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Computers And Society

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Term Paper TitleComputers And Society
# of Words3027
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)12.11
Computers and Society

Computers and Society


     The decade of the 1980's saw an explosion in computer technology and
computer usage that deeply changed society.  Today computers are a part of
everyday life, they are in their simplest form a digital watch or more complexly
computers manage power grids, telephone networks, and the money of the world.
Henry Grunwald, former US ambassador to Austria best describes the computer's
functions, “It enables the mind to ask questions, find answers, stockpile
knowledge, and devise plans to move mountains, if not worlds.”   Society has
embraced the computer and accepted it for its many powers which can be used for
business, education, research, and warfare.
     The first mechanical calculator, a system of moving beads called the
abacus, was invented in Babylonia around 500 BC. The abacus provided the fastest
method of calculating until 1642, when the French scientist Pascal invented a
calculator made of wheels and cogs.  The concept of the modern computer was
first outlined in 1833 by the British mathematician Charles Babbage.  His design
of an analytical engine contained all of the necessary components of a modern
computer: input devices, a memory, a control unit, and output devices.  Most of
the actions of the analytical engine were to be done through the use of punched
cards.  Even though Babbage worked on the analytical engine for nearly 40 years,
he never actually made a working machine.
     In 1889 Herman Hollerith, an American inventor, patented a calculating
machine that counted, collated, and sorted information stored on punched cards.
His machine was first used to help sort statistical information for the 1890
United States census.  In 1896 Hollerith founded the Tabulating Machine Company
to produce similar machines. In 1924, the company changed its name to
International Business Machines Corporation. IBM made punch-card office
machinery that dominated business until the late 1960s, when a new generation of
computers made the punch card machines obsolete.
     The first fully electronic computer used vacuum tubes, and was so secret
that its existence was not revealed until decades after it was built.  Invented
by the English mathematician Alan Turing and in 1943, the Colossus was the
computer that British cryptographers used to break secret German military codes.
The first modern general-purpose electronic computer was ENIAC or the Electronic
Numerical Integrator and Calculator. Designed by two American engineers, John...

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