Computer Generations Best Preparation Notes
Computer Generations
There are five generations of computer:
- First generation – 1946 - 1958
- Second generation – 1959 - 1964
- Third generation – 1965 - 1970
- Fourth generation – 1971 - today
- Fifth generation – Today to future
The First Generation
- The first computers used vacuum tubes for circuitry and magnetic drums for memory, and were often enormous, taking up entire rooms.
- They were very expensive to operate and in addition to using a great deal of electricity, generated a lot of heat, which was often the cause of malfunctions.
- First generation computers relied on machine language, the lowest-level programming language understood by computers, to perform operations, and they could only solve one problem at a time.
- Input was based on punched cards and paper tape, and output was displayed on printouts.
The Second Generation
- Transistors replaced vacuum tubes and ushered in the second generation of computers.
- One transistor replaced the equivalent of 40 vacuum tubes.
- Allowing computers to become smaller, faster, cheaper, more energy-efficient and more reliable.
- Still generated a great deal of heat that can damage the computer.
- Second-generation computers moved from cryptic binary machine language to symbolic, or assembly, languages, which allowed programmers to specify instructions in words.
- Second-generation computers still relied on punched cards for input and printouts for output.
- These were also the first computers that stored their instructions in their memory, which moved from a magnetic drum to magnetic core technology.
The Third Generation
- The development of the integrated circuit was the hallmark of the third generation of computers.
- Transistors were miniaturized and placed on silicon chips, called semiconductors, which drastically increased the speed and efficiency of computers.
- Much smaller and cheaper compare to the second generation computers.
- It could carry out instructions in billionths of a second.Users interacted with third generation computers through keyboards and monitors and interfaced with an operating system, which allowed the device to run many different applications at one time with a central program that monitored the memory.
- Computers for the first time became accessible to a mass audience because they were smaller and cheaper than their predecessors.
The Fourth Generation
- The microprocessor brought the fourth generation of computers, as thousands of integrated circuits were built onto a single silicon chip.
- As these small computers became more powerful, they could be linked together to form networks, which eventually led to the development of the Internet.
- Fourth generation computers also saw the development of GUIs, the mouse and handheld devices.
- Based on Artificial Intelligence (AI).
- Still in development.
- The use of parallel processing and superconductors is helping to make artificial intelligence a reality.
- The goal is to develop devices that respond to natural language input and are capable of learning and self-organization.
- There are some applications, such as voice recognition, that are being used today.