Basic Computer Notions Computer trends

Some history

Difference Engine 2 built from Babbage's plans, 1990's

First programmable calculator: Charles Babbage's mechanical Analytical Engine, conceived in the 1830's, but never actually completed because of funding problems.

First programmers: Charles Babbage and Ada, countess of Lovelace (daughter of Lord Byron).

(Ref. Scientific American, 1999 May; and the San Diego Computer Museum. See also Analytical Engine emulator.)
IBM history

Harvard Mark I: conceived by Howard Aiken, built by IBM, completed 1944. Electromechanical, weighed ~5 tons.

Vacuum tubes

Vacuum tube Triode tube The first electronic digital computers were built from vacuum tubes.
The History of Computing at BRL

The first electronic programmable calculator, ENIAC, was built in 1946: electronic. 19,000 vacuum tubes, 30 tons, 1000 sq ft, consumed ~190kW; clock speed 100kHz, ~6000 additions/sec. Binary circuits but not binary number representation; no central memory unit.

Manchester Mark 1 The first stored-programme computer, ‘the Baby’, first successfully ran a programme in 1948. It had 32-bit words and up to 8 kwords of main memory, and could execute about 830 instructions/second.

In 1998, a noodle-timing programme won a 50th-anniversary programming competition for a replica Baby.

By the autumn of 1949, the Manchester Mark I was running, with a drum memory supplementing the electronic memory.

Ref: Manchester 50th Anniversary site

Transistors

The transistor was invented in 1947 at Bell Labs.

The earliest transistors were germanium crystals touched by two fine wires: ‘cat's whiskers’.

Transistors were commercially available by the late 1950's. Transistor

Magnetic cores

IBM 360 core memory, 2 kB IBM 360 core memory, 4 b Magnetic-core memory was developed in the late 1940's and early 1950's. It became commercially available in the mid-1950's and was the dominant memory technology during the 1960's and well into the 1970's.

Chips

Jack Kilby's first IC

The integrated circuit was developed in 1958. The first one contained a two transistors on a single silicon chip.

Early commercial IC's contained a few transistors, resistors and capacitors on one chip.
Digital computers are ‘at heart, only carefully polluted sand’
N. Holmes, Computer 35(5): 112, 2002

Silicon wafer 200-mm wafer and new 300-mm wafer Chips are manufactured in batches on wafers.
Approximate chip-size relationships

Evolution of Intel CPU chips:
Bits Date   Transistors   Clock speed
MHz
Line width
nm
Die size
mm2
4004 4 1971 2 250 0.1 10 000 13.5
8008 8 1972 3 500 0.2 10 000 15.2
8080 1974 6 000 2.  6 000 20.0
8088 16/8 1979 29 000 8.  3 000 28.61st IBM PC
8086 16 1978 29 000 8.  3 000 28.6
80286 1982 134 000 12.5 1 500 68.7
80386 32 1985 275 000 20.  1 500104. 
80486 1989 1 200 000 25.  1 000163. 
Pentium 1993 3 100 000 66.  800294. 
1994 3 300 000 75.  600148. 
1995 3 300 000 120.  350 91. 
Pentium II 1997 7 500 000 233.  350203. 
1998 7 500 000 300.  250131. 
Pentium III 1999 9 500 000 450.  250123. 
2000 28 000 000 533.  180106. 
Pentium 4 2000 42 000 0001500.  180217. 
2002 55 000 0002200.  130146. 
2004125 000 0002800.  90112. 
2006188 000 0003200.  65 81. 
Itanium 64 2001 25 000 000 733. 180 300. 
Itanium 2 2003 220 000 000 900. 180421. 
2004 592 000 0001300. 130374. 
2006 1 720 000 0001400.  90596. 
Core 2 2006 291 000 0001860.  65143. 
2008 800 000 000  45 

(These numbers are from various sources; see HTML source for references. The numbers are meant just to be representative. Often different versions with the same model name would have different specifications.)

Chips are packaged in various ways.

The packages are mounted on printed circuit boards (or cards) with components on the and wiring on the .

The integrated circuits are actually only a small part of the component count and surface area, as little as 10%.
(IEEE Spectrum 2006 Jun, p. 44)

For example, the circuit board of the Nokia 6161 cellular phone contains 15 IC's (containing millions of resistors) plus 405 passive components: 232 capacitors, 149 resistors and 24 inductors. The passive components take up most of the room.
(IEEE Spectrum 2003 Jul, p. 26)

Computers

In the beginning there were mainframes. And there still are. PDP-1

Transistors made it feasible to build ‘minicomputers’ for individual departments and labs, such as the PDP-1 in 1960: $120 000, 0.2 MHz clock, 4K 18-bit words of memory.
MCM/70

Integrated circuits made it feasible to build ‘microcomputers’, or personal computers.

The first was Canadian: Mers Kutt's MCM/70 in 1973: $3 500, Intel 8008 microprocessor, 0.2 MHz, 8 Kbytes of RAM + 14 Kbytes of ROM.

It was followed by the MITS Altair (1974), Apple (1976), ...

These data are from ca. 1987.

Photo of Amdahl 5860 CPU and Roger Broughton, and of disks, ca. 1987. Each of the two large banks of disks held about 4 Gbytes. (From University of Newcastle, by permission.) Amdahl 5860 CPU Amdahl 5860 disks

Things have changed a lot since then, and are changing faster than ever.
‘The computer technology in today's cars ... is 1,000 times more powerful than that which guided the [1969] Apollo moon mission.’ (Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers)

Future trends

CPU evolution, log scale

Moore's law - number of transistors per square inch doubles about every 18 months.

(Based on an observation made in 1965 by Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel. The original ‘law’ actually said 12 months, not 18.)
CPU evolution, linear scale

Moore's law on a linear scale.

Serious obstacles to continued progress, including heat ...
CPU heat sink and fan
Heat sink and fan for 1-GHz processor

Cost of cooling

Many other factors, such as interconnect delays

... continuing active research and development, e.g.,


Communication trends

Doubling time:
computing power 18 months
storage 12 months
networks 9 months
G. Stix, Sci. Am., 2001 Jan

Speeds

The Grid

Could use XML, RDF, etc. to ‘advertise’ availability and features.

Biomedical applications include

See Scientific American, 2003 April.

See both Computers Computer Science Distributed Computing and Computers Parallel Computing in the Open Directory.
New applications
Sci. Am., 2002 Apr



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Last modified: Thu, 2009 Jan 15 16:36:53