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This is where I work on drafts.
This is where I work on pre-drafts and just try stuff out


Suggestions for rewrite of [[Computer]]:
I had a draft of [[Computer]] at [[User:Pat_Palmer/Computer]].


Note 4: authors should strive explicitly to resist showing off their technical expertise by including any jargon; all jargon should be banned from this page; if it must exist, it should be at the bottom in an "also see" list
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| style="padding: 0.25em;"|'''Archive 1, 4-9-07:''' [[here]]
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| style="padding: 0.25em;"|'''Archive 2, date?:''' [[here]]
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Note 3: controlling size and complexity in this article is essential; the amount of material which COULD be in here is mind-boggling; the Wikipedia article got everything but the kitchen sink, and it read like a person babbling nonsense
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NOTE 2: this article should be held to a length of about 3 times this rough draft, and no more.


-----------------


NOTE: The goals of this article should be to introduce the meaning of "computer" briefly, and then discuss it's evolution over time and it's significance to the world as it evolved. It should be possible somehow to summarize the concept of a 'computer' today without listing every single blasted concept in every possible field of software and hardware.
===Strowger switch and telephone dialing (~1920)===
- Telephone automation systems, called "switches" or switchboards, were likely among the first electromechanical devices to implement a primitive form of computer-like memory, whereby a number is stored by the setting of relays, or the operation of similar equipment. The earliest form of switching memory was the [[Strowger switch]], developed by an independent American inventor decades before [[Bell Laboratories]] invented an equivalent technology. Strowger switches completed an additional segment of a phone call's connection each time a digit was dialed; in this case, the entire telephone system was the memory. Later switchboards (1960's generation) used general-purpose computers and completely stored all digits of the dialed number in a [[register]] before making a [[routing decision]] based on a host of complex factors. Call connections were made "all at once" after running a program that analyzed the dialed number. + Telephone automation systems, called "switches" or switchboards, were likely among the first electromechanical devices to implement a primitive form of computer-like memory, whereby a number is stored by the setting of relays, or the operation of similar equipment. The earliest form of switching memory was the [[Strowger switch]], developed by an independent American inventor decades before [[Bell Laboratories]] invented an equivalent technology. Strowger switches completed an additional segment of a phone call's connection each time a digit was dialed; in this case, the entire telephone system was the memory. Strowger eliminated the need for intervention by a human operation when placing a phone call (in consumer terms, he "invented the dial telephone"). Later switchboards (1960's generation) used general-purpose computers and completely stored all digits of the dialed number in a [[register]] before making a [[routing decision]] based on a host of complex factors. Call connections were made "all at once" after running a program that analyzed the dialed number.


==References==
<references />


For centuries, people sought assistance from mechanical devices in performing onerous arithmetical calculations (ref. abacus and knotted string--Amer. Indians?, and of course the slide rule).
==Front==


The invention of the computer--an electronic machine that can perform numerical manipulations far faster than humans--revolutionized the world in the later half of the the twentieth century.
__NOTOC__
The classical, most stripped-down view of a computer has the following four basic parts:<br />
{|
&nbsp;* processor (and bus)<br>
|-
&nbsp;* memory<br>
|valign=bottom|[[Image:Logo400grbeta_small.png|left]]
&nbsp;* input (punched cards? keyboard? mouse? microphone?)<br>
|width=35px|
&nbsp;* output (printout, monitor, sound, industrial automation of mechanical robots)<br />
|
NOTE: Maybe omit the above (more details should probably go on a "computer SYSTEM" page)
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The first generation of computers (1940's and 1950's) were mainly useful for performing complex mathematical calculations such as actuary tables or weapons firing trajectories.  They were difficult to use. But as the complexity of computer hardware increased, an even more drastic revolution occurred in the programs which the hardware was able to execute.  New kinds of programs were
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written with the explicit purpose of making computers easier to use (these kinds of programs
|-
are ''operating systems'' in software terms).  As these programs became better, use of computers was made available to more and more people.
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----NOTE: Discuss the feedback cycle of rapidly developing hardware and software technology (Moore's law type stuff); break it briefly into phases by, probably, decades. Keep it fairly short.----
[http://www.citizendium.org/about.html The ''Citizendium''] ([http://www.citizendium.org/cit.mp3 sit-ih-ZEN-dee-um]), a "citizens' compendium of everything," is an experimental new wiki project started by a co-founder of [[Wikipedia|Wikipedia]] with the aim of improving on ''that'' model by adding "gentle expert oversight" ''and'' requiring contributors to use their real names.  The pilot project launched in November 2006 and became public in March 2007.  As of July 11, 2007, we were working on '''[[:Category:CZ Live|over 2,300 articles]].'''


Although today's computer are used as a tool in almost every profession, in the early years after their inventions, computers were the domain of scientists, mathematicians and engineers.  (And I can't resist saying that now they are the domain of teenagers and every Dick, Tom and Harry).
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Outline the growth of a new academic discipline, computer science, starting around 1980's, and the parallel growth of world-wide computer networks.  These programs were needed because many people began to want or need to know how to use computers.  VERY BRIEFLY introduce the notion of a programmable computer, or a stored-program computer, and the Church-Turing ideas.  Mostly this part should just point off to other articles (that's where the jargon can live).
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;<span>Entry points </span>
Workgroup homepages are &Phi; symbols.


The evolution of the computer from a scientific calculator to a chess-playing prima-donna unfolds like a fascinating drama--first, the idea (Babbage et al.).  The invention of electricity. Radio and vacuum tubes. The realization that vaccuum tubes could be used as on-off switches to replace mechanical relays.  The almost accidental invention of the transitor (first one had a paper clip in it).  Then the giants--Turing, Shannon, and number and information theory.  The invention of the compiler.  Then the evolution of operating systems, from batch to command line to windows.  Apple-Microsoft software wars paralleling Sun-Intel wars in hardware.
{| border="0.1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
|{{click|image=Natural science button.png|link=CZ:Workgroups#Natural_Sciences|width=25px|height=25px}} ||'''Natural Sciences'''
|}:[[Astronomy]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Astronomy Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Biology]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Biology Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Chemistry]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Chemistry Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Earth science]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Earth Sciences Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Mathematics]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Mathematics Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Physics]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Physics Workgroup|&Phi;]]


The internet and the world wide web, and astonishingly, Google. Last but not least, the importance of hardware miniaturization, radio technology, cheap memory, and all the tiny computer chips and software embedded in our everyday gadgets; these are invisible to most people and tend to get overlooked.
{| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
|{{click|image=Social science button.png|link=CZ:Workgroups#Social_Sciences|width=25px|height=25px}} ||'''Social Sciences'''
|}:[[Anthropology]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Anthropology Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Archaeology]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Archaeology Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Economics]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Economics Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Education]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Education Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Geography]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Geography Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Countries of the world]] - [[Law]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Law Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Linguistics]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Linguistics Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Politics]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Politics Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Psychology]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Psychology Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Sociology]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Sociology Workgroup|&Phi;]]


This should be the outline of the article. It should be kept as short as possible, just introduce these different areas to explore, and then point off to more specialized topics.
{| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
|{{click|image=Humanities button.png|link=CZ:Workgroups#Humanities|width=25px|height=25px}} ||'''Humanities'''
|}:[[Classics]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Classics Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[History]]&nbsp;[[CZ:History Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Literature]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Literature Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Philosophy]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Philosophy Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Catalog of famous philosophers]] - [[Religion]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Religion Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Catalog of religions]]
 
{| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
|{{click|image=Arts button.png|link=CZ:Workgroups#Arts|width=25px|height=25px}} ||'''Arts'''
|}:[[Architecture]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Architecture Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Music]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Music Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Theater]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Theater Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Visual Arts]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Visual Arts Workgroup|&Phi;]]
 
{| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
|{{click|image=Applied arts button.png|link=CZ:Workgroups#Applied Arts and Sciences|width=25px|height=25px}} ||'''Applied Arts and Sciences'''
|}:[[Agriculture]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Agriculture Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Business]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Business Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Computer]]s&nbsp;[[CZ:Computers Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Engineering]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Engineering Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Healing Arts]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Healing Arts Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Health Sciences]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Health Sciences Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Journalism]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Journalism Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Library and Information Science]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Library and Information Science Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Media]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Media Workgroup|&Phi;]] - [[Military]]&nbsp;[[CZ:Military Workgroup|&Phi;]]
 
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Latest revision as of 10:58, 7 March 2024

This is where I work on pre-drafts and just try stuff out

I had a draft of Computer at User:Pat_Palmer/Computer.

Discussion Archives
Archive 1, 4-9-07: here
Archive 2, date?: here
To Do List
placeholder
placeholder


Strowger switch and telephone dialing (~1920)

- Telephone automation systems, called "switches" or switchboards, were likely among the first electromechanical devices to implement a primitive form of computer-like memory, whereby a number is stored by the setting of relays, or the operation of similar equipment. The earliest form of switching memory was the Strowger switch, developed by an independent American inventor decades before Bell Laboratories invented an equivalent technology. Strowger switches completed an additional segment of a phone call's connection each time a digit was dialed; in this case, the entire telephone system was the memory. Later switchboards (1960's generation) used general-purpose computers and completely stored all digits of the dialed number in a register before making a routing decision based on a host of complex factors. Call connections were made "all at once" after running a program that analyzed the dialed number. + Telephone automation systems, called "switches" or switchboards, were likely among the first electromechanical devices to implement a primitive form of computer-like memory, whereby a number is stored by the setting of relays, or the operation of similar equipment. The earliest form of switching memory was the Strowger switch, developed by an independent American inventor decades before Bell Laboratories invented an equivalent technology. Strowger switches completed an additional segment of a phone call's connection each time a digit was dialed; in this case, the entire telephone system was the memory. Strowger eliminated the need for intervention by a human operation when placing a phone call (in consumer terms, he "invented the dial telephone"). Later switchboards (1960's generation) used general-purpose computers and completely stored all digits of the dialed number in a register before making a routing decision based on a host of complex factors. Call connections were made "all at once" after running a program that analyzed the dialed number.


References


Front

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