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- 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.
- 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.
===Discovery of "switching algebra" leading to logic gate designs (1938)===
[[Claude Shannon]] (1916-2001) made a critical step enabling hardware design of a computer in his 1938 MIT master's thesis<ref name="Shannon3">{{cite web|url=http://www.research.att.com/~njas/doc/shannonbib.html|title=``A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits'', MIT master's thesis published in T.A.I.E.E. Vol. 57 (1938), pp. 713-723|publisher= Transactions American Institute of Electrical Engineers|year=1938|accessdate=2007-05-12}}</ref> on the use of Boole's algebra to analyse and optimise relay switching circuits. Shannon associated [[boolean algebra]], a kind of mathematical system that had been known for centuries, with the design of logic gates in digital hardware<ref name="Shannon1">{{cite web|url=http://www.nyu.edu/pages/linguistics/courses/v610003/shan.html|title="Claude Shannon" from Professor Ray C. Dougherty's course notes (V61.0003) Communication: Men, Minds, and Machines (Fall, 1996)|publisher=[[Microsoft Corporation]]|year=1996|accessdate=2007-05-12}}</ref>, calling boolean algebra "switching algebra" in the context of digital hardware design. Shannon also later made seminal contributions towards the burgeoning field of [[information theory]].


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year of Sun's  
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{| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
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necessary cross-platform compromises; Java does
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<li>.NET makes 36 versions of Windows alike for programmers; it eliminates the "DLL hell" which formerly
occurred when installing Windows applications</li>
<li>.NET libraries can be used by any of the .NET compiled languages (of  
which there are dozens); libraries can be written in any .NET language</li>
</ul>
</li><li>the two platforms compete fiercely in the world wide web<ul>
<li>JSP's require Apache web servers (Linux or Unix); these are HTML
interlaced with code</li>
<li>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; called "servlets" if all code</li>
<li>ASP's require
Microsoft's IIS6 web server; these are HTML interlaced with code</li>
<li>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; called "web handlers" if all code</li>
<li>both Linux and Microsoft web servers use load-balancing across mirrored web
farms to scale up</li>
<li>so-called "dynamic" languages such as Ruby are seen by
some as the next stage beyond Java and .NET</li>
</ul></li>
<li>it's an arms race!</li>
</ul>

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


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