Who invented the computer?
Many say the first computer is the "difference engine." The first of
these devices was conceived in 1786 by J.H. Müller. It was never built.
Difference engines were forgotten and then rediscovered in 1822 by
Englishman Charles Babbage..who is known as "the father of the
Computer". This machine used the decimal numbers system and was powered
by cranking a handle. The British government first financed the project
but then later cut off support. Babbage went on to design his much more
general analytical engine but later returned and produced an improved
design (his "Difference Engine No. 2") between 1834 and 1869.
Others point out that this is the first ELECTRONIC computer. The
earliest computer known is the Antikythera Machine, a mechanical device
that computed the positions of the astrological signs on any given date,
past or future. It was discovered in an ancient shipwreck in the
Mediterranean Sea and dates to approximately 250 BC. The
designer/builder is not known, but because of its similarity to other
mechanical devices known to have been designed by Archimedes, it is
probably his work.
Still others will say the abacus is the
first computer. They were invented by the Chinese between 2600 BC and
300 BC is considered as the first computer ever. Abacus was used by the
merchants and Clerks in China.
Here is still more input:
- If
you mean Electronic Computer, it was a man called Alan Turing from
Cambridge UK, who was drafted in to Bletchley park secret base where
they worked at cracking the WWII enigma codes that the Germans used
every day. The Germans changed their Enigma machines to a four digit
code maker. However, Because what went on at Bletchley Park the computer
made from thousands of valves was kept top secret up until recently.
The computer, named Colossus was smashed to pieces at the end of the
war. The buildings have now been restored as a tourist center.
- The
Collosus Mark I 1943, the world's first programmable, digital,
electronic, computing devices... its follow up the Mark II was used by
British codebreakers to read encrypted German Enigma codes during World
War II (notably D Day)
- The first computer, or "modern computer"
was invented in World War II by a German engineer, Konrad Zuse in 1941
called the Z3. More Info: "I can add some authenticity to this answer.
My grandfather was a rocket scientist on Werner Von Braun's team during
WWII. He was the technician who actually built the computer described
above. It was an analog computer designed to simulate the guidance
system for the rockets. It was built in secret because the higher-ups
had not given their permission for this project."
- After doing
some research to answer a question for a scholarship I was applying for I
found that Babbage failed to build a complete machine. The most widely
accepted reason for this failure is that Victorian mechanical
engineering were not sufficiently developed to produce parts with
sufficient precision.
- It was Konrad Zuse. He invented the z1,
z2, z3, z4 and other ones. The z3 was the first fully functional
program-controlled electromechanical digital computer in the
world-completed in 1941. Charles Babbage just made a mechanical
computing machine.
- "Who invented the computer?" is not a
question with a simple answer. The real answer is that many inventors
contributed to the history of computers and that a computer is a complex
piece of machinery made up of many parts, each of which can be
considered a separate invention.
- The first electronic computer
was invented by Bulgarian John Vincent Ansoff. He named it the Anatasoff
Berry Computer, or the ABC. It was the world's first electronic digital
computer and built between 1937-42 by John Vincent Atanasoff and
Clifford Berry at Iowa State University. It used regenerative memory,
parallel processing, binary arithmetic and split computing functions
(routines) away from memory use and management.
- Now, if
we're talking technical knowledge and actual precursors to the PC - IBM
may have accidentally spread it around when they allowed cloning of the
PC architecture. But they were not the first. [This answer refers to
desktop "personal" computers. These were far from the first computers.
- These
are all pre-IBM machines: MITS ALTAIR 8800, Apple II, TRS80, Atari 800
and the Commodore 64. [This answer refers to desktop "personal"
computers. These were far from the first computers.
- Purists who
claim that the ALTAIR was not the first, will say it was 'Simon' by
Berkley Enterprises, 1950, costing $300. [This answer refers to desktop
"personal" computers. These were far from the first computers.]
- The
first completely electronic computer was developed in England in 1943.
It was known as Colossus. It took up 1,000 Sq. ft. weighed 30
tons/60,000 pounds. And took 150 kilowatts which is enough power to
light up a small town.
- The first computer was developed by
Charles Babbage. It was called the Differential and Analytical Engine.
The programmer for this computer was Ada Lovelace (first programmer).
[Not quite correct. Babbage's Differential Engine was not the same as
his Analytical Engine. The Differential Engine came first and was more
limited.]
- The first working computer (in the modern sense) was
invented by Konrad Zuse. But others had created machines or ideas close
to it before. These were people like Pascal, Leibnitz and Turing.
- The
first patent for a working computer (outside the military) was the
ENIAC, created by Drs. John Mauchly and Presper Eckert at the University
of Pennsylvania in 1952. They formed the Eckert-Mauchly Computer
Corporation, which was later bought by Remington Rand. Their computer
was used in the 1950 census and by Walter Cronkite in the 1952
Presidential election.
- The ENIAC patent was declared invalid on
October 19, 1973, by US Federal Judge Earl R. Larson. He attributed
Atanasoff and Berry with the invention of the electronic digital
computer. For more information see the related Link.
- Charles Babbage invented the concept of a programmable computer in about 185
- It
partly depends on what you mean by "computer", but the earliest claim
is that Charles Babbage invented the first programmable computer in
1822. The machine was called a "difference engine" and it was intended
to generate mathematical tables. This machine contained 25,000 parts and
weighed 15 tons. Babbage followed this with a "difference engine 2"
which, although well funded, was never completed. Babbage also designed a
printer to go along with the computer, but this also was never
completed. In 1989-1991, the London science museum made a difference
engine 2 and printer from Babbage's design. Both worked perfectly.
- This,
of course, depends on the definition of "computer". If you define it as
the first device for doing mathematical calculations, the answer would
be the "Babbage Difference Engine", invented by Charles Babbage but
never completely built. However, computers trace their lineage to
19th-century power looms which became "programmable" by use of something
akin to a punch-card which was used to determine which color thread
would be used at any given time in the loom's weaving process. On an
even more basic level, you could consider the first use of cams to
determine timing of any mechanism (such as steam engine poppet valves)
to be the first "computer".
- The first programmable computer was
invented by Charles Babbage. It was called the difference engine and was
a huge, 2 tonne machine that was told what to do by punched cards.
- The
inventor of the first computer was John V. Atanasoff and his assistant
Clifford Berry but they did not get the credit until about 30 years
later because there patent was not complete so some one else took the
idea and made one while John and Clifford were called to the military.
Later there was a court trial that proved the first computer inventors,
John and Clifford. In the end, John did not receive any money for his
invention.
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