Each Generation of Computer is designed based on the new technological development, resulting in better, cheaper
and smaller computers that are more
powerful, faster and efficient than their
predecessors.
1st Generation
Vacuum Tubes
Machine
language uses 0s and 1s for coding of the
instructions. The first generation
computers could solve one problem at a time. The computation
time was in milliseconds. enormous in size and required a large room
for installation. used vacuum
tubes for circuitry and
magnetic drums for
memory.
Examples: UNIVersal Automatic Computer
(UNIVAC), Electronic Numerical Integrator And
Calculator (ENIAC), and Electronic Discrete
Variable Automatic Computer (EDVAC).
2nd Generation
Transistors
The instructions were
written using the assembly language. The computation
time was in microseconds. smaller in
size compared to vacuum tubes. used magnetic
core technology for
primary memory. They
used magnetic tapes and
magnetic disks for
secondary storage.
Examples: PDP-8, IBM 1401 and CDC 1604.
3rd Generation
Integrated Circuits
The keyboard and the
monitor were interfaced through the operating
system. High-level
languages were used extensively for
programming, instead of machine language and
assembly language. The computation time
was in nanoseconds. quite small compared to the
second generation computers. multiple
transistors are placed on a
silicon chip.
Examples: IBM 370, PDP 11.
4th Generation
Microprocessors
Several new operating
systems like the MS-DOS and MS-Windows
developed during this time. This generation of
computers supported Graphical User
Interface (GUI).The computation time
is in picoseconds. smaller than the
computers of the previous generation. became widely available for
commercial purposes.
Examples: In 1981, IBM
introduced the first computer for home use. In 1984, Apple
introduced the Macintosh.
5th Generation
Artificial Intelligence
The goal of fifth generation computing is to
develop computers that are capable of
learning and self-organization. The fifth
generation computers use Super Large Scale
Integrated (SLSI) chips that are able to store
millions of components on a single chip. These
computers have large memory requirements. The fifth generation computers are based
on Artificial Intelligence (AI). They try to
simulate the human way of thinking and
reasoning.
Artificial Intelligence such as Expert System (ES), Natural Language
Processing (NLP), speech recognition, voice
recognition, robotics, etc.
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