The Five Generations of Computer
The Five Generations of Computer
The Five Generations of Computer
GENERATIONS
First Generation (1940-1956)
Vacuum Tubes
The first computers used vacuum tubes for circuitry and magnetic drums for memory, and were
often enormous, taking up entire rooms. They were very expensive to operate and in addition to
using a great deal of electricity, generated a lot of heat, which was often the cause of
malfunctions.
First generation computers relied on machine language, the lowest-level programming language
understood by computers, to perform operations, and they could only solve one problem at a time.
Input was based on punched cards and paper tape, and output was displayed on printouts. The
UNIVAC and ENIAC computers are examples of first-generation computing devices. The UNIVAC
was the first commercial computer delivered to a business client, the U.S. Census Bureau in 1951.
A UNIVAC computer at the Census Bureau. Image Source: United States Census Bureau.
The development of the integrated circuit was the hallmark of the third generation of computers.
Transistors were miniaturized and placed on silicon chips, called semiconductors, which
drastically increased the speed and efficiency of computers.
Instead of punched cards and printouts, users interacted with third generation computers through
keyboards and monitors and interfaced with an Operating System (O.S), which allowed the device
to run many different applications at one time with a central program that monitored the memory.
Computers for the first time became accessible to a mass audience because they were smaller
and cheaper than their predecessors.
Fifth generation computing devices, based on artificial intelligence, and are still in development,
though there are some applications, such as voice recognition, that are being used today.
The use of parallel processing and super-conductors is helping to make artificial intelligence a
reality. Quantum computation and molecular and nano-technology will
radically change the face of computers in years to come. The goal of fifth-generation computing is
to develop devices that respond to natural language input and are capable of learning and self-
organization.