Computer Evolution and Performance: Julius Bancud
Computer Evolution and Performance: Julius Bancud
Computer Evolution and Performance: Julius Bancud
and Performance
Julius Bancud
ENIAC - background
• The First Generation: Vacuum Tube
• ENIAC: Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer
• The Army’s Ballistics Research Laboratory (BRL), an
agency responsible for developing range and trajectory
tables for new weapons, was having difficulty supplying
these tables accurately and within a reasonable time frame.
• The BRL employed more than 200 people who, using
desktop calculators, solved the necessary ballistics
equations.
ENIAC
• John Mauchly, a professor of electrical engineering at
the University of Pennsylvania, and John Eckert, one
of his graduate students, proposed to build a general-
purpose computer using vacuum tubes for the BRL’s
application. In 1943, the Army accepted this proposal,
and work began on the ENIAC. The resulting machine
was enormous, weighing 30 tons, occupying 1500
square feet of floor space, and containing more than
18,000 vacuum tubes. When operating, it consumed 140
kilowatts of power. It was also substantially faster than
any electromechanical computer, capable of 5000
additions per second.
ENIAC
• The ENIAC was a decimal rather than a binary machine.
That is, numbers were represented in decimal form, and
arithmetic was performed in the decimal system.
• Its memory consisted of 20 “accumulators,” each capable
of holding a 10-digit decimal number. A ring of 10
vacuum tubes represented each digit. At any time, only
one vacuum tube was in the ON state, representing one of
the 10 digits. The major drawback of the ENIAC was that
it had to be programmed manually by setting switches
and plugging and unplugging cables.
ENIAC