Computer Fundamentals
Lecture # 2:
Introduction to Computer & History
(Continued)
Today’s Aim
Vacuum Tubes; Electronics arrived
Advent of Transistors
IC’s
Microprocessor – The on-chip processor
Microcomputer
History (Vacuum Tubes)
Vacuum Tubes (Thermo-ionic Valves)
The very first Electronic Devices because they
provided ‘electrically Controlled Current’ &
‘Controlled Voltage’
But switches and rheostats etc. also control
electricity!
The special thing about is that “electricity controls
electricity”
History (Vacuum Tubes)
Edison Effect
Thomas Edison, in 1880, while developing the
incandescent lamp, observed that “a small current
passed from the heated filament to a metal plate
mounted inside the vacuum envelop
Electrons would flow from the filament to the
metal plate even if the filament was heated by
some other means, battery is not mandatory
History (Vacuum Tubes)
History (Vacuum Tubes)
Flemming Valve (Vacuum Diode)
By 1904, John Flemming, the advisor of Marconi
Wireless Company found that “an externally
applied current only passed in one direction i.e.,
from the filament to plate but not the reverse
direction”
This invention was called ‘the vacuum diode’ and
was used to convert AC into DC
History (Vacuum Tubes)
History (Vacuum Tubes)
These were two initial steps towards
electronics
The era of electronics began with the
invention of the Audion tube, when Lee
DeForest added a third electrode to the
vacuum diode; that allowed a small signal to
control the larger electron flow from filament
to plate
This device truly provided electrical control of
electricity
History (Vacuum Tubes)
DeForest Audion triode vacuum tube amplifier
History (Vacuum Tubes)
Drawbacks of Vacuum Tubes
Large Glass Tubes
Power Hungry
Computers using them (e.g., Colossus, ENIAC,
Manchester Small-Scale Experimental Machine,
EDSAC, Manchester Mark 1) were large enough
to occupy big halls
History (Transistors)
Advent of Transistors
Computers using vacuum tubes as their electronic
elements were in use throughout the 1950s
But by the 1960s had been largely replaced by transistor-
based machines
smaller, faster, cheaper to produce, require less power and
more reliable.
The first transistorized computer was demonstrated at the
University of Manchester in 1953
History (ICs)
Late 1960s - Integrated Circuits
1971, Intel’s DRAM and EPROM
4001; 256 Byte ROM with a 4-bit I/O port
4002; 40 Byte RAM (80x4) with a 4-bit I/O port
4003; 10-bit parallel output ‘shift register’ for
scanning keyboards, displays, printers, etc
History (microprocessors)
Intel 4004
The first complete CPU on a single chip
Produced from late 1971 to 1981
Released on November 15, 1971
New silicon technology at that time, higher speed
and Integration, executed approximately 92,000
instructions per second
Maximum Clock Speed 740 kHz
Separate program and data storage (i.e., a
Harvard architecture)
History (microprocessors)
Intel 4004 (continued)
12-bit addresses
8-bit instructions
4-bit ‘data words’
‘Instruction set’ contains
46 instructions
Register set contains 16
registers of 4 bits each
History (microprocessors)
Successors of Intel 4004 (pre x86)
Intel 4040
Intel 8008
Intel 8080
Intel 8085
X86-16 (16-bit) series
Intel 8086
Intel 8088
Intel 80186
Intel 80188
Intel 80286
History (microcomputer)
Altair 8800 (1975)
A microcomputer; product of MITS (Micro
Instrumentations & Telemetry System), founded
by ‘Ed Robert, Forrest M. Mims, Stan Cagle &
Robert Zaller in 1969.
Based on Intel 8080 CPU, an 8-bit microprocessor
Was expected to be sold in hundreds but
thousands were sold in the first month
the first programming language for the machine
was Altair BASIC, by Microsoft
History (microcomputer)
TRS-80 (The Model I)
Released in 1977 by Tandy Corporation
Apple and Commodore were major competetors
It combined the mainboard and keyboard into one
unit
It used a Zilog Z80 processor clocked at
1.77 MHz
Popular with the hobbyists and small-scale
businesses
More than 250,000 were sold, discontinued in
1981
History (microcomputer)
Model II
In October 1979, Tandy Corporation began
shipping the Model II
It was not an upgrade of the Model I, but an
entirely different system, built using the faster
Zilog Z80A chip running at 4 MHz
The Model II ran the TRSDOS-II operating system
which was not compatible with TRSDOS for the
Model I
Thus Model II never had the same breadth of
available software as the Model I
History (microcomputers)
Successors to TRS-80 (Model I)
Major drawback of Model I was the massive RF
interference it caused in surrounding electronics,
thus violating FCC (Federal Communication
commission) regulations
This drawback was removed with the release of
Model III in July 1980
This machine was much more integrated and
used a much faster (2.08 MHz) Z-80 processor
The successor to the Model III was the Model 4
(April 1983)
History (microcomputers)
IBM PC
IBM PC, is the original version and progenitor of
the IBM PC compatible hardware platform
Introduced on August 12, 1981; used Intel 8088
operating at 4.77 MHz
Came into the market to compete Commodore
PET, Atari 8-bit family, Apple II and Tandy
Corporation's TRS-80s
Unlike its competitors, It was specifically designed
for professional and scientific problem-solvers, not
meant just for hobbyists
History (microcomputer)
IBM PC
Gained popularity because;
‘off-the-shelf’ components were used to reduce cost
Open architecture was followed so that, other
manufacturers could produce and sell peripheral
components and compatible software without
purchasing licenses
IBM also sold an IBM PC Technical Reference Manual
which included complete circuit schematics, a listing of
the ‘ROM BIOS source code’
History (microcomputers)
Hence Columbia Data Products introduced the first
IBM-PC compatible computer in June 1982
In November 1982, Compaq Computer Corporation
announced the Compaq Portable, the first portable
IBM PC compatible
The "IBM Personal Computer XT", IBM's model
5160; enhanced for business use
History (microcomputers)
The "IBM Personal Computer/AT", announced
August 1984
Used an Intel 80286 processor, originally
running at 6 MHz
It had a 16-bit ISA bus and 20 MB hard drive
A faster model, running at 8 MHz, was
introduced in 1986
IBM Convertible, IBM Portable & PCjr are other
models in this line
History (microprocessors)
Pentium
A 32-bit microprocessor produced by Intel.
The first large-scale x86 architecture processor
Introduced on March 22, 1993
Its micro-architecture was called ‘P5’, (pent
means ‘five’ in Greek)
History (microprocessors)
Pentium
P5
The original Pentium Processor was code named
‘P5’
It operated at 60 MHz and 66 MHz
It contained 3.1 million transistors
Measured 16.7 mm by 17.6 mm for an area of
293.92 mm2
Fabricated in a 0.8 µm BiCMOS process
History (microprocessors)
Pentium
P54C
The P5 was followed by the P54C (80502)
Operated at 75, 90 and 100 MHz
It contained 3.3 million transistors
Measured 163 mm2
Fabricated in a 0.6 µm BiCMOS process.
History (microprocessors)
Pentium
P54CQS
The P54C was followed by the P54CQS
Operated at 120 MHz
The first commercial microprocessor to be
fabricated in a 0.35 µm BiCMOS process
It had the same area as P54C, to fit into the
existing pad-ring
Only the logic circuitry was reduced to achieve
higher clock speed
History (microprocessors)
Pentium
P54CS
The P54CQS was followed by the P54CS
Operated at 133, 150, 166 and 200 MHz
It contained 3.3 million transistors
Measured 90 mm2
Fabricated in a 0.35 µm BiCMOS process with
History (microprocessors)
Successors of Pentium
x86-32 / IA-32 (32 bit)
Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium 4,
Pentium M, Celeron M, Celeron D & Intel A100
x86-64 (64 bit)
Pentium 4 (Some), Pentium D, Pentium Extreme
Edition & Celeron D (Some)
History (microprocessors)
Successors of Pentium
Current
Atom, Celeron, Pentium Dual-Core, Core 2, Core
i3, Core i5, Core i7, Xeon and Itanium
Upcoming
Moorestown, Core i9