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1
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- Thomas J. Bergin
- Computing History Museum
- American University
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2
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- Today, we live in an electronic world, where everything is electronic:
our automobiles, our home appliances, even our books, writing tablets,
and tally sheets.
- Reference: Bunch and Hellemans, The Timetables of TECHNOLOGY, A
Chronology of the Most Important People and Events in the History of
Technology, Simon and Schuster,
1993.
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3
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- Thomas Alva Edison discovers the “Edison effect” in 1883, after
introducing a metal plate into an electric light bulb in an attempt to
keep the bulb from turning black.
It doesn’t work, but Edison discovers that there is a current
between the filament and a separate electrode, thus finding a basic
principle of the operation of the vacuum tube. Seeing no immediate application, he
looses interest!
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4
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- William Crookes [b. London, 1832] 1878
describes his experiments on passing electric discharges through an
evacuated glass tube to the Royal Society
- Karl Ferdinand Braun [b. Fulda, Germany] 1897
- develops a cathode-ray tube
consisting of an evacuated electron tube in which electrons, aimed by
electromagnetic fields, form an image on a fluorescent screen
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5
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- John A. Flemming [b. Lancaster,
UK] 1904
- files a patent for the first
vacuum tube, also called a “Flemming valve.”
- diode that acts as a rectifier, a device that makes current flow in a
single direction instead of alternating back and forth; hence, it
changes alternating current (AC) to direct current (DC)
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6
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- Lee De Forest and R. Von Lieben 1907
- invent the amplified vacuum tube (triode) based on a two-element vacuum
tube invented by John Ambrose Fleming.
The tube contains a third element, a grid, placed between the
cathode and the anode which allows modulation of the current through the
valve with very small voltage changes.
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7
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- William H. Eckles and F. W. Jordan 1919 publish a paper on flip-flop
circuits; first used in electronic counters; later used in computers
around 1940
- C.E. Wynn-Williams (UK) develops 1932 the thyratron, an electronic tube
used for counting electric pulses, and later develops a binary counter
using thyratrons.
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8
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9
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- John V. Atanasoff builds a calculator 1939 called the ABC using vacuum
tubes
- John Mauchly writes “The Use of High 1942
- Speed Vacuum Tube Devices for
Calculating”
- William Shockley starts research, at 1942 on semiconductors which
results in the development of the transistor
- The Colossus, a computer with 1,500 1943 valves is designed by T.H.
Flowers and M.H.A. Newman under the direction of Alan Turing (UK)
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10
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- Spurred research and development of electronic devices such as:
- RAdio Detecting And Ranging, RADAR
- S0und Navigation And Ranging, SONAR
- Colossus coding and deciphering machine
- Calculators at Bell Laboratories & Harvard
- Electronic projects at MIT and elsewhere
- Electronic computers such as the ENIAC
- and many, many other devices and techniques!!!
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11
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- Science, n, 1. a branch of knowledge
or study dealing with a body of facts or truths systematically arranged
and showing the operation of general laws; 2. Systematic knowledge of
the physical or material world gained through observation and
experimentation.
- Reference: Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary, Second Edition,
1998
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12
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- Technology, n. 1. The branch of knowledge that deals with the creation
and use of technical means and their interrelation with life, society,
and the environment, drawing upon such objects as industrial arts,
engineering, applied science and pure science; 3. A technological
process, invention, method, or the like....
- The American College Dictionary (1970) “The branch of knowledge that
deals with the industrial arts....”
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13
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- 1990s “science and technology” seem to be interwoven; research and
development include basic science, applied science and invention (homo
farber, man the tool-maker)
- 1940s -science and technology as separate activities, science as pure,
technology as commercial activity, i.e.,
Eckert and Mauchly
- 1900s science was an academic pursuit and technology was outside of
science, the academy, and academic manners and ethics!
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14
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- Vacuum tube
- Rack of tubes (various)
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