Although
introduced with mainframe machines, the mini-computer epoch saw a complete
migration of the human to computer interface away from punched cards and toward
text and modest graphic mechanisms. These were first introduced through
teletype terminals, which formed the earliest variants of non-voice, network
communications. These terminals became the primary source of input to and then
output from mini-computers. Rapid advances in the technology migrated from the
mechanical teletype terminals to cathode ray tube devices that used typewriter qwerty keyboards for input and electron
display tubes for output. The end result of this was a much tighter linkage
between the human and the computer. Developing computer software and using the
resultant software products became much more of an interactive activity.
In 1958,
Jack Kilby with Texas Instruments constructed the first integrated circuit. This
device allowed for the construction and interconnection of many transistors and
other semi-conductor devices on a single substrate of material. This provided
yet another order of magnitude decrease in both physical size as well as
electrical power consumption in order to achieve comparable computer
operations. Smaller size again meant faster operation. While incredibly
profound, we tend to characterize this development as comparable to genetic
selection as opposed to mutation. In fact, the goal of the research and
development work from which this event resulted was generally aimed toward this
end.
Prior to this
selection event, electrical circuits were comprised of discrete components:
transistors of various sorts along with resistors, capacitors and induction
coils connected by highly conducting material such as copper or gold wire. The
connections between components and their conducting links were generally
effected by soldering the materials together. A significant innovation that
occurred across the boundary between mainframe computers and minicomputers was
the wire-wrap connection. This form
of interconnection involved attaching components to a mounting board that had,
on its reverse side, short peg-like extensions at the connection points of the
components. Then a very flexible conducting wire could be wrapped around one of
these extensions for a connection point of a component and then extended to and
wrapped around a different extension for a connection point of a different
component. This approach had the benefit of not requiring the use of high
temperature tools around potentially sensitive components.
The third epoch
of computers is comprised of personal computers, whose history is different
from that of mainframes and mini-computers, although the trend is similar.
Personal computers showed up in volume in the 1980’s, to become prevalent as
mini-computer replacements in the 1990’s, until they started to also replace
mainframes in some functions in the 2000’s. Personal computers sold in the hundreds
of millions, a hundred times more than mini-computers, in prices around a thousand
dollars, a hundred times less than mini-computers.
Personal
computers brought a new type of applications into being. The best example was VisiCalc,
the first spreadsheet of widespread use. A personal application, VisiCalc by
itself would be enough to justify the purchase of a computer. Over time,
personal computers would end up being used not only by individuals, but also in
the back office as powerful servers doing tasks previously performed by
mainframe or mini-computers. Coincident with the development of the
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