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Basic Computer Skills


                        Notes
                                           Figure 1.1:  Electronic Devices Used for Manufacturing Computers of Different





                                                      Glass envelope
                                                      Plate (anode)
                                                      Cathode
                                                      Grid








                                                (a) A Vacuum Tube        (b) A Transistor                     (c) An IC Chip




                                       1.3.3 Third Generation (1964-1975)
                                       In 1958, Jack Clair Kilby and Robert Noyce invented the first integrated circuit.  Integrated
                                       circuits  (called  ICs) are circuits  consisting of several electronic components like transistors,
                                       resistors, and capacitors grown on a single chip of silicon eliminating wired interconnection
                                       between components. The IC technology was also known, 0 technologies because it made
                                       it possible to integrate larger number of circuit components into very small (less than 5 mm
                                       square) surface of silicon, known as “chip” [see Figure l.l(c)]. Initially the integrated circuits
                                       contained only about ten to twenty components. This technology was named  small scale
                                       integration (SSI). Later with the  advancement in technology for manufacturing ICs, it became
                                       possible to integrate up to about components on a single chip. This technology came to be
                                       known as  medium scale integration  (MSI).
                                       Computers built using integrated circuits characterized the third generation. Earlier ones
                                       used SSI technology and later used MSI technology. ICs were smaller, less expensive to
                                       produce, more rugged and reliable, faster in operations, dissipated less heat, and consumed
                                       less power than circuits built by wiring electronic components manually. Hence third-
                                       generation computers were more powerful, more reliable, less expensive, smaller, and
                                       cooler to operate than second-generation computers.

                                       Parallel advancements in storage technologies allowed construction of larger magnetic
                                       core based random access memory as well as larger capacity magnetic disks and tapes.
                                       Hence, third-generation computers typically had few megabytes (less than 5 Megabytes)
                                       of main memory and magnetic disks capable of storing few tens of megabytes of data per
                                       disk drive.
                                       On software front, standardization of high-level programming languages, timesharing
                                       operating systems, unbundling of software from hardware, and creation of an independent
                                       software industry happened during third generation. FORTRAN and COBOL were the most
                                       popular high-level programming languages in those days. American National Standards
                                       Institute (ANSI) standardized them in 1966 and 1968 respectively, and the standardized
                                       versions were called ANSI FORTRAN and ANSI COBOL. The idea was that as long as
                                       programmers follows these standards in program writing, a program could be run on any
                                       computer with an ANSI FORTRAN or ANSI COBOL compiler. Some more high-level




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