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Friday, August 26, 2011

computer history


An Illustrated History of Computers
Part 1
___________________________________

John Kopplin © 2002

The first computers were people! That is, electronic computers (and the earlier mechanical computers) were given this name because they performed the work that had previously been assigned to people. "Computer" was originally a job title: it was used to describe those human beings (predominantly women) whose job it was to perform the repetitive calculations required to compute such things as navigational tables, tide charts, and planetary positions for astronomical almanacs. Imagine you had a job where hour after hour, day after day, you were to do nothing but compute multiplications. Boredom would quickly set in, leading to carelessness, leading to mistakes. And even on your best days you wouldn't be producing answers very fast. Therefore, inventors have been searching for hundreds of years for a way to mechanize (that is, find a mechanism that can perform) this task.



This picture shows what were known as "counting tables" [photo courtesy IBM]



A typical computer operation back when computers were people.
The abacus was an early aid for mathematical computations. Its only value is that it aids the memory of the human performing the calculation. A skilled abacus operator can work on addition and subtraction problems at the speed of a person equipped with a hand calculator (multiplication and division are slower). The abacus is often wrongly attributed to China. In fact, the oldest surviving abacus was used in 300 B.C. by the Babylonians. The abacus is still in use today, principally in the far east. A modern abacus consists of rings that slide over rods, but the older one pictured below dates from the time when pebbles were used for counting (the word "calculus" comes from the Latin word for pebble).



A very old abacus



A more modern abacus. Note how the abacus is really just a representation of the human fingers: the 5 lower rings on each rod represent the 5 fingers and the 2 upper rings represent the 2 hands.
In 1617 an eccentric (some say mad) Scotsman named John Napier invented logarithms, which are a technology that allows multiplication to be performed via addition. The magic ingredient is the logarithm of each operand, which was originally obtained from a printed table. But Napier also invented an alternative to tables, where the logarithm values were carved on ivory sticks which are now called Napier's Bones.



An original set of Napier's Bones [photo courtesy IBM]



A more modern set of Napier's Bones
Napier's invention led directly to the slide rule, first built in England in 1632 and still in use in the 1960's by the NASA engineers of the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs which landed men on the moon.



A slide rule
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) made drawings of gear-driven calculating machines but apparently never built any.



A Leonardo da Vinci drawing showing gears arranged for computing
The first gear-driven calculating machine to actually be built was probably the calculating clock, so named by its inventor, the German professor Wilhelm Schickard in 1623. This device got little publicity because Schickard died soon afterward in the bubonic plague.



Schickard's Calculating Clock
In 1642 Blaise Pascal, at age 19, invented the Pascaline as an aid for his father who was a tax collector. Pascal built 50 of this gear-driven one-function calculator (it could only add) but couldn't sell many because of their exorbitant cost and because they really weren't that accurate (at that time it was not possible to fabricate gears with the required precision). Up until the present age when car dashboards went digital, the odometer portion of a car's speedometer used the very same mechanism as the Pascaline to increment the next wheel after each full revolution of the prior wheel. Pascal was a child prodigy. At the age of 12, he was discovered doing his version of Euclid's thirty-second proposition on the kitchen floor. Pascal went on to invent probability theory, the hydraulic press, and the syringe. Shown below is an 8 digit version of the Pascaline, and two views of a 6 digit version:



Pascal's Pascaline [photo © 2002 IEEE]



A 6 digit model for those who couldn't afford the 8 digit model



A Pascaline opened up so you can observe the gears and cylinders which rotated to display the numerical result
Click on the "Next" hyperlink below to read about the punched card system that was developed for looms for later applied to the U.S. census and then to computers...


Saturday, June 18, 2011

PEBGUINS DO TO KEEP THEM WARM


AMAZING CYCKING


Thursday, June 16, 2011

Burj Khalifa - The world's tallest skyscraper


Burj Khalifa - The world

Burj Khalifa formerly known as Burj Dubai, is the world's tallest skyscraper located in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and the tallest man-made structure ever built, at 828 m (2,717 ft).
Views: 7987
  • Currently 3.57/5
Rating: 3.6/5 (7 votes cast)
Provided by: Murtaza ali Shakruwala

Metal Sculpture - Love

Metal Sculpture - Love
In the Georgian spa town of Batumi, a new attraction - a metal sculpture of Love. It is noteworthy that the sculpture ... mobile. Seven meter schematic figures of men and women spinning move toward each other and merge together.
Views: 3692
  • Currently 3.50/5
Rating: 3.5/5 (4 votes cast)
Provided by: Sabrina

WORLDS BIGGEST THINGS


WORLDS MOST AMAZING VIDEO


Wednesday, June 15, 2011

GIANT SNAKE


UFO ALLIEN SATTELITE

Aliens



Aliens

Area 51, located on Groom Lake in southern Nevada (c.), was founded in 1955 by the U.S. Air Force to develop and test new aircrafts such as the U-2 Spy Plane, A-12 Blackbird and F-117 Stealth Fighter. The secretive nature of the military base, combined with its classified aircraft research, helped conspiracy theorists imagine an installation filled with time-travel experimentation, UFO coverups and alien autopsies.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

SLAP YOU HAVE NEVER SEEN

amazing video



amazing


This is a rare two headed snake found by a farmer in a village in Alicante, Spain. The chances of a two headed snake surviving in the wild is very slim as both would often fight over which head will swallow the prey as well as difficulty in deciding which direction to go.


Carlos Slim Helu
Mexico
$74 billion

World No.1 Rich Bastard



William Gates III 
USA
$56 billion

World No.2 Rich Bastard


Warren Buffet 
USA
$50 billion

World No.3 Rich Bastard


Billionaires Under 35 are

1. Mark Zuckerberg
$13.5 billion
Facebook
USA
26yo - Single
1. Dustin Moskovitz
$2.7 billion
Facebook
USA
26yo - Single
3. Prince Albert von Thurn und Taxis
$2.0 billion
inherited, diversified
Germany
27yo - Single
4. Scott Duncan
$3.1 billion
inherited (pipelines)
USA
28yo - Single
4. Eduardo Saverin
$1.6 billion
Facebook
USA
28yo - Single
6. Yang Huiyan
$4.1 billion
inherited (real estate)
China
29yo - Married
7. Fahd Hariri
$1.5 billion
inherited (construction, investments)
Lebanon
30yo - Single
8. Sean Parker
$1.6 billion
Facebook
USA
31yo - Single
9. Aymin Hariri
$1.5 billion
inherited (construction, investments)
Lebanon
32yo - Married, 1 child
10. Yoshikazu Tanaka
$2.2 billion
social networking (Gree)
Japan
34yo - Single

must see

Crocodiles eats man - full story:





Often people come to google these keywords for example crocodile attack,crocodile eats man or man eating crocodile. It hints their eager desire to know more about man eating crocs. They might also want to know whether any live action captured by any one in form of video or a picture. Now is that weird? Recently I watched a movie called “Black Water,” which is Australian based crocodile movie thriller. Personally I liked the plot its seriously alarming about the fact that we should be really careful before we plan adventures like that. You can check its trailer here.





Now coming back to the topic. Recently I got an email by a friend with this subject “Dubai Electricity and Water Authority apparently found something in Hatta.” I didn't expect a bit what was inside which was quite shocking. I would say again its not for faint-hearted people, so close it right away.

Moreover, there were no details attached to this email so any one who knows about this incident, feel free to comment and let other readers know about it.


So here are Man eating crocodile pictures.


Crocodile Attack Picture – Crocodile eats man 1
Crocodile eats man


They hunt him down and kicked his ass look what they found inside his belly.

Crocodile Attack Picture – Crocodile eats man 2

Man eating Crocodile


Crocodile Attack Picture – Crocodile eats man 3


Crocodile eats man

Here is another incident took place in New Guinea.


Dr. Rick Feinberg's research on Buka Island, Papua New Guinea can take unexpected turns. Here in 2000 he captured this view of a saltwater crocodile that recently had eaten two men. The victim's relatives shot crocy and removed the remaining human remains for proper burial. Image: R. Feinberg


Crocodile Attack Picture – Crocodile eats man 4
Man eating crocodile

The mighty Incan Empire of South America



The mighty Incan Empire of South America



The mighty Incan Empire of South America flourished between 1200 and 1535 AD. They developed drainage systems and canals to expand their crops, and built stone cities atop steep mountains such as Machu Picchu (above) without ever inventing the wheel. Despite their vast achievements, the Incan Empire with its 40,000 manned army was no match for 180 Spanish conquistadors armed with advanced weapons and smallpox.

The Legend of El Dorado

The Legend of El Dorado

The Legend of El Dorado

The Legend of El Dorado originates from the Muisca, who lived in the modern country of Colombia from 1000 to 1538 AD. In a ritual ceremony for their goddess, the tribal chief would cover himself in gold dust and jump into a lake as an offering. This spawned the legend of a lost golden city, which led Spanish conquistadors on a wild goose chase to nowhere.

Sphinx of Giza, Egypt



Sphinx of Giza, Egypt

Another Egyptian wonder, the Sphinx of Giza has the body of a lion and the head of a Pharaoh, believed by most to be that of king Khafre. It was carved from soft limestone, and has been slowly falling apart over the years. A popular theory of the missing nose claims Napoleon's soldiers shot it off with a cannon in 1798, but early sketches discovered of the Sphinx without a nose predate Napoleon's rampage.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

KARACHI INCIDENT



KARACHI: Police on Saturday said they were seeking to arrest another four paramilitary personnel over the killing of an unarmed man in a public park.
Two soldiers from the Rangers paramilitary force, Shahid Zafar and Muhammed Afzal, were on Friday remanded into police custody for five days over the killing which was captured on camera and broadcast repeatedly on television.
“We have sent a request to Rangers officials to hand over four of the remaining soldiers seen in the video,” said a senior police investigator on condition of anonymity.
Security forces shot dead Sarfaraz Shah, 22, in Karachi on Wednesday, accusing him of robbery, but his family has demanded justice, insisting he was an innocent student passing the time of day.
Widely viewed footage showed a clean-shaven man wearing black trousers and a navy shirt crying and pleading for his life as a soldier cocks his rifle at his neck, then shoots him twice in the hand and thigh in a local park.
As his blood pours onto the ground, the man begs for help from soldiers — who appear to do nothing but watch — until he falls unconscious.
Police said they had also taken custody of Afsar Khan, a man in plainclothes who dragged the victim over to the paramilitary soldiers and later filed a criminal case, accusing Shah of robbery.
Another local police official said taking custody of the four soldiers was essential to an investigation ordered by the government and the Supreme Court.
A Rangers spokesman said he was unaware that police were seeking custody of the other four soldiers who were at the scene.
“I don’t know about it, but we’ll hand them over if such a request comes our way,” spokesman Bilal Farooq said.
Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry on Friday directed the government to remove from their posts Major General Aijaz Chaudhry, head of the paramilitary in Sindh province, and Sindh police chief Fayyaz Leghari.
The victim’s brother Salik Shah, a local reporter, said the family wanted to see everyone involved face justice.