HISTORY OF COMPUTER — May 26, 2015

HISTORY OF COMPUTER

Computers
1939

Hewlett and Packard in the garage workshop courtesy HP Archives
Hewlett-Packard is Founded. David Packard and Bill Hewlett found Hewlett-Packard in a Palo Alto, California garage. Their first product was the HP 200A Audio Oscillator, which rapidly becomes a popular piece of test equipment for engineers. Walt Disney Pictures ordered eight of the 200B model to use as sound effects generators for the 1940 movie “Fantasia.”
1940

The Complex Number Calculator (CNC)
The Complex Number Calculator (CNC) is completed. In 1939, BELL Telephone Laboratories completed this calculator, designed by researcher George Stibitz. In 1940, Stibitz demonstrated the CNC at an American Mathematical Society conference held at Dartmouth College. Stibitz stunned the group by performing calculations remotely on the CNC (located in New York City) using a Teletype connected via special telephone lines. This is considered to be the first demonstration of remote access computing.
1941

The Zuse Z3 Computer
Konrad Zuse finishes the Z3 computer. The Z3 was an early computer built by German engineer Konrad Zuse working in complete isolation from developments elsewhere. Using 2,300 relays, the Z3 used floating point binary arithmetic and had a 22-bit word length. The original Z3 was destroyed in a bombing raid of Berlin in late 1943. However, Zuse later supervised a reconstruction of the Z3 in the 1960s which is currently on display at the Deutsches Museum in Munich.

Bombe replica, Bletchley Park, U.K.
The first Bombe is completed. Based partly on the design of the Polish “Bomba,” a mechanical means of decrypting Nazi military communications during WWII, the British Bombe design was greatly influenced by the work of computer pioneer Alan Turing and others. Many bombes were built. Together they dramatically improved the intelligence gathering and processing capabilities of Allied forces. [Computers]
1942

The Atanasoff-Berry Computer
The Atanasoff-Berry Computer (ABC) is completed. After successfully demonstrating a proof-of-concept prototype in 1939, Atanasoff received funds to build the full-scale machine. Built at Iowa State College (now University), the ABC was designed and built by Professor John Vincent Atanasoff and graduate student Cliff Berry between 1939 and 1942. The ABC was at the center of a patent dispute relating to the invention of the computer, which was resolved in 1973 when it was shown that ENIAC co-designer John Mauchly had come to examine the ABC shortly after it became functional.

The legal result was a landmark: Atanasoff was declared the originator of several basic computer ideas, but the computer as a concept was declared un-patentable and thus was freely open to all. This result has been referred to as the “dis-invention of the computer.” A full-scale reconstruction of the ABC was completed in 1997 and proved that the ABC machine functioned as Atanasoff had claimed.
1943

Whirlwind installation at MIT

Project Whirlwind begins. During World War II, the U.S. Navy approached the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) about building a flight simulator to train bomber crews. The team first built a large analog computer, but found it inaccurate and inflexible. After designers saw a demonstration of the ENIAC computer, they decided on building a digital computer. By the time the Whirlwind was completed in 1951, the Navy had lost interest in the project, though the U.S. Air Force would eventually support the project which would influence the design of the SAGE program.

George Stibitz circa 1940
The Relay Interpolator is completed. The U.S. Army asked BELL Labs to design a machine to assist in testing its M-9 Gun Director. Bell Labs mathematician George Stibitz recommended using a relay-based calculator for the project. The result was the Relay Interpolator, later called the Bell Labs Model II. The Relay Interpolator used 440 relays and since it was programmable by paper tape, it was used for other applications following the war.
1944

Harvard Mark-I in use, 1944
Harvard Mark-1 is completed. Conceived by Harvard professor Howard Aiken, and designed and built by IBM, the Harvard Mark-1 was a room-sized, relay-based calculator. The machine had a fifty-foot long camshaft that synchronized the machine’s thousands of component parts. The Mark-1 was used to produce mathematical tables but was soon superseded by stored program computers.

The Colossus at Work At Bletchley Park
The first Colossus is operational at Bletchley Park. Designed by British engineer Tommy Flowers, the Colossus was designed to break the complex Lorenz ciphers used by the Nazis during WWII. A total of ten Colossi were delivered to Bletchley, each using 1,500 vacuum tubes and a series of pulleys transported continuous rolls of punched paper tape containing possible solutions to a particular code. Colossus reduced the time to break Lorenz messages from weeks to hours. The machine’s existence was not made public until the 1970s
1945

John von Neumann
John von Neumann wrote “First Draft of a Report on the EDVAC” in which he outlined the architecture of a stored-program computer. Electronic storage of programming information and data eliminated the need for the more clumsy methods of programming, such as punched paper tape — a concept that has characterized mainstream computer development since 1945. Hungarian-born von Neumann demonstrated prodigious expertise in hydrodynamics, ballistics, meteorology, game theory, statistics, and the use of mechanical devices for computation. After the war, he concentrated on the development of Princeton´s Institute for Advanced Studies computer and its copies around the world.
1946

ENIAC
In February, the public got its first glimpse of the ENIAC, a machine built by John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert that improved by 1,000 times on the speed of its contemporaries.
Start of project: 1943
Completed: 1946
Programmed: plug board and switches
Speed: 5,000 operations per second
Input/output: cards, lights, switches, plugs
Floor space: 1,000 square feet
Project leaders: John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert.

AVIDAC
An inspiring summer school on computing at the University of Pennsylvania´s Moore School of Electrical Engineering stimulated construction of stored-program computers at universities and research institutions. This free, public set of lectures inspired the EDSAC, BINAC, and, later, IAS machine clones like the AVIDAC. Here, Warren Kelleher completes the wiring of the arithmetic unit components of the AVIDAC at Argonne National Laboratory. Robert Dennis installs the inter-unit wiring as James Woody Jr. adjusts the deflection control circuits of the memory unit.
1948

IBM´s SSEC
IBM´s Selective Sequence Electronic Calculator computed scientific data in public display near the company´s Manhattan headquarters. Before its decommissioning in 1952, the SSEC produced the moon-position tables used for plotting the course of the 1969 Apollo flight to the moon.
Speed: 50 multiplications per second
Input/output: cards, punched tape
Memory type: punched tape, vacuum tubes, relays
Technology: 20,000 relays, 12,500 vacuum tubes
Floor space: 25 feet by 40 feet
Project leader: Wallace Eckert
1949

Wilkes with the EDSAC
Maurice Wilkes assembled the EDSAC, the first practical stored-program computer, at Cambridge University. His ideas grew out of the Moore School lectures he had attended three years earlier.

For programming the EDSAC, Wilkes established a library of short programs called subroutines stored on punched paper tapes.
Technology: vacuum tubes
Memory: 1K words, 17 bits, mercury delay line
Speed: 714 operations per second

Manchester Mark I
The Manchester Mark I computer functioned as a complete system using the Williams tube for memory. This University machine became the prototype for Ferranti Corp.´s first computer.
Start of project: 1947
Completed: 1949
Add time: 1.8 microseconds
Input/output: paper tape, teleprinter, switches
Memory size: 128 + 1024 40-digit words
Memory type: cathode ray tube, magnetic drum
Technology: 1,300 vacuum tubes
Floor space: medium room
Project leaders: Frederick Williams and Tom Kilburn
1950

ERA 1101 drum memory
Engineering Research Associates of Minneapolis built the ERA 1101, the first commercially produced computer; the company´s first customer was the U.S. Navy. It held 1 million bits on its magnetic drum, the earliest magnetic storage devices. Drums registered information as magnetic pulses in tracks around a metal cylinder. Read/write heads both recorded and recovered the data. Drums eventually stored as many as 4,000 words and retrieved any one of them in as little as five-thousandths of a second.

SEAC
The National Bureau of Standards constructed the SEAC (Standards Eastern Automatic Computer) in Washington as a laboratory for testing components and systems for setting computer standards. The SEAC was the first computer to use all-diode logic, a technology more reliable than vacuum tubes, and the first stored-program computer completed in the United States. Magnetic tape in the external storage units (shown on the right of this photo) stored programming information, coded subroutines, numerical data, and output.

SWAC
The National Bureau of Standards completed its SWAC (Standards Western Automatic Computer) at the Institute for Numerical Analysis in Los Angeles. Rather than testing components like its companion, the SEAC, the SWAC had an objective of computing using already-developed technology.

Pilot ACE
Alan Turing´s philosophy directed design of Britain´s Pilot ACE at the National Physical Laboratory. “We are trying to build a machine to do all kinds of different things simply by programming rather than by the addition of extra apparatus,” Turing said at a symposium on large-scale digital calculating machinery in 1947 in Cambridge, Mass.
Start of project: 1948
Completed: 1950
Add time: 1.8 microseconds
Input/output: cards
Memory size: 352 32-digit words
Memory type: delay lines
Technology: 800 vacuum tubes
Floor space: 12 square feet
Project leader: J. H. Wilkinson
1951

MIT Whirlwind
MIT´s Whirlwind debuted on Edward R. Murrow´s “See It Now” television series. Project director Jay Forrester described the computer as a “reliable operating system,” running 35 hours a week at 90-percent utility using an electrostatic tube memory.
Start of project: 1945
Completed: 1951
Add time: Approx. 16 microseconds
Input/output: cathode ray tube, paper tape, magnetic tape
Memory size: 2048 16-digit words
Memory type: cathode ray tube, magnetic drum, tape (1953 – core memory)
Technology: 4,500 vacuum tubes, 14,800 diodes
Floor space: 3,100 square feet
Project leaders: Jay Forrester and Robert Everett

LEO
England´s first commercial computer, the Lyons Electronic Office, solved clerical problems. The president of Lyons Tea Co. had the computer, modeled after the EDSAC, built to solve the problem of daily scheduling production and delivery of cakes to the Lyons tea shops. After the success of the first LEO, Lyons went into business manufacturing computers to meet the growing need for data processing systems.

UNIVAC I
The UNIVAC I delivered to the U.S. Census Bureau was the first commercial computer to attract widespread public attention. Although manufactured by Remington Rand, the machine often was mistakenly referred to as the “IBM UNIVAC.” Remington Rand eventually sold 46 machines at more than $1 million each.F.O.B. factory $750,000 plus $185,000 for a high speed printer.
Speed: 1,905 operations per second
Input/output: magnetic tape, unityper, printer
Memory size: 1,000 12-digit words in delay lines
Memory type: delay lines, magnetic tape
Technology: serial vacuum tubes, delay lines, magnetic tape
Floor space: 943 cubic feet
Cost: F.O.B. factory $750,000 plus $185,000 for a high speed printer
Project leaders: J. Presper Eckert and John Mauchly
1952

Los Alamos MANIAC
John von Neumann´s IAS computer became operational at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton, N.J. Contract obliged the builders to share their designs with other research institutes. This resulted in a number of clones: the MANIAC at Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, the ILLIAC at the University of Illinois, the Johnniac at Rand Corp., the SILLIAC in Australia, and others.
1953

IBM 701
IBM shipped its first electronic computer, the 701. During three years of production, IBM sold 19 machines to research laboratories, aircraft companies, and the federal government.
1954

IBM 650
The IBM 650 magnetic drum calculator established itself as the first mass-produced computer, with the company selling 450 in one year. Spinning at 12,500 rpm, the 650´s magnetic data-storage drum allowed much faster access to stored material than drum memory machines.
1956

MIT TX0
MIT researchers built the TX-0, the first general-purpose, programmable computer built with transistors. For easy replacement, designers placed each transistor circuit inside a “bottle,” similar to a vacuum tube. Constructed at MIT´s Lincoln Laboratory, the TX-0 moved to the MIT Research Laboratory of Electronics, where it hosted some early imaginative tests of programming, including a Western movie shown on TV, 3-D tic-tac-toe, and a maze in which mouse found martinis and became increasingly inebriated.
1958

SAGE operator station
SAGE — Semi-Automatic Ground Environment — linked hundreds of radar stations in the United States and CANADA in the first large-scale computer communications network. An operator directed actions by touching a light gun to the screen.

The air defense system operated on the AN/FSQ-7 computer (known as Whirlwind II during its development at MIT) as its central computer. Each computer used a full megawatt of power to drive its 55,000 vacuum tubes, 175,000 diodes and 13,000 transistors.

Japan´s NEC built the country´s first electronic computer, the NEAC 1101.
1959

IBM STRETCH
IBM´s 7000 series mainframes were the company´s first transistorized computers. At the top of the line of computers — all of which emerged significantly faster and more dependable than vacuum tube machines — sat the 7030, also known as the “Stretch.” Nine of the computers, which featured a 64-bit word and other innovations, were sold to national laboratories and other scientific users. L. R. Johnson first used the term “architecture” in describing the Stretch.
1960

DEC PDP-1
The precursor to the minicomputer, DEC´s PDP-1 sold for $120,000. One of 50 built, the average PDP-1 included with a cathode ray tube graphic display, needed no air conditioning and required only one operator. It´s large scope intrigued early hackers at MIT, who wrote the first computerized video game, SpaceWar!, for it. The SpaceWar! creators then used the game as a standard demonstration on all 50 computers.
1961

IBM 1401
According to Datamation magazine, IBM had an 81.2-percent share of the computer market in 1961, the year in which it introduced the 1400 Series. The 1401 mainframe, the first in the series, replaced the vacuum tube with smaller, more reliable transistors and used a magnetic core memory.

Demand called for more than 12,000 of the 1401 computers, and the machine´s success made a strong case for using general-purpose computers rather than specialized systems.
1962

Wes Clark with LINC
The LINC (Laboratory Instrumentation Computer) offered the first real time laboratory data processing. Designed by Wesley Clark at Lincoln Laboratories, Digital Equipment Corp. later commercialized it as the LINC-8.

Research faculty came to a workshop at MIT to build their own machines, most of which they used in biomedical studies. DEC supplied components.
1964

IBM System/360
IBM announced the System/360, a family of six mutually compatible computers and 40 peripherals that could work together. The initial investment of $5 billion was quickly returned as orders for the system climbed to 1,000 per month within two years. At the time IBM released the System/360, the company was making a transition from discrete transistors to integrated circuits, and its major source of revenue moved from punched-card equipment to electronic computer systems.

CDC 6600
CDC´s 6600 supercomputer, designed by Seymour Cray, performed up to 3 million instructions per second — a processing speed three times faster than that of its closest competitor, the IBM Stretch. The 6600 retained the distinction of being the fastest computer in the world until surpassed by its successor, the CDC 7600, in 1968. Part of the speed came from the computer´s design, which had 10 small computers, known as peripheral processors, funneling data to a large central processing unit.
1965

DEC PDP-8
Digital Equipment Corp. introduced the PDP-8, the first commercially successful minicomputer. The PDP-8 sold for $18,000, one-fifth the price of a small IBM 360 mainframe. The speed, small size, and reasonable cost enabled the PDP-8 to go into thousands of manufacturing plants, small businesses, and scientific laboratories.
1966

ILLIAC IV
The Department of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency contracted with the University of Illinois to build a large parallel processing computer, the ILLIAC IV, which did not operate until 1972 at NASA´s Ames Research Center. The first large-scale array computer, the ILLIAC IV achieved a computation speed of 200 million instructions per second, about 300 million operations per second, and 1 billion bits per second of I/O transfer via a unique combination of parallel architecture and the overlapping or “pipe-lining” structure of its 64 processing elements.

This photograph shows one of the ILLIAC´s 13 Burroughs disks, the debugging computer, the central unit, and the processing unit cabinet with a processing element.

HP-2115
Hewlett-Packard entered the general purpose computer business with its HP-2115 for computation, offering a computational power formerly found only in much larger computers. It supported a wide variety of languages, among them BASIC, ALGOL, and FORTRAN.
1968

Ed deCastro and Nova
Data General Corp., started by a group of engineers that had left Digital Equipment Corp., introduced the Nova, with 32 kilobytes of memory, for $8,000.

In the photograph, Ed deCastro, president and founder of Data General, sits with a Nova minicomputer. The simple architecture of the Nova instruction set inspired Steve Wozniak´s Apple I board eight years later.

Apollo Guidance Computer
The Apollo Guidance Computer made its debut orbiting the Earth on Apollo 7. A year later, it steered Apollo 11 to the lunar surface. Astronauts communicated with the computer by punching two-digit codes and the appropriate syntactic category into the display and keyboard unit.
1971

Kenbak-1
The Kenbak-1, the first personal computer, advertised for $750 in Scientific American. Designed by John V. Blankenbaker using standard medium-scale and small-scale integrated circuits, the Kenbak-1 relied on switches for input and lights for output from its 256-byte memory. In 1973, after selling only 40 machines, Kenbak Corp. closed its doors.
1972

HP-35
Hewlett-Packard announced the HP-35 as “a fast, extremely accurate electronic slide rule” with a solid-state memory similar to that of a computer. The HP-35 distinguished itself from its competitors by its ability to perform a broad variety of logarithmic and trigonometric functions, to store more intermediate solutions for later use, and to accept and display entries in a form similar to standard scientific notation.
1973

TV Typewriter
The TV Typewriter, designed by Don Lancaster, provided the first display of alphanumeric information on an ordinary television set. It used $120 worth of electronics components, as outlined in the September 1973 issue of Radio Electronics. The original design included two memory boards and could generate and store 512 characters as 16 lines of 32 characters. A 90-minute cassette tape provided supplementary storage for about 100 pages of text.

Micral
The Micral was the earliest commercial, non-kit personal computer based on a micro-processor, the Intel 8008. Thi Truong developed the computer and Philippe Kahn the software. Truong, founder and president of the French company R2E, created the Micral as a replacement for minicomputers in situations that didn´t require high performance. Selling for $1,750, the Micral never penetrated the U.S. market. In 1979, Truong sold Micral to Bull.
1974

Xerox Alto
Researchers at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center designed the Alto — the first work station with a built-in mouse for input. The Alto stored several files simultaneously in windows, offered menus and icons, and could link to a local area network. Although Xerox never sold the Alto commercially, it gave a number of them to universities. Engineers later incorporated its features into work stations and personal computers.

Scelbi 8H
Scelbi advertised its 8H computer, the first commercially advertised U.S. computer based on a microprocessor, Intel´s 8008. Scelbi aimed the 8H, available both in kit form and fully assembled, at scientific, electronic, and biological applications. It had 4 kilobytes of internal memory and a cassette tape, with both teletype and oscilloscope interfaces. In 1975, Scelbi introduced the 8B version with 16 kilobytes of memory for the business market. The company sold about 200 machines, losing $500 per unit.
1975

MITS Altair
The January edition of Popular Electronics featured the Altair 8800 computer kit, based on Intel´s 8080 microprocessor, on its cover. Within weeks of the computer´s debut, customers inundated the manufacturing company, MITS, with orders. Bill Gates and Paul Allen licensed BASIC as the software language for the Altair. Ed Roberts invented the 8800 — which sold for $297, or $395 with a case — and coined the term “personal computer.” The machine came with 256 bytes of memory (expandable to 64K) and an open 100-line bus structure that evolved into the S-100 standard. In 1977, MITS sold out to Pertec, which continued producing Altairs through 1978.

Felsenstein´s VDM
The visual display module (VDM) prototype, designed in 1975 by Lee Felsenstein, marked the first implementation of a memory-mapped alphanumeric video display for personal computers. Introduced at the Altair Convention in Albuquerque in March 1976, the visual display module allowed use of personal computers for interactive games.

Tandem-16
Tandem computers tailored its Tandem-16, the first fault-tolerant computer, for online transaction processing. The banking industry rushed to adopt the machine, built to run during repair or expansion.
1976

Apple-1, signed by Steve Wozniak
Steve Wozniak, a young American electronics expert, designed the Apple-1, a single-board computer for hobbyists. With an order for 50 assembled systems from Mountain View, California computer store The Byte Shop in hand, he and best friend Steve Jobs started a new company, naming it Apple Computer, Inc. In all, about 200 of the boards were sold before Apple announced the follow-on Apple II a year later as a ready-to-use computer for consumers, a model which sold in the millions.

Cray I
The Cray I made its name as the first commercially successful vector processor. The fastest machine of its day, its speed came partly from its shape, a C, which reduced the length of wires and thus the time signals needed to travel across them.
Project started: 1972
Project completed: 1976
Speed: 166 million floating-point operations per second
Size: 58 cubic feet
Weight: 5,300 lbs.
Technology: Integrated circuit
Clock rate: 83 million cycles per second
Word length: 64-bit words
Instruction set: 128 instructions
1977

Commodore PET
The Commodore PET (Personal Electronic Transactor) — the first of several personal computers released in 1977 — came fully assembled and was straightforward to operate, with either 4 or 8 kilobytes of memory, two built-in cassette drives, and a membrane “chiclet” keyboard.

Apple II
The Apple II became an instant success when released in 1977 with its printed circuit motherboard, switching power supply, keyboard, case assembly, manual, game paddles, A/C powercord, and cassette tape with the computer game “Breakout.” When hooked up to a color television set, the Apple II produced brilliant color graphics.

TRS-80
In the first month after its release, Tandy Radio Shack´s first desktop computer — the TRS-80 — sold 10,000 units, well more than the company´s projected sales of 3,000 units for one year. Priced at $599.95, the machine included a Z80 based microprocessor, a video display, 4 kilobytes of memory, BASIC, cassette storage, and easy-to-understand manuals that assumed no prior knowledge on the part of the consumer.
1978

VAX 11/780
The VAX 11/780 from Digital Equipment Corp. featured the ability to address up to 4.3 gigabytes of virtual memory, providing hundreds of times the capacity of most minicomputers.
1979

Advertisment for Atari 400 and 800 computers
Atari introduces the Model 400 and 800 Computer. Shortly after delivery of the Atari VCS game console, Atari designed two microcomputers with game capabilities: the Model 400 and Model 800. The two machines were built with the idea that the 400 would serve primarily as a game console while the 800 would be more of a home computer. Both sold well, though they had technical and marketing problems, and faced strong competition from the Apple II, Commodore PET, and TRS-80 computers.
1981
IBM introduced its PC, igniting a fast growth of the personal computer market. The first PC ran on a 4.77 MHz Intel 8088 microprocessor and used Microsoft´s MS-DOS operating system.

Osborne I
Adam Osborne completed the first portable computer, the Osborne I, which weighed 24 pounds and cost $1,795. The price made the machine especially attractive, as it included software worth about $1,500. The machine featured a 5-inch display, 64 kilobytes of memory, a modem, and two 5 1/4-inch floppy disk drives.

In April 1981, Byte Magazine Editor in Chief Chris Morgan mentioned the Osborne I in an article on “Future Trends in Personal Computing.” He wrote: “I recently had an opportunity to see the Osborne I in action. I was impressed with it´s compactness: it will fit under an airplane seat. (Adam Osborne is currently seeking approval from the FAA to operate the unit on board a plane.) One quibble: the screen may be too small for some people´s taste.”

Apollo DN100
Apollo Computer unveiled the first work station, its DN100, offering more power than some minicomputers at a fraction of the price. Apollo Computer and Sun Microsystems, another early entrant in the work station market, optimized their machines to run the computer-intensive graphics programs common in engineering.
1982
The Cray XMP, first produced in this year, almost doubled the operating speed of competing machines with a parallel processing system that ran at 420 million floating-point operations per second, or megaflops. Arranging two Crays to work together on different parts of the same problem achieved the faster speed. Defense and scientific research institutes also heavily used Crays.

Early Publicity still for the Commodore 64
Commodore introduces the Commodore 64. The C64, as it was better known, sold for $595, came with 64KB of RAM and featured impressive graphics. Thousands of software titles were released over the lifespan of the C64. By the time the C64 was discontinued in 1993, it had sold more than 22 million units and is recognized by the 2006 Guinness Book of World Records as the greatest selling single computer model of all time.
1983
Apple introduced its Lisa. The first personal computer with a graphical user interface, its development was central in the move to such systems for personal computers. The Lisa´s sloth and high price ($10,000) led to its ultimate failure.

The Lisa ran on a Motorola 68000 microprocessor and came equipped with 1 megabyte of RAM, a 12-inch black-and-white monitor, dual 5 1/4-inch floppy disk drives and a 5 megabyte Profile hard drive. The Xerox Star — which included a system called Smalltalk that involved a mouse, windows, and pop-up menus — inspired the Lisa´s designers.

Compaq PC clone
Compaq Computer Corp. introduced first PC clone that used the same software as the IBM PC. With the success of the clone, Compaq recorded first-year sales of $111 million, the most ever by an American business in a single year.

With the introduction of its PC clone, Compaq launched a market for IBM-compatible computers that by 1996 had achieved a 83-percent share of the personal computer market. Designers reverse-engineered the Compaq clone, giving it nearly 100-percent compatibility with the IBM.
1984

Apple Macintosh
Apple Computer launched the Macintosh, the first successful mouse-driven computer with a graphic user interface, with a single $1.5 million commercial during the 1984 Super Bowl. Based on the Motorola 68000 microprocessor, the Macintosh included many of the Lisa´s features at a much more affordable price: $2,500.

Apple´s commercial played on the theme of George Orwell´s “1984” and featured the destruction of Big Brother with the power of personal computing found in a Macintosh. Applications that came as part of the package included MacPaint, which made use of the mouse, and MacWrite, which demonstrated WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) word processing.

IBM PC Jr.
IBM released its PC Jr. and PC-AT. The PC Jr. failed, but the PC-AT, several times faster than original PC and based on the Intel 80286 chip, claimed success with its notable increases in performance and storage capacity, all for about $4,000. It also included more RAM and accommodated high-density 1.2-megabyte 5 1/4-inch floppy disks.
1985

Amiga 1000 with Seiko Music Keyboard
The Amiga 1000 is released. Commodore’s Amiga 1000 sold for $1,295 dollars (without monitor) and had audio and video capabilities beyond those found in most other personal computers. It developed a very loyal following and add-on components allowed it to be upgraded easily. The inside of the case is engraved with the signatures of the Amiga designers, including Jay Miner as well as the paw print of his dog Mitchy.
1986

Connection Machine
Daniel Hillis of Thinking Machines Corp. moved artificial intelligence a step forward when he developed the controversial concept of massive parallelism in the Connection Machine. The machine used up to 65,536 processors and could complete several billion operations per second. Each processor had its own small memory linked with others through a flexible network that users could alter by reprogramming rather than rewiring.

The machine´s system of connections and switches let processors broadcast information and requests for help to other processors in a simulation of brainlike associative recall. Using this system, the machine could work faster than any other at the time on a problem that could be parceled out among the many processors.

IBM and MIPS released the first RISC-based workstations, the PC/RT and R2000-based systems. Reduced instruction set computers grew out of the observation that the simplest 20 percent of a computer´s instruction set does 80 percent of the work, including most base operations such as add, load from memory, and store in memory.

The IBM PC-RT had 1 megabyte of RAM, a 1.2-megabyte floppy disk drive, and a 40-megabyte hard drive. It performed 2 million instructions per second, but other RISC-based computers worked significantly faster.
1987

IBM PS/2
IBM introduced its PS/2 machines, which made the 3 1/2-inch floppy disk drive and video graphics array standard for IBM computers. The first IBMs to include Intel´s 80386 chip, the company had shipped more than 1 million units by the end of the year. IBM released a new operating system, OS/2, at the same time, allowing the use of a mouse with IBMs for the first time.
1988

NeXT
Apple cofounder Steve Jobs, who left Apple to form his own company, unveiled the NeXT. The computer he created failed but was recognized as an important innovation. At a base price of $6,500, the NeXT ran too slowly to be popular.

The significance of the NeXT rested in its place as the first personal computer to incorporate a drive for an optical storage disk, a built-in digital signal processor that allowed voice recognition, and object-oriented languages to simplify programming. The NeXT offered Motorola 68030 microprocessors, 8 megabytes of RAM, and a 256-megabyte read/write optical disk storage.

Education in Pakistani Culture —

Education in Pakistani Culture

Education system is considered backbone of a country. If a country with good educational system it must be with good cultural values in roots. Education systems vary society to society. In every social system education play a very important role to take that nation on peek. So the biggest agenda of every developed nation to provide better schooling and best education system.

Government Primary School in Pakistan

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If we talked about our educational culture we will diffidently get confused. Because as we all know have a variety of systems although our slogan as a nation is HUM AIK HAIN. But actually the ruling power of our country divided us in this so called education system. We have a TAAT school system where students get education sitting on TAATS; we have English and Urdu medium Government schools. Then we have MUDRSSSAs where just Islamic education delivered to students. Then comes private English medium schools that copied total western style of education. When children belonging to all these educational institutes comes out what will happen? Are not they will totally different from each other? Some of them feel proud while some of them feel complex. Another bad thing that is the syllabus, the syllabus taught in schools and collages is not our society’s need. What we taught in school is economics, MBA, fine arts, communication, computer and many other subjects that are not real need of the society. Because everyone cannot get white collared job after getting even 16 years of education, as our economic situation is not stabled. No doubt importance of these subjects is on the place of it. But we should keep in mind that we are a developing nation. And a country where schools are being used for tether animals in the schools ground what will be the future of the nation.

If we see the education culture history of developed nation the first and foremost thing is there is a same education system for all students. And they provide that kind of education that is according to their social need of the day. If we see the history there was a time when china was asked by the world a closed door nation. It means china made its development by cutting off with the whole world. And now china is a world power, whole world asserts that china do a great job for gaining its current position. They don’t blindly follow the western culture as we are doing. We get inspiration from west in every bad culture that not even meet with our Islamic values, and why we don’t follow the positive things of west. Due to the emerging false traditions in our culture of education we are slaves of the west.

Possible solution to refine of our education system is firstly Government should take strong steps to make the whole education system same. Then come the need to introduced technical and vocational courses for the students. History of Islam and other Islamic education should teach in institutions along with the courses that would help full in future to find a good job for students. On the other hand when education system will be same for all a wind of cooperation comes in society. The need of tolerance in society is also a matter, when everyone will satisfied then problems will automatically reduced. Education culture is a base for a society. It can take to a nation on the peek or it may lay down due to wrong cultures adopted in education system. Just need to be care of institutions, just with the increased numbering of institution system can’t change. Government’s responsibility doesn’t end here. Teacher provides to Government institution and strictly asked them to teach in a right way. So, in this way we can change our destiny as a nation.


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Civic Education; Important For Development — May 19, 2015

Civic Education; Important For Development

Civic education means sense of some basic practices to be a sensible citizen of society. Civic education is the need of today, and it is very crucial to make a country developed. Countries having strong civic sense are more powerful and influential both in economic and social standards.

equal rights

Educational institutions of Pakistan and many other Asian countries focus mainly on academic qualification. Although civic sense is equally important and needs surveillance of authorities. Many issues come under civics; first and foremost is keep your surroundings clean.The second major threat to Pakistan is from pollution. People from every class, age are seen doing this activity of throwing garbage and it shows lack of civic sense clearly. Every street, road or vacant plot is filled with litter and there is no proper way of wasting it. Schools, college, university going students are also involved in this unethical act in spite of being literate.

walk safely

Secondly, following traffic signals is the allegiance to avoid any bad consequences. But youngsters especially feel so proud in breaking signals and keeping others life in jeopardy as well as their own. Traffic rules are for the well-being ofsociety, but people didn’t realize its importance, even bikers use foot paths as road and a third track is made for them but still they wander in between cars. Vehicles are parked under the board of “no parking” and it is very annoying. Similarly, it is clearly mentioned on ambulances that “give way to ambulance”, so someone’s life can be saved. But many people ignore this, in fact they are serving mankind and one gesture of wiping ambulance way can give a new life to patient and revamp our standard in the eyes of Allah.

cellphone

Use of cell phones is the requirement of everyone now-a-days but during driving it should be omitted because many accidents happen due to careless use of mobiles. Police charge fine if somebody violates laws but traffic police is not assign duties on every nook and corner. So this behavior is also common and against laws. Use of cell phones is an addiction for many people, even when someone is talking, they keep their eyes constantly on phones that antagonize other person and it is disrespect of elders. As someone has truly said “the greatest gift you can give to someone is the purity of your attention when somebody talks to you”. It seems very immoral but many people don’t take any notice and keep on repeating such mistakes without being guilty.

Civic education is the part of academics in western countries. Children’s are aware of dos and don’ts and follows strictly the teachings. One reason behind their development is that they consider civic sense an important feature for country progress. I think seminars should be conducted for both literate and illiterate citizens about the benefits of civic education. Because our country’s development can foster more rapidly if this need is fulfilled. Basic information or education about traffic rules and regulations should be given in schools starting from primary level so at young age they have awareness about right and wrong. If authorities are not active for this effort then on individual level some steps should be taken i.e. posters, pamphlets having information should be disseminated for knowledge so we can compete with the world and recognized for our manner able behavior.

Say No to Sedentary Life Style! — May 16, 2015

Say No to Sedentary Life Style!

According to James Levine, a professor of medicine at the Mayo Clinic “The human body evolved to move around”. Development in the technology has resulted in crafting electronic machines for each and every work. As a result of this technology improvement, most of us spend many hours sitting beside a television or computer and always keep chewing all the time. Enhanced eating along with sedentary lifestyle increases the risk of various health issues. People can considerably improve their quality of life and health including adequate amounts of physical activity in their daily routine. Actually, regular exercise lessen a person’s risk of early death, as well as the danger of evolving obesity, heart disease, cancer and other diseases. Sedentary lifestyle is not only limited to adults even kids become targeted to this problem. It results in development of metabolic ailments such as inadequate cholesterol metabolism, improper exudation of hormones such as insulin and various other diseases.

Sedentary Life Style

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Obesity is the major disadvantage of leading a sedentary lifestyle. Due to reduced activity the number of calories burnt are far less than those utilized leading to obesity. Enhanced fat deposition in the body upturns the risk of various diseases such as diabetes, heart attack and more. Research has shown that people who lead a sedentary lifestyle become aged very fast as compared to physically active people. This is due to the destruction of the telomeres found at the end of the chromosomes, which play a significant role in inhibiting the process of aging. Sedentary lifestyle stimulates formation of lumps within arteries resulting in circulatory disorders that lead to numerous heart related issues. Reduced activity amplifies the risk of development of certain types of cancers such as colon cancer and other forms of malignant tumors.

Decreased activity also affects joint structure and functioning as well as muscle strength, thus inclining the person to ailments such as osteoporosis and arthritis where bones become stiff and breakable. Having a sedentary lifestyle lowers the brain activity making the person less responsive which in turn hampers the individuals work efficiency. Ineffectual work progress makes the person feel down. A person leading a sedentary lifestyle from childhood is at a risk of developing high blood pressure at a very early age. Individuals owing a sedentary lifestyle do not like to socialize much and stay at home most of time. They will not be prepared to encounter any challenges in their life. As there are many shortcomings of leading a sedentary lifestyle, it is suggested to take suitable actions to lead a lively lifestyle.

Flow Chart of Sedentary Life Style Effects

With strict determination and commitment, it is very easy to overcome sedentary lifestyle. Exercising early in the morning at least for duration of at least thirty minutes is very beneficial in this regard. People which are not into practicing exercises early can start with simpler exercises such as cycling and walking. Involving kids in physical activities such as swimming not only amuse the kids but also works as a whole body exertion. Another motivating idea is to organize outdoor games. This will act as an exercise for both kids and adults equally. It is essential for people to remember that balancing food intake with physical activity is vital to maintain an ideal healthy weight. This mutual approach leads to other health advantages as well. Physical activity diminishes the risk of premature deaths in general, and of diabetes mellitus, coronary heart disease, hypertension and colon cancer in particular.

Strawberries : a Summer Fruit — May 15, 2015

Strawberries : a Summer Fruit

Strawberries are aggregates comprises of several small fruits and nutrient-rich fruit with very delicious taste. Strawberries are the member of rose family. It efficiently prevents the oxidation process in the body for free radicals.
Strawberries can be frozen, made into preserves as well as dried and used in many products in dairy products, creams, milkshakes, smoothies, yogurts,syrups,jams,jellies and strawberry pie is also popular. strawberry is also called “Queen of fruits”. Strawberries have high nutrients. This heart shape fruit is very popular among masses. one of the most important and famous history about strawberries is that it is a fruit that is enjoyed by royal people.
Strawberries are the angels of the earth, innocent & sweet with green leafy wings reaching heavenward.” – Jasmine Heiler.

Health Benefits of Strawberry

Health benefits of strawberries:
Boost short term memory:
Strawberry is very useful for boost up the memory.one research shows that strawberry helps to boost up memory 100 percent in 8 weeks. It is very common in old people they lose their memory but strawberriesare best for it.
Lower in calories and high in fiber:
It is lower in calories one cup of strawberries contain 54 calories.
Promote health bones:
It contain magnesium, potassium, vitamin k which is Important for bone health. They are essential for bones in order to make them strong.
Good for weight loss:
It promotes blood flow and oxygen in body which helps in losing weight.
Good for eye health:
Strawberry is the fruit which helps to protect eye vision and keep away from eye loss.
High blood pressure:
Strawberries have a high content of potassium due to which they are very essential for high blood pressure.
Remedy for cancer:
Strawberries are best remedy for cancer .This red fruit contain a lot of benefits it has a ability to fight against cancer.strawberies are also found protective for other cancers like breast cancer.
Use strawberries to cut stress:
Strawberries are essential for stress. As it contains potassium and vitamins C which are helpful for leveling blood pressure.
Helpful for heart disease:
Strawberries contains high fibers rich in vitamins that makes the working of heart better and keep away the heart disease.

Skin Benefits of Strawberry

Excellent skin cleanser:
Strawberries are rich with cleansing properties. The extracts are used in face wash, creams, scrubs, and in many more products. Strawberry juice has a skin lightening properties.it has an ability to clean the skin. Strawberries are also considered as a skin toner.
Effective foot scrub:
Strawberries are effective in giving soft and free crack foot skin. Rub the mixture of 6 to 8 strawberries over foot It will give clean and clear foots.
Keep teeth healthy:
Scrubbing teeth with strawberries makes them whiten.
Used for the treatment of acne:
Fresh strawberries are best remedy for pimples and acne on skin. Strawberries are effective for removing acne and reducing oil.

Benefits of Strawberry Fruit For Hair

Makes hairs silky and shiny:
Strawberry is fruit but it is very useful for health, skin, and as well as for hairs. It has ability to repair hairs and provide them shine .Apply mash strawberries with mayonnaise and leave it for an hour than shampoo, it will give extra shine to hairs.
Ability to fight against dandruff:
One of the best solutions for the removal of dandruff is the use of strawberries. Mix strawberries with tea tree oil it will give dandruff free hairs.
Fruits are part of blessing it is rich with so many benefits the thing is that how we use them simply fruits are secrets of health.

Junk Food: The Paradox of Our Age — May 14, 2015

Junk Food: The Paradox of Our Age

Junk food is a food which comprises less nutritional values and high amount of calories. For years, junk foods have fascinated people by their attractive colors and savored the taste buds. With their ideal array of flavor and varieties, junk foods are appealing to the young and old alike. Conversely, these foods filled with zero nutritional value and empty calories offer various challenges in terms of health benefits.

Variety of Junk Food

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The term “junk food” was first invented by the director of the Centre for Science in the Public Interest, Michael Jacobson in the year 1972. He was commended for revealing the harmful effects associated with junk food with its use of additives such as salt, trans-fat and food colors. He intended to enhance awareness among people regarding Junk food, which often leads to various life-threatening diseases.

Junk foods are frequently reported to cause a wide range of health problems. Ingredients of junk foods that are artificial and contain high fat or sugar are not meant to be eaten consistently. These ingredients can also be addicting for many consumers and can cause withdrawal impacts if the patient attempts to stop ingesting these foods. Consuming junk food containing these ingredients on regular basis can lead to certain health problems including:

Weight gain: Fast Food is renowned for its plentiful use of oil, butter, cheese and additional fatty constituents. With the increased uptake of pizzas and burgers obesity has become a severe issue seen amongst people nowadays.

Pizza with Extra Cheese Topping

Most junk foods contain high levels of fats and carbohydrates but are low in fiber and other nutrients, which provide your body with vitamins and minerals. This means you do not eat adequate components to keep you healthy and switch to piling up many added calories in your fat deposits. Attaining extra weight can not only destroy your looks, but it can threaten your life. Certain people eat more than what is worthy for them in the form of junk food, which causes unnecessary weight and numerous health problems. This also enhances the hazard of having a stroke or developing heart diseases.

Liver damage: Liver damage is a substantial risk related with consuming fast food, although it is not commonly discoursed. Junk food often includes trans-fat, a synthetic fat that is used as a preservative so that junk foods can stay for long periods of time before they are consumed. As the body works to eliminate this fat from our system it can accumulate in the liver and causes impairment. This is very analogous to the damage which is caused by the regular consumption of alcohol. If this is kept unchecked, it can cause liver failure.

Cardiovascular diseases: Junk food mostly contains high sodium content. High sodium uptake increase blood pressure as well as badly effects the functioning of kidneys. High blood pressure is a primary cause of heart attack, heart failure, kidney disease, stroke and other ailments. Recent researches encourage us to ingest less than 2,300 milligrams of sodium each day which is equal to about a teaspoon of table salt.

Burger, Soda & Fries with High Sodium Content

Regular consumption of fast food that is high in cholesterol and sodium can cause harm to the cardiovascular system. Cholesterol may enhance the risk of having a stroke or heart attack by blocking the arteries. Increased levels of sodium found in burgers, pizzas, sodas, supplemented meat products or fries will elevate your blood pressure, which can also intensify the risk of stroke or heart attack with the passage of time. As your cardiovascular system becomes less efficient it can be challenging to perform certain physical tasks that will let you to sustain your health.

10 Upcoming Technology That May Change The World — May 13, 2015

10 Upcoming Technology That May Change The World

Eye tracking systemswww.eyetechds.comSmart Sensors – No Host Needed Or Attach to Windows or Android

We have seen great leaps in digital technology in past the past five years. Smartphones, cloud computing, multi-touch tablets, these are all innovations that revolutionized the way we live and work. However, believe it or not, we are just getting started. Technology will get even better. In the future, we could live like how people in science fictionmovies did.

revolutionary product

(Image Source: YouTube)Today’s post is about 10 upcoming, real-life products that is set to revolutionize the world as we know it. Get ready to control thedesktop and slice Ninja fruits with your eyes. Get ready to print your own creative physical product. Get ready to dive into the virtual world, and interact with them. Come unfold the future with us.

1. Google Glass

Augmented Reality has already gotten into our life in the forms of simulated experiment and education app, but Google is taking it several steps higher with Google Glass. Theoretically, with Google Glass, you are able to view social media feeds, text, Google Maps, as well as navigate with GPS and take photos. You will also get the latest updates while you are on the ground.

google glass

(Image Source: YouTube)It’s truly what we called vision, and it’s absolutely possible given the fact that the Google’s co-founder, Sergey Brin has demo’ed the glasswith skydivers and creatives. Currently the device is only available to some developers with the price tag of $1500, but expect other tech companies trying it out and building an affordable consumer version.

2. Form 1

Just as the term suggests, 3D printing is the technology that could forge your digital design into a solid real-life product. It’s nothing new for the advanced mechanical industry, but a personal 3D printer is definitely a revolutionary idea.

Everybody can create their own physical product based on their custom design, and no approval needed from any giant manufacturer! Even the James Bond’s Aston Martin which was crashed in the movie was a 3D printed product!

form 1

(Image Source: Kickstarter)Form 1 is one such personal 3D printer which can be yours at just $2799. It may sound like a high price but to have the luxury of getting producing your own prototypes, that’s a reaonable price.

Imagine a future where every individual professional has the capability to mass produce their own creative physical products without limitation. This is the future where personal productivity and creativity are maximized.

3. Oculus Rift

Virtual Reality gaming is here in the form of Oculus Rift. This history-defining 3D headset lets you mentally feel that you are actually inside avideo game. In the Rift’s virtual world, you could turn your head around with ultra-low latency to view the world in high resolution display.

There are premium products in the market that can do the same, but Rift wants you to enjoy the experience at only $300, and the package even comes as a development kit. This is the beginning of the revolution for next-generation gaming.

oculus rift

(Image Source: Kickstarter)The timing is perfect as the world is currently bombarded with the virtual reality topic that could also be attributed to Sword Art Online, the anime series featuring the characters playing games in an entirely virtual world. While we’re getting there, it could take a few more years to reach that level of realism. Oculus Rift is our first step.

4. Leap Motion

Multi-touch desktop is a (miserably) failed product due to the fact that hands could get very tired with prolonged use, but Leap Motion wants to challenge this dark area again with a more advanced idea. It lets you control the desktop with fingers, but without touching the screen.

leap motion

(Image Source: Leap Motion)It’s not your typical motion sensor, as Leap Motion allows you to scroll the web page, zoom in the map and photos, sign documentss and even play a first person shooter game with only hand and finger movements. The smooth reaction is the most crucial key point here. More importantly, you can own this future with just $70, a price of a premium PS3 game title!

If this device could completely work with Oculus Rift to simulate a real-time gaming experience, gaming is going to get a major make-over.

5. Eye Tribe

Eye tracking has been actively discussed by technology enthusiasts throughout these years, but it’s really challenging to implement. ButEye Tribe actually did this. They successfully created the technology to allow you to control your tablet, play flight simulator, and even slice fruits in Fruit Ninja only with your eye movements.

eye tribe

(Image Source: Eye Tribe)It’s basically taking the common eye-tracking technology and combining it with a front-facing camera plus some serious computer-vision algorithm, and voila, fruit slicing done with the eyes! A live demo was done in LeWeb this year and we may actually be able to see it in in action in mobile devices in 2013.

Currently the company is still seeking partnership to bring this sci-fi tech into the consumer market but you and I know that this product is simply too awesome to fail.

6. SmartThings

The current problem that most devices have is that they function as a standalone being, and it require effort for tech competitors to actually partner with each other and build products that can truly connect with each other. SmartThings is here to make your every device, digital or non-digital, connect together and benefit you.

smartthings

(Image Source: Kickstarter)With SmartThings you can get your smoke alarms, humidity, pressure and vibration sensors to detect changes in your house and alert you through your smartphone! Imagine the possibilities with this.

You could track who’s been inside your house, turn on the lights while you’re entering a room, shut windows and doors when you leave the house, all with the help of something that only costs $500! Feel like a tech lord in your castle with this marvel.

7. Firefox OS

iOS and Android are great, but they each have their own rules and policies that certainly inhibit the creative efforts of developers. Mozilla has since decided to build a new mobile operating system from scratch, one that will focus on true openness, freedom and user choice. It’sFirefox OS.

Firefox OS is built on Gonk, Gecko and Gaia software layers – for the rest of us, it means it is built on open source, and it carries web technologies such as HTML5 and CSS3.

firefox os

(Image Source: Mozilla)Developers can create and debut web apps without the blockade of requirements set by app stores, and users could even customize the OS based on their needs. Currently the OS has made its debut on Android-compatible phones, and the impression so far, is great.

You can use the OS to do essential tasks you do on iOS or Android: calling friends, browsing web, taking photos, playing games, they are all possible on Firefox OS, set to rock the smartphone market.

8. Project Fiona

Meet the first generation of the gaming tablet. Razer’s Project Fiona is a serious gaming tablet built for hardcore gaming. Once it’s out, it will be the frontier for the future tablets, as tech companies might want to build their own tablets, dedicated towards gaming, but for now Fiona is the only possible one that will debut in 2013.

project fiona

(Image Source: Razer™)This beast features next generation Intel® Core i7 processor geared to render all your favorite PC games, all at the palm of your hands. Crowned as the best gaming accessories manufacturer, Razer clearly knows how to build user experience straight into the tablet, and that means 3-axis gyro, magnetometer, accelerometer and full-screen user interface supporting multi-touch. My body and soul are ready.

9. Parallella

Parallella is going to change the way that computers are made, andAdapteva offers you chance to join in on this revolution. Simply put, it’s a supercomputer for everyone. Basically, an energy-efficient computer built for processing complex software simultaneously and effectively. Real-time object tracking, holographic heads-up display,speech recognition will become even stronger and smarter with Parallella.

parallella

(Image Source: YouTube)The project has been successfully funded so far, with an estimated delivery date of February 2013. For a mini supercomputer, the price seems really promising since it’s magically $99! It’s not recommended for the non-programmer and non-Linux user, but the kit is loaded with development software to create your personal projects.

I never thought the future of computing could be kick-started with just $99, which is made possible using crowdfunding platforms.

10. Google Driverless Car

I could still remember the day I watch the iRobot as a teen, and being skeptical about my brother’s statement that one day, the driverless car will become reality. And it’s now a reality, made possible by… a search engine company, Google.

While the data source is still a secret recipe, the Google driverless car is powered by artificial intelligence that utilizes the input from the video cameras inside the car, a sensor on the vehicle’s top, and some radar and position sensors attached to different positions of the car. Sounds like a lot of effort to mimic the human intelligence in a car, but so far the system has successfully driven 1609 kilometres without human commands!

google driverless car

(Image Source: Wikipedia)ker with an average salary could benefit from.

MUHAMMAD BIN QASIM — May 12, 2015

MUHAMMAD BIN QASIM

Muhammad bin Qasim

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Muhammad ibn Qasim ath-Thaqafi
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Muhammad ibn Qasim leading his troops in battle
Born 31 December 695
Ta’if, Arabia
Died 18 July 715 (aged 20)
Allegiance Al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf, Governor to the Umayyad Caliph Al-Walid I
Rank General
Battles/wars Conquest of Sindh and Multan for the Umayyads.

‘Imād ad-Dīn Muḥammad ibn Qāsim ath-Thaqafī (Arabicعماد الدين محمد بن القاسم الثقفي‎; c. 31 December 695 – 18 July 715[citation needed]) was anUmayyad general who conquered the Sindh and Multan regions along the Indus River (now a part of Pakistan) for the Umayyad Caliphate. He was born and raised in the city of Taif (in modern-day Saudi Arabia). Qasim’s conquest of Sindh and southern-most parts of Multan enabled further Islamic expansion into India.

A member of the Thaqeef tribe of the Ta’if region, Muhammad bin Qasim’s father was Qasim bin Yusuf[citation needed] who died when Muhammad bin Qasim was young, leaving his mother in charge of his education. Umayyad governor Al-Hajjaj Ibn Yusuf Al-Thaqafi, Muhammad bin Qasim’s paternal uncle, was instrumental in teaching Muhammad bin Qasim about warfare and governance. Muhammad bin Qasim married his cousin Zubaidah, Hajjaj’s daughter, shortly before going to Sindh. Another paternal uncle of Muhammad bin Qasim was Muhammad bin Yusuf, governor of Yemen.[citation needed]Under Hajjaj’s patronage, Muhammad bin Qasim was made governor of Persia, where he succeeded in putting down a rebellion.[citation needed]

Due to his close relationship with Hajjaj, Bin Qasim was executed after the accession of Caliph Sulayman ibn Abd al-Malik.

The 100 personalities of the world — May 11, 2015

The 100 personalities of the world

in 100 personalities, Isaac Newton Anglican, Muhammad (S.A.W.W), top people, top personalities.

The Records were taken from the Book “The 100”, A Ranking of the Most Influential Persons in History published in 1978, book by Michael H. Hart, reprinted in 1992 with revisions. It is a ranking of the 100 people who, according to Hart, most influenced human history. The first person on Hart’s list is the Islamic Prophet Muhammad. Hart asserted that Muhammad was “supremely successful” in both the religious and secular realms. He also believed that Muhammad’s role in the development of Islam was far more influential than Jesus’ collaboration in the development of Christianity. He attributes the development of Christianity to St.
Paul, who played a pivotal role in its dissemination. 1 Muhammad (S.A.W.W) The true and the last Messenger of Allah.
2 Isaac Newton Anglican (rejected Trinitarianism, i.e., Athanasianism; believed in the Arianism of the Primitive Church) physicist; theory of universal gravitation; laws of motion.
3 Jesus Christ * Judaism; Christianity founder of Christianity
4 Buddha Hinduism; Buddhism founder of Buddhism
5 Confucius Confucianism founder of Confucianism
6 St. Paul Judaism; Christianity proselytizer of Christianity
7 Ts’ai Lun Chinese traditional religion inventor of paper
8 Johann Gutenberg Catholic developed movable type; printed Bibles
9 Christopher Columbus Catholic explorer; led Europe to Americas
10 Albert Einstein Jewish physicist; relativity; Einsteinian physics
11 Louis Pasteur Catholic scientist; pasteurization
12 Galileo Galilei Catholic astronomer; accurately described heliocentric solar system
13 Aristotle Platonism / Greek philosophy influential Greek philosopher
14 Euclid Platonism / Greek philosophy mathematician; Euclidian geometry
15 Moses Judaism major prophet of Judaism
16 Charles Darwin Anglican (nominal); Unitarian biologist; described Darwinian evolution, which had theological impact on many religions
17 Shih Huang Ti Chinese traditional religion Chinese emperor
18 Augustus Caesar Roman state paganism ruler
19 Nicolaus Copernicus Catholic (priest) astronomer; taught heliocentricity
20 Antoine Laurent Lavoisier Catholic father of modern chemistry; philosopher; economist
21 Constantine the Great Roman state paganism; Christianity Roman emperor who completely legalized Christianity, leading to its status as state religion. Convened the First Council of Nicaea that produced the Nicene Creed, which rejected Arianism (one of two major strains of Christian thought) and established Athanasianism (Trinitarianism, the other strain) as “official doctrine.”
22 James Watt Presbyterian (lapsed) developed steam engine
23 Michael Faraday Sandemanian physicist; chemist; discovery of magneto-electricity
24 James Clerk Maxwell Presbyterian; Anglican; Baptist physicist; electromagnetic spectrum
25 Martin Luther Catholic; Lutheran founder of Protestantism and Lutheranism
26 George Washington Episcopalian first president of United States
27 Karl Marx Jewish; Lutheran; Atheist; Marxism/Communism founder of Marxism, Marxist Communism
28 Orville and Wilbur Wright United Brethren inventors of airplane
29 Genghis Khan Mongolian shamanism Mongol conqueror
30 Adam Smith Liberal Protestant economist; philosopher; expositor of capitalism; author: The Theory of Moral Sentiments
31 Edward de Vere a.k.a. William Shakespeare Catholic; Anglican literature; also wrote 6 volumes about philosophy and religion
32 John Dalton Quaker chemist; physicist; atomic theory; law of partial pressures (Dalton’s law)
33 Alexander the Great Greek state paganism conqueror
34 Napoleon Bonaparte Catholic (nominal) French conqueror
35 Thomas Edison Congregationalist; agnostic inventor of light bulb, phonograph, etc.
36 Antony van Leeuwenhoek Dutch Reformed microscopes; studied microscopic life
37 William T.G. Morton ?? pioneer in anesthesiology
38 Guglielmo Marconi Catholic and Anglican inventor of radio
39 Adolf Hitler Nazism; born/raised in, but rejected Catholicism conqueror; led Axis Powers in WWII
40 Plato Platonism / Greek philosophy founder of Platonism
41 Oliver Cromwell Puritan (Protestant) British political and military leader
42 Alexander Graham Bell Unitarian/Universalist inventor of telephone *
43 Alexander Fleming Catholic penicillin; advances in bacteriology, immunology and chemotherapy
44 John Locke raised Puritan (Anglican); Liberal Christian philosopher and liberal theologian
45 Ludwig van Beethoven Catholic composer
46 Werner Heisenberg Lutheran a founder of quantum mechanics; discovered principle of uncertainty; head of Nazi Germany’s nuclear program
47 Louis Daguerre ?? an inventor/pioneer of photography
48 Simon Bolivar Catholic (nominal); Atheist National hero of Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia
49 Rene Descartes Catholic Rationalist philosopher and mathematician
50 Michelangelo Catholic painter; sculptor; architect
51 Pope Urban II Catholic called for First Crusade
52 ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab Islam Second Caliph; expanded Muslim empire
53 Asoka Buddhism king of India who converted to and spread Buddhism
54 St. Augustine Greek state paganism; Manicheanism; Catholic Early Christian theologian
55 William Harvey Anglican (nominal) described the circulation of blood; wrote Essays on the Generation of Animals, the basis for modern embryology
56 Ernest Rutherford ?? physicist; pioneer of subatomic physics
57 John Calvin Protestant; Calvinism Protestant reformer; founder of Calvinism
58 Gregor Mendel Catholic (Augustinian monk) Mendelian genetics
59 Max Planck Protestant physicist; thermodynamics
60 Joseph Lister Quaker principal discoverer of antiseptics which greatly reduced surgical mortality
61 Nikolaus August Otto ?? built first four-stroke internal combustion engine
62 Francisco Pizarro Catholic Spanish conqueror in South America; defeated Incas
63 Hernando Cortes Catholic conquered Mexico for Spain; through war and introduction of new diseases he largely destroyed Aztec civilization
64 Thomas Jefferson Episcopalian; Deist 3rd president of United States
65 Queen Isabella I Catholic Spanish ruler
66 Joseph Stalin Russian Orthodox; Atheist; Marxism revolutionary and ruler of USSR
67 Julius Caesar Roman state paganism Roman emperor
68 William the Conqueror Catholic laid foundation of modern England
69 Sigmund Freud Jewish; atheist; Freudian psychology/psychoanalysis founded Freudian school of psychology/psychoanalysis (i.e., the “religion of Freudianism”)
70 Edward Jenner Anglican discoverer of the vaccination for smallpox
71 Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen ?? discovered X-rays
72 Johann Sebastian Bach Lutheran; Catholic composer
73 Lao Tzu Taoism founder of Taoism
74 Voltaire raised in Jansenism; later Deist writer and philosopher; wrote Candide
75 Johannes Kepler Lutheran astronomer; planetary motions
76 Enrico Fermi Catholic initiated the atomic age; father of atom bomb
77 Leonhard Euler Calvinist physicist; mathematician; differential and integral calculus and algebra
78 Jean-Jacques Rousseau born Protestant; converted as a teen to Catholic; later Deist French deistic philosopher and author
79 Nicoli Machiavelli Catholic wrote The Prince (influential political treatise)
80 Thomas Malthus Anglican (cleric) economist; wrote Essay on the Principle of Population
81 John F. Kennedy Catholic U.S. President who led first successful effort by humans to travel to another “planet”
82 Gregory Pincus Jewish endocrinologist; developed birth-control pill
83 Mani Manicheanism founder of Manicheanism, once a world religion which rivaled Christianity in strength
84 Lenin Russian Orthodox; Atheist; Marxism/Communism Russian ruler
85 Sui Wen Ti Chinese traditional religion unified China
86 Vasco da Gama Catholic navigator; discovered route from Europe to India around Cape Hood
87 Cyrus the Great Zoroastrianism founder of Persian empire
88 Peter the Great Russian Orthodox forged Russia into a great European nation
89 Mao Zedong Atheist; Communism; Maoism founder of Maoism, Chinese form of Communism
90 Francis Bacon Anglican philosopher; delineated inductive scientific method
91 Henry Ford Protestant developed automobile; achievement in manufacturing and assembly
92 Mencius Confucianism philosopher; founder of a school of Confucianism
93 Zoroaster Zoroastrianism founder of Zoroastrianism
94 Queen Elizabeth I Anglican British monarch; restored Church of England to power after Queen Mary
95 Mikhail Gorbachev Russian Orthodox Russian premier who helped end Communism in USSR
96 Menes Egyptian paganism unified Upper and Lower Egypt
97 Charlemagne Catholic Holy Roman Empire created with his baptism in 800 AD
98 Homer Greek paganism epic poet
99 Justinian I Catholic Roman emperor; reconquered Mediterranean empire; accelerated Catholic-Monophysite schism
100 Mahavira Hinduism; Jainism founder of Jainism