Tittle: Computer Generation
Name: Nurfarah Waheeda Binti Mohd
Saifuddin
Courses: Diploma in Banking
Date of submission: 21 October 2023
1
1. 1st generation
The period of first generation was from 1946-1959. The
computer was developed by a British engineer named Alan
Turing. The computers of first generation used vacuum tubes
as the basic components for memory and circuitry for CPU
(Central Processing Unit). These tubes, like electric bulbs,
produced a lot of heat and the installations used to fuse
frequently. Therefore, they were very expensive and only large
organizations were able to afford it. In this generation, mainly
batch processing operating system was used. Punch cards,
paper tape, and magnetic tape was used as input and output
devices. The computers in this generation used machine code
as the programming language.
2
Figure 1
The main features of the first generation are –
Vacuum tube technology
Unreliable
Supported machine language only
Very costly
Generated a lot of heat
Slow input and output devices
Huge size
Need of AC
Non-portable
Consumed a lot of electricity
3
2. 2nd generation
A second-generation computer, through the late 1950s and
1960s featured circuit boards filled with individual transistors
and magnetic-core memory. In this generation, transistors
were used that were cheaper, consumed less power, more
compact in size, more reliable and faster than the first
generation machines made of vacuum tubes. Magnetic cores
were used as the primary memory and magnetic tape and
magnetic disks as secondary storage devices.
Figure 2
4
The main features of second generation are –
Use of transistors
Reliable in comparison to first generation computers
Smaller size as compared to first generation computers
Generated less heat as compared to first generation
computers
Consumed less electricity as compared to first
generation computers
Faster than first generation computers
Still very costly
AC required
Supported machine and assembly languages
Faster than first generation computers
Still very costly
AC required
Supported machine and assembly languages
Some computers of this generation were −
IBM 1620
IBM 7094
CDC 1604
5
CDC 3600
UNIVAC 1108
3. 3rd generation
The period of third generation was from 1965-1971. The
computers of third generation used Integrated Circuits (ICs) in
place of transistors. A single IC has many transistors,
resistors, and capacitors along with the associated circuitry.
The IC was invented by Jack Kilby. This development made
computers smaller in size, reliable, and efficient. In this
generation remote processing, time-sharing,
multiprogramming operating system were used. High-level
languages (FORTRAN-II TO IV, COBOL, PASCAL PL/1, BASIC,
ALGOL-68 etc.) were used during this generation.
6
Figure 3
The main features of third generation are −
IC used
More reliable in comparison to previous two
generations
Smaller size
Generated less heat
Faster
Lesser maintenance
Costly
AC required
Consumed lesser electricity
Supported high-level language
Some computers of this generation were −
• IBM-360 series
• Honeywell-6000 series
• PDP (Personal Data Processor)
• IBM-370/168
• TDC-316
7
4. 4th generation
The period of fourth generation was from 1971-1980.
Computers of fourth generation used Very Large Scale
Integrated (VLSI) circuits. VLSI circuits having about 5000
transistors and other circuit elements with their associated
circuits on a single chip made it possible to have
microcomputers of fourth generation. Fourth generation
computers became more powerful, compact, reliable, and
affordable. As a result, it gave rise to Personal Computer (PC)
revolution. In this generation, sharing real time networks,
distributed operating system was used. All the high-level
8
languages like C, C++, DBASE etc., were used in this
generation.
Figure 4
The main features of fourth generation are −
VLSI technology used
Very cheap
Portable and reliable
Use of PCs
Very small size
Pipeline processing
No AC required
Concept of internet was introduced
Great developments in the fields of networks
Computers became easily available
Some computers of this generation were −
DEC 10
STAR 1000
PDP 11
CRAY-1(Super Computer)
CRAY-X-MP (Super Computer)
9
5. 5th generation
The period of fifth generation is 1980-till date. In the fifth
generation, VLSI technology became ULSI (Ultra Large Scale
Integration) technology, resulting in the production of
microprocessor chips having ten million electronic
components. This generation is based on parallel processing
hardware and AI (Artificial Intelligence) software. AI is an
emerging branch in computer science, which interprets the
means and method of making computers think like human
10
beings. All the high-level languages like C and C++, Java, .Net
etc., are used in this generation.
Figure 5
AI includes −
Robotics
Neural Networks
Game Playing
Development of expert systems to make decisions in
real-life situations
Natural language understanding and generation
The main features of fifth generation are −
ULSI technology
Development of true artificial intelligence
Development of Natural language processing
Advancement in Parallel Processing
Advancement in Superconductor technology
More user-friendly interfaces with multimedia features
Availability of very powerful and compact computers at
cheaper rates
Some computer types of this generation are −
11
Desktop
Laptop
NoteBook
UltraBook
ChromeBook
12