00:00Computers didn't just appear as the sleek smartphones or powerful servers we use today.
00:05They evolved through five distinct generations, each marked by a massive technological breakthrough
00:12that changed the world. Let's trace the journey from vacuum tubes to artificial intelligence.
00:18The first generation, 1940 to 1956, relied on vacuum tubes for circuitry and magnetic drums
00:26for memory. These machines were massive, often taking up entire rooms, and they were incredibly
00:32expensive to run. They generated a ton of heat and were programmed in machine language, the most basic
00:39level of computer code. If you've heard of the ENIAC, that was the titan of this era.
00:44The second generation, 1956 to 1963, saw the invention of the transistor. This was a game
00:51changer. Transistors were smaller, faster, cheaper, and more energy efficient than vacuum tubes.
00:57This era also introduced high-level programming languages like COBOL and FORTRAN. Computers were
01:04still big, but they were finally becoming practical for businesses and universities.
01:08In the third generation, 1964 to 1971, we saw the birth of the integrated circuit, IC. Engineers
01:17figured out how to move thousands of transistors onto a single silicon chip. This made computers
01:22significantly smaller and faster. Most importantly, this is the era where we stopped using punch cards
01:28and started using keyboards and monitors to interact with an operating system.
01:33The fourth generation, 1971 to present, is defined by the microprocessor. Thousands of integrated circuits
01:41were built onto a single silicon chip, the CPU. This led to the birth of the personal computer,
01:47PC. Suddenly, computers could fit on a desk, and eventually in our pockets. This era also gave us
01:54the internet, GUI interfaces, and the massive networking infrastructure that forms the umbrella
01:59of ICT we talk about today. The fifth generation, present and beyond, is based on artificial intelligence.
02:06This is the frontier. We're talking about parallel processing, voice recognition, and machines that
02:13can learn and make decisions. From the AI tools we use to generate video scripts, to the complex
02:18algorithms managing global server traffic, the fifth generation is making computing more human
02:24and more connected than ever before. From a room full of glass tubes, to a chip the size of a
02:30fingernail, computing has come a long way. Understanding these generations helps us appreciate the massive
02:36power we hold in our hands today. If you enjoyed this trip through tech history, hit that like button
02:41and subscribe for more technical deep dives.
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