Want to learn more about the Technological Revolution? Watch our playlist here: ua-cam.com/video/ENWsoWjzJTQ/v-deo.html
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Why have you deleted my comments on russian inventor? Are you a controlled puppet by the us gov? Or is it not acceptible to tell the truth in the comment section?
Singularity Prosperity I would love to see a video of how the internal workings of coding works like on the binary level how a bunch of programs alter 1's and 0's that are able to execute commands and why some programming languages are limited (is it because of their digital architecture?)
not me. i wish i would have been born later, much later. this stuff is gonna be child's play in the next few centuries. i want my holodeck and i want it now.
My phone has 512gb, FOUR cameras, each of which better than any on the planet at the time, a processor exceeding the entire computing power of the planet at the time, and, you know, the INTERNET. The progress of computers and how it's changed society in even the past 30 years is almost unfathomable.
@@kilroy1964 you need to elaborate? the resolution of film (35mm), comparative in digital terminology is about 19 megapixels, we have cameras better than that even in consumer use.
@@mhc4124 i get the feeling good narrators become rarer these days. I see a lot of channels here on UA-cam that have someone mumbling and talking with a weird pace, yet they are still very successful and barely no one seems to be bothered by it.... It drives me crazy, especially when the script and research is actually good^^
@@dr.doppeldecker3832 Maybe because it's not some huge company with a team pumping videos out twice a week. Maybe bro was just interested in this topic, or is just kinda passionate about it, idk. Could say thank you for taking the time to make the video even if he didn't have the perfect narrator/radio voice. Sir David Attenborough was probably out of his budget
This video is just amazing for anyone who wants to learn what this title promises to deliver. This is accurate, saturated with top quality information.
Do you know why the Chinese abacus is the type of abacus most often pointed out as the ancestor of digital computer? A Bit of Insight The answer to the question may lie in the fact that the Chinese abacus has two heaven beads and five earth beads along each rod, and thus that makes the difference from other types of abaci. The Chinese abacus is commonly used for working in decimal, but it may be used as well for hexadecimal numbers. Note that when all beads along a rod are set then the sum of bead values would exactly be equal to 15 or F. Hexadecimal numerals are widely used by computer system designers and programmers because they provide a human-friendly representation of binary-coded values.
For those of you thinking the narrator's speaking too fast, you can slow the video down. I find 0.75 helps. Other than that and the sort of monotone voice you had with a little too much bass, the content is excellent. Well done!
Take a breath buddy;) it's hard to keep up with all the information if you are talking non stop without pauses or intonation at all. The script is very well written, but due to your fast speaking without pauses a lot of it just gets drowned in the constant output from you. Your hard and excellent work on research and editing deserves a better voice over;)
Whenever I look at the history of computers, they usually mention simple devices before modern times. One good example of this that is also the first kind is the abacas. It is surprising to hear that it is involved at the beginning of computer history. By the way, one different thing (which is also an error) is saying "Chinese abacas" at 0:50. Most sources say that it was actually first invented in ancient Mesopotamia.
I think that computing has been very important from the beginning to the norwaday, because it helps many people to meet needs, to work, today young people to study from home.
Thank You this was very useful, More people need to take the time to listen to these inspiring videos this channel provides very useful knowledge in a video i highly recommend it
You are not quite correct. Alan Turing was not really involved with Colossus. Turing mainly worked on naval enigma using the bombe electro-mechanical Decrypter. It was Max Newman and Tommy flowers who are directly responsible for Colossus. With help from Bill Tutte who worked on the Tunny cypher (which was the cypher Colossus was working on). I recommend reading material such as 'Station X' and other good books on Bletchley. Its important to get history right :-)
Thank you for making this upload, it was worth the watch, educational, insightful, but what was more jaw dropping for me was foreshadowing of computerized chips in the future.
Love the history lesson. You call vacuum tube computers digital. Relay based computers were however mostly digital also. Digital just means the logic is based on numbers like 1's & 0's (boolean) , or any other number base in which whole numbers are used, and the logic is based on truth ables,.. I E absolute. You don't really mention analog computers, but there were analogue, vernier based computers even developed during WWII that used vacuum tubes, and comparing vernier scales the way a slide rule does. They were used to predict trajectories, of projectiles, and airplanes, etc. They were much faster than the 1st digital computers (that ran on relays) but less accurate for complex calculations involving many steps, because they had to be periodically re-calibrated, and errors were dependent on the linearity of the tubes ( age, temperature, etc dependent ), and errors were also cumulative. Scales of forces, or a number, or objectively measurable representation of a value in an equation, were represented by a continously variable voltage, or current usually. This video, though made late,r does an excellent job of describing the basic principles of early vacuum tube analogue computers: They were especially time savers for doing squares, square roots, and trig functions. ua-cam.com/video/Ys7v7lnLgbM/v-deo.html
Sweet video! Was utterly surprised when i clicked out of fullscreen and saw the amount of views, likes and subsrcribers. Keep it up man i'll spread the word!
"Computing power would double every two years at low cost, and that computers would eventually be so small that they could be embedded into homes, cars, and what he referred to as personal portable communications equipment". The guy was right.
This is the 7th or so video I have watched on this topic and yours crammed in almost everything in from all the other videos. WHEW! That was a monster amount of research and presentation. Thank you. My brain hurts now.
Good video, but I have to say that you speak too fast. I know that I can slow down the play-back-speed, but even so, I have to recommend that you leave some time between sentences (I know that UA-cam videos in general are pushing towards kutting out silences, but for this type of video, which demands some reflection to absorb the information, a slight pause between sentences becomes crucial).
This video and most every textbook about computers misses the real concepts behind the computer. Ada Lovelace was a mathematician, so was Turning. The logic for the computer came from the Ancient Greeks. Euclids proofs of Geometry is fundamental to the logic behind computer operation.
great explaining thank you !! is there a name for the first compiler that she invented .. on modern day computers are compilers part of windows/how come sometimes you gotta "download the c compiler ...?
Imagine if Charles Babbage's analytical machine had funding and by then end of The 1800s we had integrated circuits and compilers being put inside the first portable computers.
That is the premise of an "alternate history" sci-fi novel, "The Difference Engine." In that novel, Babbage succeeds, and by the 2nd half of the 19th century, Babbage's "engines" are used widely in British business and government, helping to keep the British Empire the most technologically advanced on earth.
11:33 No, with Engelbart, the mouse is the side note. Also, the mouse is not really an example of miniaturization or transistors or integrated circuits or computing.
I had always wondered where the true beginning was, great video. You’re voice is a bit boring but nonetheless you provided good information. I really did not realize that computers began as mechanical machines, makes much more sense how we got to where we are today now.
Thank you for this video. I really hate that Hollywood trope that our technology was "given to us by extraterrestrial beings" 🙄 Engineers and scientists are treated like we're invisible, even in the movies. 🤦♂️
One thing that is easy to lose sight of when living in current times is how every generation preceding ours had incredibly smart people. To accomplish what they did in their time, with the more limited body of knowledge and more limited access to advanced materials and processes is amazing. This obviously applies to all human endeavors, not just computing. It's also difficult to picture how the technology we have around us in 2024 will soon be considered primitive. AI is going to accelerate Moore's law. Not sure how much longer humans can "keep up" with their inventions.
3things i have learned- The 3 things i have learned is the 1st, 2nd and 3rd generations of computing 2 things i find interesting- I find the chinese abacus interesting cause its also part of computing and i am also interested that computing existed in the 3000bc 1 suggestion i have-My suggestion is to use a good password, be aware and avoid scams, and dont install pr download unsolicited programs or apps Pov:this is for my assignment only i used yt as a note😋
This video completes misses the Small Scale Experimental Machine also known as BABY, and developed at Manchester University, UK in 1948. It was the world’s first all electronic computer with an electronic RAM memory, delivering stored program capability. It is fully programmable, and multi function. There is a working replica at the Science and Industry Museum. The BABY technology went into the Ferranti MkI the first commercially available electronic computer.
only mistake i could find after an entire evening watching all your videos, love them by yhe way! I think you mention that Zuse's first computer used relays. If i remember correctly, Zuse's Z1 machine in 1936 was purely mechanical, no relays or vacume tubes. Very much like the analytical engine in that respect but Zuse used binary mechanical logic gates of his own design. The machine ran off an electric motor to act as the clock and give mechanical motion to his gates. It is considered the most complex mechanical device ever constructed with over a quarter million different moving parts... not to mention the dude built it by himself pretty much, in his parents apartment's living room, FREAKEN BADASS if you ask me! XD
I would love to see a detailed documentary of motherboards, with a focus on PCI-Express and how various generations of PCI-Express have accelerated the evolution of solid-state storage devices. For example, a "4x4" add-in card with NVMe M.2 SSDs in RAID-0 mode performs similarly to DDR4 DRAM.
Want to learn more about the Technological Revolution? Watch our playlist here: ua-cam.com/video/ENWsoWjzJTQ/v-deo.html
- ALSO - Become a UA-cam member for many exclusive perks from exclusive posts, bonus content, shoutouts and more! subscribe.futurology.earthone.io/member - AND - Join our Discord server for much better community discussions! subscribe.futurology.earthone.io/discord
Why have you deleted my comments on russian inventor? Are you a controlled puppet by the us gov? Or is it not acceptible to tell the truth in the comment section?
Singularity Prosperity I would love to see a video of how the internal workings of coding works like on the binary level how a bunch of programs alter 1's and 0's that are able to execute commands and why some programming languages are limited (is it because of their digital architecture?)
Gk
Please continue your videos..you did such an awesome job..really applaudable..
cant wait to use my light speed computer
Even though printing hello world is simple, its still amazing how the computer recognizes and executes
the program.
Its not simple when you program it only in Binary. Now we have high level languages but back then 1s and 0s is all you had lol.
there is a utube video to code hello world in binary . its difficult
Try printing hello world using a Quantum Computer. Back to square one!
truly blessed and fortunate to be born in this century, it's impressive to see how much work has gone behind the technologies that we use for everyday
not me. i wish i would have been born later, much later. this stuff is gonna be child's play in the next few centuries. i want my holodeck and i want it now.
Hmm talk about the next century. Their body will be the computer.
if you ever go back in time to 1950. don't tell them you got 128 Gb smartphone in your pocket, you will be locked as crazy person
and now we got phones with 1T like the s10 plus ceramic....
Nope. These were the visionaries, who understood that infinite complexity could follow from a few simple building blocks.
My phone has 512gb, FOUR cameras, each of which better than any on the planet at the time, a processor exceeding the entire computing power of the planet at the time, and, you know, the INTERNET. The progress of computers and how it's changed society in even the past 30 years is almost unfathomable.
@@cameron2794 Almost. No digital camera can get the resolution of film... yet.
@@kilroy1964 you need to elaborate? the resolution of film (35mm), comparative in digital terminology is about 19 megapixels, we have cameras better than that even in consumer use.
I love the fact that you have an actual conclusion in your video. That's a real classy touch
Who is here after computers class?
👇
I am in it rn
Yeah I’m doing a project for my class rn🤣
I am having my class rn while watching this
me lol
Except for me, I am here 1 day before the class. The professor suggested the video :)
Your speech rate is too fast. But otherwise an excellent video! Well done sir!
Alan Gauthier
Seems fine to me
Yes too fast and way to monotone, I fall asleep. But info is amazing, thx a lot for that!
Agreed, although you can slow the video speed down. I find 0.75 seems to help without being too noticeable.
I think he's doing fine. Listen at 1.75x :P
No way, any slower and the video would be way too long, good speed. Just needs to lower the base a bit.
It's crazy how far technologies have evolved. Many of people don't even realize, they have a super powerful computer in their pocket.
I watched this video 3 times, and I am amazed every time. Good choice of music!
probably because u didnt remember anything from the firs two times
Good stuff! Although narrator needs to take a breath before enunciate
Voice 👎
@@mhc4124 i get the feeling good narrators become rarer these days. I see a lot of channels here on UA-cam that have someone mumbling and talking with a weird pace, yet they are still very successful and barely no one seems to be bothered by it.... It drives me crazy, especially when the script and research is actually good^^
I stopped listening, It sounds like a bot.
You should make a video and narrate it perfectly. Some people just talk $#!7 and don't produce anything.
@@dr.doppeldecker3832 Maybe because it's not some huge company with a team pumping videos out twice a week. Maybe bro was just interested in this topic, or is just kinda passionate about it, idk. Could say thank you for taking the time to make the video even if he didn't have the perfect narrator/radio voice. Sir David Attenborough was probably out of his budget
This video is just amazing for anyone who wants to learn what this title promises to deliver. This is accurate, saturated with top quality information.
For 5000 years people have been working at a future in which internet porn exists. I salute these heroes.
I've watched this video so many times I still can't get over how well put together this is
Agreed. Same
Wow
Do you know why the Chinese abacus is the type of abacus most often pointed out as the ancestor of digital computer?
A Bit of Insight
The answer to the question may lie in the fact that the Chinese abacus has two heaven beads and five earth beads along each rod, and thus that makes the difference from other types of abaci.
The Chinese abacus is commonly used for working in decimal, but it may be used as well for hexadecimal numbers. Note that when all beads along a rod are set then the sum of bead values would exactly be equal to 15 or F.
Hexadecimal numerals are widely used by computer system designers and programmers because they provide a human-friendly representation of binary-coded values.
For those of you thinking the narrator's speaking too fast, you can slow the video down. I find 0.75 helps.
Other than that and the sort of monotone voice you had with a little too much bass, the content is excellent. Well done!
Take a breath buddy;) it's hard to keep up with all the information if you are talking non stop without pauses or intonation at all. The script is very well written, but due to your fast speaking without pauses a lot of it just gets drowned in the constant output from you. Your hard and excellent work on research and editing deserves a better voice over;)
I think it's a bot
Too fast bro ! Also the monotone is a problem too
The best video of computer history that I have ever seen very thanks.
This is what I have wanted looking for years. 🙇♂️
A great computer primer. I'm old enough to remember the early IBM punch card devices devices, We've come a long way.
Well done Sir. This video just played by itself right now, and I never thought to skip it. Interesting and informative.
If the narrator practiced enunciating syllables and speaking with fluency, this would be highly watchable. Very informative nonetheless.
It's better to hear a person speaking more naturally imho especially with dry material like this
Pretty good video for an up and coming channel!
Thanks for watching :)!
A 5-ton device to store 5MB for $27K/month? Where do I sign up?!?
Transaction clompeted! Your Device will be send from 5th to 9th July!
@@lil_shiba5267 Hah!
It's already booked upto 2025. Welcome to the queue...
For $20K more, you could get premium delivery.
thanks for this video! I needed some quick info on the evolution of computers and this helped a lot!
Whenever I look at the history of computers, they usually mention simple devices before modern times. One good example of this that is also the first kind is the abacas. It is surprising to hear that it is involved at the beginning of computer history.
By the way, one different thing (which is also an error) is saying "Chinese abacas" at 0:50. Most sources say that it was actually first invented in ancient Mesopotamia.
An entire chapter in 12 mins
Thanks
looking forward to watch this playlist about technological revolution and get the clarity about how are the things around us actually working.
I think that computing has been very important from the beginning to the norwaday, because it helps many people to meet needs, to work, today young people to study from home.
This is a link that my professor gave us in my computer orientation class of a University. Congrats.
Great video! Glad i stumbled across it!
This is one of the best educational channels I've ever seen, I'm surprised you don't have more subscibers
youtube fucked it. he is not being recommended at all for anyone, for the algorithm it is as if it doesnt even exist.
Excellent video. It's crazy to think that we have come so far so fast, but have probably barely scratched the surface.
UA-cam wanna recommend this to my 3 years later! I wished I was here earlier!
Thank You this was very useful, More people need to take the time to listen to these inspiring videos this channel provides very useful knowledge in a video i highly recommend it
Your fast monotone speech is perfect. We need the speed to save time
Can't say enough about how well done this was in every way. Thanks for the upload!
@@bobbykamer3042 well shit
Good job sir this video was shared with us by Army Public School in Pakistan. I am thankful you made such a detailed video
You are not quite correct. Alan Turing was not really involved with Colossus. Turing mainly worked on naval enigma using the bombe electro-mechanical Decrypter. It was Max Newman and Tommy flowers who are directly responsible for Colossus. With help from Bill Tutte who worked on the Tunny cypher (which was the cypher Colossus was working on). I recommend reading material such as 'Station X' and other good books on Bletchley. Its important to get history right :-)
Thank you for making this upload, it was worth the watch, educational, insightful, but what was more jaw dropping for me was foreshadowing of computerized chips in the future.
I recently got a job offer from IBM. This video gave me chills.
Love the history lesson. You call vacuum tube computers digital. Relay based computers were however mostly digital also. Digital just means the logic is based on numbers like 1's & 0's (boolean) , or any other number base in which whole numbers are used, and the logic is based on truth ables,.. I E absolute. You don't really mention analog computers, but there were analogue, vernier based computers even developed during WWII that used vacuum tubes, and comparing vernier scales the way a slide rule does. They were used to predict trajectories, of projectiles, and airplanes, etc. They were much faster than the 1st digital computers (that ran on relays) but less accurate for complex calculations involving many steps, because they had to be periodically re-calibrated, and errors were dependent on the linearity of the tubes ( age, temperature, etc dependent ), and errors were also cumulative. Scales of forces, or a number, or objectively measurable representation of a value in an equation, were represented by a continously variable voltage, or current usually. This video, though made late,r does an excellent job of describing the basic principles of early vacuum tube analogue computers: They were especially time savers for doing squares, square roots, and trig functions. ua-cam.com/video/Ys7v7lnLgbM/v-deo.html
Sweet video! Was utterly surprised when i clicked out of fullscreen and saw the amount of views, likes and subsrcribers. Keep it up man i'll spread the word!
Was recommended by a lecturer that's why I'm here!
"Computing power would double every two years at low cost, and that computers would eventually be so small that they could be embedded into homes, cars, and what he referred to as personal portable communications equipment". The guy was right.
it was pretty easy to extrapolate that though.
I enjoyed the speaker speech, just WOW!!!! It's so cool!
Excellent information and beautifully narrated!
This is the 7th or so video I have watched on this topic and yours crammed in almost everything in from all the other videos. WHEW! That was a monster amount of research and presentation. Thank you. My brain hurts now.
Wonderful video love the detailed explanation
Amazing and useful video. It shows your hard work also in organizing the content of the video.
Thanks for all the information. This will be a great asset to my teaching.
I cant understand how wonderfull videos u can make. I didnt watch all of them but I am sure all of them are excellent.
Awesome! I watched this video for my cybersecurity course btw haha
Good video, but I have to say that you speak too fast. I know that I can slow down the play-back-speed, but even so, I have to recommend that you leave some time between sentences (I know that UA-cam videos in general are pushing towards kutting out silences, but for this type of video, which demands some reflection to absorb the information, a slight pause between sentences becomes crucial).
This video and most every textbook about computers misses the real concepts behind the computer.
Ada Lovelace was a mathematician, so was Turning. The logic for the computer came from the Ancient Greeks. Euclids proofs of Geometry is fundamental to the logic behind computer operation.
New favorite channel. Keep em coming !
great explaining thank you !! is there a name for the first compiler that she invented .. on modern day computers are compilers part of windows/how come sometimes you gotta "download the c compiler ...?
Imagine if Charles Babbage's analytical machine had funding and by then end of The 1800s we had integrated circuits and compilers being put inside the first portable computers.
That is the premise of an "alternate history" sci-fi novel, "The Difference Engine." In that novel, Babbage succeeds, and by the 2nd half of the 19th century, Babbage's "engines" are used widely in British business and government, helping to keep the British Empire the most technologically advanced on earth.
Nicely done!
Thank You!
Great channel! Keep up the good work.
Now we can access this all through a phone
Thank you for mentioning Zuse!
Great Video man
11:33 No, with Engelbart, the mouse is the side note. Also, the mouse is not really an example of miniaturization or transistors or integrated circuits or computing.
i learned so much u are very good at editing thankyou!
Keep up the fabulous work, buddy!!
really nice video! so well made. 👍
Appreciate the HOME plug throughout this video. Subscribed on that.
It's so interesting to learn by interest but I had to come here because of my computer exams.
this is like listening to a podcast on 1.8 speed, or reading a textbook while spinning out on a snowy side road.
Nice, but how do you find those historical videos in decent quality?!
Us goverment gave them to him)
@@vasilijvasiljev4409 LOL
What was the first programable computer, the Analytical Engine, or the z1 computer?
Probably Colossus, built by Tommy Flower for WW2 decoding.
Very informative video!
Nice film, good work, thank you !
this is the information ive been looking for! THANK YOU!
a day ago, you find him the same time as me hehe.
can i ask you, how did you find this channel?
I had always wondered where the true beginning was, great video. You’re voice is a bit boring but nonetheless you provided good information. I really did not realize that computers began as mechanical machines, makes much more sense how we got to where we are today now.
Thank you for this video.
I really hate that Hollywood trope that our technology was "given to us by extraterrestrial beings" 🙄
Engineers and scientists are treated like we're invisible, even in the movies. 🤦♂️
This has helped me understand this better thank u
The fact that something smaller then your hand can be more powerful then a computer the size of a entire room
literally watching this in school lol ty
The music is so fit to the topic of this video
keep it up, the youngsters of today need to know where there processing power started that is in their devices today!
ok boomer
Gian Nietes that meme is dead
Ok boomer
Ok boomer- 🤓
Brilliant Video :D
Great video man, thanks!
and now we have. AR VR
You heard it right everyone. 4chan was the first programme language
Thanks, fam! We watched your video as a reference for our GUI Design class!
Excellent eleboration (Sir), but I want to study Babbage's analytic engine (algorithm), so where I may get it? can you suggest me?(please) 👍👍👍
Thanks so much for great work
You left out Shockley.
Why?
What device shown in the video
Pls answer
One thing that is easy to lose sight of when living in current times is how every generation preceding ours had incredibly smart people. To accomplish what they did in their time, with the more limited body of knowledge and more limited access to advanced materials and processes is amazing. This obviously applies to all human endeavors, not just computing. It's also difficult to picture how the technology we have around us in 2024 will soon be considered primitive. AI is going to accelerate Moore's law. Not sure how much longer humans can "keep up" with their inventions.
A history of tech support would be a good one too lol
3things i have learned- The 3 things i have learned is the 1st, 2nd and 3rd generations of computing
2 things i find interesting- I find the chinese abacus interesting cause its also part of computing and i am also interested that computing existed in the 3000bc
1 suggestion i have-My suggestion is to use a good password, be aware and avoid scams, and dont install pr download unsolicited programs or apps
Pov:this is for my assignment only i used yt as a note😋
Von Neumann is pronounced "von Noyman". Other than one small pet peeve, I really liked this.
What a really really awesome video man, REALLY AWESOME.
This video completes misses the Small Scale Experimental Machine also known as BABY, and developed at Manchester University, UK in 1948. It was the world’s first all electronic computer with an electronic RAM memory, delivering stored program capability. It is fully programmable, and multi function. There is a working replica at the Science and Industry Museum. The BABY technology went into the Ferranti MkI the first commercially available electronic computer.
only mistake i could find after an entire evening watching all your videos, love them by yhe way! I think you mention that Zuse's first computer used relays. If i remember correctly, Zuse's Z1 machine in 1936 was purely mechanical, no relays or vacume tubes. Very much like the analytical engine in that respect but Zuse used binary mechanical logic gates of his own design. The machine ran off an electric motor to act as the clock and give mechanical motion to his gates. It is considered the most complex mechanical device ever constructed with over a quarter million different moving parts... not to mention the dude built it by himself pretty much, in his parents apartment's living room, FREAKEN BADASS if you ask me! XD
i believe it did use relays...
Also he said "two" instead of "twenty four" at 12:13
i need you to elaborate the whole video sir
I would love to see a detailed documentary of motherboards, with a focus on PCI-Express and how various generations of PCI-Express have accelerated the evolution of solid-state storage devices. For example, a "4x4" add-in card with NVMe M.2 SSDs in RAID-0 mode performs similarly to DDR4 DRAM.
Nice video, very informative. But the delivery would be much better if you spoke slower and less monotonously.