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The tower of a personal computer.

A computer is a device for making calculation s or controlling operations that are expressible in numerical or logical terms. While factually accurate, this definition and those found in other dictionaries are so broad that they fail to differentiate between the many types of historic, contemporary and potential future computers. More meaningful questions might be: What are the different types of computer? or, What are the distinguishing features and capabilities of a contemporary computer?

1 Etymology

The meaning of the word computer has changed but has always lagged behind the capabilities of machines in use at the time. The word was originally used to describe a person who performed arithmetic calculations and this usage is still valid. The OED2 lists the year 1897 as the first year the word was used to refer to a mechanical calculating device. By 1946 several qualifiers were introduced by the OED2 to differentiate between the different types of machine. These qualifiers included analogue, digital and electronic. However, from the context of the citation, it is obvious these terms were in use prior to 1946.

(see the Wiktionary entry for the word computer for definitions, translations and a detailed etymology )

2 The exponential progress of computer development

The complexities involved in classifying the various types of computer are compounded by the exponential growth in computing capacity. Roughly speaking computing devices have doubled in capacity (instructions processed per second per $1000) every 18 to 24 months since 1900. Gordon E. Moore, co-founder of Intel, first described this property of computer development in 1965 (see Moore's Law). The exponential growth in capacity has been sustained by the rapid evolution of engineering techniques used to build computers. Hand-in-hand with this increase in capacity per unit cost has been an equally dramatic process of miniaturization . The first electronic computers, such as the ENIAC ( announced in 1946), were huge devices that weighed tons, occupied entire rooms, and required many operators to function successfully. They were so expensive that only governments and large research organizations could afford them and were considered so exotic that only a handful would ever be required to satisfy global demand. By contrast modern computers are orders of magnitude; more powerful, less expensive, smaller and have become ubiquitous .

3 Classification of computers

To define what a computer is it is necessary to develop a classification of computing devices. The following sections describe several different approaches to classifying computers. These classification approaches must be used in combination to unambiguously describe a given machine.

3.1 Classification by intended use

The most obvious way to classify computing machines is by their usage. This approach is commonly employed by manufacturers of computers to describe their products and users of computers to describe the machines they interact with. For Example

The colloquial nature of this classification approach means it is ambiguous . It is usual for only current, commonly available devices to be included. The rapid nature of computer development means new uses for computers are frequently found and current definitions quickly become outdated. Many classes of computer that are no longer used, such as differential analyzers, are not commonly included in such lists. Other classification schemes are required to unambiguously define the term computer.



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