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Description:
What is a computer? A wonderful machine full of cat videos? Well...yes, but it's way more than that. Hit play to find out.
Transcript
- 00:02
At this point in the course, we've talked about almost every technology that has contributed
- 00:07
to the modern world as we know it.
- 00:09
Don't worry, we won't toot our own horns… [Saxophone playing]
- 00:12
…we have self-tooting ones for that now.
- 00:14
Seriously, we’ve been thorough.
Full Transcript
- 00:16
We've covered cars, airplanes, fossil fuels, industrial agriculture, nuclear weapons, telegraphs, [Pictures of cars, airplanes etc... in a tornado]
- 00:23
telephones, televisions, and modern medicine.
- 00:26
We've even covered microwaves, which made us crave massive amounts of popcorn. [Popcorn flies out of a microwave]
- 00:31
But there's one technology that defines our modern lives, perhaps more than all the others combined. [Mac computer starts up]
- 00:36
It's the reason we call this the Information Age, and the reason people watch about 500 [Cat video playing from YouTube]
- 00:42
years of YouTube videos on Facebook every day.
- 00:45
We’re not even exaggerated that math.
- 00:47
Seriously 500 years worth of hours are watched every day, and that number is only growing
- 00:53
bigger and bigger.
- 00:54
We're talking, of course, about computers. [Person using a MacBook]
- 00:55
Y'know…those little machines that let us do everything from typing up our homework
- 01:00
to watching GIFS of disgustingly cute dogs to watching Shmoop videos about computers. [Loop of a dog on a computer]
- 01:06
Whoa.
- 01:08
Computerception there huh?
- 01:09
But computers haven't always been the all-consuming must-have technology of their time. [A sledge hammer hits a computer monitor]
- 01:14
In their early history, computers were just giant, slow calculators, used only by governments [Calculator with legs]
- 01:19
and very patient researchers.
- 01:20
In 1946, the head of IBM predicted that the world would probably need about six computers [6 computers appear on the world]
- 01:28
Lucky for IBM that that didn’t prove to be the case.
- 01:31
For the record, at least 2 billion computers have been sold. [IBM stock chart goes up]
- 01:35
In this lesson, we're going to figure out how we went from computers the size of houses [Picture of an old computer]
- 01:40
to computers the size of our hand. [Someone holding a smartphone]
- 01:43
And then, perhaps even more importantly, we'll find out why computers have become the defining
- 01:47
technology of the twenty-first century.
- 01:49
Y'know. [Computer crying]
- 01:50
As of now.
- 01:51
Still waiting on those hoverboards…
- 01:52
Most inventions are the product of lots of people working on different ideas over a long [Pictures of people working in labs]
- 01:58
period of time…
- 02:00
But nobody could ever simplify computer history enough to give the credit to one person… [People appearing and holding on to one trophy]
- 02:04
Or even ten people.
- 02:06
Computers have a century-long history, and involve hundreds of researchers, engineers,
- 02:10
and mathematicians working independently.
- 02:13
It's even difficult to define what a computer is. [Kid scratching his head]
- 02:16
Seriously, go ahead and try it.
- 02:18
A computer is…
- 02:19
Um…a machine…full of cat videos?
- 02:21
And…celebrity tweets…?
- 02:22
Yeah it's hard right?
- 02:24
In the beginning of the nineteenth century…computers….were just people who worked computing numbers. [Man working in front of a computer]
- 02:28
Yup, anybody who did math all day was technically a computer.
- 02:32
Charles Babbage's "difference engine" was a calculator that could perform polynomial [Babbage stood next to his machine]
- 02:39
math, which sounds very impressive.
- 02:41
Alan Turing's machine was a device that printed symbols on paper according to the directions
- 02:46
it was given.
- 02:48
These days, we expect a computer to have a central processing unit, plenty of memory, [Man sat at a desk and the different components of a computer appear]
- 02:52
and the ability to stream whatever we want, whenever we want it…or else. [Man holds a gun to the computer]
- 02:57
For the purposes of this lesson, we're going to call all of that a computer….
- 03:01
A programmable, usually electronic device that can store, retrieve, and process data.
- 03:06
We’re also going to call it our friend because it will let us binge watch Parks and Recreation [Thought bubble appears above a man saying that he loves his computer]
- 03:11
after we’re done making this video without complaining.
- 03:14
And that's what real friends do.
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