CHARLES BABBAGE
Charles Babbage (26 December 1791 – 18 October
1871) was an English
mathematician, analytical philosopher, mechanical engineer and computer scientist. He was the first person to
come up with the idea of a computer that
could be programmed. Unfinished parts of his mechanisms are on display in the London Science Museum.
Charles Babbage was born in England,
at 44 Crosby Row, Walworth Road, London. Babbage's father, Benjamin Babbage, was a banker in London who
owned the Bitton Estate in Teignmouth.
His mother was Betsy Plumleigh Babbage. In 1808,
the Babbage family moved into the old Rowdens house in East Teignmouth.
His Brain is also on display in the Science Museum in London.
Works
Knowing that there were lots of errors in the calculation of mathematical
tables, Babbage wanted to find a method by which they could be calculated
mechanically, removing errors made by humans. Three different factors seem to
have influenced him: a dislike of untidiness; his experience working on logarithmic tables; and existing work on calculating machines carried out by Wilhelm Schickard, Blaise
Pascal, and Gottfried Leibniz.
He first talked about the principles of a calculating engine in a letter to Sir
Humphrey Davy in 1822.
Part of Babbage's difference engine, assembled after his death by Babbage's
son, using parts found in his laboratory.
Babbage's engines were among the first mechanical computers. His engines
were not actually completed because he did not have enough money. Babbage
realised that a machine could do the work better and more reliably than a human
being. Babbage controlled building of some steam-powered machines that more or
less did their job; calculations could be mechanized to an extent. Although
Babbage's machines were large machines they were organized in a way similar to
modern computer architecture. The data
and program memory were separated, operation was instruction based, control
unit could make conditional jumps and the machine had a separate I/O unit. Ada Lovelace studied how to program them.
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