first generation computers
4 th generation computers
First generation (1940-1956) Vaccum Tubes Second Generation(1956-1963)Transistors Third Generation(1964-1971)Integrated circuits Fourth Generation(1971-present)Microprocessors We already know about some of the early computers - ENIAC , EDVAC , EDSAC , UNIVAC I and IBM . These machines and others of their time used thousands of vacuum tubes . A vacuum tube was a fragile glass device , which used filaments as a source of electronics and could control and amplify electronic signals . It was the only high-speed electronic switching device available in those days . These vacuum tube computers could perform computations in milliseconds and were referred to as first generation computers.
The second generation language programmers.
There is no such thing as a fourth generation language. Machine code is the first generation (the native language of the computer). Assembly language is the second generation (low-level symbolic language). All high-level (abstract) languages are third-generation. Although some languages claim to be fourth-generation or even fifth-generation, they are meaningless terms used by marketing types that tell you nothing about a language's capability.
Second generation computers are often called transistorized computers. The transistorized computers are more advanced computers than the first generation of computers.
second generation
Second Generation computers. The VAX mentioned above is just a single model of first generation electronic computers.
no, second generation. third generation computers used ICs.
Charles Babbage is the inventor of second generation computers.
Because the first, second, and third generation computers were also digital computers.
Biocomputers
The second generation computers were developed to meet the needs of the atomic energy laboratories.
The first second generation computers came on the market in 1958.
The first minicomputers were second generation computers, but the most well known minicomputers were third generation computers.
Transistorized computers.
Ancient ones.