The DDR400 memory modules for computers were first available on the public market in 2002. It was the largest volume of memory available in one place at the time is was released.
Many different types of memory were used in first generation computers, a few of the most commonly used were:electrostatic cathode ray tubes (DRAM)sonic delay lines (DSAM)electrostatic selectron tubes (SRAM)magnetic drums (NVSSAM)magnetic disks (NVSSAM)magnetic core stacks (NVSRAM)Magnetic core memory eventually became dominate.Second and third generation computers continued to use sonic delay line memory, magnetic disk memory, and magnetic core memory (with magnetic core memory still dominating).Late in the third generation computers solid state memory chips replaced all other types of memory.Fourth generation computers used only solid state memory chips.
Second Generation computers. The VAX mentioned above is just a single model of first generation electronic computers.
By most definitions, first generation computers were the ones built with vacuum tubes.
The first minicomputers were second generation computers, but the most well known minicomputers were third generation computers.
Because the first, second, and third generation computers were also digital computers.
Second generation computers are often called transistorized computers. The transistorized computers are more advanced computers than the first generation of computers.
Electro-Mechanical Computers were used before first generation of computers.
First generation computers.
No computers.
first generation computers
FIRST GENERATION