In the 1970s, computers were used in banking and for the (then quite new) credit card systems. They were also used in universities and large national organisations requiring computing power - such as the Meteorological Office in the UK (for weather forecasting) and NASA in the USA. Most offices did not have one and virtualy no one used one at home.
There were a limited number of personal computers, much larger than today's standalone computers (and very much large than laptops!). These just used a keyboard for input and a screen (VDU) that only displayed lines of text. These would have been used on some offices - with no internet or other connectivity and very limited (black and white) printing.
After the microprocessor was developed in the 1970s.
The third generation of computers, which emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, first utilized multiprogramming. With the development of mainframes and time-sharing systems, these computers were capable of running multiple programs simultaneously, sharing the CPU's processing time among different tasks.
Computers were introduced into Australia in the late 1950s. The first significant computer installation was the IBM 704, which was used by the Australian government for scientific research. By the 1960s, computers began to be adopted more widely in various sectors, including business and education, significantly influencing the country's technological landscape. The 1970s saw an increase in the availability of smaller, more affordable computers, further driving their adoption.
no, second generation. third generation computers used ICs.
No, microchips made missile guidance computers possible in the early 1960s. The microprocessor (a specific type of microchip containing a complete CPU) made microcomputers possible in the early 1970s and when microprocessors became powerful enough in the early 1980s, the first personal computers.
There were none in the classrooms where I attended, but I can't say about the offices for sure.
After the microprocessor was developed in the 1970s.
Alan Turing's experiments in the 1940s were a forerunner of computers. The computers built in the 1970s functioned like today's computers but were much bigger.
MacOS is a very old operating system. The first Macintosh computers were made in 1983, and MacOS was published with them. However, MacOS was developed since the 1970s.
No, dreamcatchers were not fads in the 1970s because they was used in the age of the Ancient Americas, not the 1970s.
The services that accounting and the accountant can provide have been enhanced in many ways since the 1970s by advances in computers and other information technology.
The first computer with a Graphical User Interface and mouse was the Xerox Alto in the late 1970s.
why computers used in government
Computers are used for everything
they made intel
The third generation of computers, which emerged in the 1960s and 1970s, first utilized multiprogramming. With the development of mainframes and time-sharing systems, these computers were capable of running multiple programs simultaneously, sharing the CPU's processing time among different tasks.
Computers were introduced into Australia in the late 1950s. The first significant computer installation was the IBM 704, which was used by the Australian government for scientific research. By the 1960s, computers began to be adopted more widely in various sectors, including business and education, significantly influencing the country's technological landscape. The 1970s saw an increase in the availability of smaller, more affordable computers, further driving their adoption.