Back in the early days, computers weren’t small or smart. They were massive machines filled with vacuum tubes, glowing like old TV sets and taking up entire rooms. These tubes controlled electricity but got hot, broke often, and used tons of power.
Then came the game-changer: the transistor. Invented in 1947, it replaced vacuum tubes with a tiny, solid-state switch. Computers became faster, more reliable, and way smaller—this was the real start of the digital age.
Before hard drives and flash memory, data lived on punch cards. Programs were written using holes in stacks of stiff paper. One wrong punch and the whole program could crash. It was precise, painful, and totally normal back then.
In the 1970s, things took a fun turn. The Altair 8800 came out—a tiny metal box with switches and blinking lights. It wasn’t pretty, but it got hobbyists excited and even inspired Bill Gates to write BASIC for it.
Then came the Apple II in 1977. It had color graphics, sound, and was actually easy to use. Suddenly, computers weren’t just lab toys—they became part of people’s homes.
Microprocessors made all of this possible. The Intel 4004 kicked it off in 1971, packing thousands of transistors into a chip the size of a fingernail. Today, chips have billions, running everything from watches to cars.
Unix also quietly changed the game. It introduced command lines, file systems, and multitasking—laying the foundation for macOS, Linux, and even Android.
Now, we’re entering the age of quantum computers. These machines don’t just crunch numbers—they play with probability and parallel worlds. The future of computing might not be just faster, but weirder and way more powerful.
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