Konrad Zuse

Konrad Zuse at Amazon
Buy books at Amazon.com and save. Qualified orders over $25 ship free.
Amazon.com/books

Konrad Zuse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paul Janositz: Informatik und Konrad Zuse: Der Pionier des Computerbaus in ... Jürgen Alex: Zur Entstehung des Computers - von Alfred Tarski zu Konrad Zuse. ...
en.wikipedia.org

Life and Work of Konrad Zuse, The
Biography of the inventor of the program-controlled computer, written by his son, Prof. Horst Zuse.
www.epemag.com

Konrad Zuse
Biography and history of his life.
ei.cs.vt.edu

Konrad Zuse's first computers - The Z1
The Life and Work of Konrad Zuse ... of Konrad Zuse's parents in 1936. Fig.8. The ... In 1986, Konrad Zuse decided to rebuild the Z1 (Fig. 13), because the ...
www.epemag.com

Konrad Zuse (1910 - 1995)
Before Claude Shannon wrote his famous thesis, Konrad Zuse was already labouring away in his parent's apartment to build a machine that could perform any computation ...
www.kerryr.net

Inventors of The Modern Computer - Konrad Zuse
Konrad Zuse was the inventor of the first freely programmable computer. ... Erfinder: Konrad Zuse - Inventor of first programmable computer - Z1 Z2 Z3 ...
inventors.about.com

Erfinder: Konrad Zuse - Inventor of first programmable computer - Z1 Z2 ...
Information about the German inventor of the first programmable digital computer, Konrad Zuse. ... Konrad Zuse was born on June 22, 1910 in the Wilmersdorf ...
german.about.com

Konrad Zuse: Definition from Answers.com
Konrad Zuse (born June 22, 1910, Berlin, Ger. - died Dec. 18, 1995, Hünfeld) German engineer. ... Konrad Zuse Museum Hoyerswerda. Computermuseum Kiel Z11 ...
www.answers.com

Konrad Zuse
biography of Konrad Zuse ... Konrad Zuse. principal papers. hardware. software. keywords. Z1, Plankalkul. see also ... Konrad Zuse was born in Berlin in 1910. ...
www.thocp.net




Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: Permission denied in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: fopen(/home/templatecore2cache//*cluesnet.com/78/7883d2d35908b63add320214ad9c585cf8b99276.tc2cache) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 130

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 131

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 132



{{Infobox_Scientist| name = Konrad Zuse| image = Konrad_Zuse_(1992).jpg|200px| image_width = 200px| caption = Konrad Zuse in 1992| birth_date = June 22, 1910, [German Empire, [1995, [Germany| field = [Computer Science| doctoral_advisor =| doctoral_students =| known_for = [Z3
Plankalkül
Calculating Space (cf. digital physics)] in 1964,
Harry H. Goode Memorial Award in 1965 (together with George Stibitz),
Bundesverdienstkreuz in 1972

Konrad Zuse (June 22, 1910 Berlin - December 18, 1995 Hünfeld) was a Germany engineer and computer pioneer. His greatest achievement was the world's first functional program-controlled computer, the Z3, in 1941 (the program was stored on a tape). In 1998, the Z3 was shown to be Turing-complete. He received the Werner-von-Siemens-Ring in 1964 for the Z3.

Zuse also designed the first high-level programming language programming language, Plankalkül, first published in 1948, although this was a theoretical contribution, since the language was not implemented in his lifetime and did not directly influence early languages. One of the inventors of ALGOL (Rutishauser) wrote: "The very first attempt to devise an algorithmic language was undertaken in 1948 by K. Zuse. His notation was quite general, but the proposal never attained the consideration it deserved."

In addition to his technical work, Zuse founded the first computer startup company in 1946. This company built the Z4 (computer), which became the first commercial computer, leased to ETH Zürich in 1950. Due to World War II, however, Zuse's work went largely unnoticed in the United Kingdom and the United States; possibly his first documented influence on a US company was IBM's option on his patents in 1946. In the late 1960s, Zuse suggested the concept of a Calculating Space (a computation-based universe).

There is a replica of the Z3, as well as the Z4, in the Deutsches Museum in Munich.

The Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin in Berlin has an exhibition devoted to Zuse. In it are twelve of his machines, including a replica of the Z1, some original documents, including the specifications of Plankalkül, and several of Zuse's paintings.

Pre-WWII work and the Z1 Born in Berlin, Germany, Zuse graduated in civil engineering from the Technical University of Berlin in 1935. In his engineering studies, Zuse had to perform many routine calculations by hand, which he found mind-numbingly boring. This led him to dream about performing calculations by machine.

He started as a design engineer at the Henschel aircraft factory in Berlin-Schönefeld but resigned a year later to build a program driven/programmable machine.Working in his parents' apartment in 1936, his first attempt, called the Z1 (computer), was a binary electrically driven mechanical calculator with limited programmability, reading instructions from a punched tape. The Z1 never worked well, though, due to the lack of sufficiently precise parts. The Z1 and its original blueprints were destroyed during World War II.

Between 1987 and 1989, Zuse recreated the Z1, suffering a heart-attack midway through the project. It had 30,000 components, cost 800,000 Deutsche Mark, and required four individuals (including Zuse) to assemble it. Funding for this retrocomputing project was provided by Siemens and a consortium of five companies.

The WWII years; the Z2, Z3, and Z4 World War II made it impossible for Zuse and other German computer scientists to work with scientists in the UK and the USA, or even to stay in contact with them. In 1939, Zuse was called for military service but was able to convince the army to let him return to his computers. In 1940, he gained support from the Aerodynamische Versuchsanstalt (AVA, Aerodynamic Research Institute), which used his work for the production of glide bombs. Zuse built the Z2, a revised version of the Z1, from telephone relays. The same year, he started a company, Zuse Apparatebau (Zuse Apparatus Engineering), to manufacture his machines.

Improving on the basic Z2 machine, he built the Z3 in 1941. It was a Binary numeral system 64-bit floating point calculator featuring programmability with loops but without conditional jumps, with memory and a calculation unit based on telephone relays. The telephone relays used in his machines were largely collected from discarded stock. Despite the absence of conditional jumps, the Z3 was a Turing complete computer (ignoring the fact that no physical computer can be truly Turing complete because of limited storage size). However, Turing-completeness was never considered by Zuse (who had practical applications in mind) and only demonstrated in 1998 (see History of computing hardware).

Zuse never received the support that computer pioneers in Allied countries, such as Alan Turing, got. The Z3 was financed only partly by the DVL (Deutsche Versuchsanstalt für Luftfahrt, i.e. German Experimentation-Institution for Aviation), which wanted their extensive calculations automated. A request by his co-worker Helmut T. Schreyer (1912-1984) for government funding for an electronic successor to the Z3 was denied as "strategically unimportant". In 1937 Schreyer had advised Zuse to use vacuum tubes as switching elements, who at this time considered it a "Schnapsidee", i.e. crazy idea (in his own words).

Zuse's company (with the Z3) was destroyed in 1945 by an Allied attack. Fortunately, the partially finished, relay-based Z4 (computer) had been moved to a safe place earlier. Zuse designed the first high-level programming language, Plankalkül, from 1941 to 1945, although he did not publish it in its entirety until 1972. No compiler or interpreter was available for Plankalkül until a team from the Free University of Berlin implemented it in 2000.

Konrad Zuse married Gisela Brandes in January 1945 - employing a carriage, himself dressed in tailcoat and top hat and with Gisela in wedding veil, for Zuse attached importance to a noble ceremony. Their son Horst Zuse was born in November 1945.

Zuse the entrepreneur In 1946 Zuse founded the world's first computer startup company: the Zuse-Ingenieurbüro Hopferau. Venture capital was raised through ETH Zürich and an IBM option on Zuse's patents.

Zuse founded another company, Zuse KG, in 1949. The Z4 (computer) was finished and delivered to the ETH Zürich, Switzerland in September 1950. At that time, it was the only working computer in continental Europe, and the first computer in the world to be sold, beating the Ferranti Mark I by five months and the UNIVAC I by ten months. Other computers, all numbered with a leading Z, were built by Zuse and his company. Notable are the Z11, which was sold to the optics industry and to universities, and the Z22, the first computer with a memory based on magnetic storage.

By 1967, the Zuse KG had built a total of 251 computers. Due to financial problems, it was then sold to Siemens AG.

Calculating Space In 1967 Zuse also suggested that the universe itself is running on a grid of computers (digital physics); in 1969 he published the book Rechnender Raum (translated into English as Calculating Space). This idea has attracted a lot of attention, since there is no physical evidence against Zuse's thesis. Edward Fredkin (1980s), Juergen Schmidhuber (1990s), Stephen Wolfram (A New Kind of Science) and others have expanded on it.

Zuse received several awards for his work. After he retired, he focused on his hobby, painting. Zuse died on December 18 1995 in Hünfeld, Germany, near Fulda.

Awards

Quotations

References

See also

External links



Konrad Zuse from FOLDOC
Konrad Zuse < person > The designer of the first programming language, Plankalkül, and the first fully functional program-controlled electromechanical digital computer in the ...

Konrad Zuse from FOLDOC
Zuse, Konrad ==> Konrad Zuse < person > The designer of the first programming language, Plankalkül, and the first fully functional program-controlled electromechanical digital ...

Konrad Zuse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Konrad Zuse (pronounced [ˈkɔnʁat ˈtsuːzə]; June 22, 1910 Berlin - December 18, 1995 Hünfeld) was a German engineer and computer pioneer. His greatest achievement was the ...

Konrad Zuse
Konrad Zuse Born June 22, 1910, Berlin-Wilmersdorf; German inventor of pre-war electromechanical binary computer designated Z1 which was destroyed without trace by wartime bombing ...

Zuse summary
Konrad Zuse (1910-1995) ... JOC/EFR © July 1999. The URL of this page is: http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Mathematicians/Zuse.html

konrad-zuse.de
Konrad Zuse’s Homepage Today, in the whole world Konrad Zuse almost is unanimosly accepted as the creator / inventor of the first free programmable computer with a binary ...

Konrad Zuse: Preface
EPE Online article by Konrad Zuse's son, Prof. Horst Zuse. Well written biography, many historical pictures.

Zuse biography
Biography of Konrad Zuse (BB^Y-1995) ... Born: 22 June 1910 in Berlin-Wilmersdorf, Germany Died: 18 Dec 1995 in Hünfeld (near Fulda), Germany

Konrad Zuse
The Free Online Dictionary of Computing (http://foldoc.doc.ic.ac.uk/) is edited by Denis Howe < dbh@doc.ic.ac.uk >. Previous: KOMPILER Next: Korn Shell

KONRAD ZUSE - Inventor of the First Working Computer
1935-1938: Konrad Zuse builds Z1, world's first program-controlled computer. Despite certain mechanical engineering problems it had all the basic ingredients of modern machines ...





 
Copyright © 2008 opini8.com - All rights reserved.
Home | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
All Trademarks belong to their repective owners.
Many aspects of this page are used under
commercial commons license from Yahoo!