Thank you for all the likes comments and also discovering my binary error! Try to see if you can find it yourself without searching through the comments.
Holy smokes, kid! This is more like a THESIS! Congratulations on producing what's probably the single most interesting, comprehensive, and compelling description on how we got to where we are in computers. Wow. No one mentions Germany's Zuse. The war is over people. History is history. Thank you.
It was hard to find the Zuse stuff. Although Turing is a household name, his contribution to the ACE isn't really mentioned in many places either. Now it is.
I'm standing firm with King Tutenkahmuen had a smart device eg. Telephone of sorts? & it is referenced with his gold death mask. For example I believe a cobra_&_bird. Two for sure on the front & the line pattern in blue ie. Represents { .=log}
@@FreshandFelicia There's absolutely no doubt this would have taken a lot of effort to put together. And you sure did amazing. Thankyou for considering our request.
Hello world from India, I want to thanks a million to the Guys who spent time for creating such comprehensive historical timeline of the Computing Age. Thanks a lot voice over artist, Chuck Fresh. I have started a Computer science Bootcamp class in our local nearby with 25 students and a vision to spread the education and awareness for the coding, programming, computer science and the digital and tech awareness. I used this video to introduce the kids to the History of amazing world we have today in our hands, and got a wonderful feedback. Thanks again to everyone involved in making this video. For me this is a masterpiece....
The fact a Magnetic film storage computer in 1952 predicted eisenhower winning is actually jaw dropping. I am curious what data they collected for the prediction and what algorithm was used. Great Video!
Thanks! Since storage was extremely limited, I'd bet the 1950s predictions were heavily influenced with coder bias. But still - very cool achievement for its time.
I've tried to get into coding in the past, but due to poorly designed classes it left me extremely frustrated and turned me off of it, in addition to life events that derailed things for a bit. I've recently gotten a possible in to working within Microsoft and it's fired me up again. This was a lovely refresher and filled in a lot of the holes I'd been missing, and I think I have a better direction to go with self study, so thank you very much for that!
We also used to only have 10 months, july and august were added for Julius and Augustus. Remove them and the prefixes of the names now make sense again Sep 7, Oct 8, Nov 9, Dec 10
Programming is super important, but we cannot forget about the value of history! Always happy to see the combination of these, especially in such a fun way, thanks for sharing with us! I'll be passing it along as well!
Coding and computers have a long history dating back to the 1800s, starting with punch cards used in the textile industry. Ada Lovelace is considered the first computer programmer. ✦ The story of coding and computers 00:06 ✦ Binary code is the basis of all computer systems 06:10 ✦ Tabulating machines revolutionized data counting and sorting, paving the way for modern computers. 12:02 ✦ The first successful high-level programming language in America was Fortran. 17:43 ✦ The evolution of technology from modems to smartphones and the shift towards cloud storage 23:10 ✦ Coding is the way to tell computers what to do in a language they understand 28:31 ✦ There are numerous job opportunities in coding with high salaries 34:07 ✦ Swift, Rust, Go, Angular, HTML5, Ruby on Rails, SQL, PHP, MEAN and LAMP stacks are important programming languages. Good code is crucial for the advancement of AI and machine learning.
We still get a LOT of flak about HTML not being a programming language. Technically, Hypertext Markup Language is a declarative programming language. Whether or not HTML is a "real" language is a matter of semantics. HTML and CSS are programmatic commands declaring what should exist on a web page and how it should be displayed, so it's a little confusing. But we did disclose that here at 40:24. What's your take?
in my horrible opinion: I'd say it's coding, but not programming (like you said, semantics). HTML won't help me calculate how many apples I'd have if jimmy ate some, but it's still a useful tool
I also do not consider HTML to be a programming language, you cannot write your own sorting algorithm in HTML afaik. I do however strongly disagree with your opinion that PHP is not a programming language 41:45 it is even possible to write standalone programs in PHP that run without a browser or webserver. SQL is the one that is more debatable, I feel that it is fine to categorise it as non-language even though I have heard that strictly speaking it is Turing complete and therefor is a language. It is a bit like the question of whether a cucumber is a fruit or a vegetable, most people consider it to be a vegetable even though it strictly speaking is a fruit.
Terms have changed over the years. One used to "program thier vcr" so, I'd actually say that (as today languages are expected to be Turing complete) it *is programing but not coding* and no, I'm not just trying to be contentios but the above seems the mist natural modern interpretation. If you take code to mean a set of symbols used to affect the recipients behavior (all the way back, think code-breaking egnima) the you are *programming and coding* But no doubt you are programming, that is simply applying an algorithm to customize or speed up a task. (Think "programming our students) it's a much more abstract term.
if someone says it IS, shows they're not technically able to understand a Turning complete language (needs branches/conditional jumps)... so no it's not a programming language.
This video is amazing. Seeing the history to the present day of the most fascinating technological subject. When I was in school I loved using the computer, I wanted to get into computing but my careers advisor told me not to bother because 'too many people would be in that field and I'd never get a job'. I could strangle that guy now. But such is life. Thanks for the amazing video, its truly inspirational
It's never to late to start! Coding can be super fun just to do for self-fulfillment and being able to work on your own passion projects and you could freelance your work to some things on the side if you want to. However serious you'd want to get is up to you but don't let the past dictate what you do now :) Have a great day
Rob I heard the same exact thing in 1983. Began with Cobol in college on punchcards. I couldn't afford to go to Drexel University, my first choice, so I didn't have the opportunity to learn from the best. Changed to broadcasting, then marketing, then pre-law.
This kind of documentary presentation would certainly ignite more interest towards learning coding and do it with passion. I'm a guy with 20yrs of IT Infra exp. Used to stay away from coding and loved to manage data centers storage, networks, compute on prem and Cloud. Now there is a paradigm shift from traditional way of managing stuff from Infrastructure as a code. What if AI completely overtake humans in administering IT and everything is automated. Change is the only constant in this World. We are in work from anywhere era..due to Covid19.
By far the most interesting and fun to watch video of computer science! I litterally could watch this all day. You are so good at teaching! This is what a lecturer should be like.
Amazing content thank you so much!! The was the high level overview that I really needed as a fresh coder! I'm looking to make my mark in data science in the near future and being able to have a basic idea of the history of computing and an idea of how code works and runs will help me immensely! Thank you for helping to provide me with these foundations 😊
A lot of people think that AI is much more powerful than it actually is. Although it is true that right now, AI can: : Write a poem : Tell a story : Paint a picture : Create a film : Compose a song Here’s the thing. Creativity is an expression of self. And AI doesn’t have a ‘self’. An AI has never had its heart broken. Never watched a sunrise. Or swam in the sea. A bot has no life experience. And no soul. Without this last thing, there is no innovation. No art. Nothing new that humans might enjoy. Just preprogrammed, predetermined ‘output’. Creatives, programmers, and inventors- you are irreplaceable. Don’t be afraid of AI.
Except when we are, by the time only "corporate drones" and homeless are left in society what kind of content and "art" do you think people with actual "money" will consume?, as America is devouring itself out of debt and printing fake money we as mere citizens don't have much time left, I'll say the next generation maybe the last to "enjoy" a sunset before getting 20 alerts in their augmented reality inbox reminding them about the bazillion debts they have to pay and they haven't started college yet... We are doom, not in the sense of science fiction by in the sense of actual data analysis, there is people who still think slavery doesn't exist anymore in the world, it never left, as many other shades of "humanity"
Your way of teaching style is really awesome. I'm also a teacher from small county called Nepal but your style is way better and full of fun. While watching this video I was feeling like I'm a 26 years old but little kid.😃
Thanks brother i finally understand everything, using pc is like a illusion because works with codes that is translated to informations but with a representation that we can understand is crazy, i will never see computers the same while playing a super realistic game again 😂
I nearly choked when I heard you say Brevard county! I lived in Titusville for 20 years haha! Live up North now and just started learning C# this year. Thanks for putting this video together! Looking forward to more.
There are small details that are still misteries to me. But hey, you nail the concept in this video, Brother. You literally nail it. This is one semester of coding history condensed into a 45-minute video. Congratulation.
And this is my first time hearing a name "Herman Hollerith". Never knew until now that the guy was the inventor of Punch Card. Nevertheless, my further research revealed that Hollerith was not the only one involved in the development of punchcards. His colleague,John Shaw Billings, also had a contribution towards developing the punchcard. For further reading, see THE DEVELOPMENT OF PUNCH CARD TABULATION IN THE BUREAU OF THE CENSUS WITH OUTLINES OF ACTUAL TABULATION PROGRAMS.
Thanks so much! There are bits and pieces that are missing, many which have been addressed in these comments (thank you all). We will confirm the research, and add the facts in an updated version that will include the Metaverse.
I believe all of this is going to converge with a device like neuralink in the next decade. Where spatial computing is taking place between your brain and the cloud. And further in the future upload ourselves into digital world or viceversa.
Brother spoke about AI being able to code for computers by computers being a thing of the future (10 years). The video is now 5 years old and the advents of AI are unprecedented and leading the industry into a new era of computing. AI will change the way we code, heck I can even guarantee that AI is coding for many companies. The day where they will automate code for coders is gonna be soon, and i want to be on top of AI before that and i advise those in the tech to do the same. Let the machine's work for you for you to work with yourself, godspeed brothers and sisters
WOW 5 years! I was still a teacher when we made this! We're still waiting for the day we can say, "Siri, write me an adventure game no one has ever played set in space and starring my favorite celebrities, and use my chill playlist as the soundtrack." It's coming!
well done, great history presentation...I always find it interesting that Babbage is credited with inventing the first computer, but he never actually built it. Lovelace is always credited as the 1st programmer, although she never programmed Babbage's computer because he never built it. Go figure
I think I'm the only ten year old who's making a book about technology. Without an assignment and I am for some reason actually excited to see once I finish it if actually is able to be published. If not I just make a lot of copys and preserve them as later on once I get my degree in technology in college hopefully to revamp it and get it published.
technically, she is still correct. computers have not yet launched their own *original* thoughts. More: th-cam.com/video/inUJPrfbCD8/w-d-xo.htmlsi=xnSVCsqI6o9yQgqn
This is amazing, I've never seen something boil it all down so efficiently. It's also terrible because having it all shown in a linear fashion like this robs me of some of the mystique of computing. Oh well, I guess I'll go try to understand quantum computing, that should properly **** me up
0:45 wait - those "punch cards" work very similar to player piano piano rolls. I feel like those are older than those textile machines, or am I mistaken?
Fair ground organs use punch card music sheets Vs weaving machine punchcards ? Not sure which came first but they were both examples of earlier automation which lead to computers. Of course I've forgoten Music boxes where the decoder is the fixed bar and the programme is the rotating pin barrel .... amazing how man has learnt ....
I like the way you discuss....I hear you bro. Frotran is very much used by scientific community today, if you're doing modelling, simulation that involves intense calculation.
@@FreshandFelicia Yeah that's true. I guess it wasn't that long ago. It's cool to see the amount of progress that has been made. Makes me excited and curious for the future. If we can make this many advances in this amount of time imagine 20-30 years from now...
I'm finally returning to school at 27 to finish my CE degree, and watching this really gets me excited to get back to work! Things are at an interesting point with computers and possibilities, can't wait to see what's up next. Thanks for the upload!
I wish you would add Grace Hopper, Margaret Hamilton(Software Engineer, 1969 Moon Launch computer) and other applications. Lost In Space 1965-68 also introduced me to robots and computers(especially the first episode: "The Reluctant Stowaway" with computers and that awesome Robot B-9), "War Games" et al.
Those are EXCELLENT examples! We are currently in talks to produce a second version of this, and we will definitely include these amazing people. Thank you!
The gears required to exact tolerances for the gears babage never finished stuff ada did a turing shot and programmed without hardware more correctly i suppose it was an algorithm
01001000 01000101 01101100 01101100 01101111 00100001 if the computer reads that binary code the outcome is HEllo! the L and O is Lower case. 01001000 01000101 01001100 01001100 01001111 00100001 this is the correct Binary code in HELLO! because the binary code of the lower case of L and O is different in the Upper Case.
Ada Lovelace wrote the first language for the second Babbage computer which only existed in a series of blueprints. Niece of lord Byron apparently. It would have been the size of a small church, or a third of the size of large church, had it been built. If I recall correctly.
Loved this video. The part at the end where you talk about Ai and having these jobs available until code can code itself but that it may be a decade or 2 away was funny to hear with copilot and now chatGPT. Again great video. Loved the storyline and learned a lot!
Thanks! As cool as they are, Copilot and ChatGPT are still comparatively weak compared to humans or human coders. But that will change at some point, but not as quickly as we might think.
This was a fantastic dive into the past, present and future of the coding industry. Also, where were you back in 2004 when I was bored to death in my first and only high school computer class?! I'd probably be a programmer for Google by now... *sigh* Anyways, thank you for posting this!
@@FreshandFelicia Well that's like music to my ears:) As someone who recently started coding (in VFX) I am more excited about sequel to this then any upcoming blockbuster hit sequel :)
Thank you for all the likes comments and also discovering my binary error! Try to see if you can find it yourself without searching through the comments.
Am I the only one that's here for fun? (yes, i have boring life but i like it). And this should get more recognition.
Here for fun too! It was a great video. I agree, this needs to be watched by more people.
@@Lwyte17 totally
@@egidijusgagela8772 nope I'm here too 😊
@@egidijusgagela8772 I'm here for fun too :) who said learning the history of computing was boring!? 😊
I’m not exaggerating when I say this is the number one comprehensive explanation from the ground up on how computers work that I have wanted for years
Thank you! Working on part 2 soon.
I turn 49 today. You inspire me. I am taking IT class this month. Thank you!
Happy Birthday, you 50 today :)
How did it go?
@@DayZilya He just bought Google
@@christianalmli9085 Not bad for one year huh? Ahaha
This is awesome
Holy smokes, kid! This is more like a THESIS! Congratulations on producing what's probably the single most interesting, comprehensive, and compelling description on how we got to where we are in computers. Wow. No one mentions Germany's Zuse. The war is over people. History is history. Thank you.
It was hard to find the Zuse stuff. Although Turing is a household name, his contribution to the ACE isn't really mentioned in many places either. Now it is.
@@FreshandFelicia Is it me or is the binary code for 76 & 79 wrong there? @8:47
I'm standing firm with King Tutenkahmuen had a smart device eg. Telephone of sorts? & it is referenced with his gold death mask. For example I believe a cobra_&_bird. Two for sure on the front & the line pattern in blue ie. Represents
{
.=log}
I agree. This video is awesome!
@@NuanceOverDogma I was thinking the same thing. I got 108 and 111. In fact I came to the comments for this reason.
Being someone from a non technical background this was really helpful. You did an amazing job on this one. We would really appreciate a part 2.
Thank you! It takes a TREMENDOUS amount of time to compile all this information, but we're seriously considering it.
@@FreshandFelicia There's absolutely no doubt this would have taken a lot of effort to put together. And you sure did amazing. Thankyou for considering our request.
Hello world from India,
I want to thanks a million to the Guys who spent time for creating such comprehensive historical timeline of the Computing Age. Thanks a lot voice over artist, Chuck Fresh.
I have started a Computer science Bootcamp class in our local nearby with 25 students and a vision to spread the education and awareness for the coding, programming, computer science and the digital and tech awareness.
I used this video to introduce the kids to the History of amazing world we have today in our hands, and got a wonderful feedback.
Thanks again to everyone involved in making this video. For me this is a masterpiece....
VERY COOL! Thank you! Share away!
The fact a Magnetic film storage computer in 1952 predicted eisenhower winning is actually jaw dropping.
I am curious what data they collected for the prediction
and what algorithm was used.
Great Video!
Thanks! Since storage was extremely limited, I'd bet the 1950s predictions were heavily influenced with coder bias. But still - very cool achievement for its time.
I've tried to get into coding in the past, but due to poorly designed classes it left me extremely frustrated and turned me off of it, in addition to life events that derailed things for a bit. I've recently gotten a possible in to working within Microsoft and it's fired me up again. This was a lovely refresher and filled in a lot of the holes I'd been missing, and I think I have a better direction to go with self study, so thank you very much for that!
@@Insharai you can do it! Wish you all the best in your technical career journey.
We also used to only have 10 months, july and august were added for Julius and Augustus. Remove them and the prefixes of the names now make sense again Sep 7, Oct 8, Nov 9, Dec 10
Never realized that! #themoreyouknow
Wow, that's lovely info, but seasons would have began 2 months later. Or we could have had 35 days each month 60/10
Seriously, this is the kind of thing Discovery Channel should be showing! EXCELLENT work!
Wow, thank you!
@@FreshandFelicia 4f
@@FreshandFelicia very nice
Programming is super important, but we cannot forget about the value of history! Always happy to see the combination of these, especially in such a fun way, thanks for sharing with us! I'll be passing it along as well!
Thanks so much!
using this for my home school 1950-2020 computer time line (Crona...) Thanks litarly took 5 mins to finish!
mate you have no clue how many people you have helped with this video, you have made a helpful resource for school. Thx.
Thank you! There is actually more information we missed or could not fit into this video. Working on a part 2 when we can!
Some of the best content I’ve ever seen on TH-cam great presentation, very well done and fun learning. Best of wishes to future coders
Thank you so much!
this is crazy but I’m actually working on a school project and this is been a tremendous help. Thanks so much
Use it and abuse it Wendy!
@@FreshandFelicia lol
Coding and computers have a long history dating back to the 1800s, starting with punch cards used in the textile industry. Ada Lovelace is considered the first computer programmer.
✦
The story of coding and computers
00:06
✦
Binary code is the basis of all computer systems
06:10
✦
Tabulating machines revolutionized data counting and sorting, paving the way for modern computers.
12:02
✦
The first successful high-level programming language in America was Fortran.
17:43
✦
The evolution of technology from modems to smartphones and the shift towards cloud storage
23:10
✦
Coding is the way to tell computers what to do in a language they understand
28:31
✦
There are numerous job opportunities in coding with high salaries
34:07
✦
Swift, Rust, Go, Angular, HTML5, Ruby on Rails, SQL, PHP, MEAN and LAMP stacks are important programming languages. Good code is crucial for the advancement of AI and machine learning.
Nice work!
people like you make the world a better place man, thanks
Nope - it's all about people like YOU! Happy New Year!
This is great. I'm going to show this to my middle school computer students. Thanks for posting! You should do more of these.
It's all about the future! Thanks for doing what you do Shawn.
FINALLY I UNDERSTAND BINARY!
You sir are a saint.
Doubtful
There 10 kinds of people: those who understands binary and those that don't.
@@krzysztofwaleska BRILLIANT!
How does this video only have 40k viewerr?! It is marvelous 😂
Right? Thanks so much!
I was born in the 90's so I've only seen IBM computers at stores when I pay for something, it's 2022, and they're still in use today.
it's true! many insurance companies still use terminals to process claims. crazy!
We still get a LOT of flak about HTML not being a programming language. Technically, Hypertext Markup Language is a declarative programming language. Whether or not HTML is a "real" language is a matter of semantics. HTML and CSS are programmatic commands declaring what should exist on a web page and how it should be displayed, so it's a little confusing. But we did disclose that here at 40:24. What's your take?
in my horrible opinion: I'd say it's coding, but not programming (like you said, semantics). HTML won't help me calculate how many apples I'd have if jimmy ate some, but it's still a useful tool
I also do not consider HTML to be a programming language, you cannot write your own sorting algorithm in HTML afaik. I do however strongly disagree with your opinion that PHP is not a programming language 41:45 it is even possible to write standalone programs in PHP that run without a browser or webserver. SQL is the one that is more debatable, I feel that it is fine to categorise it as non-language even though I have heard that strictly speaking it is Turing complete and therefor is a language. It is a bit like the question of whether a cucumber is a fruit or a vegetable, most people consider it to be a vegetable even though it strictly speaking is a fruit.
Terms have changed over the years. One used to "program thier vcr" so, I'd actually say that (as today languages are expected to be Turing complete) it *is programing but not coding* and no, I'm not just trying to be contentios but the above seems the mist natural modern interpretation. If you take code to mean a set of symbols used to affect the recipients behavior (all the way back, think code-breaking egnima) the you are *programming and coding*
But no doubt you are programming, that is simply applying an algorithm to customize or speed up a task. (Think "programming our students) it's a much more abstract term.
if someone says it IS, shows they're not technically able to understand a Turning complete language (needs branches/conditional jumps)... so no it's not a programming language.
Hi have you done a video on python or JS? because you are one of the best TH-camrs I have come across
This video is amazing. Seeing the history to the present day of the most fascinating technological subject. When I was in school I loved using the computer, I wanted to get into computing but my careers advisor told me not to bother because 'too many people would be in that field and I'd never get a job'. I could strangle that guy now. But such is life. Thanks for the amazing video, its truly inspirational
So Where do you Plan to Start?
It's never to late to start! Coding can be super fun just to do for self-fulfillment and being able to work on your own passion projects and you could freelance your work to some things on the side if you want to. However serious you'd want to get is up to you but don't let the past dictate what you do now :) Have a great day
Maybe you missed the best time to start (i.e. your school years), but there's no reason to miss the second best time to start (i.e. *now* ). 😊
Rob I heard the same exact thing in 1983. Began with Cobol in college on punchcards. I couldn't afford to go to Drexel University, my first choice, so I didn't have the opportunity to learn from the best. Changed to broadcasting, then marketing, then pre-law.
Ada Lovelace was the daughter of Lord Byron, btw. She also had the idea of using numbers to represent other things like colors, fruits, names ...
@@maxheadrom3088 of course she was!!!
This kind of documentary presentation would certainly ignite more interest towards learning coding and do it with passion.
I'm a guy with 20yrs of IT Infra exp. Used to stay away from coding and loved to manage data centers storage, networks, compute on prem and Cloud.
Now there is a paradigm shift from traditional way of managing stuff from Infrastructure as a code.
What if AI completely overtake humans in administering IT and everything is automated.
Change is the only constant in this World.
We are in work from anywhere era..due to Covid19.
Just imagine if Fresh had an actual budget and a production team…
Honestly one of the best yt videos thank you for this information
@@ZaouiNaila thank you 🙏
Love your content, i am a new begginer Developer here from Brazil, thanks a lot for sharing the history of computer science. Have a nice year, peace
I wish you success in your career!
By far the most interesting and fun to watch video of computer science! I litterally could watch this all day. You are so good at teaching! This is what a lecturer should be like.
Thank you so much for your kind words! Now please begin programming. The world needs you!
Amazing content thank you so much!! The was the high level overview that I really needed as a fresh coder! I'm looking to make my mark in data science in the near future and being able to have a basic idea of the history of computing and an idea of how code works and runs will help me immensely! Thank you for helping to provide me with these foundations 😊
@@sophiebarrie5749 you will be AMAZING!
A lot of people think that AI is much more powerful than it actually is. Although it is true that right now, AI can:
: Write a poem
: Tell a story
: Paint a picture
: Create a film
: Compose a song
Here’s the thing.
Creativity is an expression of self. And AI doesn’t have a ‘self’.
An AI has never had its heart broken. Never watched a sunrise. Or swam in the sea.
A bot has no life experience. And no soul.
Without this last thing, there is no innovation. No art. Nothing new that humans might enjoy. Just preprogrammed, predetermined ‘output’.
Creatives, programmers, and inventors- you are irreplaceable. Don’t be afraid of AI.
Except when we are, by the time only "corporate drones" and homeless are left in society what kind of content and "art" do you think people with actual "money" will consume?, as America is devouring itself out of debt and printing fake money we as mere citizens don't have much time left, I'll say the next generation maybe the last to "enjoy" a sunset before getting 20 alerts in their augmented reality inbox reminding them about the bazillion debts they have to pay and they haven't started college yet... We are doom, not in the sense of science fiction by in the sense of actual data analysis, there is people who still think slavery doesn't exist anymore in the world, it never left, as many other shades of "humanity"
This content is insightful and knowledgeable. I enjoyed watching your video. Great editing and commentating skills 😊
@@kopilkaiser8991 thank you for your kind words!
Your way of teaching style is really awesome. I'm also a teacher from small county called Nepal but your style is way better and full of fun. While watching this video I was feeling like I'm a 26 years old but little kid.😃
So nice of you!
I woke up with this question on my mind, thank you for this answer!
happy to help!
Hats off to you for your effort to gather all this information and present it in a delicate way.
Thanks!
Wow, you are really interesting and engaging. I'm a high schooler enrolled in a CS history competition so this was a great place to start!
Thanks! It’s a very interesting topic that’s still evolving!
you clear my soo many concepts love man the way you explain ;)
Thanks! Wishing you a long and prosperous career in the computer business.
This computer science saga thing has gotta be one of the most awesome things happened to mankind.
@@Waris_07-z1i it is! Next world changer: consumer robots. Then, DNA manipulation for eternal life created by general AI
@@FreshandFelicia yeah, not far fetched. Gonna take 100 years at max from now(technology is growing rapidly)
Thanks TH-cam for recommending this channel he gave me so much knowledge in this video and also I subscribed your channel amazing videos
@@ayushpatel1420 many thanks 🙏
Thanks brother i finally understand everything, using pc is like a illusion because works with codes that is translated to informations but with a representation that we can understand is crazy, i will never see computers the same while playing a super realistic game again 😂
it's deep right?
I nearly choked when I heard you say Brevard county! I lived in Titusville for 20 years haha! Live up North now and just started learning C# this year. Thanks for putting this video together! Looking forward to more.
Titusville in the house!
HELL YEAH just came across your channel. Looks like you have some super interesting videos, just what I'm looking for.
Welcome aboard!
There are small details that are still misteries to me. But hey, you nail the concept in this video, Brother. You literally nail it. This is one semester of coding history condensed into a 45-minute video. Congratulation.
And this is my first time hearing a name "Herman Hollerith". Never knew until now that the guy was the inventor of Punch Card. Nevertheless, my further research revealed that Hollerith was not the only one involved in the development of punchcards. His colleague,John Shaw Billings, also had a contribution towards developing the punchcard. For further reading, see THE DEVELOPMENT OF
PUNCH CARD TABULATION IN THE BUREAU OF THE CENSUS WITH OUTLINES OF ACTUAL TABULATION PROGRAMS.
@@myhumblebeginnings Excellent research! Thank you for adding the information and credit for Mr. Billings.
Thanks so much! There are bits and pieces that are missing, many which have been addressed in these comments (thank you all). We will confirm the research, and add the facts in an updated version that will include the Metaverse.
Spatial computer will be next, then ambient computing afterward. How we interact with technology is what’s changing.
googling spatial computing
I believe all of this is going to converge with a device like neuralink in the next decade. Where spatial computing is taking place between your brain and the cloud. And further in the future upload ourselves into digital world or viceversa.
Phenomenal Video. Very useful. Thank you for posting!
Thanks Jeannie!
Awesome video man! Super detailed
thx much!
Perfectly explained Thank you!
@@AbelJanko thanks!
Brother spoke about AI being able to code for computers by computers being a thing of the future (10 years). The video is now 5 years old and the advents of AI are unprecedented and leading the industry into a new era of computing. AI will change the way we code, heck I can even guarantee that AI is coding for many companies. The day where they will automate code for coders is gonna be soon, and i want to be on top of AI before that and i advise those in the tech to do the same. Let the machine's work for you for you to work with yourself, godspeed brothers and sisters
WOW 5 years! I was still a teacher when we made this! We're still waiting for the day we can say, "Siri, write me an adventure game no one has ever played set in space and starring my favorite celebrities, and use my chill playlist as the soundtrack." It's coming!
As a programmer who started in 1997 my mind is already blown after the first minute
i started with punch cards!
@@FreshandFelicia that is impressive. punch cards were used for scoring tests and thats all i knew of them.
Teaching is your thing. Please make more videos.
well done, great history presentation...I always find it interesting that Babbage is credited with inventing the first computer, but he never actually built it. Lovelace is always credited as the 1st programmer, although she never programmed Babbage's computer because he never built it. Go figure
Tremendous video man! I really like how you explain!! Hats off
Thanks for your kind words
Great presentation, I like the way you lay the narrative... Great and thanks...keep it up.
Thanks for your kind words! Fresh is a retired teacher.
I'm in college and this is actually very helpful. Thanks!
are you from Colombia, actually?. I'm just asking because of your user name.
@@User_-xv7ol sisa
Glad it was helpful!
you earned yourself a life long sub ,top Job bro .well explained brother...... God bless everyone watching this
Thanks for the sub! God bless.
This is brilliant as usual. Nice work. Thorough, and unboring!
We learned from the MASTA~
One of the best classes that I've ever seen about computers
Thank you so much!
Good video that 👍🏼 saved to share also. Nice one
thanks 🙏
Thank you for the free information. It was much informative on a Saturday night!
You are so welcome!
I like the way you talk man, hahaha this is like as if Hank Schrader from breaking bad was a Computer Programmer.
HANK! Terrible way to go. Walter lives!
I think I'm the only ten year old who's making a book about technology. Without an assignment and I am for some reason actually excited to see once I finish it if actually is able to be published. If not I just make a lot of copys and preserve them as later on once I get my degree in technology in college hopefully to revamp it and get it published.
You can do it!
@@FreshandFelicia :D
@@FreshandFelicia Thanks!
Now I just need a computer and ill get started
Holy cow
Neat Work👏🏼🙌🏻🎉
Plus, love the energy
@@Lirfon1019 thanks 🙏
I had an Altair! Wish I had kept it. Probably worth a ton of money now. Great vid guy.
Thanks man I'm doing engineering in Computer science I was really interested to know about history of computer awesome video love from India.
Glad you liked it!
LOVE LOVE LOVE this video! Great historical narrative. I could see this on the Discovery Channel.
Oooh we could actually get paid to teach? What a concept! 🤣
Ada Lovelace: Computers will never thinks for itself
*183 years later 💀
technically, she is still correct. computers have not yet launched their own *original* thoughts. More: th-cam.com/video/inUJPrfbCD8/w-d-xo.htmlsi=xnSVCsqI6o9yQgqn
This is amazing, I've never seen something boil it all down so efficiently.
It's also terrible because having it all shown in a linear fashion like this robs me of some of the mystique of computing.
Oh well, I guess I'll go try to understand quantum computing, that should properly **** me up
It’s a wide angle view at best. Reality is much more messy.
as a cs student who loves history, thank u for this
Thanks for watching!
0:45 wait - those "punch cards" work very similar to player piano piano rolls. I feel like those are older than those textile machines, or am I mistaken?
nope - textiles date back to Egyptian times
Fair ground organs use punch card music sheets Vs weaving machine punchcards ?
Not sure which came first but they were both examples of earlier automation which lead to computers. Of course I've forgoten Music boxes where the decoder is the fixed bar and the programme is the rotating pin barrel .... amazing how man has learnt ....
Player pianos as well
I am learning software engineering and very new to it and this is the best overview video ever. I watched a dozen more but this one is great
Thank you! Best of luck in your career.
Thanks a lot bro ❤
@@ShivasaiB-i6k best of luck in your coding future
This was a fantastic video, engaging and well researched and presented! If you were a teacher id take a class 😂
@@MarsRoverYT awww thank you 🙏
Well within the first few words I knew this was going to be good.
@@OptimusShepherd thanks! 🙏
wow thank you so much for this man ❤
@@okayydude thank you for your comment. Means a lot.
I like the way you discuss....I hear you bro.
Frotran is very much used by scientific community today, if you're doing modelling, simulation that involves intense calculation.
34:05 hilarious!! I love your video.
Thanks so much for watching!
Best dang story I've heard in a long time. You know how to tell a story.
Amazing. Kenyan youth are stepping into tech enmass 😊
Great news!
very detailed and helped me with my notes.
awesome job man!
thanks!
I remember dial up on that 56k internet connection...I used to use Juno... lol remember those weird sounds dial up used to make...
Wasn't all that long ago when you think about it. I'd run Juno, NetZero, and AOL on three different machines!
@@FreshandFelicia Yeah that's true. I guess it wasn't that long ago. It's cool to see the amount of progress that has been made. Makes me excited and curious for the future. If we can make this many advances in this amount of time imagine 20-30 years from now...
as an old programmer i was a little emotional watching this ! idk why :D
The history is still being written!
I'm finally returning to school at 27 to finish my CE degree, and watching this really gets me excited to get back to work! Things are at an interesting point with computers and possibilities, can't wait to see what's up next.
Thanks for the upload!
You got this!
I wish you would add Grace Hopper, Margaret Hamilton(Software Engineer, 1969 Moon Launch computer) and other applications. Lost In Space 1965-68 also introduced me to robots and computers(especially the first episode: "The Reluctant Stowaway" with computers and that awesome Robot B-9), "War Games" et al.
Those are EXCELLENT examples! We are currently in talks to produce a second version of this, and we will definitely include these amazing people. Thank you!
bro school sucks like hell but i can not turn away from computers
The gears required to exact tolerances for the gears babage never finished stuff ada did a turing shot and programmed without hardware more correctly i suppose it was an algorithm
Truth. Wondering what Ada would have done with today's hardware.
Interesting and well done video. But I'd like to see how human language actually translates into assembly and then into machine code.
Other than the HEllo! Mistake very insightful and informative video
@@damionmccullom2424 and that is exactly the inspiration you need to debug code
Excellent. I always find these sorta talks so fascinating.
Glad you like them!
LOVED this video! More please!
More to come!
Awwssommeee stuff.....🔥🔥🔥
Got all the information in just one video 😅😅
Thank you so much 😀
Is it me or is the number for binary code of 76 & 79 wrong there? @8:47
Who knows. That's not really super important here. What should it be?
01001000 01000101 01101100 01101100 01101111 00100001 if the computer reads that binary code the outcome is HEllo! the L and O is Lower case. 01001000 01000101 01001100 01001100 01001111 00100001 this is the correct Binary code in HELLO! because the binary code of the lower case of L and O is different in the Upper Case.
Ada Lovelace wrote the first language for the second Babbage computer which only existed in a series of blueprints. Niece of lord Byron apparently. It would have been the size of a small church, or a third of the size of large church, had it been built. If I recall correctly.
Now you can fit all that tech on the tip of a needle. Crazy, right?
Loved this video. The part at the end where you talk about Ai and having these jobs available until code can code itself but that it may be a decade or 2 away was funny to hear with copilot and now chatGPT. Again great video. Loved the storyline and learned a lot!
Thanks! As cool as they are, Copilot and ChatGPT are still comparatively weak compared to humans or human coders. But that will change at some point, but not as quickly as we might think.
red stone was so popular they made it into a real thing
What a video. It is just perfect!!😍
thanks!
This was a fantastic dive into the past, present and future of the coding industry. Also, where were you back in 2004 when I was bored to death in my first and only high school computer class?! I'd probably be a programmer for Google by now... *sigh* Anyways, thank you for posting this!
Thank you for this immense body of work. It’s by far the best introduction and lesson on history of coding and computers I have ever seen.
Thank you so much for watching! We're working on Part 2 soon.
@@FreshandFelicia Well that's like music to my ears:) As someone who recently started coding (in VFX) I am more excited about sequel to this then any upcoming blockbuster hit sequel :)
Really exciting video
clear my web development path.
Clear out confusions.
Get busy!