Before the 1920s, computers (sometimes computors) were
human clerks that performed computations. They were usually under the
lead of a physicist. Many thousands of computers were employed in
commerce, government, and research establishments. Most of these
computers were women, and they were known to have a degree in calculus.
Some performed astronomical calculations for calendars.
After the 1920s, the expression computing machine referred to
any machine that performed the work of a human computer, especially
those in accordance with effective methods of the Church-Turing thesis.
The thesis states that a mathematical method is effective if it could
be set out as a list of instructions able to be followed by a human
clerk with paper and pencil, for as long as necessary, and without
ingenuity or insight.
Machines that computed with continuous values became known as the analog
kind. They used machinery that represented continuous numeric
quantities, like the angle of a shaft rotation or difference in
electrical potential.
Digital machinery, in contrast to analog, were able to render a state
of a numeric value and store each individual digit. Digital machinery
used difference engines or relays before the invention of faster memory
devices.
The phrase computing machine gradually gave away, after the late 1940s, to just computer
as the onset of electronic digital machinery became common. These
computers were able to perform the calculations that were performed by
the previous human clerks.
Since the values stored by digital machines were not bound to
physical properties like analog devices, a logical computer, based on
digital equipment, was able to do anything that could be described
"purely mechanical." The theoretical Turing Machine, created by Alan Turing, is a hypothetical device theorized in order to study the properties of such hardware.
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