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  • Hi and welcome to another awesome video by 365 Data Science, where we take interesting

  • ideas related to data, technology, business, and careers then turn them into unique and

  • intriguing content for your enjoyment.

  • So, without delay, let’s get started.

  • Nowadays, it feels like every week another ground-breaking invention or idea is revealed.

  • But how did we get here?

  • In this video were going to look at the evolution of technology from the very beginning.

  • Well go through some of the most influential devices and concepts that have led us to the

  • techno-fuelled world we live in today.

  • Our time travel journey starts pretty much when we did, before selfies, trolling, open-world

  • gaming, and cheesy infographic videos, way back in 35,000 BC with the first recorded

  • example of counting.

  • It all began with a simple tally on a bonethe Lebombo bone.

  • Talk about upcycling!

  • More conveniently, Papyrus paper was invented in 3,000 BC for recording and the Abacus in

  • 2,300 BC for sums.

  • These had evolutions of their own for the next couple of millennia up to around 100

  • CE where they reached a state of how we know them today.

  • This was also the time Hindu Arabic numerals were developed, not the first characterised

  • numbers but ones which allow complex mathematics.

  • Jumping to the second millennia we have the development of the Torquetum – a complex

  • analogue computer used to measure astronomical coordinates and is the bases for all modern

  • astronomical instruments.

  • The Torquetum was the first device used for the observation of Hayleys Comet.

  • Equally terrifying and amazing In 1206 came one of the first examples of the concept of

  • automation with Al-Jazari’s Programmable automata which helped to fuel the ideas of

  • mechanical humans and artificial intelligence.

  • Recently, evidence was discovered showing that the first mechanical calculator was conceived

  • in 1502 by none other than Leonardo da Vinciwho apparently invented everything.

  • However, nothing came of it and after a few manual calculation systems, the first mechanical

  • calculator was realised as Pascal’s Calculator in 1642.

  • Shortly after, we got the binary system.

  • But It wasn’t until the 1800s that technology was advanced enough to take advantage of it.

  • Starting with the Jacquard Loom, which used punch cards to automatically weave designs,

  • then leading to Babbage’s concept of the difference engine and later the analytical

  • engine.

  • Unfortunately, these last two projects weren’t actualised due to funding but that didn’t

  • stop the world’s first computer programmer Ada Lovelace from seeing how they could work

  • and writing the first ever algorithm.

  • Then we literally captured lightning in a bottle and harnessed electricity, we performed

  • the census with a tabulating machine for the first time, the triode was inventedessential

  • for the development of television and radio, we came up with the idea of a thinking machine

  • the first ever robot in the sci-fi filmMetropolis”, and the Turing machine was

  • conceptualised.

  • All this played a huge part in the creation of the first ever electric computer in 1939

  • The Atanasoff-Berry Computer.

  • Work on the Atanasoff-Berry was discontinued due to World War II, but other computers built

  • for the war effort, like the colossus and Zuse Z3, were developed.

  • During the war a model for computational neural networks was created.

  • After the war had ended we got the ENIAC - the grandfather of digital computing, the UNIVAC

  • for business and government, the transistor, and the first thinking machines in the SNARC

  • and the IBM 701.

  • In fact, this was the first computer that displayed AI capabilities as it learned to

  • play checkers.

  • The 50s saw another step forward in machine learning with the Logic Theorist – a program

  • designed to mimic the grammar skills of a human and dubbed the first AI program.

  • This decade also sees the integrated circuit which in the 60s was starting to be used in

  • digital computers.

  • This gives us the first ever minicomputerthe PDP 1 which, in turn, creates the

  • need for the mouse and graphical user interface.

  • We also got Eliza, the first ever Chatbot.

  • The end of the 60s saw programmable calculators, super computers, operating systems and the

  • introduction of ARPANET, the internet’s humbler and less complex older sibling, and

  • of course the Apollo guidance computer.

  • The 1970s saw these technologies become commercial and with that came a flood of new developments

  • the Honeywell 316, Canon Pocketronic, the first DRAM and microprocessors, the iconic

  • floppy disk, the first humanoid robot, and the first commercially available microcomputer.

  • The decade saw plenty of improvements to the technology including Microsoft’s first programming

  • language, and IBM’s and Apple’s original entries into desktop computing.

  • The end of the 70’s saw the first automated vehiclethe Stanford cartand led

  • us into the 80’s where technology was quickly getting smaller, cheaper, and more powerful.

  • We also find the development of backpropagation and the CD ROM.

  • During this time, tech is becoming so compact that the Galvilan SC is marketed as a ‘laptop

  • computer.

  • AI is also making leaps and bounds with Cyc, a project aiming to build a knowledge base

  • of basic concepts, ‘rules of thumband common sense to assist AI applications perform

  • human-like thinking.

  • In the following 5 years we get handheld computers, AI that teaches itself to speak, the first

  • versions of windows and excel, plenty of supercomputers, laptops, desktops, processors, and in 1989

  • we get the world wide web.

  • The web and some big leaps in processing power in the early 90s brought PCs into the realm

  • of entertainment devices.

  • This decade introduced us to PC gaming, DVDs, internet browsers.

  • We got some of the first mobile phone devices from Nokia to fit in our hands and super computers

  • that are now able to beat human master chess champions with Deep Blue.

  • And let’s not forget Skynet, I mean Google.

  • For the next decade we see the development of various computers, hard drives, robots,

  • processors, and the still in use USB.

  • In the mid 2000’s we get our first 64-bit processor and dual core CPU, a huge jump in

  • speed and power of computing.

  • Speaking of speed, in 2002 we got the first commercial Maglevshort for magnetic levitation

  • train.

  • The world is also introduced to YouTube and thus the innate human need for on-demand cat

  • videos was satisfied.

  • With the huge growth and commercialisation of technology in the last decade or two, data

  • is everywhere.

  • That’s why in 2005 the term Big data is coined.

  • Apple shows its power in the tech field with the release of the MacBook Pro, while the

  • iPhone brings smartphones to the mainstream.

  • In the late 2000s IBM shows off its dominance in the realm of the supercomputer by having

  • the fastest in the world with the blue gene then bettering it themselves with the roadrunner.

  • Block chain arrives in force in 2008 to shake up the financial sector among others.

  • China and Japan start to push back IBM in a battle for who has the most powerful super

  • computer, with the Tianhe and K computer, respectively.

  • This leads to some of the biggest jumps in computing power.

  • We also see another show of AIs growth with Siri and Watson, who wins Jeopardy against

  • human opponents.

  • And it’s not just on earth where things are getting more advanced with the Mars Rover

  • showing the rest of the universe what were capable of.

  • To exemplify how far weve come to this point, in 2012 and 2013 we have supercomputers

  • that reach exascale speed and on our wrists we have computational devices millions of

  • times faster than the computers that sent a rocket to the moon.

  • And did I mention now that our rockets have the capability to land themselveswith

  • a lot more computing power than a watch, mind you.

  • By 2016 weve officially reached sci-fi territory with self-aware Sophia, 3-D printed

  • prosthetic limbs, and realistic virtual reality.

  • At this point were looking at molecular computingbecause humanity love making

  • small techespecially things like almost paper-thin laptops with incredibly fast processors

  • and cancer-fighting nanobots.

  • And because we also like to show off, we have the fastest supercomputer at 200 petaflops

  • with summit.

  • New grounds of travel and AI combined with the model S. And Atlas who puts many of to

  • shame with his precision parkour.

  • We really are in amazing times.

  • But where do you think well be heading next?

  • What will be the next big thing?

  • Are we maybe going too fast, our ancestors had much more time to process and learn from

  • new developments.

  • We’d like to open up a discussion in the comments and get your thoughts on the future

  • of technology.

  • And, of course if you enjoyed this video and would like to see morelike, subscribe,

  • and hit the notification bell.

Hi and welcome to another awesome video by 365 Data Science, where we take interesting

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科技發展太快了嗎?| 科技的進化和改變世界的發明創造。 (Is Technology Moving Too Fast? | Evolution of Technology And the Inventions that Changed the World)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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