Past, Present, Future

  • Babbage Engine

    Babbage Engine

    Charles Babbage (1791-1871), computer pioneer, designed the first automatic computing engines. He started to construct a small difference engine in. 1819 and had completed it by 1822
  • First computer programmer

    First computer programmer

    Ada Lovelace has been called the world's first computer programmer. What she did was write the world's first machine algorithm for an early computing machine that existed only on paper. Of course, someone had to be the first, but Lovelace was a woman, and this was in the 1840s.
  • drones

    drones

    World War 1 saw the first glimpse of drones being used by the military. The Hewitt Sperry Automatic Aircraft was developed by Peter Hewitt and Elmer Sperry, which made its first successful flight in September, 1917.
  • Bombe

    Bombe

    Turing played a key role in this, inventing the bombe. Turing's first Bombe, a code-breaking machine, was installed at Bletchley Park
  • fake news

    fake news

    it became possible for users to edit the content on webpages. the 45th president Donald trump was accused of telling fake new. fake news spreads so easily because of social media
  • First music launching service

    Napster launched the first music streaming service now in are time there is a lot of music streaming services.
  • Tesla

    Tesla

    tesla was created by a group of engineers Elon Musk joined tesla
  • corona

    corona

    As of the coronavirus all of us went into lockdown so we could only go out for limited reasons
  • chip

    chip

    Elon Musk has embedded a chip into a pig.
    Mr Musk argues such chips could eventually be used to help cure conditions such as dementia, Parkinson's disease and spinal cord injuries.
  • A.I

    A.I

    In the time of online avatars, AI chatbots, Alexa and Siri, Ai-Da as a robotic artist is acutely relevant. She is not alive, but she is a persona that we relate and respond to.
  • flying cars

    flying cars

    In fact, flying cars are real – and they could shape how we commute, work and live in the coming decades.