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Technology History Project

  • Sep 29, 1450

    first robot

    first robot
    The first robot was created by Leonardo Davinci(1452-1495)
  • who came up with the name robots

    The word 'robot' was first used to denote fictional humanoid in a 1921 play R.U.R. by the Czech writer, Karel Čapek. Electronics evolved into the driving force of development with the advent of the first electronic autonomous robots created by William Grey Walter in Bristol, England in 1948.
  • more robots

    more robos were created after a lot of years also a lot of people got jobs
  • First computer

    First computer
    ENIAC was the first electronic general-purpose computer. It was Turing-complete, digital, and capable of being reprogrammed to solve "a large class of numerical problems
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ENIAC
  • 1st Satellite in orbit

     1st Satellite in orbit
    On October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union launched the world’s first manmade satellite into orbit. The satellite, known as Sputnik, did not do much: It tumbled aimlessly around in outer space, sending blips and bleeps from its radio transmitters as it circled the Earth. Still, to many Americans, the beach-ball-sized Sputnik was proof of something alarming: While the brightest scientists and engineers in the United States had been designing bigger cars and better television sets, it seemed, the Soviet
  • Leonard kleinrok

    He is the smartest person in the group and he is an computer engineer
  • THE ARPANET

    THE ARPANET
    This is the ARPANET.The first internet created and it was developed by the United States military.
  • Microsoft Excel

    whene the microsoft excel started working
  • Asimo robot

    http://www.robotshop.com/media/files/pdf/timeline.pdf2002
    Honda created the Advanced Step in Innovative Mobility (ASIMO). It is
    intended to be a personal assistant. It recognizes its owner's face, voice, and
    name. Can read email and is capable of streaming video from its camera to a
  • Roomba robotic vacuum

     Roomba robotic vacuum
    iRobot released the first generation ofhttp://www.robotshop.com/media/files/pdf/timeline.pdf
  • tThe beginig and end of the ARPANET

    tThe beginig and end of the ARPANET
    This Internet Timeline begins in 1962, before the word ‘Internet’ is invented. The world’s 10,000 computers are primitive, although they cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. They have only a few thousand words of magnetic core memory, and programming them is far from easy.
    Domestically, data communication over the phone lines is an AT&T monopoly. The ‘Picturephone’ of 1939, shown again at the New York World’s Fair in 1964, is still AT&T’s answer to the future of worldwide communications.
  • robots

    you can program robots
  • Programing robots

    Programming is usually the final step involved in building a robot. If you followed the lessons, so far you have chosen the actuators, electronics, sensors and more, and have assembled the robot so it hopefully looks something like what you had initially set out to build. Without programming though, the robot is a very nice looking and expensive paperweight. It would take much more than one lesson to teach you how to program a robot, so instead, this lesson will help you with how to get started
  • the birth of the arpanet

    THE BIRTH OF THE ARPANET
    Scientists and military experts were especially concerned about what might happen in the event of a Soviet attack on the nation’s telephone system. Just one missile, they feared, could destroy the whole network of lines and wires that made efficient long-distance communication possible. In 1962, a scientist from M.I.T. and ARPA named J.C.R. Licklider proposed a solution to this problem: a “galactic network” of computers that could talk to one another. Such a network woul
  • more robots

    more robots were created after a lot of years and also a lot of people got jobs
  • modern vacumn robot

    modern vacumn robot
    this is themodern vacumn cleaner robot
  • when the internet was created

    Unlike technologies such as the light bulb or the telephone, the Internet has no single “inventor.” Instead, it has evolved over time. The Internet got its start in the United States more than 50 years ago as a government weapon in the Cold War. For years, scientists and researchers used it to communicate and share data with one another. Today, we use the Internet for almost everything, and for many people it would be impossible to imagine life without it.