6/22/2010 – The German engineer and computer pioneer Konrad Zuse was born one hundred years ago today. He is considered the inventor of the world's first programmable computer, and the first high-level programming language. This anniversary leads us to pause and consider how far we have come in a single human lifetime – and where the development of computers is leading. Food for thought.
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From the Z1 to the Singularity – Zuse's 100th birthday
Konrad Zuse (pronounced tsu-ze) was born exactly one hundred years ago –
on June 22nd, 1910, in Berlin. He was a German engineer and computer pioneer
and arguably the inventor of the world's first functional electronic program-controlled
Turing machine, or "computer", as we refer to it today. His Z3 machine,
which was fed punched tape programs, was completed in 1941.
Zuse also designed the first high-level programming language, Plankalkül,
which was published in 1948. Some years before its formal publication, between
1942 and 1945, the author wrote a chess program for it (however the first technical
implementaion of Plankalkül only happened in the 70s). He also founded
one of the earliest computer businesses, the Zuse Ingenieurbüro und Apparatebau,
which was founded in 1941 and went on to build the Z4, which was leased to ETH
Zürich in 1950. There are replicas of the Z3, as well as the Z4, in the
Deutsches Museum in Munich.
The Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin has displays of twelve of his machines,
including a replica of the Z1, some original documents, including the specifications
of Plankalkül, and several of Zuse's paintings.
A Zuse painting
In the early 90s Konrad Zuse contacted me (Frederic Friedel) to discuss the
progress in computer chess – which we did on a couple of occasions on
the phone. One subject of our conversation was predicting when a computer would
defeat the the reigning World Chess Champion – in a match over a large
number of games (16-20) under regular tournament time controls. In 1991 I had
asked a number of experts and received the following predictions:
1992
Monroe Newborn
1993
John McCarthy
1994
Hans Berliner, Marty Hirsch, Feng-hsiung Hsu
1999
Claude Shannon, Frederic Friedel
2000
Robert Hyatt, Jaap van den Herik
2001
John Nunn
2002
Julio Kaplan
2005
Richard Lang
2008
Harry Nelson
2010
Garry Kasparov ("or perhaps never")
2012
Dieter Steinwender
2014
David Levy
2018
Ken Thompson
2020
Tony Marsland
2030
Frans Morsch
2040
Jonathan Schaeffer
I asked Zuse for his prediction and he promised to think about it and give
it to me when we met at his home in Hünfeld. Unfortunately on the planned
weekend I caught a flu and we decided that the risk of infecting him was too
great. The visit was cancelled and I never got to meet the computer pioneer.
Konrad Zuse in 1992
Konrad Zuse died on December 18, 1995, in Hünfeld near Fulda (Germany).
His son Klaus-Peter Zuse is a 2223-rated FM who plays in the German Team Championship
and was the Champion of the state of Baden in 2005.
A bronze tribute to Konrad Zuse (Bad Hersfeld, Germany)
The history and future of computing
The history of mechanical computing machines goes a long way back. The English
mathematician, philosopher and inventor Charles Babbage, born in 1791, was the
first to propose the concept of what was essentially a programmable computer.
He drew up elaborate and detailed plans for a "Difference Engine",
which he was unable to construct. 153 years after it was designed this engine
was reconstruced in London, from Babbage's original plans. It was built to tolerances
achievable in the 19th century and, as we can show you in the following video,
it actually works.
The Babbage Engine
in action at the computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA
One of the first programmable electronic computers was built at Los Alamos in
the deserts of New Mexico after the Second World War. Its purpose was the development
and refinement of atomic weapons. Working out the correct shape of the implosion
charges that trigger the chain reaction required a very large number of calculations.
In 1946 the Hungarian/American mathematician John von Neumann was given the
task of designing a powerful calculation machine to speed up the task. In 1950
a giant machine called MANIAC I was delivered. It was filled with thousands
of vacuum tubes and switches and could execute 10,000 instructions per second.
It was also programmable.
Instead of immediately getting to work on the bombs the scientists started
experimenting with the machine. And one of the first things they did was to
write a chess program. It was for a reduced 6 x 6 board without bishops. In
spite of this the program needed twelve minutes to search to a depth of four
ply (with the bishops it would have required three hours).
The program played three games in the mid fifties. The first was against itself
(White won), the second against a strong player who spotted it a queen. The
game lasted ten hours and the master won. Finally it played against a young
lady who had learnt the game a week earlier. The program won the game in 23
moves. It was the first time a human had lost to a computer in a game of intellectual
skill. Here's the historic game (6 x 6 board, no bishops, no double-step for
pawns, no castling):
It is interesting to note that today's smartphones are around 200 million times
faster than Konrad Zuse's original computers. And other peripherals have developed
at similarly mind-boggling pace. Here's an interesting picture sent to us by
Yasser Seirawan, a great aficionado of scientific and technological subjects.
Can you guess what the above picture depicts? Hint: it was taken in 1956...
Well, you are probably not going to guess it, so we will tell you straight
out: it's a hard disk drive for the first "super computer", the 305
RAMAC, developed by IBM. It weighed over a ton and stored a whopping five megabytes
of data.
Today, 54 years later, we have micro mobile memory cards (SDHC) that weigh
just a few grams and hold 16 gigabytes and more. Sixteen GB – that is
over three thousand times as much data as the original IBM hard drive. The smallest
component in the middle is the one that contains the actual memory. The others
are just adaptors.
The SDHC chips are mainly for use in cameras and cell phones. Sixteen GB can
also be put to excellent use to store the most important tablebases and use
them with Fritz or Rybka. The seek times are considerably less than from a hard
disk, which can speed up the search when the program starts to consult the tablebases.
Incidentally our experts predict that the first one terabyte memory stick will
become available some time during the coming year (2011). It will be fairly
expensive, but prices will drop in 2012.
The general development of computers – processing speed, amount of information
– is not hitting a plateau. In fact it is accelerating. How this is going
to proceed in the near future is described by Ray Kurzweil in the following
fascinating lecture:
Kurzweil's vision of the man-machine merger which he calls the Singularity
is predicted for the year 2045, around one hundred years after the first computers
constructed by Konrad Zuse. Kurzweil defines the Singularity as follows: "Within
a few decades, machine intelligence will surpass human intelligence, leading
to The Singularity – technological change so rapid and profound it represents
a rupture in the fabric of human history. The implications include the merger
of biological and nonbiological intelligence, immortal software-based humans,
and ultra-high levels of intelligence that expand outward in the universe at
the speed of light."
We are told that Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page have become involved
in this project. It is possible, they think, that we will be able to upload
the contents of our brains by the year 2030 – and are investing serious
funds into the advancement of this enterprise.
And it all started with the machines of Konrad Zuse, just one lifetime ago.
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