In 1881, Herman Hollerith
began designing a machine to tabulate census data more efficiently than
by traditional hand methods. The U.S. Census Bureau had taken eight years
to complete the 1880 census, and it was feared that the 1890 census would
take even longer. Herman Hollerith invented and used a punched card device to
help analyze the 1890 US census data. Herman Hollerith's great breakthrough was
his use of electricity to read, count, and sort punched cards whose holes
represented data gathered by the census-takers. His machines were used
for the 1890 census and accomplished in one year what would have taken
nearly ten years of hand tabulating. In 1896, Herman Hollerith founded the Tabulating
Machine Company to sell his invention, the Company became part of IBM in
1924.
Herman Hollerith first got his idea for
the punch-card tabulation machine from watching a train conductor punch
tickets. For his tabulation machine he used the punchcard invented in the
early 1800s, by a French silk weaver called Joseph-Marie
Jacquard. Jacquard
invented a way of automatically controlling the warp and weft threads on
a silk loom by recording patterns of holes in a string of cards.
Hollerith's punch cards and tabulating
machines were a step toward automated computation. His device could automatically
read information which had been punched onto card. He got the idea
and then saw Jacquard's punchcard. Punch card technology was used in computers
up until the late 1970s. Computer "punched cards" were read electronically,
the cards moved between brass rods, and the holes in the cards, created
a electric current where the rods would touch.
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