On May 12, 1941, 75 years ago, the world's first computer was released: The legendary Z3 was the ultra heavy and bulky grandfather of the Apple Watch. Revisit the vintage models of the machine that has changed our lives.
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Computer design: From the legendary Z3 to the Apple Watch
A computer the size of a clothes' wardrobe, the Z3 was devised 75 years ago by the German Konrade Zuse. The first programmable computer was the first step towards the digital age we now know today.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Cowie
Design fit for a museum
The wunderkind from the early days of computer technology, the Commodore PET 2001 was released in 1977. Built to last, most are still fully functional. In 2016, the German Museum of Digital Culture (Deutsches Museum der digitalen Kultur) in Dortmund will put the old treasure in an honorable position. Its retro look is once again fashionable.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/B. Thissen
The inventor
The first computer to use the binary number system of 1s and 0s was built by German mechanical engineer Konrad Zuse, who worked for the Nazi government. The computer was constructed out of old recycled materials, a keypunch out of film. A visit to the Nuremberg Computer Trade Fair in 1982 astounded the man who saw what had been accomplished out of his initial invention.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/K. Staedele
The legendary Z3
Konrad Zuse created a first programmable calculator in 1938. Three years later, he completed the world's first computer, the Z3. The size of three clothing wardrobes, it weighed one metric ton. The machine could take up to one second or more to process. The original was destroyed during World War II; a reconstruction can be found in the German Museum in Munich.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/T.. Brakemeier
The first PC: Altair 8800
The personal computer first entered the American market in 1974. Quickly thereafter, computer clubs were founded as were Altair Circles, for those interested in the original Altair computer. Apple founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak were often present at these meetings, inspired as they were by the technology. The Altair 8800 really hit a nerve in its day.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/A. Harnik
Apple's success story
Steve Wozniak's garage, in which the Apple I computer came to life, has become something of a legend. What looked at the time like a converted television for hobbyists costs $666.66 (584 euros) at the time. Keyboard and housing were sold separately. Today, the Apple I computers are well-loved and quite expensive collector's pieces - worth thousands of dollars.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/Ben Margot
A computer like a sculpture
Although IBM introduced its first personal computer in 1981, the company earned its success through the sales to companies of larger computers that were longer-lasting. The IBM System/360 came on the market already back in 1964, a system comprised of numerous large computers, separate machines for business, industry, research and th execuitve offices, which could be combined based on needs.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/IBM
The Apple II is a museum masterpiece
Steve Jobs quickly gained influence over the product palette on offer from Apple, the innovative computer firm he founded in California's not-yet-named Silicon Valley. The new Apple model, the Apple II, stood out for its simple, puritanical look. On sale as of 1977, the legendary design object is now housed in the Museum of the Moving Image in New York.
Image: cc-by-2.0 Marcin Wichary
New shapes, colors and sizes
Over the years, Microsoft developed as a competitor to the Apple computer based on its innovative developments in software and operating systems. While Microsoft stayed true to the bland grays of the office computer, Apple turned its attention to aesthetics, launching the first iMac in 1998, available in a semi-transparent turquoise and with rounded corners.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/C. Charisius
A computer chip as design accessory
A microprocessor was first released in 1971 by Intel - a technological wonder that brought computers quickly up to speed while reducing their size. Growing increasingly smaller and more powerful, in the meantime, such tiny chips have become a bit of a design accessory. The chips have made PCs and laptops into a technological wonder.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Intel
Flat-screened and hand-held
The future belongs to the tablet. Especially for people who travel frequently, the small, hand-held flatscreen with a mini-computer inside is valuable. Small enough to fit into handbags and be taken out in the train or plane without disturbing your neighbor, the tablet can act as a newspaper, a video player and an internet connection all in one.
Image: Colourbox
The computer on your wrist
A watch in which you can not only check the time, but also read your e-mails and monitor your health, the Smartwatch hit the market a few years ago, but it became popular once Apple released its version in 2015. The Apple Watch is now a status symbol - especially the 18-karat gold edition, which can be acquired for 11,000 euros ($12,500).
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Cowie
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The computer has become an integral part of everyday life. Whether you work in art, in media, in scientific research or medicine, computer technology has influenced every career and every life. Without it, nothing would function.
The earliest computers were still referred to as calculating machines but looked much bigger than the calculators we know today - as large as an office cupboard - and could only work with numbers. Punch cards were used to do simple calculations which were then imprinted using celluloid from films.
In 1941, Konrad Zuse built the world's first computer, the Z3; a short time later, he released the Z4, which could do quite a bit more than its predecessor. From 1950 to 1955, the Z4 was used as a central processor at the Technical University in Zurich.
The computer mouse was added in the 1960s as a prototype. It, along with many other original computers, are now design pieces in museums around the world.
Using a binary number system, the initial computer has served as a foundation for all computers to date; even music, films, art and colors are saved as binary number codes - a series of ones and zeroes.
Artists are especially interested in the design of the original computers. The "Father of Video Art," Nam June Paik often works with video installations supported by computers. Street artist Bansky used an image of Apple founder Steve Jobs in one of his most famous graffiti murals.
Since its inception, the computer has altered the landscape of our lives, ushering in a digital age that is now part of art history.