Computers these days spend a fairly low fraction of their time
computing. In fact, the very word "computer" has become something of a
misnomer. In the American History museum of the Smithsonian Institute in
Wash- ington, D.C., there is an exhibit of early computers. Three
features of these machines are striking. First, they are enormous,
especially in com- parison to their capabilities. The museum visitor who
has just come from the Natural History building next door may be
reminded of fossilized di- nosaur bones. Second, they don't look at all
like modern computing ma- chines. The cases are made of crude metal or
beautifully worked wood, recalling an approach to the design of
scientific apparatus which belongs to a previous generation. Lastly, the
function of these machines is mainly to compute-to perform rapid
arithmetic. The computer of today bears little resemblance in size,
form, or function to its ancestors. It is, most obviously, smaller by
several orders of mag- nitude. Its form has changed from the carefully
crafted one-of-a-kind in- strument to the mass-produced microchip. But
the change in its function is perhaps the most dramatic of all. Instead
of being a computing engine, it is a machine for the processing of
information. The word "processor" has come into common usage. A
processor used to be a central processing unit-a set of wires and vacuum
tubes, or later a set of printed circuit boards-which was nestled deep
within the computer. Today a processor is an off-the-shelf component.