One of the earliest known computer peripherals to be made was the
punched card, which was first introduced into computing in the late 1880s by
Herman Hollerith, an American engineer. As a result, the punched card
tabulator was invented, which was able to read the punch cards. In addition, it was the first computer peripheral to be mass-produced.
Punched tape was later used instead of punched cards as a computer peripheral, because of its lower cost, and higher storage capacity. Programs were written to punched tape using existing
teleprinters, then were transferred to a reader so that a computer could load the program. The first documented computer to use punched tape as storage was the
Zuse Z1, released in 1938 by German inventor
Konrad Zuse. which was able to read source code on punched tape. In the early 1950s, the
UNISERVO I, created for the
UNIVAC I computer, became the first commercially available
magnetic tape drive. Magnetic tape drives have both the ability to read and write to magnetic tape. Magnetic tape is often used to backup or archive digital data for long periods of time, due to its higher cost efficiency compared to other storage mediums, and because it is not possible cannot both read and write to magnetic tape at the same time. In 1956, the
IBM 305 RAMAC was the first the first commercial computer to ship with a hard disk, the
IBM Model 350. The IBM Model 350 was the first hard disk, and it had the ability to be randomly read and written to at any time. The hard drive was able to store 5 MB of storage. To achieve this, it used fifty magnetic disks, that were double sided and had a diameter of 24 inches each, spinning at 1200 RPM. In the early 1960s, the
RS-232 standard was developed by the
Electronic Industries Association. The standard was designed on the belief that it would provide reliable connections, and to allow the interconnection of devices made by different manufacturers. The standard allowed devices to communicate via
serial connections, using a
D25 connector. Personal computers began to be widespread from the 1970s onwards, and while the existing peripherals such as keyboards and mice became standard, new peripherals also began development, such as scanners and
webcams. IBM began using
semiconductor memory in 1970, which could store twice as much data as
core memory.
Flash memory was invented in 1984. ==See also==