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				the end of the Middle Ages, people started thinking math and 
				engineering were more important. In 1623, Wilhelm Schickard made 
				a mechanical calculator. Other Europeans made more calculators 
				after him. They were not modern computers because they could 
				only add, subtract, and multiply- you could not change what they 
				did to make them do something like play Tetris. Because of this, 
				we say they were not programmable. Now engineers use computers 
				to design and plan. 
				 
				In 1801, Joseph Marie Jacquard used punched paper cards to tell 
				his textile loom what kind of pattern to weave. He could use 
				punch cards to tell the loom what to do, and he could change the 
				punch cards, which means he could program the loom to weave the 
				pattern he wanted. This means the loom was programmable. Charles 
				Babbage wanted to make a similar machine that could calculate. 
				He called it "The Analytical Engine". Because Babbage did not 
				have enough money and always changed his design when he had a 
				better idea, he never built his Analytical Engine. 
				 
				As time went on, computers were used more. People get bored 
				easily doing the same thing over and over. Imagine spending your 
				life writing things down on index cards, storing them, and then 
				having to go find them again. The U.S. Census Bureau in 1890 had 
				hundreds of people doing just that. It was expensive, and 
				reports took a long time. Then an engineer worked out how to 
				make machines do a lot of the work. Herman Hollerith invented a 
				tabulating machine that would automatically add up information 
				that the Census bureau collected. The Computing Tabulating 
				Recording Corporation (which later became IBM) made his 
				machines. They leased the machines instead of selling them. 
				Makers of machines had long helped their users understand and 
				repair them, and CTR's tech support was especially good. 
				 
				Because of machines like this, new ways of talking to these 
				machines were invented, and new types of machines were invented, 
				and eventually the computer as we know it was born  |