Introduction & Generations of Computers MCQs — 50+ Solved with Answers | QuizWing

Introduction & Generations of Computers MCQs with Answers

50+ solved MCQs on Introduction & Generations of Computers — origin of the word, CPU, BOOT, compiler, analog vs digital vs hybrid, plus all 5 generations (Vacuum Tubes, Transistors, ICs, Microprocessors, AI), ENIAC, UNIVAC, Intel 4004, FORTRAN, COBOL, GUI & VLSI. For PPSC, FPSC, NTS, CSS & PMS.

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Introduction & Generations of Computers — Master Reference for Pakistani Competitive Exams

The chapter Introduction & Generations of Computers is the most fundamental — and the most repeated — Computer Science topic in Pakistan’s PPSC, FPSC, NTS, CSS, PMS, OTS, CTS, BPSC, KPPSC and SPSC One Paper exams. Almost every Junior Clerk, Assistant, Sub-Inspector, Lecturer and BPS-14 to BPS-17 paper carries 2–4 MCQs from this single chapter. This page consolidates 50+ solved MCQs with answers covering computer fundamentals (origin, CPU, BOOT, compiler, analog vs digital), the complete five-generation timeline, key inventors (Ted Hoff, Intel) and all the classic acronyms (ENIAC, UNIVAC, FORTRAN, COBOL, IC, VLSI, GUI).

The 5 Generations of Computers — Quick Comparison

GenerationPeriodTechnologyKey Facts
1st Generation1940 – 1956Vacuum TubesUsed machine language. ENIAC, UNIVAC. UNIVAC = first commercial computer.
2nd Generation1956 – 1963TransistorsAssembly / symbolic language. Transistor invented 1947, used 1950s. FORTRAN & COBOL. First atomic-energy computer.
3rd Generation1964 – 1971Integrated Circuits (ICs)Keyboards & monitors introduced. PDP-8, IBM 360, ICL 2900.
4th Generation1972 – 2010Microprocessors (VLSI)GUI developed. Intel 4004 by Ted Hoff (1971). Apple II, IBM PC, STAR 1000.
5th Generation2010 – PresentArtificial IntelligenceAI-based. Still in active development.

Key Facts to Memorise

  • Computer (origin) — From the Latin word computare meaning “to calculate / to count / to sum up / to think together”.
  • Computer — An electronic machine that processes input into meaningful information.
  • Brain of computer — Central Processing Unit (CPU).
  • BOOT — The word used for “to start a computer”.
  • Recycle Bin — Stores all files deleted from the computer.
  • Compiler — Converts an entire programme from a high-level language to a lower-level (object/machine) language at one time.
  • Key features of a computer — Accuracy, Reliability and Speed.
  • Multiprocessor — A computer with more than one processor.
  • Hybrid computer — Resembles both a digital and an analogue computer.
  • Analog computer — Works on continuous electrical pulses.
  • Digital computer — Works on discrete electrical pulses.
  • Total generations — Five.
  • First microprocessor — Intel 4004 — discovered by Ted Hoff — commercially available in 1971.
  • GUI (Graphical User Interface) — Developed in the 4th Generation.
  • First-ever transistor — Invented in 1947 but used in computers from the 1950s.
  • FORTRAN — Formula Translation; COBOL — Common Business-Oriented Language. Both developed in the 2nd Generation.
  • VLSI — Very Large Scale Integration; used in 4th Generation computers.
  • UNIVAC — Universal Automatic Computer — the first commercial computer (1st generation).
  • ENIAC — Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer — classic 1st-generation example.

3GL vs 4GL — Quick Comparison

Feature3GL (3rd Generation Language)4GL (4th Generation Language)
UsersProfessional programmers onlyMay also be used by non-programmers
Task SpecificationSpecifies HOW to perform the taskSpecifies WHAT task to perform
AlternativesAll alternatives must be specifiedDefault alternatives are built-in
InstructionsRequires a large number of instructionsRequires far fewer instructions
Code ReadabilityDifficult to read and understandEasy to read and maintain
Original UseBatch processingOn-line use
LearningDifficult to learnEasy to learn
DebuggingDifficult to debugEasier to debug
OrientationFile orientedDatabase oriented

Exam tip: Lock six anchors and you cover ~80% of all MCQs from this chapter — computare (Latin), CPU = brain, 5 generations, Vacuum Tubes → Transistors → ICs → Microprocessors → AI, UNIVAC = first commercial, and Intel 4004 (1971, Ted Hoff).

Frequently Asked Questions

There are five generations of computers — 1st (Vacuum Tubes, 1940–1956), 2nd (Transistors, 1956–1963), 3rd (Integrated Circuits, 1964–1971), 4th (Microprocessors / VLSI, 1972–2010) and 5th (Artificial Intelligence, 2010–Present).

The word “Computer” is derived from the Latin word computare, meaning to calculate, to count, to sum up or to think together.

The Central Processing Unit (CPU) is called the brain of the computer because it processes input and executes instructions.

UNIVAC (Universal Automatic Computer) was the first commercial computer. It was a first-generation machine that used vacuum tubes.

The first microprocessor — the Intel 4004 — was discovered by Ted Hoff and made commercially available in 1971. This launched the 4th generation of computers.

Analog computers work on continuous electrical pulses (signals). Digital computers work on discrete electrical pulses — typically represented as 0s and 1s. A hybrid computer combines both analog and digital features.

Yes — essential. Computer fundamentals and generations are tested in every One Paper, NTS NAT, GAT, OTS, CTS, BPSC, KPPSC, SPSC, PPSC and FPSC exam. Expect 2–4 MCQs from this chapter in any 100-mark paper.

Yes. Click the Download PDF button in the hero or quiz section to get all 50+ Introduction & Generations of Computers MCQs with correct answers as a branded QuizWing PDF for offline revision.

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