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== History ==
The first commercial business computer was developed in the [[United Kingdom]] in [[1951]], by the [[Joe Lyons]] catering
Early commercial systems were installed exclusively by large organizations. These could afford to invest the time and capital necessary to purchase hardware, hire specialist staff to develop bespoke [[software]] and work through the consequent (and often unexpected)
At first, individual
High hardware costs and relatively slow processing speeds forced developers to use resources 'efficiently'. [[Computer storage|Data storage]] formats were heavily compacted, for example. A common example is the removal of the century from dates, which eventually lead to the '[[millennium bug]]'.
Data input required intermediate processing via punched paper tape or [[punch card|card]] and separate input to computers, usually for overnight processing. Data required validation in batches. All of this was a repetitive,
Data storage was strictly serial on paper tape, and then later to [[magnetic tape]]: the use of data storage within readily accessible memory was not cost-effective.
Results would be presented to users on paper.
== Today ==
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As with other industrial processes commercial IT has moved in all respects from a bespoke, craft-based industry where the product was tailored to fit the customer; to multi-use components taken off the shelf to find the best-fit in any situation. Mass-production has greatly reduced costs and IT is available to the smallest company or one-man band - or school-kid.
LEO was hardware tailored for a single client. Today, [[Intel Pentium]] and compatible chips are standard and become parts of other components which are combined as needed. One individual change of note was the freeing of computers and removable storage from protected, air-filtered environments. [[Microsoft]] and [[IBM]] at various times have been influential enough to impose order on IT and the resultant
Software is available off the shelf: apart from Microsoft products such as Office, or Lotus, there are also specialist packages for payroll and personnel management, account maintenance and customer management, to name a few. These are highly
Data storage has also
In parallel, software development has fragmented. There are still specialist technicians, but these increasingly use
===See also===
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