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100% of your donations go directly to Lailatu.

Lailatu is a student from Tanzania who is fully funded for this school year! Fund another student here.

$200 raised
$0 to go
Lailatu Ngeng'ena
In 2002 my mother left the family and left us with my father. I am the first born in the family of eight children, and also I am the first child in my family to have finished Ordinary level and to join the Advanced level education.
Today I am living with my uncle, but he is unable to ensure that we get all basic needs, such as food, clothes and school fees. My intention is, with God to help me, to finish Advanced level education with highest marks. I could be among those students who shall be selected to join the University, because my ambition is to be a pharmacist.
I want to help sick people to get the right medicine to treats their illnesses. When my dream comes true, I promise to give back and support other students of The School Fund.

Birthday: 1998

Gender: Female

Favorite Classes: Form 4 Chemistry

Favorite Books: Subjects books

I Want to Be: Pharmacist

Hobbies: Reading Qur-an, Subject books

Family: 1 brother, 6 sisters, 1 grandmother

Funding for Form 6 2017:
Tuition, Exams, Uniform   $200

TOTAL   $200
Funding for Form 5 2016: $200
Lailatu's Journal
189 Entries
hello family
Today I want to share with you about the history of computer development.
Here’s a quick sweep through the major milestones in computer history:

- *Pre‑digital (‑1800s)* – Mechanical calculators like the abacus and Pascal’s adding machine showed that computation could be automated. Charles Babbage’s “Analytical Engine” (1837) is considered the first design for a programmable computer, though it was never built.

- *Early electronic computers (1940‑1950s)* – ENIAC (1945) and Colombe (1943) used vacuum tubes to perform calculations thousands of times faster than mechanical devices. The von Neumann architecture (mid‑1940s) introduced the stored‑program concept, where both data and instructions live in the same memory.

- *Transistors & mainframes (late 1950s‑1960s)* – Replacing bulky tubes with transistors made computers smaller, faster, and more reliable. IBM’s 7000 series and later the System/360 brought mainframe computing to businesses and governments.

- *Integrated circuits & minicomputers (1960s‑1970s)* – Chips that packed many transistors onto a single silicon wafer enabled the rise of minicomputers like the DEC PDP‑11, which were affordable enough for universities and research labs.

- *Microprocessors & personal computers (1970s‑1980s)* – Intel’s 4004 (1971) was the first commercial microprocessor. This led to kits such as the Altair 8800 and fully assembled machines like the Apple II, Commodore 64, and IBM PC, putting computing into homes and small offices.

- *Graphical user interfaces & networking (1980s‑1990s)* – Xerox PARC’s GUI, popularized by the Macintosh and later Windows, made computers intuitive. Meanwhile, ARPANET evolved into the Internet, turning isolated machines into a global network.

- *Mobile & cloud era (2000s‑present)* – Smartphones and tablets brought powerful processors into pockets. Cloud platforms (AWS, Azure, Google Cloud) shifted much of the heavy lifting to massive data centers, while open‑source software and AI accelerators (GPUs, TPUs) are reshaping what computers can do.
Hi Indy,
I hope your fine and you proceed well with you program . And me also am fine and i continue well with my studies.
my plan in this holiday is to complete covering topics which i have not covered and prepare well for my mock exam which are coming soon after opening the school
thank for text and have a nice weekend.
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