That really depends on the definition of a "computer". The usual story that computer scientists learn in their introductions is Charles Babbage, who devised a "Difference Machine" to count polynomials, which however, was not yet constructed in his time.
Another "first" was Konrad Zuse's finished in 1938, which was the first programmable computer.
The answer is John Adams. John Adams was definitely the first vice president. And he was for sure one of the authors of the Declaration of Independence
house of Burgess is the answer
Im pretty sure the answer is C because a lot of companies were still downsizing