Progress Continues On Recreating the Babbage Programmable Computer (plan28.org) 12
Long-time Slashdot reader RockDoctor writes: A project to create a working example of [english mathematician and computer pioneer Charles Babbage's] original "steampunk computer," referred to by Babbage as the "Analytical Engine 30," is continuing. The update comes via a "Spring 2021 report" to the Computer Conservation Society.
The main news is that a new series of plans, dating from about 1857 have been found and are being examined for incorporation into the final design. "One remarkable feature is the extension of the Store to 1000 registers, and most intriguingly various methods of mechanically addressing the store contents," reads the update. This would compare well with electronic processor design... not that anyone is expecting this machine, when built, to be blisteringly fast.
Could a steam-powered Analytical Engine support backup DNS services in a post-apocalyptic world? Is this Cloudflare's ultimate plan?
The main news is that a new series of plans, dating from about 1857 have been found and are being examined for incorporation into the final design. "One remarkable feature is the extension of the Store to 1000 registers, and most intriguingly various methods of mechanically addressing the store contents," reads the update. This would compare well with electronic processor design... not that anyone is expecting this machine, when built, to be blisteringly fast.
Could a steam-powered Analytical Engine support backup DNS services in a post-apocalyptic world? Is this Cloudflare's ultimate plan?
AnalyticalX. (Score:3)
3D print a Babbage Engine.
Re:Or just create it in CAD. (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem is primarily that of working out what his actual design was, given that some important elements changed between plans. For example, the "Store" I mentioned in TFS of 1000 "registers", which would have been one bit wide, in modern parlance.
Did you see the story a week or so back about the Antikithera Mechanism - which presents rather the inverse problem - we've got some the hardware for that, but are still trying to work out it's intended function. (Yes, there is a leading hypothesis, but there are other interpretations of the evidence.) I would link to the story, but the search function has gone from the site for some reason.
The Chinese can't eat "our" lunch since there is no "our" which doesn't include the Chinese. Indians likewise.
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I thought the store was 1000 registers of really wide decimal numbers (many tens of digits).
Also regarding your signature, you might as well write: mammals are not fish descendants;mammals are fish, for all useful meanings of "mammals", "are" and "fish". And yet I would not be happy if the chippie gave me battered sausage when I asked for fish.
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I agree with you about mammals being bony fish (well, we're not sharks after all -
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Also regarding your signature, you might as well write: mammals are not fish descendants;mammals are fish, for all useful meanings of "mammals", "are" and "fish". And yet I would not be happy if the chippie gave me battered sausage when I asked for fish.
lol.
The horror (Score:2)
...Charles Babbage's] original "steampunk computer," referred to by Babbage as the "Analytical Engine 30"...
Oh my god someone from Mozilla went back in time and perpetrated their versioning system on Charles Babbage! The horror!
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It's the parsimonious solution - it requires no new physics (but plenty of interesting chemistry to defrost his brain intact).
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Well if Mozilla and Charles Babbage are working hand in hand for the future of technology, I can't wait to see Firefox running on this device!
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