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dateMore Than a Year Ago
subjectHardware
authorHerbert Bruderer
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Jost Bürgi and the Discovery of Logarithms
From BLOG@CACM

Jost Bürgi and the Discovery of Logarithms

A forgotten universal genius.

400 Years of Mechanical Calculating Machines
From BLOG@CACM

400 Years of Mechanical Calculating Machines

Germany is celebrating the 400th birthday of Schickard's "calculating clock."

Turing, Churchill, and the Colossus
From BLOG@CACM

Turing, Churchill, and the Colossus

Did Turing collaborate on the Colossus?

Where is the Cradle of the Computer?
From BLOG@CACM

Where is the Cradle of the Computer?

The digital computer of today arose in the first half of the 1940s independently in three different countries: Germany, the U.K. and the U.S.

The Mesm: Ukraine Beats Russia
From BLOG@CACM

The Mesm: Ukraine Beats Russia

The Mesm is considered the first stored program digital computer in Continental Europe.

Leonardo Torres Quevedo, a Brilliant but Forgotten Spanish Inventor
From BLOG@CACM

Leonardo Torres Quevedo, a Brilliant but Forgotten Spanish Inventor

Although far ahead of his time, in the German- and English-speaking countries, Torres Quevedo has been largely forgotten.

How Does One Divide with Napier's Rods?
From BLOG@CACM

How Does One Divide with Napier's Rods?

Napier's multiplication and division rods, deriving from the basic multiplication table, simplify calculations considerably.

How Does One Calculate With A Circular Slide Rule?
From BLOG@CACM

How Does One Calculate With A Circular Slide Rule?

The circular slide rule was widely used until the 1970s.

The World's Most Magnificent Historical Calculating Machines
From BLOG@CACM

The World's Most Magnificent Historical Calculating Machines

The design of today's electronic computers is usually not very appealing, in contrast to magnificent mechanical calculating machines from earlier times.

The World's Most Magnificent Historical Automatons
From BLOG@CACM

The World's Most Magnificent Historical Automatons

Automatons are ubiquitous. Some of the most magnificent works in the genre have survived in museums.

Superb Historical Robots
From BLOG@CACM

Superb Historical Robots

The world's most magnificent historical robots.

An Enigmatic Device from Denmark
From BLOG@CACM

An Enigmatic Device from Denmark

Discovery of a very rare surveying instrument in Denmark.

Tracking Down a Seminal Work on Computer Construction – in Russian
From BLOG@CACM

Tracking Down a Seminal Work on Computer Construction – in Russian

A Russian edition of Rutishauser's standard work on computer construction.

Discovery: User Manual of the Oldest Surviving Computer in the World
From BLOG@CACM

Discovery: User Manual of the Oldest Surviving Computer in the World

A rare find: the user manual of the oldest surviving computer in the world, the Zuse Z4 relay machine (1945).

Automatic Translators are Not Really Capable of Learning
From BLOG@CACM

Automatic Translators are Not Really Capable of Learning

One does not get the impression the Google Translate and DeepL translation programs are self-learning and have made real progress.

The World's Largest Commercial Cylindrical Slide Rule has a Scale Length of 24m
From BLOG@CACM

The World's Largest Commercial Cylindrical Slide Rule has a Scale Length of 24m

The world's largest mass-produced cylindrical slide rules come from Loga-Calculator AG in Zurich/Uster, Switzerland.

Why Is There No Well-Known Swiss IT Industry?
From BLOG@CACM

Why Is There No Well-Known Swiss IT Industry?

Herbert Bruderer asks why no information technology industry emerged in Switzerland in the 1950s, despite the appearance of computers from several sources.

Leonardo da Vinci's Robot Lion
From BLOG@CACM

Leonardo da Vinci's Robot Lion

We are celebrating the 500th anniversary of Leonardo da Vinci's death with a major exhibition of the Renaissance painter's works.

How Do You Calculate with the Sector?
From BLOG@CACM

How Do You Calculate with the Sector?

The sector was developed in the second half of the 16th century, and was in widespread use until the end of the 19th century,

The Model Maker of Leonardo da Vinci, Blaise Pascal, and Charles Babbage
From BLOG@CACM

The Model Maker of Leonardo da Vinci, Blaise Pascal, and Charles Babbage

Discovery of a previously unknown replica of the legendary Swiss Millionaire calculating machine at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, PA.
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