- #2,416
brewnog
Science Advisor
Gold Member
- 2,750
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Woop, Wooly wins!
brewnog said:Woop, Wooly wins!
Close in regard to the time and motivation -Mk said:Defense needs in World War II were the driving force behind the development of the first large electronic computer built in the United States. The Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC), although completed at the end of 1945, after World War II had ended, was initially designed to calculate trajectories of projectiles. Developed by the University of Pennsylvania's Moore School of Electrical Engineering for the Ballistic Research Laboratory in Aberdeen, Maryland, it was a general-purpose decimal machine containing 18,000 vacuum tubes. Its design was related to the Differential Analyzer built by Vannevar Bush, except that Bush's mechanical components, such as counters and adders, were replaced by electronic ones.
I said i would make it harder for you MK.Mk said:If so, how about "Death by Chocolate," fried ice cream, hot fudge?
Is it a CIA computer?here's a clue - code breaking.
Nope, Here's lots of clues - UK gov't - WW2 - Bletchley Park - Enigma.Mk said:Is it a CIA computer?
Right time place and machine. Wrong designer. Colossus was first offered to the MOD at design stage but was rejected as it was thought to be too complicated and the war would be over before it was built. The post office worker who had tried to sell them on the idea was called Tommy Flowers. He went off and built it himself using his own money. He completed it in 10 months and the MOD was so impressed they ordered 10 of them to break the German codes. They were so successful the intelligence officers in Bletchley park were reading the secret German communiques practically in real time. His reward was anonymity for 50 years under the official secrets act and a £1000 award in recognition of his contribution to the war effort (which was slightly less than the amount of personal expenditure he had incurred in constructing it).Mk said:In 1943, the Colossus, the world's first programmable digital electronic computer, was designed at Bletchley Park by Max Newman and his team?
Probably the Middle East?Iraq?
I think you're right:matthyaouw said:Is it for marking paper? I can imagine it rolled along a letter or document to leave an impression rather like an ink stamp.