I always assumed it has same root as analogy,
from Webster
1
: inference that if two or more things agree with one another in some respects they will probably agree in others
2
a: resemblance in some particulars between things otherwise unlike : similarity
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/analogy
my slide rule being my favorite analog computer
which operates on the
inference that if distances along the C and D scales agree with base ten logartihms of numbers, they can be added and subtracted to agree with multiplication and division in base ten, just as can logarithms.
I really enjoyed my analog computer lab where we solved differential equations with opamps and a strip chart recorder.
Well, nowadays the term analog, when referring to a signal, is usually meant to describe its trait of having an amplitude (volts or milliamps) in proportion to the value it represents. That's in stark contrast to a digital signal which is a numerical representation by a string of numbers, usually just the 0's and 1's of the binary(base two) system, which decode to a number representing the value being expressed.
Curiously there is now interest in computers with number bases other than binary. Base 3 arithmetic has a following, and so does base e. Try google.
I once encountered a three level logic system, it used 0, 2.5 and 5 volts to represent 3 states. I was awed at the implications. If three levels, why not four or a hundred? Push that line of thought far enough, and at some very large number of states, digital computing would revert to analog.
So the basic difference between analog and digital electronic signals is the number of levels used.
An analog signal should be continuous over a range, ie an infinite number of levels;
while a digital signal will have a discrete number of levels ,
and nowadays that number is almost universally two. But watch out.
Which begs the question - is output of a digital-to-analog converter really analog, if it can have only as many levels as its binary word allows ?
just Sunday musings...
old jim