File:Analytical Engine printer.jpg
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Analytical Engine (nonfiction) invented by Charles Babbage (nonfiction). Only part of the machine was completed before his death in 1871. This is a portion of the mill with a printing mechanism.
In the News
Smile on Babbage indicates confidence in future, says new Babbage simulator.
Ada Lovelace will write unit tests for Babbage simulator, confirms Babbage.
Fiction cross-reference
- Analytical Engine - any sign, symbol, or glyph used in a scrying engine. It is a mis-translation of the obsolete military-computational term analytical enseign.
- Charles Babbage
- Babbage simulator
- Ada Lovelace
Nonfiction cross-reference
Attribution:
This was the first fully-automatic calculating machine. British computing pioneer Charles Babbage (1791-1871) first conceived the idea of an advanced calculating machine to calculate and print mathematical tables in 1812. This machine, conceived by Babbage in 1834, was designed to evaluate any mathematical formula and to have even higher powers of analysis than his original Difference engine of the 1820s. Only part of the machine was completed before his death in 1871. This is a portion of the mill with a printing mechanism. Babbage was also a reformer, mathematician, philosopher, inventor and political economist.
By Science Museum London / Science and Society Picture Library - Babbage's Analytical Engine, 1834-1871.Uploaded by Mrjohncummings, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=28024313
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