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Computers - Using Rod Logic and Graphene to build the Elusive Molecule-Scale Computer
Rod Logic and Graphene: Elusive Molecule-Scale Computers | Hackaday Making graphene with a DVD burner | HackadaySynthesizing graphene in your basement laboratory | Hackaday Xefro - Intelligent Graphene Heating System - intelligent infrared graphene central heating & hot water system | Xefro Graphene light bulb set for shops - BBC News Home
ORNL demonstrates first large-scale graphene composite fabrication | ORNL
Nanotechnology: Into the realm of real : CompositesWorld
LEGO Logic Gates - Half Adder - YouTube
Mechanical Computer (All Parts) - Basic Mechanisms In Fire Control Computers - YouTube False Dawn: The Babbage Engine - YouTube Engines of Creation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia IBM News room - 2015-10-01 IBM Research Breakthrough Paves Way for Post-Silicon Future with Carbon Nanotube Electronics - United States Intro to Rod Logic — The Half-Baked Maker DSpace@MIT: Molecular machinery and manufacturing with applications to computation
False Dawn: The Babbage Engine
Video link...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XSkGY6LchJs
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- 15 videos CHM Exhibition: Revolutionby ComputerHistory
CHM Exhibition "Revolution: The First 2000 Years of Computing"
Charles Babbage (1791-1871), computer pioneer, designed the first automatic computing engines. He invented computers but failed to build them. The first complete Babbage Engine was completed in London in 2002, 153 years after it was designed. Difference Engine No. 2, built faithfully to the original drawings, consists of 8,000 parts, weighs five tons, and measures 11 feet long.
Catalog Number: 102695004
Lot Number: X6142.2011
Mechanical Computer (All Parts) - Basic Mechanisms In Fire Control Computers
Video link...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1i-dnAH9Y4
A 1953 training film for a mechanical fire control computer aboard Navy Ships. Amazing how problems of mathematical computation were solved so elegantly in "permanent" mechanical form, before microprocessors became inexpensive and commonplace.
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