They are just electrical devices, not computers. — Corvus
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ComputerSo, no we cannot see the human brain as computer. — Corvus
If you see machines as soulless things made by man, no they cant. — Prishon
You can see machines whatever you want, but human brains cannot be reduced to machines. — Corvus
Arent we made out of matter? Thats what you eat. You can say we evelved from some initial state of the universe and thede days we have an internal representation of the physical outside world. In this inside world things are going on like in the outsidde world. Im not saying we are matter only (I think thats what you mean by a machine). Matter has content. — Prishon
Sorry, I'm lost. First you were saying to your knowledge there has never been an analog computer. Then I gave you a listing of them (a museum manifest), and you said those were not computers, "just" electric devices. I then linked you to wiki articles, and you mumbled something about teen nerds. So I said there's nothing debate... and that was your point?That was my point mate. — Corvus
Sorry, I'm lost. First you were saying to your knowledge there has never been an analog computer. Then I gave you a listing of them (a museum manifest), and you said those were not computers, "just" electric devices. I then linked you to wiki articles, and you mumbled something about teen nerds. So I said there's nothing debate... and that was your point?
Do you have something interesting to say or not? — InPitzotl
Why is that not easy. I can simply say that there is some magical stuff inside matter that becomes our soul and feelings once inside us. — Prishon
Cute narrative, but that is not what happened. I linked to a museum manifest and a wikipedia article. I've yet to call anything an analog computer... I linked to other people calling things analog computers.If anyone comes with the picture of the old electronic analogue meters or vintage recording machines, and call them analogue computers, — Corvus
This is a picture of an analog computer. More precisely, it's a picture of a picture of one; that picture being from the operating manual of a TR-10. — InPitzotl
Ill think about it. Buon appetito! — Prishon
You wrote (in last comments) what I was thinking. It seems hard to imagine that computers are only computers if bits are involved. Thanks again for your examples! Nice material. I wanna use them in a book. I never knew about these guys! Ive only seen one used in a chaotic drop experiment. — Prishon
I was just making a comment about what you said! Dont you wanna continue? Are you offended that I said that computers can be analogue? — Prishon
No.Was it using the punch cards for the data storage? — Corvus
That would be changing the standard usage of terms. But that's not what's going on here. The TR-10 was commercially sold as an analog computer, as you can clearly see from the operator manual cover. That would make you the one changing the standard usage of the terms.I suppose you could call a horse cart as car, saying that it has wheels, moves and take you from A to B. — Corvus
That would be changing the usage of terms. But that's not what's going on here. The TR-10 was commercially sold as an analog computer, as you can clearly see from the operator manual. That would make you the one changing the usage of the terms. — InPitzotl
No idea what you're talking about, but:It sounds like the time when nobody knew what computers was, or was for. — Corvus
Which modern definition exactly? The most popular kind of computers are digital computers, but to say you have never heard of an analog computer in the history of human kind, where analog computer means digital computer, is a bit weird and meaningless. To "philosophically" only count a computer as a computer if it is a digital computer is a bit ridiculous.Really it looks like too grossly far fetched definition of computer from the modern definition we are familiar with in any shape form or meanings. — Corvus
Which modern definition exactly? The most popular kind of computers are digital computers, but to say you have never heard of an analog computer in the history of human kind, where analog computer means digital computer, is a bit weird and meaningless. To "philosophically" only count a computer as a computer if it is a digital computer is a bit ridiculous. — InPitzotl
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