The existence of analogue computers is already established a few times in this thread! This is one more:And analogue computers? That is just another contradictory concept which not makes sense. — Corvus
The existence of analogue computers is already established a few times in this thread! This is one more:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_computer — Alkis Piskas
Please make an effort to actually read the reference (i.e. more than its sub-reference) at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_computer again. Then try not to laugh ironically, but when something is actually funny.That is for ANALOG Computing (an acronym for Atari Newsletter And Lots Of Games) . :D
Atari is a company name. — Corvus
All computer is digital device by my 1st order definition.
Give us your definition of what "analogue" and "computer" is. — Corvus
There isn't any doubt about the existence of analogue computers, just try to read and understand what people are saying to you. — Daemon
Does a digital computer actually compute — Daemon
There are no 1s and 0s in a PC. There are voltages, or "pits and lands" on an optical disc, and we interpret these as representing 1s and — Daemon
Well that rules out analog computers (as well as quantum computers), but it doesn't sound like it's talking the same language as people who use terms like "analog computers" (including you) and "quantum computers".All computer is digital device by my 1st order definition. — Corvus
It's given in the links already provided to you. Here's a definition for "computer":Give us your definition of what "analogue" and "computer" is. — Corvus
Here's a definition for "analog computer":A computer is a machine that can be programmed to carry out sequences of arithmetic or logical operations automatically. — Wikipedia, Computers
...and as for the standalone definition of analog, it's a red herring. Analog computer is a compound term with meaning and referents. The usage of the compound term establishes the meaning of it.An analog computer or analogue computer is a type of computer that uses the continuously variable aspects of physical phenomena such as electrical, mechanical, or hydraulic quantities to model the problem being solved. — Wikipedia, Analog computer
You've got this entire exercise backwards. Terms get their meaning from established usage. Per the established usage, the TR-10 is referred to as an analog computer, not a meter, and not a vintage recording machine. The quality of your definition comes from its ability to describe the established usage... so it's kind of futile for you to argue that because you define "analog computer" as a square circle, the TR-10 is not one. The absolute best you could do with this argument is to argue that an analog computer doesn't match your definition of a computer, which is uninteresting.For adecentdefinition of computerin modern times, computers must be able to store, search, compute, and recover data for its minimum functions. — Corvus
...then all you're saying is you have not seen a square circle. So what?I am not sure if analogue computer has ever existed. Every computer ever existed in history is all digital from my knowledge.
Can you list some examples of analogue computers? — Corvus
The absolute best you could do with this argument is to argue that an analog computer doesn't match your definition of a computer, which is uninteresting.
Per linguistic standards, insofar as your definition does not fit the established usage, its your definition that's wrong. — InPitzotl
I judge wikipedia's definition the same way I judge yours. Wikipedia's definition is good by this criteria. Yours is wanting.Normally I go with the dictionary definitions on most concepts, but wiki? I don't trust wiki sorry. — Corvus
Everyone deals with myriads of analog devices. I interact with SSD's all of the time in my profession. This has nothing to do with your definition.And in my profession, I have dealt with myriads of analogue devices — Corvus
Then (a) what would you call a TR-10? (b) Given everyone else calls the TR-10 an analog computer, why should I care what you call a TR-10?For computers, they must be able to store, retrieve, compute and search for data, and process them into useful and organised form of information. — Corvus
Second time... the TR-10 was commercially sold as an analog computer. That goes in the established usage bucket, not the desperate relabeling bucket.OK, if you are desperate, you can call an ancient abacus a computer. — Corvus
What confusions? The biggest confusion here is your weird claim that to your knowledge there has never been an analog computer, followed by denying that what everyone else calls an analog computer is an analog computer. If that's the confusion you're talking about, I have another idea of how to resolve it.But due to the misuse and widening of the concepts, you will find that the confusions will never go away in the discussions and even in real life. — Corvus
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