..then all you're saying is you have not seen a square circle. So what? — InPitzotl
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. — InPitzotl
You're begging the question here.The most significant difference between analogue device and computer — Corvus
Not all of them.the computers have microprocessors equipped in. — Corvus
None. The TR-10 includes interchangeable plug-in components including coefficient setting potentiometers, integrator networks, function switches, comparators, function generators, reference panels, tie point panels, multipliers, and operational amplifiers, as described in the operations manual.What microprocessor did TR-10 have? — Corvus
None. The TR-10 includes interchangeable plug-in components including coefficient setting potentiometers, integrator networks, function switches, comparators, function generators, reference panels, tie point panels, multipliers, and operational amplifiers, as described in the operations manual.
Is there a point to this game or are you just going to indefinitely annoy me? You mentioned something in just the last post about confusion. Now suddenly you're rambling something about microprocessors and lecturing me on the thing I'm using to type messages at you. — InPitzotl
Now suddenly you're rambling something about microprocessors and lecturing me on the thing I'm using to type messages at you. — InPitzotl
The PDP-11 did not have a microprocessor.Computers must have, — Corvus
Nope. The OS is absolutely unnecessary. Usually this is referred to as bare metal.For SW, it must have the OS for the central instruction processing and ROM (booting) — Corvus
Also unnecessary. I recall using the hex keypad to punch machine code into the 6800. Yeah, I did actually write a program first, but I did the compiling, not the 6800.And computers must be able to process data, and take new instructions via the programming languages. — Corvus
Irrelevant. This is yet another round of barking out requirements that are absolutely not requirements, then pretending you have a gotcha.Now which analogue device is equipped with above components and capabilities? — Corvus
Philosophy forum is an internet site, you are a "they", and I don't accept your ideas just because you typed it up here.My point is that rather than accepting the concepts and ideas from the Wiki or other internet sites just because they have typed up and uploaded unto there, — Corvus
If you are after "clearer concepts", let's start with what's so unclear about calling the TR-10 an analog computer.but why not try come to the knowledge by discussing and arguing for the clearer concepts and conclusion with the philosophical and logical discourse. — Corvus
You're giving me the wrong lecture. I'm not buying what some unknown bloke (Corvus) wrote out and put them on the net (philosophy forum). Why should I trust you?The meanings and concepts reveal in this process seem far clearer and logical than some unknown bloke written out and put them on the net. — Corvus
You're giving me the wrong lecture. I'm not buying what some unknown bloke (Corvus) wrote out and put them on the net (philosophy forum). Why should I trust you? — InPitzotl
You're lecturing me, virtually calling me a clueless wiki-zombie, despite my explicitly giving you my criteria for rejecting your definitions. Which still apply.I don't expect you trust me. Never said that. — Corvus
But you're not doing any philosophy here. You were directly asked what was so confusing about calling the TR-10 an analog computer. Instead of replying, and giving an argument, you chose to lecture me on how trusting random blokes on the internet yada yada yada, yada yada yada. In other words, you went on a tirade, which is not an argument.It is a principle in philosophical dIscussion. If one reject that, then there is no point. — Corvus
But you're not doing any philosophy here. You were directly asked what was so confusing about calling the TR-10 an analog computer. Instead of replying, and giving an argument, you chose to lecture me on how trusting random blokes on the internet yada yada yada, yada yada yada. In other words, you went on a tirade, which is not an argument. — InPitzotl
How is ranting on the importance of establishing clearer concepts, instead of, oh I don't know, actually trying to do that... not lecturing?Why do you see it as lecturing? — Corvus
Nope. You basically said, all swans have white feathers. That thing has black feathers, so there's no way it's a swan.I think I have given out the clear reason why analogue devices are not computers with all the necessary conditions for being computer in one of the posts with the HW and SW specs. — Corvus
Nope. You basically said, all swans have white feathers. That thing has black feathers, so there's no way it's a swan. — InPitzotl
Your definition is one of niche and habit; not generalized applicability. If we're going to discuss whether the brain is some form of analog computer, we're probably not going after whether it has a microprocessor in it; and despite your diatribes, philosophy isn't hanging in the balance over whether or not we count the brain as a non-computer because there's no silicon wafers in it. You are lacking all sense of proportion here. — InPitzotl
That's fair. But so is my analogy.I feel that it is important to clarify the concepts involved in the debate, — Corvus
I told you it didn't have a microprocessor.I have asked you about the details on the TR-10 you were talking about — Corvus
Not true. I told you a PDP-11 doesn't have a microprocessor, an OS is optional (gave you the term "bare metal"), and told you how I did the compiling for that 6800 I programmed. IOW, I am dismantling your arbitrary criteria.I have asked you about the details on the TR-10 you were talking about in its specs and SW/OS it uses, but you have not given your replies at all. — Corvus
Not true. I told you a PDP-11 doesn't have a microprocessor, an OS is optional (gave you the term "bare metal"), and told you how I did the compiling for that 6800 I programmed. IOW, I am dismantling your arbitrary criteria. — InPitzotl
Incidentally, again, the thread isn't about whether brains have silicon wafers in it. It's not asking whether brains run an operating system. It's not asking whether brains run on software written in programming languages. So all of these are fanciful distractions. There's nothing clarified here about how the brain works, and how it doesn't work, and how that might compare to what we call analog computers and what we call digital computers, to be found in these criteria that don't always apply to the things we call analog computers and digital computers anyway. — InPitzotl
I don't think anyone would be interested in PDP-8 or 11 in this thread. See you are the one who keeps bringing these dinosaur devices insisting they are the computers?Mea culpa; I meant to refer to the PDP-8 as having no microprocessor... the PDP-11 did have one. Then again, I note that you mutated this from "microprocessor" into "processor". — InPitzotl
I think you did already enough! At least, for me, by participating in this discusdion.. — Prishon
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