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Questions tagged [relay-computer]

Computers based on electromagnetic relays as logic elements. DO NOT USE for relays that merely switch an output (such as a cassette motor).

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10 votes
1 answer
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I'm looking for performance data on relay based computers, and even human based computers. Performance, as in, time to perform an addition, multiple, etc. The Nordhaus data is all I have been able to ...
Derek Jones's user avatar
10 votes
1 answer
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Many early computers were relay-computers. Like any other inductor, when the coil in a relay is shut off, the current through the coil continues to flow. This is a result of Faraday's Law of ...
DrSheldon's user avatar
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34 votes
8 answers
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Many of of the computers built in the 1940s used relays for logic (see here and here): Bell Labs Model I, 1940 Bletchley Park Bombe, 1940 Zuse Z2, 1940 Zuse Z3, 1941 Bell Labs Model II, 1943 Bell ...
DrSheldon's user avatar
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8 votes
4 answers
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Computers of the first half of the 20th century generally used relays or vacuum tubes as their logic elements. Each of these components has there own methods of failure, but relays and tubes have a ...
DrSheldon's user avatar
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13 votes
1 answer
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Computer pioneer Grace Hopper often recounted the story of her team finding the first physical computer bug: While she was working on a Mark II Computer at Harvard University in 1947, her associates ...
DrSheldon's user avatar
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4 votes
4 answers
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Switches are intended for just turning ON or OFF the power supply by either closing or opening the circuit. I often wonder how does mankind got idea to use these switch for sake of processing (simple ...
A P SATHISH KUMAR's user avatar
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2 answers
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From what I understand, with floating point arithmetic, shifting values up and down is important, since a floating point value essentially is an equation like 2e×m. This supposition may be supported ...
Omar and Lorraine's user avatar
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There are a lot of designs out there of modern home made relay computers (not just ALUs but real computers -let's call them Turing complete, although Turing complete is not enough for having an ...
nbloqs's user avatar
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20 votes
6 answers
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From what I understand of ENIAC, it had a very large number of manually-operated rotary switches which behaved as ROM. While programming ENIAC in the early days required a plugboard, the machine was ...
supercat's user avatar
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