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From Friday, April 19th (11:00 PM CDT) through Saturday, April 20th (2:00 PM CDT), 2024, ni.com will undergo system upgrades that may result in temporary service interruption.
We appreciate your patience as we improve our online experience.
11-24-2019 03:50 PM
Interesting project to do computations (add, multiply, square-root, etc.) in hardware. (He should add a LabVIEW interface to enter input values via relays, select operation mode, and read out the result in decimal based on the toggle positions. :D)
11-25-2019 02:38 PM
Many years ago ( 1993) I saw the Z1 in Berlin working... a little bit 😉
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z1_(computer)
Konrad Zuse, the inventor, provided support for that rebuild of the first computer until he died in 1995.
Quotation:
11-27-2019 03:16 PM
Actually Michelson designed a mechanical Fourier synthesizer. In short, the synthesizer had 80 springs which represented the amplitudes of the Fourier Coefficients.
When used to reproduce a square wave, it showed Gibbs Phenomenon. Michelson assumed mechanical shortcomings, later Gibbs gave the true cause in a letter to Nature. (59, 606,1899).
(Not sure if that is mentioned in the video you linked, can't watch videos at work.)
mcduff
11-28-2019 02:13 AM
Michelson's analyzer is not mentioned in the video (the video is about using mechanical flip-flops to build logic gates and combining them to perform a few types of computations), but it is explained quite nicely in this series of videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NAsM30MAHLg&list=PL0INsTTU1k2UYO9Mck-i5HNqGNW5AeEwq
12-05-2019 02:25 PM
I was once employed by th Chicago and Northwestern Rail road.
Union Station in downtown Chicago still runs off one of the earliest mechanical computers. T. A. Edison was the inventor. The relays are 6x9x5 inches and the room they are installed in is 3 stories by huge. The control switches are over 6 feet and the cam weighs about as much as my next ex.
12-06-2019 07:56 AM
@mcduff wrote:
Actually Michelson designed a mechanical Fourier synthesizer. In short, the synthesizer had 80 springs which represented the amplitudes of the Fourier Coefficients.
When used to reproduce a square wave, it showed Gibbs Phenomenon. Michelson assumed mechanical shortcomings, later Gibbs gave the true cause in a letter to Nature. (59, 606,1899).
(Not sure if that is mentioned in the video you linked, can't watch videos at work.)
mcduff
Some years ago I dumpster dived this RPM meter (and two more with different ranges) :
I always argue that's an FFT analysator even mechanics can understand 😄
12-06-2019 08:40 AM
@Henrik_Volkers wrote:Some years ago I dumpster dived this RPM meter (and two more with different ranges) :
Love to see that one in action!
I only have this mechanical DA converter, that serves as door\window stop...
If you switch fast enough, you get audio!
12-06-2019 11:06 AM - edited 12-06-2019 11:09 AM
@Henrik_Volkers wrote:Some years ago I dumpster dived this RPM meter (and two more with different ranges) :
I always argue that's an FFT analysator even mechanics can understand 😄
There were very similar devices to display the AC frequency. (random picture from the internet)
Then of course we also have the mechanical FFT occurring inside the human cochlea.
12-09-2019 09:06 AM
I used to have a battery room for the back-up batteries for a computer system I took care of back in the early 80's.
It had a Gould Static Frequency Inverter that used the same "tuned tines" to indicate the frequency it was producing.
Dumb Ben Story!
One cold winter day, I walked in to the battery room and was disturbed by the sound the Inverter was making. Looking at the indicators I realized it was running at very high current. Much higher than normal.
I went into troubleshooting mode and could not explain why it was be heavily loaded. Hours of investigation and phone calls to support I finally realized...
The operators had plugged in a space heater into one of the backed-up outlet and I had been warming my feet on same the entire day!
Ben
12-18-2019 01:54 PM
Here's a neat early mechanical computer that used punch cards for weaving patterns.
mcduff