Computer development followed this up with the modern slide rule in 1632, essentially a combination of two Gunter rules, held together with the hands.
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Computer development followed this up with the modern slide rule in 1632, essentially a combination of two Gunter rules, held together with the hands.
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Computer development built twenty of these machines in the following ten years.
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Computer development attempted to create a machine that could be used not only for addition and subtraction but would utilise a moveable carriage to enable long multiplication and division.
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Computer development's machine was an improvement over similar weaving looms.
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Computer development independently designed a programmable mechanical computer, which he described in a work that was published in 1909.
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Computer development's device was the foundation for further developments in analog computing.
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Computer development explored the possible construction of such calculators, but was stymied by the limited output torque of the ball-and-disk integrators.
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Computer development proved that some such machine would be capable of performing any conceivable mathematical computation if it were representable as an algorithm.
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Computer development went on to prove that there was no solution to the Entscheidungsproblem by first showing that the halting problem for Turing machines is undecidable: in general, it is not possible to decide algorithmically whether a given Turing machine will ever halt.
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Computer development introduced the notion of a "universal machine", with the idea that such a machine could perform the tasks of any other machine, or in other words, it is provably capable of computing anything that is computable by executing a program stored on tape, allowing the machine to be programmable.
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Computer development is especially historically significant because of its pioneering inclusion of index registers, an innovation which made it easier for a program to read sequentially through an array of words in memory.
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Manchester University Transistor Computer development's design was adopted by the local engineering firm of Metropolitan-Vickers in their Metrovick 950, the first commercial transistor computer anywhere.
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Computer development's chip solved many practical problems that Kilby's had not.
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