
Quite the perfectionist, Babbage designed this incredibly complicated 5-ton mechanical computer with 8,000 parts in 1822-1849, before the era of standard screws. It would calculate and print tables of solutions to seventh-order polynomials using only addition. Half of the parts are dedicated to the creation of book printing templates to remove all possible sources of human error in the tables, a source of great irritation to Babbage.
While Babbage never saw one built during his lifetime, Nathan Myhrvold commissioned the construction of this one, which is cranking away at the Computer History through the end of this year.
I took an HD video of the beautiful ripples of movement through the soul of the machine.


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