Arthur Fuller
fuller.artful at gmail.com
Tue Dec 27 10:35:07 CST 2011
>From slashdot... "It was on this day 220 years ago (December 26 1791) that Charles Babbage was born. The calculating machines he invented in the 19th century, although never fully realized in his lifetime, are rightly seen as the forerunners of modern programmable computers. [0]What if he had succeeded? Babbage already had plans for game arcades, chess playing machines, sound generators and desktop publishing. A Victorian computer revolution was entirely possible." -- For more information on this and an imaginative take on it, read "The Difference Engine", by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling; an amazing piece of fiction, IMO, but frankly not quite my favorite take on historical S-F. That vote would go to "Cryptonomicon" by Neal Stephenson, neck and neck with "V." by Thomas Pynchon. Arthur Cell: 647.710.1314 Thirty spokes converge on a hub but it's the emptiness that makes a wheel work -- from the Daodejing