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Analytical Engine
Charles Babbage, an English mathematician and computing pioneer, proposed the Analytical Engine, a mechanical general-purpose computer. It was first identified in 1837 as the successor to Babbage's difference engine, a simpler mechanical computer design. It is an arithmetic machine.
It is able to control flow in the form of conditional branching and loops.
Finally, it has integrated memory.
https://ecomputernotes.com/fundamental/introduction-to-computer/analytical-engine -
ENIAC Computing
The ENIAC computing device was created by John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert at the University of Pennsylvania's Moore School of Electrical Engineering in 1943.
The 20 single-number accumulators were its primary functional units.
ENIAC also had special units for multiplication, division, and square roots.
No Mechanical parts slowed it down. -
Current Computers (Much better than mac cheese grater btw)
Custom OC & water-cooled Intel Core i9-7980XE (Skylake-E) with 18 Cores (36 Threads!!), 24.75 MB L3 Cache and OC @ min. 4.6 GHz
ASUS ROG Rampage 6 Extreme Omega Mainboard (E-ATX) with Intel X299 chipset and LGA 2066/li>
Two NVIDIA RTX Titan with 24GB GDDR6 VRAM connected in NV-Link for incredible gaming graphical performance, or three water-cooled NVIDIA RTX Titan run independently
Faster and more efficient DDR4-RAM with 128 GB capacity and 3200 MHz, also insane storage and cooling -
2100
In the near yet far future, I'm sure that scientists will be able to successfully put computers into a small compact folded papers like the one in the picture.
this will have amazing graphics and cooling which you can use anywhere you want a 3090 or in the future a 10090 graphics card.
Never-ending storage.
more cores and threads than the thread ripper, around 1000 threads and 200 cored