100 years ago an Englishman named Charles Baddage invented a mechanical computer that was nearly as powerful as the "electronic brains" of the 1950s. The history books listed the machine as a dead end - but, in fact, the Baddage machine was a success whose existence was hidden.
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100 years ago an Englishman named Charles Baddage invented a mechanical computer that was nearly as powerful as the "electronic brains" of the 1950s. The history books listed the machine as a dead end - but, in fact, the Baddage machine was a success whose existence was hidden.
Read Less