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There is still some "argument" as to what was truly the first "computer" as we now think of the word. There was a gay guy who worked for British intelligence during WWII named Turing (sp) who developed a machine for cracking the German Enigma code. The brilliant little queen killed himself a few years later after getting popped on a morals charge by the Bobbies.
How many geniuses have met a premature tragic end, due to their socially backward society, eh?
As to the first computer, the first time the concept was used was during the French Revolution. The bureaucracy required to turn the entire nation around, calculating tax, and so on, and all the numerous details that the new regime demanded required a huge amount of calculation. This was acheived by hiring a large number of accountants and arranging them all strictly in physical order, with each one having a specific task to do, and all those with like tasks arranged just so, in order to get the massive efficiency required.
These men were called computers, and it is said that Babbage witnessed this arrangement first hand, which gave him the idea for his difference engine,
some info about which can be found here, and which he got to try out when the Astronomical Society of London commissioned a table of the stars to be worked out.
Here's a good history of the difference engine by the way. It was never finished, due to money and, again, social circumstances.
I'm sure there must have been other independent thinkers who thought along the same lines, oblivious to the work of Babbage and Herschel. For instance, were the stone circles of Europe really big calculators? Utilising the alignment of the heavenly bodies for mathematical purposes? Who knows.
Difference Engine No 2. and Difference Engine No 1.
Link to imageLink to imageLinks to pictures of the Difference Engine No 2.
[ July 02, 2002: Message edited by: Calum ]