Computing

From the abacus to AI: inventors, machines, and ideas that turned counting into computing.

Charles Babbage

Welcome back, cave dwellers!

(Heads up: this is a placeholder. The full Babbage post is still cooking. For now, here’s the man, the palette, and the layout test.)

Pixel art portrait of Charles Babbage
Charles Babbage (1791 to 1871). Mathematician, mechanical engineer, philosopher, and full-time enemy of London's street musicians.

London, 1821. The Industrial Revolution isn’t yet a concept in the history books, it’s a noise. The hiss of steam pistons everywhere. In twenty years the world has changed more than in the previous five centuries.

Everything seems to be getting automated. Everything except the math.

Babbage is thirty years old and sits in front of a stack of mathematical tables. The tables are the software of the time, used by ship navigators to not crash on rocks, by engineers to build bridges, by insurance companies to set premiums.

The tables are always wrong.

That evening, looking at the columns of numbers, he thinks something simple.

What if a machine did the calculations?

(To be continued, little dwellers. Back to your cave. This one’s mine. ;))