What a difference the Difference Engine made: from Charles Babbage's calculator emerged today's computer
The incredible world of computers was born some 150 years ago, with a clunky machine dreamed up by a calculating genius named Charles Babbage
- By Edwards Park
- Smithsonian magazine, February 1996, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Like the Lunar Society in the days of Josiah Wedgwood and Erasmus Darwin (grandfather of Charles), two generations before, the "Analyticals" gathered in noisy sociability to discuss, among other things, the manufacture of cloth from cotton and wool, and the iron forges and steel plants then filling England's green Midlands. Their aim was to calculate how science could best support the continuing Industrial Revolution with new techniques, better tools, more accurate planning.
Long before going up to Cambridge, Babbage devised a way to walk on water. "My plan," he wrote, "was to attach to each foot two boards closely connected together by hinges themselves fixed to the sole of the shoe." The thing had worked well enough for young Charles to squish downriver on an ebb tide. But something went wrong, and he had to swim for his life.
He left Cambridge, obsessed with the idea of using machines to speed up time-consuming mathematical calculations. Thus the idea of a Difference Engine was born. Charles also envisioned a machine that would handle more decimal places to speed the process of "carrying" and "borrowing."
"He was always the great improver," says Peggy Kidwell, curator of the Scheutz Difference Engine at the Smithsonian. Kidwell, coauthor of Landmarks in Digital Computing, thinks Babbage was constantly goaded by the urge to improve not just his Engine, but the quality of 19th-century life. Among other examples, she cites his experiments with printing tables in different colors on different shades of paper (black print on white paper was hard on the eyes). In 1826 he had one page of tables published in 13 different inks on 151 different colors of paper.
More important, he endlessly sought ways to take the killing drudgery out of factory work. Metering devices, for example, would automatically do the mindless counting of some repeated action in a mill. He invented a time clock for punching in; suspicious workers called it the "tell-tale." He designed a device to record the direction of shocks in earthquake-prone areas, an inking roller for printing and, thinking perhaps of those boyhood "water shoes," proposed an idea for a hydroplane.
He tried to get the government to change the traditional values of pounds, shillings and pence for a decimal system. He got about as far as American scientists have today after years of pleading in vain to introduce the metric system. Still, the British adopted his proposed two-shilling piece, or florin, making ten florins equal to a pound sterling.
Babbage never fully finished the expanded Difference Engine, which he began calling the "Analytical Engine," but parts of the original ran smoothly in displays and kept bringing him more attention. "Now Mr. Babbage," said one woman after listening to his explanation of it, "there is only one thing that I want to know. If you put the question in wrong, will the answer come out right?" People eventually learned that a computer is no smarter than its programmer. As the saying goes, "Garbage in, garbage out."
Babbage was a splendid host. The Duke of Wellington came to call. So did Charles Dickens. Babbage talked shop with Sir Charles Wheatstone, inventor of the Wheatstone bridge for measuring electrical resistance; with Joseph Whitworth, whose rifle cannon with hexagonal bores were bought by the Confederate States of America and used with deadly accuracy on unfortunate Union troops; with Isambard Kingdom Brunel, builder of the giant iron ship Great Eastern (Smithsonian, November 1994).
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