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FRAGMENTARY KNOWLEDGE

Was the Antikythera Mechanism the world's first computer?

From The New Yorker
May 14, 2007


In October, 2005, a truck pulled up outside the National Archeological Museum in Athens, and workers began unloading an eight-ton X-ray machine that its designer, X-Tek Systems of Great Britain, had dubbed the Bladerunner. Standing just inside the National Museum's basement was Tony Freeth, a sixty-year-old British mathmetician and filmmaker, watching as workers in white
T-shirts wrestled the Range Rover-size machine through the door and up the ramp into the museum. Freeth was a member of the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project—a multidisciplinary investigation into some fragments of an ancient mechanical device that were found at the turn of the last century after two thousand years in the Aegean Sea, and have long been one of the great mysteries of science.

Click here to read the rest of Fragmentary Knowledge. (1.24 mb pdf)

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