Main pageSend to administrator

Search
Site map




Login:  
Password:  
registration
forgot your password?
About the contest
For Entrants
Experts of the competition
Competitive innovations
Ukrainian National Forum
Partners
Press-center
Innovative community
For corporate bodies
For contacts
advanced search



17.07.2008
Seedcamp Week 2008 have opened the gates to online application system. Applications are being accepted till August 10th.
printdetails
19.05.2008
Web2People announces the start of the Summer'08 session, which will take place in St.Petersburg from July 14 to September 30, 2008.
printdetails
07.05.2008
International summit SEEDCAMP Eastern Europe is open in Kyiv on May 21 and 22. In view of SEEDCAMP-2007 success, organizers decided to held SEEDCAMP EASTERN EUROPE in Ukraine, the country with increasing euro integration processes and high dynamics of IT development.
printdetails
29.03.2008
On April, 17 “7 minutes” competition to be held within the framework of TMT.Ventures’08 in Kyiv.
printdetails
news archive



tel: +38 (044) 569-95-05
e-mail: support@ideasplanet.org
Contact us





Wilhelm Schickard (Wilhelm Schickard) (1592 - 1653) (built the first automatic calculator in 1623)

Wilhelm Schickard

Wilhelm Schickard (born 1592 in Herrenberg - died 1635 in Tubingen) built the first automatic calculator in 1623.

Contemporaries called this machine the Calculating Clock. It precedes the less versatile Pascaline of Blaise Pascal and the calculator of Gottfried Leibniz by twenty years. Schickard's letters to Johannes Kepler show how to use the machine for calculating astronomical tables. The machine could add and subtract six-digit numbers, and indicated an overflow of this capacity by ringing a bell; to aid more complex calculations, a set of Napier's bones were mounted on it. The designs were lost until the twentieth century; a working replica was finally constructed in 1960.

Schickard's machine, however, was not programmable. The first design of a programmable computer came roughly 200 years later (Charles Babbage). And the first working program-controlled machine was completed more than 300 years later (Konrad Zuse's Z3, 1941).

previous inventorlist of all inventorsnext inventor


Legal information
Privacy policy
Vacancies


TechnoBridge © 2006
All rights reserved
Ñîçäàíèå ñàéòà
Ñîçäàíèå ñàéòà
Sparkle Design Studio