This seems very simple to say, and it can be understood by applying the general factory production procedures. But the reality is: if you pile all the raw materials in one place, then when you carry out mass production, you will spend a lot of labor to transport these raw materials in batches. I'm sure you'll say the solution is simple. Move in. However, if all of them move here, what's the difference between the workshop and the warehouse? How can we produce effectively? That will definitely get in the way. Babic skillfully set up a factory scheduling named "control bucket" in the "warehouse" and "workshop" so that "production" can be carried out continuously and orderly. Don't underestimate babic's design, which laid the basic framework of today's computer. You will be surprised when you say it: the warehouse is today's memory, the workshop is a counter, and the workshop and control bucket are the central processing units that control counting, commonly known as CPU.
Babic did not immediately publish this rather advanced design idea until an engineer who was also keen on computer design recorded it and published it in a journal, which produced the first article about babic's computer design outline. In the last forty years of his life, babic devoted himself to developing an "analytical machine". The father of high-speed digital computer hopes that this machine can perform various mathematical operations without direct instructions from human beings as long as it inputs data. That machine is not beautiful in any way, but like modern computers, it has four parts: memory, operation department, control center and I/O center, which is a historic creation.
Don't wonder that babic designed such a complicated and sophisticated machine in the19th century. You know, he once wrote a letter to Lord Tennyson, an English poet, which said, "Sir, in the poem" Dream of Sin ",you wrote that people are dying all the time and there is life all the time. This is a beautiful poem, but there are some flaws. If the truth is as you say, then the world population will remain unchanged. In fact, however, the birth rate is slightly higher than the death rate. Therefore, I suggest that in the next edition of poetry anthology, this poem can be slightly modified to read: Every moment, a person dies, and every moment has a sixteenth life. " When a person is so scientific and rigorous about numbers, it is no wonder that he will become the father of computers!