yes
Atanasoff's Computer was nearly completed in 1942 before Atanasoff and his assistant were drafted. This Atanasoff was the first to think of using base 2 (or binary) in his mechanical computation and incorporated that into his computer. However, a friend of Atanasoff's is believed to have visited while the computer was still in production and later used the knowledge gained from that visit while helping to build ENIAC a few years later.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ENIAC From what i gathered, mainly 6 i think.
The first electornic computer was built in the United States, to solve ballistics problems. It was called ENIAC, and was completed in 1946. The program was wired into the computer, which used several hundred vacumn tubes.
According to me what I think is you can copy this below given Link in Address bar to know more about ENIAC (world's first computer with a Video Clipping)AnswerThe first ELECTRONIC computer (ENIAC) consisted of several rooms full of racks filled with vacuum tubes, wiring, and relays. You could walk down aisles "through" the computer which seems a strange concept given today's technology! It used a tremendous amount of electricity, generated a tremendous amount of heat, and had frequent failures. It is possible to argue that Charles Babbage's Difference Engine was perhaps the first computer (though it was mechanical not electronic, see: difference-enginePossibly the first successful programmable (by wiring), electronic, computer was the Colossus Computer built in Bletchley Parkcolossus-computerRoughly like the photo above of the recreation of the Atanasoff Berry Computer, the first electronic digital computer (it was not programmable). The first programmable electronic digital computers were significantly bigger.
I think it was the Mycenaeans who built the first Greek kingdoms
I think it was the Mycenaeans who built the first Greek kingdoms
Known as "ENIAC" the Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer was the first electronic computer used by the military. Financed by the U.S. Army, ENIAC was a general-purpose computer initially designed to calculate artillery firing tables.
Alan Turing, I think. He made the computer, I am not to sure. Turing was British not American. The first American to invent a programmable computer was likely Vanevar Bush in 1929, but his was analog electromechanical, it was called the Differential Analyzer. The first American to invent an electronic digital computer was John Vincent Atanasoff, but his was not programmable, while it had no name at the time it was built it was later called the Atanasoff-Berry Computer. The first American to invent a programmable digital computer was Howard Aiken, but his was electromechanical, it was called the Harvard Mark I. The first programmable electronic digital computer was invented by Thomas Flowers of the British Post Office in 1942, called Colossus it was used to crack the German high command's cyphers (with 11 machines built prior to the end of the war, it was the only digital computer built prior to 1950 in a quantity greater than 1). The first Americans to invent a programmable electronic digital computer were John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert, but their machine ENIAC was a dead end architecture that was very difficult to program. The first programmable electronic digital computer resembling modern ones in architecture, called the Manchester Baby, was built by the British in 1948, but it had a minuscule memory of only 32 words of 32 bits each. Practical programmable electronic digital computers resembling modern ones in architecture really had to wait for the early 1950s and by then inventions only covered improvements in specific design detail, not whole computers.
I think it was Germany
The first train was built to carry coal from a mine in Wales, I think. The railway was short and narrow.
I think the 1st hindu temple was built between 1500BC-600BC.
its about 30 tons i think:)