vFirst computer
vKonrad Zuse (1910-1995) was a construction engineer for the Henschel Aircraft Company in Berlin, Germany at the beginning of WWII. Konrad Zuse earned the semiofficial title of "inventor of the modern computer" for his series of automatic calculators, which he invented to help him with his lengthy engineering calculations. Zuse has modestly dismissed the title while praising many of the inventions of his contemporaries and successors as being equally if not more important than his own. In 1936, Zuse made a mechanical calculator called the Z1, the first binary computer. Zuse used it to explore several ground breaking technologies in calculator development.
The first electronic digital computer was.
I think it was the apple computer.
The Z1 originally created by Germany's Konrad Zuse in his parents living room in 1936 to 1938 is considered to be the first electrical binary programmable computer.
Math. The abacus was a basic mechanical adding machine. Pascal is credited with building the first mechanical machine computer in 1642 which was used for calculating sums. In 1939, Stibitz and S.B. Williams built the Complex Number Calculator, the world's first electrical digital computer.
The first recorded use of the word in the English language was in 1613 and referred to a person - someone who computed. The first recorded use of the word for an electrical item which did the computation for you was 1897. Although Charles Babbage had devised what was effectively a mechanical computer in 1837, the term, 'computer' was not used for it. He called it an 'Analytical Engine'.
William Gilbert was the first electrical engineer
You first must determine what wattage each computer consumes. You then need to figure out what your electrical rate is ... the charge per kilowatt hour.
no, Australia did not have the first computer in the world
When you program a computer to do something then you use what is known as a higher level language. For the computer to run the program it must first convert your program into binary so the computer can do the work. That work is done by either sending an electrical signal or not sending an electrical signal through the computer. When the computer has finished running the program it then has to change the binary system it uses into the higher level language you use so you get the answer you want
The first step is having the computer checked for codes. When you know the failure code you can diagnose for possible causes.
EMAC in 1947 was the first computer .
the computer will not code on most electrical ignition problems, I would check my coil packs first and my coil or coil wire