Rhea Vargas
ENIAC, one of the earliest electronic general-purpose computers, could perform approximately 5,000 calculations per second. This was a significant achievement for its time, as it dramatically increased the speed of computation compared to earlier mechanical devices. Despite its capabilities, ENIAC was still relatively slow by modern standards, as contemporary computers can perform billions of calculations per second.
The processor can perform approximately 2.5 billion floating point operations per second.
Using these machines, a machinist may perform up to 32 different types of cutting and forming operations.
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200,000
A heart transplant, this is one of the most dangerous operations as you have to disconnect so many vital veins and nerves, which carry a lot of blood
20 numbers
many far better computers
if you are talking about ENIAC, that is how it was programmed.
Eniac didn't have any transistors. It was built with 17,468 vacuum tubes, 7,200 crystal diodes, and a whole host of other components. But no transistors. The first transistor was created in November, 1947, almost two years after Eniac was completed.
Each Accumulator had 10 decimal places, two Accumulators could be connected for 20 decimal place double precision.
70 hours