Charles Babbage
James Watt invented steam engine & it is invented in 1769
The Newcomen engine was invented in England.
the Analytical Engine - an engine created by Ada Byron (the Lady Lovelace) and a person named Babbage - Ada suggested to Babbage writing a plan for how the engine might calculate Bernoulli numbers. This plan, is now regarded as the first "computer program." A software language developed by the U.S. Department of Defense was named "Ada" in her honor in 1979
perform calculations according to a program, just like modern computers.
Charles Babbage
The 'Difference Engine' - it was a mechanical calculator.
The computers invented by Charles Babbage were the Difference Engine and the Analytical Engine. Neither was finished in his lifetime but gave him fame as a computer pioneer.
Charles Babbage, but he never built it. It was called the Analytical Engine, was all mechanical, and was to be powered by a steam engine.
features of analytical engine
at roughly that time Charles Babbage invented the Analytical Engine, but it turned out to be beyond his ability to build for a complex variety of reasons.
He invented the Difference Engine between 1847 and 1849, a forerunner to modern computers. He is sometimes regarded as the father of computers. He also invented a machine called the Analytical Engine.
Charles Babbage invented the concept of a programmable mechanical computer known as the Analytical Engine. He conceived this invention in the early 1830s. Although Babbage was unable to complete the construction of the Analytical Engine during his lifetime, his work laid the foundation for the development of modern computers.
Charles Babbage. there are other questions on this English mathematician and computer inventor. it was called an analytical engine, not how you spelled it
Charles Babbage invented the first computer, the mechanical Analytical Engine, in the mid 1830s. However he was never able to get support or funding to build it.
An analytical engine is a mechanical general-purpose computer which was designed and envisaged by Charles Babbage, but never built.
1837