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112233 | 24 days ago
I'd imagine something that changes operation based purely on state (position of a dial, presence of a peg in a slot etc) conceptually being "symbolic". Punchcards are not it.
112233 | 24 days ago
I'd imagine something that changes operation based purely on state (position of a dial, presence of a peg in a slot etc) conceptually being "symbolic". Punchcards are not it.
ajb|24 days ago
They would be amused by the idea that this wasn't computing.
Punched cards store bits. Bits can store symbols.
noefingway|24 days ago
andsoitis|24 days ago
I don’t know that I said the punchcards are programmable.
It is the machine that is programmable via the punchcards.
112233|24 days ago
The "It had no conditional logic or flow control. No stored symbolic instructions." you mention applies to the loom too. It copied what was poked into cards to different medium, not unlike Gutenberg's press did.
I'm obviously missing the big differentiator of Jacquard's loom, but so far I have not seen it clearly explained in the articles I've read.