Is there a series showing how we got rocks to think?

https://lemmy.world/post/17462504

Is there a series showing how we got rocks to think? - Lemmy.World

What is a computer

Demons it’s all demons.

I really enjoyed watching most of this series a while back by Ben Eater:

"Building an 8-bit Breadboard Computer

It explains a lot of the steps in the rocks-to-computer pipeline in detail.

Building an 8-bit breadboard computer!

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+1 for Ben Eater. There will be things you won’t understand, but for those at least you get a good starting point for reading them up.
There is a game called Turing complete where you start with simple logic gates and you start building upwards from there. Then you’re only missing the part where you build transistors from silicone wafers.

youtu.be/FU_YFpfDqqA?si=NRQYXa6nk_NTn7vf

I believe it was this video by Veritasium that I was thinking of that explains how we got switches to think. Modern computers use the same principles. Just instead of physical switches, they use semiconductor switches. Which is were the rocks come into play. Semiconductors, in supper brief nut shell, are on the verge of conducting and need a little nudge of voltage to start conducting. Hence the semi part.

Why The First Computers Were Made Out Of Light Bulbs

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This post from the other day was pretty good

www.righto.com/…/pentium-standard-cells.html?m=1

Standard cells: Looking at individual gates in the Pentium processor

Intel released the powerful Pentium processor in 1993, a chip to "separate the really power-hungry folks from ordinary mortals." The origin...

How To Make A CPU

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there is a rock in my house

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Before we used rocks to think we did it with vacuum, heat, and glass. At the time we did have some very very basic thinking rocks with primitive semiconductor diodes made from lead and sulfur.
Also how debugging got its name, because bugs would get into the vacuum tubes
Wouldn’t really be vacuum if they could get in though
Very true. I got more curious and found this discussion trying to trace “debug.”
Origin of "bug" in reference to software

What is the origin of the expression bug when used to refer to software? Wikipedia says it's from 1843 in Ada Byron's notes on the analytical engine. Another source I found was on dictionary.com: ...

English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Computers can’t think, they are just calculators on steroids…
Depending on how much you know already, the Crash Course Computer Science videos are an excellent place to start. It’s obviously an intro course but, like most Crash Course stuff, it does a good job of explaining the basics and also giving a bit of context and history.
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I can really recommend the YouTube channel “Branch Education” they do a lot of in depth explanations on this topic.

I like that channel alot. They get into the science while keeping it understandable enough to learn the basics.

If you like Branch Education, Check out Deconstructed, AnimagraffsandJared Owen. They branch out from computers and each do other cool stuff like motors, gas lighters, helicopters, Nerf guns, rockets, and the Kripsy Kreme donut machine.

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We shot it with a lightning bolt and then some weird sh*t started happening. /s.
Nah, that’s how you get Johnny 5 to be alive.

This is a classic.

Shows how changes cause more changes and interactions. For instance; coffee is imported into England;coffee shops in London were a popular place to do business before modern office building came around; investors began looking for ways to make the ships they were bankrolling safer; pine tar was a great way to keep ships watertight…

youtu.be/XetplHcM7aQ?list=PLf02uWXhaGRng_YzH-Ser_…

James Burke Connections, Ep. 1 "The Trigger Effect"

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Was thinking of Connections myself. Almost on par with Cosmos, I’d say. Definitely a must watch.
I look at Connections as a history show more than a science show.

Plenty of that in Cosmos, too.

But I see them as shows that teach you how to learn, and how to want to learn, and how to wonder. About history and technology and science, sure, but also about humanity, and the universe.

The kind of shows every child should watch at least once, or every adult if you haven’t seen them before (never too late!) or feel like having a rewatch.

“Halt and Catch Fire” was pretty good!

From Wikipedia:

It depicts a fictionalized insider’s view of the personal computer revolution of the 1980s and the early days of the World Wide Web in the early 1990s.

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