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  1. The Z1 was a motor-driven mechanical computer designed by German inventor Konrad Zuse from 1936 to 1937, which he built in his parents' home from 1936 to 1938. It was a binary, electrically driven, mechanical calculator, with limited programmability, reading instructions from punched celluloid film.

    • 16-word floating point memory
    • Ca. 30,000 metal sheets @ 1 Hz
  2. In 1938, Konrad Zuse completes construction of the Z1, a mechanical computer. Zuse started designing the Z1 in 1935, and built the machine in the living room of his parents' Berlin apartment. The device was a purely mechanical, programmable, binary calculator.

  3. May 15, 2019 · Zuse made a mechanical calculator called the Z1 in 1936. This was the first binary computer. He used it to explore several groundbreaking technologies in calculator development: floating-point arithmetic, high-capacity memory, and modules or relays operating on the yes/no principle.

    • Mary Bellis
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Konrad_ZuseKonrad Zuse - Wikipedia

    Konrad Ernst Otto Zuse ( German: [ˈkɔnʁaːt ˈtsuːzə]; 22 June 1910 – 18 December 1995) was a German civil engineer, pioneering computer scientist, inventor and businessman. His greatest achievement was the world's first programmable computer; the functional program-controlled Turing-complete Z3 became operational in May 1941.

  5. www.computerhistory.org › revolution › birth-of-theKonrad Zuse - CHM Revolution

    Konrad Zuse built this functioning replica of a binary gate used in his mechanical 1936 Z1 computer, which was inspired by the “Stabilbaukasten” construction toy. Zuse envisioned a mechanical system that linked and operated calculators automatically.

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  7. Zuse computer, any of a series of computers designed and built in Germany during the 1930s and ’40s by the German engineer Konrad Zuse. He had been thinking about designing a better calculating machine, but he was advised by a calculator manufacturer in 1937 that the field was a dead end and that.

  8. Oct 14, 2023 · This chapter provides a comprehensive description of the Z1, the programmable mechanical computing machine built by Konrad Zuse in Berlin between 1936 and 1938. We explain the main structural elements of the machine, the high-level architecture, and the internal data flow.

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