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UM-Bot
user posted image rIt looks like a heap of rubbish, feels like flaky pastry and has been linked to aliens. For decades, scientists have puzzled over the complex collection of cogs, wheels and dials seen as the most sophisticated object from antiquity, writes Helena Smith. But 102 years after the discovery of the calcium-encrusted bronze mechanism on the ocean floor, hidden inscriptions show that it is the world's oldest computer, used to map the motions of the sun, moon and planets. 'We're very close to unlocking the secrets,' says Xenophon Moussas,an astrophysicist with a Anglo-Greek team researching the device. 'It's like a puzzle concerning astronomical and mathematical knowledge.' Known as the Antikythera mechanism and made before the birth of Christ, the instrument was found by sponge divers amid the wreckage of a cargo ship that sunk off the tiny island of Antikythera in 80BC. To date, no other appears to have survived. 'Bronze objects like these would have been recycled, but being in deep water it was out of reach of the scrap-man and we had the luck to discover it,' said Michael Wright, a former curator at London's Science Museum. He said the apparatus was the best proof yet of how technologically advanced the ancients were.

'The skill with which it was made shows a level of instrument-making not surpassed until the Renaissance. It really is the first hard evidence of their interest in mechanical gadgets, ability to make them and the preparedness of somebody to pay for them.' For years scholars had surmised that the object was an astronomical showpiece, navigational instrument or rich man's toy. The Roman Cicero described the device as being for 'after-dinner entertainment'. But many experts say it could change how the history of science is written. 'In many ways, it was the first analogue computer,' said Professor Theodosios Tassios of the National Technical University of Athens. 'It will change the way we look at the ancients' technological achievements.'

user posted image View: Full Article | Source: The Observer
Shuriken
I wonder if it was using something similar to the AMD's new AM2 socket...
UtahRaptor
OOOOOooooooo the Antikytheran Mechanism! Now that was a true find! Any one see this thing on Discovery Channel? It was recreated to the best of engineer's abilities and they STILL didn't get it totally right, but pretty close. This little thing kept track of the workings of the solar system. And also served as a calender if I remember correctly.....

REALLY NEAT MACHINE!
ShaunZero
Yeah, it was extremely interesting. I wonder how they made so long ago.
RollingThunder06
Hard to believe it was made around 80BC. It's great that they found it. Proves to us just how smart our ancestors were.
chemical-licker
shuriken geek.gif yes.gif
Story
An update
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/astronomy_calcu...c&printer=1

And the NATURE magazine article, with lots of illustrations
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v444/...ll/444534a.html
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