How an Arizona teacher's dyscalculia shaped a massive cardboard recreation of the ENIAC computer ...
In complex systems, when parts are woven together through use, new structures arise that no one specified in advance. Like ENIAC, the machines we are building now—the large models, the autonomous ...
An Arizona teacher and his students built a full-scale cardboard replica of the historic ENIAC computer, using 22,000 parts and six months of work. The project, led by technology instructor Tom Burick ...
A bank of blinking lights indicate the mysterious processes going on within: That classic symbol of a computer has lasted long after computers evolved into friendly desktop tools. This was not a dream ...