"Charles Babbage, credited as the world's first computer pioneer, designed the "
Difference Engine", of which Prince Albert had the opportunity to see a prototype in July 1843.
In 1823 he designed a machine known as the "
difference engine" which was the forerunner of the modern electronic computer.
It was written by Ada Lovelace, who helped fellow mathematician Charles Babbage in inventing the world's first computer, the
Difference Engine, in 1822.
The free exhibitions include Stephenson's Rocket, Puffing Billy (the oldest surviving steam locomotive), the first jet engine, a reconstruction of Crick and Watson's model of DNA, and Babbage's
Difference Engine, a computer prototype.
In the 1830s, Charles Babbage built a
Difference Engine (mechanical calculator) and then an Analytical Engine (a decimal digital computing device).
Babbage was already known for his design for a calculating machine, which he called a "
Difference Engine," a reputation he would consolidate with his design for an "Analytical Engine" (1834).
Babbage, called by some "the father of the computer, had already invented what he called "the
Difference Engine," also known as "the Thinking Machine," but he was now at work on a new version that he called "the Analytical Engine." The new machine, whose operation was controlled by a punched-card system, was to be much more advanced than the
Difference Engine, and, as Essinger states, "able to do more than simply calculate mathematical tables." The key to the success of the Analytical System was the use of punched- cards.
Padua imagines a Pocket Universe in which Lovelace and Babbage work as partners and build the analytical engine, called here the
Difference Engine, along with other things, and encounter all sorts of historical personages in their adventures.
It's the biggest collection of computer artefacts anywhere in the world, and it's not only a brilliant account of the progress of computing technology from Babbage's
difference engine to the smartphone.
The
Difference Engine received support from the likes of One North East, Sunderland and Middlesbrough councils, and launched with the ambition to propel ideas from the North East and further afield into fully fledged businesses.
The young Ada was tutored in maths and |after meeting Charles Babbage in 1833 at a party became fascinated by his analytical
Difference Engine, forerunner of the modern electronic computer.