Is a Completely Mechanical CPU possible?

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  • Опубликовано: 16 июл 2024
  • The first video in what will probably be an absolutely insanely complicated project that will drive me crazy. I’m so excited.
    Cad Files: www.thingiverse.com/thing:486...
    Cool links that you should check out in no particular order:
    xkcd 505: xkcd.com/505/
    Ben Eater’s 8 bit computer: • 8-bit computer update
    And as always, My social media:
    Instagram: / wesleykagan
    Patreon: / wesleykagan
    Website: www.wesleykagan.com
    For promotional inquiries: wesley.kagan@gmail.com
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Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @WesleyKagan
    @WesleyKagan  3 года назад +1616

    I know, I know. Not a car video. Next week the Jaguar is getting some upgrades!

    • @jefffrasca4054
      @jefffrasca4054 3 года назад +51

      Don't worry, I can't be the only computer nerd/car guy who likes gate level digital design in your audience. This is awesome, and I am only two minutes in.

    • @SpaceMulva
      @SpaceMulva 3 года назад +6

      Turing was an assclown and now the government is using 5g chips to turn us all gay.

    • @Cracked1ce
      @Cracked1ce 3 года назад +4

      check out Rory Mangles TIM 8 relay computer. he did it with a minimal number of relays. He implemented a serial ALU. might give you some ideas on how to put together your mechanical computer

    • @jefffrasca4054
      @jefffrasca4054 3 года назад +2

      @@Cracked1ce serial architecture is a great idea. It's much lighter on gate counts. It's also slower, but this wasn't going to be a speed demon.

    • @mikehensley78
      @mikehensley78 3 года назад +2

      @@jefffrasca4054 Me too! I love the nerd-vids.

  • @Essin62
    @Essin62 3 года назад +2928

    When modern society breaks down and electricity is no more, you'll be the only one playing DOOM on your mechanical computer

    • @ExplizitDuester
      @ExplizitDuester 3 года назад +151

      but does it run crysis?

    • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
      @Skinflaps_Meatslapper 3 года назад +179

      @@ExplizitDuester Estimated to run at least 60FPW

    • @gweltazlemartret6760
      @gweltazlemartret6760 3 года назад +186

      @@Skinflaps_Meatslapper Does "FPW" mean "Frame per Week"?

    • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper
      @Skinflaps_Meatslapper 3 года назад +129

      @@gweltazlemartret6760 If you prefer FPS that would come out to about 0.00009920634FPS

    • @Sirenhound
      @Sirenhound 3 года назад +188

      If modern society breaks down, I assume the rest of us will be playing DOOM for real.

  • @carlschwarz4935
    @carlschwarz4935 2 года назад +1088

    The speed of the computer is suddenly shifted from GHz to Horsepower. Turbo boosting the CPU takes on it's original meaning!

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT 2 года назад +43

      It would be fun to have him build an actual windmill to power the CPU he makes. Or maybe to use mirrors and a small homemade stirling engine instead.

    • @JETZcorp
      @JETZcorp 2 года назад +17

      @@SapioiT I'm thinking more like 5.7 Hemi.

    • @shadyganem5448
      @shadyganem5448 2 года назад +32

      I need to upgrade my PC's drive shaft to play call of duty.

    • @odw32
      @odw32 2 года назад +12

      I think horsepower will just increase the "transistor count limit". To increase frequency, you would need a gearbox to drive the "clock" at a higher RPM.

    • @JETZcorp
      @JETZcorp 2 года назад +9

      @@odw32 You need horsepower for both. Torque and RPM.

  • @gunfaceUK
    @gunfaceUK 3 года назад +722

    "Is a mechanical computer possible?"
    Alan Turning would like a word.

    • @grimftl
      @grimftl 2 года назад +102

      As would Babbage.

    • @luserdroog
      @luserdroog 2 года назад +35

      @@grimftl I was about to say Babbage.

    • @oznerol256
      @oznerol256 2 года назад +29

      Konrad Zuse as well

    • @TheKlink
      @TheKlink 2 года назад +19

      Jacquard wants to say a-hon!-hon!-hon!

    • @pbakhshande5057
      @pbakhshande5057 2 года назад +12

      No, It is not possible for two reasons (even if his idea is beautiful):
      1) The more number of mechanical pieces in use, the more likely to crash. We already have lots of crashes, not want more of them.
      2) The latency and timing that sucks!!! Even the electrons and light emissions have unacceptable delays in some complicated circuits.

  • @dopplerdog6817
    @dopplerdog6817 2 года назад +152

    Not even 3 rules - all computation can be reduced to a single rule: NAND. You can build all gates using NANDs, and you can build FFs using NANDs too. It's feasible to build an entire Turing complete computer using NANDs only.

    • @prototypeinheritance515
      @prototypeinheritance515 2 года назад +25

      NOR is universal too

    • @panzerkampfwagentigerausfb6378
      @panzerkampfwagentigerausfb6378 2 года назад +12

      @@prototypeinheritance515 Yes but NAND is more widely used.

    • @TheAudioCGMan
      @TheAudioCGMan 2 года назад +5

      I remember this is how most is manufactured

    • @geofflongwill3280
      @geofflongwill3280 2 года назад +3

      And nands can be has been built of stone(chrystal in nature) man mad structures duh!!!

    • @guybob3618
      @guybob3618 Год назад

      ​@antonchannel And it's pretty cool now that i tried it.

  • @akumabito2008
    @akumabito2008 3 года назад +1286

    Coming soon: solid state mechanical engine management.

    • @dylanzrim3635
      @dylanzrim3635 3 года назад +20

      I very much hope that’s sarcasm, mechanical fuel injection is a thing and it is currently a step up from modern ECU tech

    • @omaristephens2143
      @omaristephens2143 3 года назад +85

      @@dylanzrim3635 It pains me to explain the joke, but I'm pretty sure the point was "a modern ECU, implemented as a mechanical computer instead of an electrical computer"

    • @csn583
      @csn583 3 года назад +35

      @@dylanzrim3635 Yeesh, humorless. Nothing about "engine management" implies fuel injection. And yes, MFI has been around since at least WW2.

    • @slidey1788
      @slidey1788 3 года назад +12

      Engine management via a difference engine.....

    • @MrAsddasdasda
      @MrAsddasdasda 3 года назад +10

      @@dylanzrim3635 step down*

  • @RinoaL
    @RinoaL 3 года назад +3888

    Ok this was quite neat. Just fyi this appeared on my YT home screen and i've never seen you before, so you have good reach.

    • @zachariaperkins3182
      @zachariaperkins3182 3 года назад +14

      Same

    • @josephgauthier5018
      @josephgauthier5018 3 года назад +9

      also same

    • @wallakee
      @wallakee 3 года назад +13

      Same - also, subscribed immediately both for cars and mechanical computers...

    • @josephgauthier5018
      @josephgauthier5018 3 года назад +2

      Ngl Rinoa, your username got me curious about your channel. Your pfp made me think it might have been related to gaming, as you well know I was incorrect lol (mostly). You come off as a relatively smart person in your videos, so I decided to subscribe. Have a nice day!

    • @brainwashingdetergent4322
      @brainwashingdetergent4322 3 года назад +3

      Same

  • @revampedharpy09
    @revampedharpy09 3 года назад +109

    9:03 although its worth noting that nasa has actually been considering giving it a look for venus-based rovers, due to the fact that electronic circuits dont hold up well at all under the venusian atmosphere, whereas mechanical devices should hold up far better and remain working for longer. we may actually see mechanical computers make a come back, at least for venus missions

    • @psd993
      @psd993 2 года назад +21

      while that might be vaguely true, the amount of processing that has to be done on an modern rover is large enough that rover might have to be much bigger than anything else built before.

    • @revampedharpy09
      @revampedharpy09 2 года назад +4

      @@psd993 true, and the idea of mechanical circuits being used is still only a consideration for now, rather than something that's been decided on. If we can make electrical circuits work, then that's obviously a better choice, I mean there's a reason we moved away from mechanical processing for the most part. It's just that NASA is at least deeming it a worthwhile consideration incase electrical circuits aren't a viable option. Doesn't hurt to have a backup plan after all.

    • @jonharson
      @jonharson 2 года назад

      No, it's for a Mercury mission, not Venus.

    • @kaidwyer
      @kaidwyer 2 года назад +3

      @@revampedharpy09 perhaps mechanical sensors and instrumentation outside of a thermally insulated electronic processing unit will be the compromise they need.

    • @pizzainc.1465
      @pizzainc.1465 10 месяцев назад

      You would still need to convert radio to mechanical energy, and you would need to make it REALLY compact. It would be better if they used the heat from the atmosphere to power a powerful cpu cooler.

  • @MrTwostring
    @MrTwostring 2 года назад +21

    I haven't heard the joke about the "spherical cow in a vacuum" in ages. Talk about specialist humor!

  • @YoureSoVane
    @YoureSoVane 3 года назад +905

    I can't imagine how much friction will exist in the final system.

    • @toomdog
      @toomdog 3 года назад +19

      I was just thinking that.

    • @dieselgeezer18
      @dieselgeezer18 3 года назад +193

      *L U B E I T*

    • @glass7923
      @glass7923 3 года назад +70

      grease cooling

    • @IONATVS
      @IONATVS 3 года назад +84

      actual adding machines from the period would basically be BATHED in lubricating oil at least daily if not more frequently.

    • @dlfon99
      @dlfon99 3 года назад +140

      @@IONATVS Imagine having to change your computer's oil every other month 🤣

  • @fencingboy101
    @fencingboy101 3 года назад +829

    interent: "i wanna put freevalve on my miata already"
    wesley: "i wonder if i can do differential equations with switches"

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera 3 года назад +19

      Charles Babbage: "I beat you to it by more than a century"

    • @a7dad822
      @a7dad822 3 года назад

      Big brain reply

    • @AfonsoBucco
      @AfonsoBucco 3 года назад +3

      @@deusexaethera Allan Turing: "let's put input and output in the same place"

  • @millenniumf1138
    @millenniumf1138 2 года назад +79

    This is awesome!! I think the final design will be excellent for classrooms in order to teach kids how logic gates work, especially if it can be made in such a way that the gates snap together and be 3D printed.

    • @lucaraza5613
      @lucaraza5613 2 года назад +6

      completely agree I'm in high school and this the best explanation on how computers work I've ever found

    • @pizzainc.1465
      @pizzainc.1465 10 месяцев назад

      @lucaraza5613 There are tons of explanations, Ben eater, Sebastian lague, etc., you probably just didn’t find any of them until now. In fact, I think Sebastian Lague’s is better, because you can follow along for free (you can follow along with Ben Eater’s but most of the time he just explains the gates and uses chips because real life is limiting. Also, real objects are expensive, so you also need to purchase a kit to follow alongs)

  • @butters742
    @butters742 3 года назад +9

    It may not be efficient to a electrical CPU, but it gives way to looking at a CPU's in a different light. I think that is valuable. Being able to see things from different angles, always proceeds with progression.

  • @sssfsfdfsdsdffsfsdf4
    @sssfsfdfsdsdffsfsdf4 3 года назад +470

    That logic gate looks like it was designed to survuve a neuclear blast, Skookum asf

    • @dylanzrim3635
      @dylanzrim3635 3 года назад +13

      Skookum As frig is acceptable

    • @jeffmoncalieri7491
      @jeffmoncalieri7491 3 года назад +12

      "Skookum" - must be in BC, Canada. That's not a thing anywhere else. :D

    • @Watchmedome3017
      @Watchmedome3017 3 года назад +22

      AvE lol 😂

    • @jeffmoncalieri7491
      @jeffmoncalieri7491 3 года назад +1

      @@Watchmedome3017 yup here's here too.

    • @slidey1788
      @slidey1788 3 года назад +5

      Dewclaw will be mortified that no ones, zeroes or angry pixies will be required

  • @gearzpop8457
    @gearzpop8457 3 года назад +446

    *There's a GPU shortage
    Wesley: alright what do I have in the scrap pile I can put together.

    • @robertbingham8053
      @robertbingham8053 3 года назад

      @gfgffgfg fgf Graphics Processor Unit.

    • @robertbingham8053
      @robertbingham8053 3 года назад +3

      OMG - he can use it to mine for bitcoin.

    • @ShyDigi
      @ShyDigi 3 года назад

      @@robertbingham8053 yes. However, be careful saying GPU because you would typically need a whole graphics card rathar than just the GPU.

    • @ShyDigi
      @ShyDigi 3 года назад

      @@robertbingham8053 also, there’s a silicon/chip shortage in general, not just GPU/CPUs so this comment still technically makes sense.

    • @robertbingham8053
      @robertbingham8053 3 года назад +1

      @@ShyDigi Likewise with a motherboard and CPU, though.

  • @CaseyPutsch
    @CaseyPutsch 3 года назад +82

    Hey dude! Just wanted to say I think you’re doing a great job here! Spherical cow in a vacuum! LOL

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  3 года назад +4

      Thanks man! Love what you’re doing too, we need to chat again soon!

  • @rafaelrodrigues2380
    @rafaelrodrigues2380 2 года назад +6

    Man, pls continue this project, it is amazing

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday 3 года назад +2168

    Fascinating thought experiment.

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  3 года назад +302

      Thank you! I'm still tinkering with the 2nd part of this, but I'm happy with the direction so far. Love your channel!

    • @meiskam
      @meiskam 3 года назад +25

      @@WesleyKagan looking forward to part 2!

    • @srenkoch6127
      @srenkoch6127 3 года назад +8

      Yea, a bit like Babbage's Analytical engine - except this will be binary so some of the 'mill' parts will be simpler although the analytical engine would have been able to calculate with 20+ decimal place accuracy.
      The 'store' part is still going to be massive though. :-)

    • @eliljeho
      @eliljeho 3 года назад +12

      Destin is probably the reason I'm here.

    • @KSchoes44
      @KSchoes44 3 года назад +6

      @@eliljeho yup, algorithm is doin its job.

  • @rparker069
    @rparker069 3 года назад +71

    "roll that intro.....I don't..I don't have an intro" is one hell of an intro

  • @Acsion42
    @Acsion42 3 года назад +11

    Back when I was in Highschool I had a similar idea for a clockwork computer, using the direction of spin as bits. I drew up the plans for the gates and a potential processor, unfortunately, 3D printers didn't exist quite yet back then.

  • @asshole9191
    @asshole9191 3 года назад +2

    Mechanical Computers were done beforehand. Take a look at the Z1 by Konrad Zuse. It was built in 1941. A reproduction is still displayed in Berlin. Fun fact: The Z2 was partially mechanical and electronic and the Z3 was completely electronic and is nowadays considered the first fully programmable Turing complete computer.

  • @dominicrichardson5546
    @dominicrichardson5546 3 года назад +255

    Damn, you never fail to exude sheer genius.

  • @davidelang
    @davidelang 3 года назад +46

    By the way, there is a practical application for this. On the surface of Venus, electronics don't work, everything needs to be mechanical. NASA is/was running a contest for a venus rover that uses no electronics and communicates by positioning pointers to be read from orbit with a camera.

    • @nickopedia5669
      @nickopedia5669 3 года назад +5

      That is interesting to hear about. I think micro-scale selective compliance mechanisms is probably the best way to go about it, and with metals they could withstand VERY high temperatures.
      www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasas-venus-rover-challenge-winners-announced

    • @Grandassets
      @Grandassets 3 года назад +2

      its probably going to have to be light enough to be shot in to space, unless it only needs to be 4 bit, he almost has a finished product
      who the heck would want to go to Venus anyway

    • @davidelang
      @davidelang 3 года назад +3

      more info
      initial contest announcement: www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasa-wants-your-help-designing-a-venus-rover-concept
      winners announced: www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasas-venus-rover-challenge-winners-announced
      Scott Manley video: ruclips.net/video/1DEvcJgBy0c/видео.html

    • @fluffmiceter1846
      @fluffmiceter1846 3 года назад +1

      Or maybe the proper question is, how can we get electronics working on the surface of Venus?

    • @davidelang
      @davidelang 3 года назад +3

      @@fluffmiceter1846 active refrigeration, vaccum tubes _may_ work, but I wouldn't want to run them through the vibration of launch and landing, let alone the thermal stress of code of deep space followed rapidly by the heat of reentry and the surface of venus (and there is a good reason we don't use them for computers any longer, their reliability is poor)
      And since we don't manufacture large numbers of tubes any more, setting up a production line for them would not necessarily be any cheaper than developing mechanical computers, and the result may not be any smaller.

  • @alkh3myst
    @alkh3myst 3 года назад +4

    "Charles Babbage. Paging Mr. Charles Babbage! Please come to the white courtesy phone. Somebody on RUclips who obviously didn't take computer science has never heard of the Analytical Engine."

  • @duncanyoung9770
    @duncanyoung9770 3 года назад

    Wow, what an excellent video, I love how you show the connections between the very simple to the very complex. I can't wait to see the follow up!

  • @dylanzrim3635
    @dylanzrim3635 3 года назад +310

    Isn’t this basically an irl redstone computer? Still awesome

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  3 года назад +214

      Yep. I think the ultimate goal of any computer is; can it run crisis? And can it run Minecraft.

    • @EmyrDerfel
      @EmyrDerfel 3 года назад +31

      @@WesleyKagan Have you seen @Foone on twitter? Their test, for both salvaged retro computers and hacked up modern embedded devices, is "will it run Doom?".

    • @gprich82
      @gprich82 3 года назад +5

      Can we not physically do this with nano tech yet?

    • @mrkeogh
      @mrkeogh 3 года назад +3

      @@WesleyKagan I'm still not convinced Crysis wasn't some *really* elaborate HCF command with an emphasis on the F.

    • @superpie0000
      @superpie0000 3 года назад +5

      @@WesleyKagan bruh i build a mc turing machine and steve mould uploaded water computer basically same day. its been a few weeks and i sucessfully built 8 bit by 8 bit long multiplication in mc. i think computers in diffrent mediums might be a meme on the rise

  • @alibizzle2010
    @alibizzle2010 3 года назад +179

    Every other youtuber: I cant think of a video idea so I'll do a vlog.
    Wesley: I cant think of a video idea so I'll reinvent the Babbage engine

  • @GoodFunIndustries
    @GoodFunIndustries 3 года назад +1

    I'm really looking forward to the rest of this series!
    Please keep at it!

  • @derekchristenson5711
    @derekchristenson5711 3 года назад +9

    As a recent comp sci grad, I found this fascinating. We had to build a simulated four-bit computer from basic logic gates, and we had to use Solidworks to model mechanical things, but we didn't put them both together! LOL! Also, nice (and very fitting) xkcd reference.

  • @deusexaethera
    @deusexaethera 3 года назад +341

    1) Yes, it is possible to build a mechanical logic processor.
    2) The frictional losses in a mechanical logic processor would make the entire thing melt into a pile of slag if it ran at anything close to a usable speed.
    3) If you're really committed to doing this, you should use pneumatic gates or hydraulic gates instead of purely mechanical gates.

    • @festiveFurry
      @festiveFurry 3 года назад +29

      but what if he wants purely mechanical gates?

    • @Ghi102
      @Ghi102 3 года назад +100

      I don't think a "usable" speed is required for this kind of project. It's not really going to accomplish any significant work, just getting it working is an amazing feat

    • @howardhiggins9641
      @howardhiggins9641 3 года назад +2

      I think that was called Fluidics.

    • @sixhundredandfive7123
      @sixhundredandfive7123 3 года назад +5

      What if this was working in the vacuum of space?

    • @howardhiggins9641
      @howardhiggins9641 3 года назад +25

      @@sixhundredandfive7123 Heating, cooling, and different lubrication issues are very different. There is no "air" to carry away any heat. Parts exposed to extremes of temperature.

  • @LeSheepe
    @LeSheepe 3 года назад +809

    "Beauty in engineering doesn't necessarily have to be efficiency" - Absolutely agree!!!!

    • @233kosta
      @233kosta 3 года назад +14

      Sometimes the "inefficient" way is objectively better suited to a particular task. For example reading in a settings file "inefficiently" allows for much greater flexibility which ultimately ends up saving time, but it still takes more clock cycles to complete.

    • @renard6012
      @renard6012 3 года назад +19

      I was about to disagree with that statement, mainly as a knee-jerk reaction, because efficiency in design inherently has a beauty on its own. It may not produce rhythmic sounds, or have good-looking patterns, or even look interesting to the naked eye, but a well-designed integrated circuit is beautiful, as well as a plane that flies well, or any other simple and elegant solution to a problem. May be my inner German speaking or something, but there is an undeniable beauty in efficiency, a great satisfaction in seeing the best possible solution to a problem...
      Why then I do not disagree at all?
      Because there is one human activity strongly associated with beauty that is, speaking on a purely utilitarian term, an utter waste of resources: That activity is PRODUCING ART!
      Art is probably the opposite of efficiency. It has zero utilitarian value, and still, it has existed longer than engineering... or probably art and engineering have coexisted forever, because the beauty of engineering comes from its likeness to art:
      Rhythm, for example, is something humans really like. The basis of music is rhythm, and a pleasant and beautiful thing machines tend to do is producing rhythmic sounds... In rhythm we can find the beauty of a well crafted machine, because an engine with a problem will not produce rhythmic sounds. Electrical equipment on the other hand produces monotonous hums and is not pleasant to listen to. Nobody finds beauty on the sound of electricity.
      I consider the best testament to human ingenuity the ability to take the beauty of efficiency and the beauty of art, and combine them into one single design or machine.
      As you can imagine, I really, really like watches, and clocks, and engines, and trains, and railways, and propeller engines...

    • @LeSheepe
      @LeSheepe 3 года назад +4

      @@renard6012 Exactly! Although electrical waves seen on an oscilloscope are beautiful, so perhaps it's all about how you experience something?

    • @ComotoseOnAnime
      @ComotoseOnAnime 3 года назад

      I would actually disagree with electronic hums and droning being disliked. That is after all the basis of the Hurdy Gurdy instrument, a thousand years ago it was an instrument in nearly every church and was used everywhere because many societies at the time found beauty and perfection in an uninterrupted melody or note, and this produced what is basically a a wheeled violin that can be cranked to create droning near violin noises and the notes played on the strings are played by keys on a box over the fretboard.
      Electrical hums can harken back to that view on perfection and can even be seen in modern EDM music with droning undertones that act like bass and texture to the notes on top of it.
      Nevermind the fact that people play music with pure electricity with Tesla coils so even the sharp unpleasant noise of electricity can make music as well.

    • @LeSheepe
      @LeSheepe 3 года назад

      @@ComotoseOnAnime I absolutely love the sound of a hurdy gurdy - it also has some low-pitch clicking noises as the fret keys are operated. Very rich cello sort of sound, with a continuous drone in the background. Beautiful.

  • @starfoxdelta
    @starfoxdelta 3 года назад +2

    I don't know really how or why I got this channel recommended to me, but I am sure glad I saw this video! I think this is a real neat project and I can't wait for more videos!

  • @paullenoue8173
    @paullenoue8173 2 года назад +3

    Can you imagine Babbage, as the world's first computer geek, coming up with these things all on his own? It's no wonder he never finished the analytical machine, kept thinking up better ways to do the calculations.

    • @Fizzer99
      @Fizzer99 Год назад

      I guess that's why Microtech named a whole city after him. "New Babbage"

  • @poptartmcjelly7054
    @poptartmcjelly7054 3 года назад +38

    Main problem i see is friction. With enough gates in series you won't be able to move the inputs, since a single input will move the entire machine simultaneously.
    What i think would be better is to have a mechanical clock input. This input would be what drives the outputs so that all the inputs do is decide whether the "clock" makes the output move or not.
    For example the AND gate:
    set A -> reset B -> pull clock -> nothing changes
    set A -> set B-> pull clock -> output changes
    I'm bad at explaining my ideas but i hope you get what i'm saying. The only drawback with the mechanical clock input that i see is that you would have so sequence it.
    For example with your current design as soon as one input is changed the entire machine moves and the result is near instant, but with this mechanical "clock" you would have to strobe each section step by step, sort of like a wave traveling through the gates.
    But then if you connect each section to the clock but with an inverter in between each section your clock it should be enough to sequence your clock in a "tick-tock" kind of way.
    And thinking about it you only need two clocks i total, one inverted, the other normal and just connect every second gate to one and the rest to the other clock.
    Anyways do what you do, will be interesting to see what you come up with.

  • @raycharles1752
    @raycharles1752 2 года назад

    man this is quite the amazing video. I havent gone through you channel but i would really be interested in hearing more about this project, and your ideas about computers in general. great content.

  • @BLUYES422
    @BLUYES422 Год назад

    ive wanted this for so long. thanks so much for working on this

  • @Jonnymiller1977
    @Jonnymiller1977 3 года назад +281

    Came for the racecar, staying for the physics... yes yes yes, more content like this

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  3 года назад +47

      There will be racecar videos soon too! Thanks!

    • @MusicSoundPlayer
      @MusicSoundPlayer 3 года назад +1

      Becauseracecar!

    • @tactownturbotime982
      @tactownturbotime982 3 года назад +3

      Here for race car stayed for physics

    • @w0nd3rlu573r
      @w0nd3rlu573r 3 года назад

      Yes, the same.

    • @dhruel
      @dhruel 3 года назад

      If the cow is in a strong vacuum and the vacuum container is spherical, then there would indeed be a spherical cow in a vacuum.

  • @carlsagan2371
    @carlsagan2371 3 года назад +128

    Someone builds a CPU in minecraft
    Wesley: So can we build a ryzen out of spare parts in the garage?

    • @FlameRat_YehLon
      @FlameRat_YehLon 3 года назад +4

      Technically yes, but the energy needed to drive it likely would render it useless. It's much easier to move a few electrons for a few nanometers than a few metal rods for a few millimeters, I think.

    • @OnFight1997
      @OnFight1997 3 года назад +3

      @@FlameRat_YehLon How cool would it be though.

    • @carlsagan2371
      @carlsagan2371 3 года назад

      @@FlameRat_YehLon OH REALLY!? DO YA THINK!?

    • @FlameRat_YehLon
      @FlameRat_YehLon 3 года назад

      @@OnFight1997 Computation is basically just wasting a whole bunch of energy to gain the tiny amount of information entropy. I mean, you wouldn't want your computer to just yeet away while doing stuffs so... Everything would turn into heat eventually.
      And this kind of mechanical logic gate is huge (a few million nanometers vs a few nanometers in process level), which means you need loads more energy to drive it in order to achieve the same computation power.

    • @pietrocavicchioli6128
      @pietrocavicchioli6128 3 года назад

      @@FlameRat_YehLon when he said "cool" he probably meant "amazing to look at while performing some calculation", I guess he wasn't referring to temperature.

  • @dolfinmicro
    @dolfinmicro 3 года назад +2

    I subscribed because of this video. I did something similar when I was young using relays but it never occurred to me to try to make it use no electricity at all. This is a very cool project and I'm really excited to see it get done.

  • @abismayn
    @abismayn 2 года назад

    First time running into your channel. I know nothing about cars nor do I wish to, but computing intrests me and this video was really interesting, can't wait for follow-up!

  • @masternerd64
    @masternerd64 3 года назад +267

    interesting thing I can already see is that the gates aren't exactly binary - since you can push them the gate inputs to different degrees. You've created some weird binary-analog abomination and that's pretty cool.

    • @JivanPal
      @JivanPal 3 года назад +28

      See fuzzy logic: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuzzy_logic

    • @cctmsp13
      @cctmsp13 3 года назад +127

      As one of my EE professors used to say, 'All circuits are analog if you try hard enough.'
      Electronic circuits have the same issue - a typical 5V logic chip will always see an input under 0.8V as a '0' and an input over 2.0V as an '1'. This leaves a range (0.8V - 2.0V) where the behavior is 'undefined'. (It may be off, on, or even weakly on or weakly off)
      Some amount of effort is put into avoiding this undefined range.

    • @colinellicott9737
      @colinellicott9737 3 года назад +2

      @@cctmsp13 Detents.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 2 года назад +2

      As someone who looked into GTL systems I know the issue. At least in my use case I had some degree of control over the high and low thresholds.

    • @toobigtofit3584
      @toobigtofit3584 2 года назад +16

      @@cctmsp13 I once got a fortune cookie while on a business meal. It said "Even digital circuits are made of analog parts." It was like destiny.

  • @tmorrison1983
    @tmorrison1983 3 года назад +73

    I appreciate the fact that you don't have an intro.

  • @Loki61642
    @Loki61642 2 года назад

    Great video - interesting concept, really well explained, loved the Doglas Adams quote. I'm looking forward to updates as you progress!

  • @emilssuss4565
    @emilssuss4565 3 года назад

    Awesome video. I have never seen your videos, this one appeared because lately I've been into such mechanical things. I really hope you continue this project since it looks really fun, educational and relatively new to youtube (as far as I know).

  • @sssfsfdfsdsdffsfsdf4
    @sssfsfdfsdsdffsfsdf4 3 года назад +48

    Would love to see a video of your take on neural nets, would be fascinating to alot of us caveman mechanical engineers

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  3 года назад +35

      I’ll put one together, it’s a super cool part of computer science

    • @kindaFunkyNGL
      @kindaFunkyNGL 3 года назад +1

      @@WesleyKagan I rang the bell just to see you explain NN

  • @houssamalucad753
    @houssamalucad753 3 года назад +35

    I'm a CS student and a petrol head so I think I just found my new role model

  • @alexandermeneses5688
    @alexandermeneses5688 2 года назад

    Never seen your channel before, this just popped intoy recommendations. And I can thank the algorithm for that! This is awesome :D

  • @fyfoh
    @fyfoh 2 года назад +3

    Awesome video! Once in a while, I daydream about alternate implementations of logic gates. One fun one would be water-driven gates next to a waterfall.

  • @CoffeeD_1
    @CoffeeD_1 3 года назад +377

    Nvidia head quarters right now: He built it in a cave, with a box of scraps!

  • @mobydick909
    @mobydick909 3 года назад +82

    When you scale up your logic circuit, you might end up with a problem : push-pull logic gates are lossy, and after tens or hundreds of them it might push the final rods so little you wouldn't even be able to notice it.
    Rotational gates are harder to build (you need gears, sometimes complex ones, they can be made out of legos though), but they solve this problem. Although a full computer built with this will need a lot of torque.
    You might also want to look into non-logic gates operators that mechanics allow, a half-adder can be built with a single double-channel relay (while with indivitual logic gates you could need 3 or 4, maybe more), there's probably similar setups in mechanical computing

    • @Dragobot7
      @Dragobot7 3 года назад +15

      Even with push pull logic gates you're gonna need a ridiculous amount of power since as the circuit gets bigger u have to push more and more.

    • @dfunited1
      @dfunited1 3 года назад +6

      ​@@OneDeuxTriSeiGo and @Moby Dick I was thinking that some biasing might be helpful. Whether that comes from springs, hydraulics, or some other clever design. How about Buffer stages so 'weaker' 1s are still 'full strength'?
      Electronic circuits have Vcc and Ground which each step uses to stay near 1 or 0, so why not do something similarly with mechanical analogs? (pun intended)

    • @defenestrated23
      @defenestrated23 3 года назад +4

      @@dfunited1 The analogy here between voltage/resistance and force/friction is quite apt; the friction at each stage saps the power until after X stages, it's no longer able to overcome sticktion. One could use a "clock signal" along with bistable spring-loaded latches such that each stage is alternatively triggered and reset, thus the amount of "voltage" (mechanical force) is constant through each stage.

    • @gadi70
      @gadi70 3 года назад +1

      3D-printed LEGO bricks could be a very slick concept to visualize computer logic, and easily scalable! Might need SLA pinter though for accuracy. But it'd be easy tp print ones with working mechanics at once! Even 4x2 could do and/or and 2x2 not. With little thinking you might do nand/nor. It'd be fascinating toy!

    • @mobydick909
      @mobydick909 3 года назад

      @@gadi70 I have a SLA printer and it's definetly something I'll try in the future, it's a really good idea!

  • @l000kin
    @l000kin 2 года назад

    This is totally awesome! I know about Konrad Zuse's mechanical computer Z1, but I never seen befor explained this basic components. Thank you very much, it really helped me to understand it!

  • @LegitToaster
    @LegitToaster 3 года назад

    Never seen your channel, glad this got recommended. Subscribed, love mechanical shit, cars, and project "diaries" like these. Keep up the good work.

  • @100PercentJake
    @100PercentJake 3 года назад +32

    Oh no they made Minecraft CPUs a real thing

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  3 года назад +20

      I think shader packs will really bog it down though.

    • @igorthelight
      @igorthelight 3 года назад

      Here is a real world lightsaber :-)
      ruclips.net/video/xC6J4T_hUKg/видео.html

  • @davidblalock9945
    @davidblalock9945 3 года назад +31

    I’m here for the nerdery. Whether it’s car nerding, or mechanical engineering, or whatever.

  • @voldemort1993
    @voldemort1993 2 года назад +11

    Make a never ending mechanical while- loop and you have free energy!

    • @varganyamuvek
      @varganyamuvek Год назад

      Just don't let ElectroBOOM see this comment 🤣

  • @maciejkoslinski2923
    @maciejkoslinski2923 2 года назад

    Man gotta say, just discovered this gem of your channel keep up the shit (loved the piston engine video), this video shows at least me the potential of your channel defenitally super interestingand provoking my immagination giving that bit of knowledge and expand it your own way, damn something im into subbed instanty!

  • @bluesillybeard
    @bluesillybeard 3 года назад +21

    6:59
    ah yes, the exclusive AND gate : only turns on when the laws of physics are disobeyed and all logic is broken

  • @elkvis
    @elkvis 3 года назад +78

    "Art itself is in nature, and technology just reveals where it's hidden." That's a very profound statement.

    • @alexrosado3890
      @alexrosado3890 3 года назад +1

      11011

    • @oldmossystone
      @oldmossystone 3 года назад +6

      I was enjoying the vid up until that point. To me it seemed a shallow pretentious statement, and completely misunderstands what art is and why it exists. Fortunately that really doesn't matter in a vid about making mechanical computers :)
      It's a truism to say that art is in nature - after all everything is in nature - nothing profound there. The idea that technology somehow reveals 'where' art is is just nonsense - completely meaningless... unless you are shortsighted and need optical technology, or its nightime and need artificial illumination, or you are lost on the way to the museum, and need some cartographical tech... but those are just practical details.
      As far as the binary logic - that's cool. It would be neat if there was a simple mechanical implementation for a NAND gate, because that is all you need - every other type of logic can be build from NANDs

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns 3 года назад +6

      ​@@oldmossystone I completely disagree with your blanket, and quite frankly derogative, statement. A statement that is just as shallow as you claim that the original statement is.
      Because:
      There would be no flute without the technology to drill holes in bones or forming wood. Not to mention metalworking, but that is much later.
      Body paint works as sunscreen, and extracting the paint and mixing it is also technology.
      That statue that always was inside that block of marble?
      It required many skilled hands to turn the marble rock into a block, and even more technology to create the tools used in all of the processes from extracting a slag of stone to polishing the final statue.
      Making a strict divisions between art, science and technology is dangerous. Art, including stories, have always inspired scientists and engineers to create new things, while new technology and scientific breakthroughs made new kinds of art possible. The links between technology and science most definitely goes both ways as well.

    • @oldmossystone
      @oldmossystone 3 года назад +3

      @@57thorns The implication in your original statement is that art is hidden and needs technology to reveal it. If this were true, all art would require technology to reveal it. This would exclude e.g. singing from art. QED.
      While various forms of technology can be exploited in the creation and dissemination of art, there is no essential need for technology in the pursuit of art.
      There is no need for a 'division' in order to make a distinction between technology, art and science either. Division would be bad, distinction is necessary in order to understand what each of them is, and to help us understand their unique value in our culture(s).
      Returning to your example of the Block of marble. The statue was not always inside the block. The statue is a result - a side effect - of an expression of the artists state of mind during that creative process. The important point here is that if there was no stone, the expression could still have occurred in some other way - the Block of marble is not the essence of the art. The statue itself isn't even the essence of the art - otherwise any statue would be art (clearly not the case, many are just ornaments with no greater value). The statue or song or painting is a conduit - a medium through which to communicate.
      A book is a useful analogy here. A book is a physical thing with pages and words. But the book is not the story, and the words are not the story either the story is an abstract construction of ideas that the reader decodes by reading the book.
      A statue is like a book, it is a medium through which an artist has encoded some abstract meaning. If the statue is art, it is because it contains some deeper meaning encoded by the artist well enough that it can be decoded by the 'consumer'.
      In the same way a story doesn't have to be in a book, it could be spoken word, or a movie, the essential meaning encoded in a statue could potentially have been encoded in a painting, or some other art 'form'. Not all available encoding forms require technology.

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns 3 года назад +3

      @@oldmossystone And yet, you can't accurately retell a story over time without a book (or other media that conveys words, including, but not limited to wooden staves, loose sheets of paper, movies, computers, clay or stone tablets).

  • @johnoney1211
    @johnoney1211 2 года назад

    I randomly ran into your page and I am super stoked about watching your videos. Thanks a bunch!

  • @lucaraza5613
    @lucaraza5613 2 года назад

    Dude is incredible how you explained it and is the best explanation of a computer I've seen to bad I'm not into cars but still will subscribe.

  • @Ayane13b
    @Ayane13b 3 года назад +27

    So I should be wearing gloves and PPE watching this video as well, yes?

  • @sillysad3198
    @sillysad3198 3 года назад +4

    the NAND gate alone provides a COMPLETE logical system, btw.

    • @Fingerblasterstudios
      @Fingerblasterstudios 3 года назад

      Don't even need to go that far. You can use a 3-state inverter with pull to get it all!

    • @Fingerblasterstudios
      @Fingerblasterstudios 3 года назад

      (or more easily with just a NOR gate which is effectively the same thing but with the pull resistors and buffering added in)

    • @sillysad3198
      @sillysad3198 2 года назад

      @@Fingerblasterstudios NOR is obviously also a complete logical system

  • @SamBrowand
    @SamBrowand Год назад +3

    I would love to see more of this project. Did you ever do anything more with this?

  • @thebigboi5357
    @thebigboi5357 2 года назад

    This is a super cool project and and this video as a whole was very entertaining. Excited to see part 2!

  • @UHAVE2ADDmeNOW
    @UHAVE2ADDmeNOW 3 года назад +12

    Wesley: Creates a miata that runs using cutting edge supercar technology
    Also Wesley: I am going to build a super computer out of pipe cleaners and toothpaste

  • @C-Henry
    @C-Henry 3 года назад +20

    Well this is getting interesting, I work on turbine engine fuel controls for a living, essentially a hydromechanical computer, although much more analog than binary. Its impressive what can be achieved without the use of electricity, these take into account the throttle position, barometric pressure, temperature, and current engine rpm along with a few other parameters to meter the correct amount of fuel at any given time. And all designed in the era of slide rules no less! A digital system would likely be better, but they still do the job. I look forward to seeing where you will take this.

    • @miff227
      @miff227 3 года назад +4

      My friend used to work on pneumatic logic for tube trains doors and aircraft wings or something like that. Again, no electricity, but I do thing it was binary decision logic stuff

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  3 года назад +10

      That’s fascinating, I still am amazed at what engineers did before computers.

    • @miff227
      @miff227 3 года назад

      Do you watch AgentJZ?

    • @Default78334
      @Default78334 3 года назад +2

      @@WesleyKagan Check out the vacuum logic setup of an 80's era Honda and imagine having to troubleshoot it: www.autoweek.com/car-life/but-wait-theres-more/a1860746/run-away-screaming-1985-honda-cvcc-vacuum-hose-routing-diagram/

    • @dfunited1
      @dfunited1 3 года назад +1

      @@Default78334 is that why my '87 CRX never passed Smog?

  • @JessWLStuart
    @JessWLStuart 3 года назад

    Awesome! I was going to mention XOR gates, but you covered that! Well done!

  • @combatwombat594
    @combatwombat594 2 года назад

    Hope you keep going with this man, would love to see the result!

  • @sssfsfdfsdsdffsfsdf4
    @sssfsfdfsdsdffsfsdf4 3 года назад +28

    Have alwasy thaught about this. Compliant designs seem a realy good way of doing this as are far more simple. Would also allow for extreem minaturisation as could be manufactured using steriolithography similar to a silicon chip.

    • @Joe-xr2xl
      @Joe-xr2xl 3 года назад

      Fun fact is that one of my professors basically worked on a design kinda like that on the silicon level. There was a poster outside the door when I went to go have her give me one more submission time cause I submitted the wrong assignment. It used a relay design and the price bends with a compliant design on it if I remember correctly.

    • @Aheitchoo
      @Aheitchoo 3 года назад +3

      It sure seems like these things need to be 3d printed to ease the mamoth task of building a functioning computer.

    • @csn583
      @csn583 3 года назад +3

      Indeed, but this scale will have a certain pleasing clackety aesthetic quality to it.

    • @dekutree64
      @dekutree64 3 года назад

      Ya beat me to it :) I was going to suggest the same thing for the same reason. Honestly I'm surprised micromechanical computers aren't a niche market already. Seems like they'd be useful in nuclear disasters, to go into high radiation areas where electronics don't work.

  • @corvettec-dt1eq
    @corvettec-dt1eq 3 года назад +18

    "so we're going to assume there's a spherical cow in a vacuum"..
    This cracked me up

  • @itsrachelfish
    @itsrachelfish 2 года назад +1

    Looking forward to seeing the rest of this series !

  • @franco-cespi
    @franco-cespi 2 года назад

    I just discovered your channel. I am fascinated with your exposition style and how you explain steam concepts. I was specially intrigue by the perseptorn and neural activity you mention at 8:30. Hope to see more of these type of content.

  • @escho14
    @escho14 3 года назад +15

    Great video! I was surprised you didn't mention hydraulic computers. Lots of older automatic transmissions are, very basically speaking, just sets of logic gates that are controlled using hydraulic fluid and vacuum.

  • @Skwisgar2322
    @Skwisgar2322 3 года назад +17

    Careful about a spring return, you might introduce too much impedance.

  • @forbiddenera
    @forbiddenera 2 года назад

    Man I swear you and me are so much on the same wavelength it's scary. Keep it up I love your videos. All of them, every topic.

  • @abcstardust
    @abcstardust 2 года назад

    I’ve always been very interested in mechanical computing. Thank you for posting!

  • @kaizousha5531
    @kaizousha5531 3 года назад +19

    My man is an inventor proper!!!!!

    • @MaNNeRz91
      @MaNNeRz91 3 года назад

      Same thing was done with water on another Channel a while ago. "Intel wet inside" or something. Same thing though.

    • @chitlitlah
      @chitlitlah 3 года назад +1

      @@MaNNeRz91 It was done on Steve Mould's channel with help from Matt Parker (stand-up maths).

    • @MaNNeRz91
      @MaNNeRz91 3 года назад

      @@chitlitlah that's the one 👌

  • @Maskddingo
    @Maskddingo 3 года назад +3

    Just make a nand. You can do any function with combinations of nands.

  • @xcutepoison5099
    @xcutepoison5099 2 года назад

    I hope you will continue this series, really interesting! Keep going!

  • @natejack2292
    @natejack2292 2 года назад +1

    I've always wanted to do this; I can't wait to see how it goes. I think it would be a great way to show people how computers are not merely magic, but rather a beautiful machine.

  • @thecircusb0y1
    @thecircusb0y1 3 года назад +9

    "I'm in a little uncharted territory here"
    You and me both buddy.

  • @Jeanluc162
    @Jeanluc162 3 года назад +9

    Hey, that looks like a really neat project!
    Also looking forward to seeing more of the FreeValve-Miata. Keep up the good wörk!

    • @Aheitchoo
      @Aheitchoo 3 года назад +1

      Freevalve miata!

  • @jowiesale
    @jowiesale Год назад

    Probably the most interesting channel on the ‘Tube at the moment. Thanks Wesley, keep it up.

  • @BeansEnjoyer911
    @BeansEnjoyer911 3 года назад +80

    "I dont have an intro" lol, immediately had to press the like button

    • @erikblaas5826
      @erikblaas5826 3 года назад

      Too bad I can not double like this comment.

  • @beatfromjetsetradio8239
    @beatfromjetsetradio8239 3 года назад +13

    “Hey, how long do fresh eggs keep after you put ‘em in the fridge?”
    “Uh~, here-let me look it up.”
    *GOD-AWFUL CACOPHONOUS CLACKING*

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  3 года назад +7

      Whether it's the sound of a mechanical computer tapping away, or the pony express delivering letters, both will be loud. Pony express for delivering bits might be faster though.

    • @bccra
      @bccra 3 года назад +2

      ​@@WesleyKagan Speaking of the pony express, cars and planes carrying hard drives and/or sd cards is still faster by total download time than anything else. And it may always be, those things keep storing more and more things in less space, even while Moore's Law slows down in other respects. (And hey, while I've got you, I highly recommend building out the full common logic gate set, not just using the minimal complete set (e.g. the AND, OR, and NOT gates you mention, or you could've just used NORs and nothing else, like Minecraft). That's all well and good for Minecraft (I made one, it was fun), but having XOR, NAND, etc, will let you have fewer components, lower friction, etc., all while keeping to the spirit of the project. May also want to make custom Muxers, Flip Flops, etc? E.g. google the wikipedia article "List of 7400-series integrated circuits". The low-complexity stuff on that list is probably good inspiration for what you might want to consider making specialized modules for.)

    • @WolfgangDoW
      @WolfgangDoW 3 года назад

      Why would you put eggs in the fridge??

    • @beatfromjetsetradio8239
      @beatfromjetsetradio8239 3 года назад

      @@WolfgangDoW Don’t get cocky with me just ‘cause you don’t know nothin’ fancy.

  • @jnevercast
    @jnevercast 3 года назад +25

    Looks like a fun adventure! I imagine the resistances of the system are going to stack up pretty quickly though. Electronic circuits can be built with gain, to increase the strength of a weak signal. Can you achieve the same with your mechanical system? Where does the energy come from to do so?

    • @geemy9675
      @geemy9675 3 года назад +2

      the only solution I see is hydraulics but hen why not just make 100% hydraulics logical gates. propagation would be slower though

    • @jomanout5866
      @jomanout5866 3 года назад

      @@geemy9675 a hydraulic computer would be the easiest kind to build that I can think of, you could use air, water, mercury whatever lol most electrical circuits could be copied into a hydraulic circuit anyway. Would be slow but also would be cool, my optimized guess for core speed is like 100 hertz, possibly 1 Mhz lol but I think it'd be really hard to get that fluid to move any quicker and still retain accuracy in the system

    • @kevinbee4617
      @kevinbee4617 3 года назад +1

      Matt Parker built a calculator out of domino pieces. But it can only do one calculation. I guess the pieces hold potential energy which is good.
      Other people built calculators with "marble gates". You could let marbles roll down and then lift them up on several places to add energy again.
      Are marbles too slow?
      You could power each mechanical gate and only let the connected gates direct the energy instead of providing it on their own. That's how real electronic computers work, don't they? Maybe push some rod upwards and another rod can connect it to another gate or disconnect it, like a clutch.

    • @kevinbee4617
      @kevinbee4617 3 года назад +1

      This is a "CMOS NAND Gate": en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMOS#/media/File:CMOS_NAND.svg
      It connects a high voltage / push to the output, if at least one input pulls and it connects a low voltage / pull to the output if both inputs push. So, in the end it "not-pushes" exactly if input a AND input b push, like a NAND gate should. (IDK if that helps anybody, sorry. I was pretty intrigued by that difference between the flow of the 1s and 0s and the flow of the voltage in computers when I first learned about it.)

    • @GordieGii
      @GordieGii 3 года назад

      @@jomanout5866 I would use water and put it next to a dam.

  • @Ali107
    @Ali107 2 года назад +1

    I've got this in my recommendation, man I wish that there were more videos you make like this.

  • @chrisvandergriff504
    @chrisvandergriff504 2 года назад

    Buddy, I just subbed specifically for this project and the fact that you shouted out Ben Eater, right before citing Douglas Adams. This is an awesome project.

  • @Jjeinntae
    @Jjeinntae 3 года назад +3

    This is a concept that I've been fascinated by for years, but never looked into actually doing due to lack of production equipment. I am eagerly looking forward to this!

  • @Demian1
    @Demian1 3 года назад +8

    I instantly hit the subscribe button when he said: "rolled that intro, wait i don't have an intro"
    LMFAO

  • @frizzlefrack253
    @frizzlefrack253 3 года назад +1

    I hope this continues, this is amazing!

  • @FabianReschke
    @FabianReschke 3 года назад

    This is awesome. Just found this video and i`m hooked!

  • @Magnymbus
    @Magnymbus 3 года назад +5

    "A diary to my madness" is a frickin' mood if I've ever heard one.

  • @mk1cortinatony395
    @mk1cortinatony395 3 года назад +3

    Love this! Cant wait for pt 2

  • @joakimvhes302
    @joakimvhes302 2 года назад

    This video randomly popped up in my recommended, and wow, car guy content AND experiments which always interested me? Count me in!

  • @Andy-th9kj
    @Andy-th9kj 2 года назад

    I'm in Computer Organization currently for my Software engineering degree currently and this video/concept is amazing. Keep up the amazing work!

  • @Hettilo
    @Hettilo 3 года назад +10

    Damn, you my friend have definitly an underrated channel.

  • @lilman227
    @lilman227 3 года назад +18

    “Playing doom on a mechanical cpu”

  • @humanplaysgamesiguess7736
    @humanplaysgamesiguess7736 3 года назад

    this is an amazing project! hope to see more of it

  • @hapasiuhengalu7586
    @hapasiuhengalu7586 2 года назад

    I’ve never seen your channel before, but this video is excellent! Please make more computing videos. I will check out your other stuff tho