Querulates the Quareaga:
Also, unbalanced parentheses.)
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Furthermore, BTW: Yeah, Charles "Tywin" Dance has certainly come a long way since he was one of Sue Ellen's heartthrobs down on Southfork. (Personally, I particularly appreciate his letting go of his curly helmet of Big Hair, which had him looking perhaps a little too much of a poodle. But that may of course have been a less than voluntary move on his part.)
Sundry other offenses against history (including someone, possibly Turing, referring to his magical device as a "digital computer." I'm pretty sure it was electromechanical: doesn't the unsung Konrad Zuse, who worked for the other side, have the laurels for the first such apparatus?I always thought "digital" only meant, as opposed to analog(ue), "works by being on-or-off, not more or less, or just a smidgen this way or that". So I'd say an electromechanical computer working with on-or-off relays is just as digital as a transistorised one; after all, aren't transistors basically just tiny electronic relays? (And, hey, what's more "digital" than a rotary-dial telephone? :-)
Also, unbalanced parentheses.)
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Furthermore, BTW: Yeah, Charles "Tywin" Dance has certainly come a long way since he was one of Sue Ellen's heartthrobs down on Southfork. (Personally, I particularly appreciate his letting go of his curly helmet of Big Hair, which had him looking perhaps a little too much of a poodle. But that may of course have been a less than voluntary move on his part.)