Michal Piekarczyk

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In the age of vacuum tubes, it was inconceivable that digital computers would operate for hundreds of billions of cycles without error, and the future of computing appeared to belong to logical architectures and systems of coding that would be tolerant of hardware failures over time. In 1952, codes were small enough to be completely debugged, but hardware could not be counted on to perform consistently from one kilocycle to the next. This situation is now reversed.
Turing's Cathedral: The Origins of the Digital Universe
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