Part 6 (1/2)
8 ”It really is a gas engine”: Ibid, p 13
9 ”Alan had no friend”: Ibid, p 23
Chapter Two
1 ”can be anything: a distance”: Mollenhoff, p 29
2 ”in essence a variable-speed gear”: Hartree, quoted in Barnet, paragraph 12
3 ”The advantages of the method”: Atanasoff and Brandt, abstract, p 83
4 ”the properties of vacuu/comp-hist/TheCompMusRep/TCMR-V12html
5 ”a power supply and electricyour ideas”: ”Howard Hathaway Aiken,” erscoetable garden”: Burton, p 86
8 ”I had been forced to the conclusion”: Ibid, p 89
9 ”represented an elegant and powerful syes, p 112
10 ”was not only a matter of abstract mathematics”: Ibid, p 107
Chapter Three
1 ”I have traced my ancestry back”: Zuse, p 1
2 ”Given my many detours”: Ibid, p 21
3 ”on all sides now”: Ibid, p 30
4 ”The psychological effect”: Ibid, p 31
5 ”When I began to build”: Ibid, p 34
6 ”which took money”: Ibid, p 35
7 ”pasted the paper”: Ibid, p 36
8 ”It took up al rooe you”: Ibid, p 42
10 ”To construct large and expensive co machines”: Ibid, p 43
11 ”I was in such a mental state”: Mollenhoff, p 157
12 ”When I finally came to earth”: Burton, pp 3435
13 ”For fifteen days I strove”: Andreasen, p 43
14 ”The changes of travel”: Ibid, p 44
15 ”most of the time that we speak”: Ibid, p 78
16 ”I would hypothesize”: Ibid
17 ”I chose small condensers”: Mollenhoff, p 35
Chapter Four
1 ”Iwas of the opinion”: Zuse, p 38
2 ”It is not true”: Ibid, p 55
3 ”We did not dare”: Burton, p 100
4 ”It could just add and subtract”: Ibid, p 102