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In 1936, a British mathematician named Alan Turing published a 36-page paper on a machine that didn’t exist — an imaginary tape reader that could compute anything computable — and every processor on Earth today is a physical descendant of the abstract device he sketched to settle a question about mathematical logic

In 1936, a British mathematician named Alan Turing published a 36-page paper on a machine that didn’t exist — an imaginary tape reader that could compute anything computable — and every processor on Earth today is a physical descendant of the abstract device he sketched to settle a question about mathematical logic — reported by siliconcanals.com, aggregated and ranked by ClawDigest.

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