• by manithree on 5/14/2025, 12:17:27 AM

    This one is higher quality (https://content.instructables.com/F84/WG7G/K2XU5LKV/F84WG7GK...) and it's all kinda pointless without the "machine" https://www.instructables.com/CARDIAC-CARDboard-Illustrative...

    I didn't get mine until about 1979 or 1980. Still have it, though.

  • by jleyank on 5/14/2025, 12:59:57 AM

    I suspect this had a two-step teaching process for neophytes... First, they'd play with the cardboard machine and get a feel for assembly programming, instruction processing, memory, etc. Once then, after a bit more hacking on things like Star Trek or 4x4x4 tic-tac-toe they'd set out to write an electronic version (virtual machine!) of the cardiac "computer". Debugging that process taught all sorts of relevant things.

    And it vaguely felt like a PDP-8, and I suspect it also felt like whatever very early minicomputer that was available.

  • by andrehacker on 5/14/2025, 2:48:50 AM

    Related, from 1959, many years before CARDIAC:

    PAPAC-00 A 2-register, 1 bit, Fixed Instruction Binary Digital Computer

    https://longstreet.typepad.com/thesciencebookstore/2010/11/a...

  • by rootbear on 5/13/2025, 10:50:06 PM

    I was given one of these by my eighth grade science teacher, ca. 1970. I still have it. It helped spark my interest in computers.

  • by Prunkton on 5/13/2025, 11:42:09 PM

    > Fig. No.5 Flow chart of repairing a flat tire

    > Start: Are you a girl?

    man, I was not prepared for that lol

  • by anthk on 5/14/2025, 6:22:50 AM

    I'd love a SUBLEQ mechanical computer with Eforth outputted into a teletype.