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Thomas ([personal profile] torkell) wrote2014-11-06 11:42 pm
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Mechanical Marvels: Clockwork Dreams

While flicking through channels recently I happened across Mechanical Marvels: Clockwork Dreams on BBC 4 (if you're in the UK then it's still on iPlayer until next week). It's an absolutely fascinating programme about automata - these being (as the programme summary goes) machines designed to mimic and recreate life. They can be simple, like a cuckoo clock, or incredibly intricate, like in this clip from the show...

It's all the more impressive when you realise that the entire mechanism in the writer was designed and built by hand. None of this modern-day CAD or CNC milling - each cog would have been handcrafted. Oh, and it's even programmable (after a fashion) - different letters can be selected to be written. In some ways it's the pinnacle of clockwork automata.

The rest of the programme is equally intriguing - it shows both large automata (like the mechanical turk, known in computing circles for what it isn't) and pocket-sized clockwork with tiny mechanisms (like a small singing bird early on in the show). Interestingly it gives the turk as inspiration for something else entirely - the power loom. The programme doesn't follow that chain of events any further, which is a shame as the power loom eventually became the Jacquard loom and that with its punch-card programming was the inspiration for the early computers.

[identity profile] ladyofastolat.livejournal.com 2014-11-09 10:00 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks for the rec. I watched it last night, and very interesting it was, too! I wish the presenter had talked a little bit faster, but I did appreciate the way he just told us stuff, without subjecting us to countless scenes of him sitting on trains and going on journeys of discovery. It felt like a good old-fashioned documentary, with substance prioritised over style.