Ancient Greek Computer Recreated in Lego

Andy Chalk

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Nov 12, 2002
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Ancient Greek Computer Recreated in Lego

An Apple engineer has recreated the Antikythera Mechanism, an ancient Greek computer built to predict astronomical events, entirely out of Lego.

The gear-driven Antikythera Mechanism [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism] is thought to have been built around 150 to 100 BC. It was discovered in late 1900 amongst a shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera and was originally thought to be some form of clock, and although its true purpose has since been divined, research on the device is still ongoing. It is the only machine of its kind that has ever been discovered.

And while experts from around the world study this "analog computer" at its home in the National Archaeological Museum [http://www.namuseum.gr/] in Athens, the rest of the world can now come to appreciate its intricate beauty a little more thanks to the efforts of Andrew Carol, an Apple software engineer who recreated the device out of Lego. 1500 pieces of Lego Technic, to be specific, assembled into four interlocking gearboxes that perform a precise series of calculations to predict solar eclipses.

There's no substitute for the real deal, especially when the real deal is two thousand years old, but this is an amazing, almost magical piece of work in its own right. Is there anything Lego can't do?

Source: Engadget [http://www.engadget.com/2010/12/10/apple-engineer-uses-lego-to-rebuild-ancient-greek-mechanism-wil/]


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tologna

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Aug 6, 2009
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I hope they make an instruction manual for making one. That would be AWSUM!
 

Owlslayer

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Nov 26, 2009
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That's cool. And even more cooler that the ancient Greeks knew how to make such a thing.
It looks quite complicated, too...but still, I'd love to build that (with proper instructions, of course)
 

Vorocano

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Jan 8, 2009
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That is really impressive. I would totally do that if I had the means. But I do feel the need to add this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRsPheErBj8&feature=related
 

KefkaCultist

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Jun 8, 2010
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1st arsenic based life and now THIS!!! Theres an abundance of awesome sciency things recently and I love it

tologna said:
I hope they make an instruction manual for making one. That would be AWSUM!
Yes please!!!
 

jack583

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Oct 26, 2010
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this video is for all the people who think legos are just a kids toy
they are so much more
 

Traun

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Jan 31, 2009
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tologna said:
I hope they make an instruction manual for making one.
As far as I know there isn't one, the guy worked from his head.

Awesome to see this on The Escapists. One of my professors worked on the video (not the model or the process of recreation, just the creation of the video).
 

Acalla

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Dec 21, 2009
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That was pretty cool but can you build one in Minecraft?

But seriously, these types of things make the little submarines and spacecrafts I built as a kid feel pretty pedestrian in hindsight. Can't wait for my son to be old enough for legos. Then I can "help" him build some pretty cool stuff. And by "help", I mean build it for him. I predict my wife will need to have the sharing talk with one of us.
 

Underground Man

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Sep 20, 2010
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Amazing -- really, really cool. Reminds me of this one SyFy movie on the mechanism; I just facepalmed through the whole thing because of how stupid it was. But, that movie also had the pyramids open up and turn into volcanoes....

I wish I had the mechanical knack for something like this.
 

Jark212

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Jul 17, 2008
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This is probably the most amazing thing I've seen all year. How is this not all over the news???
 

Tom Phoenix

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Mar 28, 2009
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This just makes me regret the fact that I lost my only Lego set even more. =(

Amazing work. I wish I had the technical skill to construct something like that.