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Eye fi hack
Eye fi hack











eye fi hack
  1. EYE FI HACK GENERATOR
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  • Third Fleet-Army Force Brain, a "mythical" thinking computer in the short story "Graveyard of Dreams", written by H.
  • Miniac, the "small" computer in the book Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine, written by Raymond Abrashkin and Jay Williams (1958).
  • The Central Computer of the city of Diaspar in Arthur C.
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  • Multivac, a series of supercomputers featured in a number of stories by Isaac Asimov (1955–1983).
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    Their highest ethic was survival of the city and they could overrule humans in exceptional circumstances.

  • The City Fathers, emotionless computer bank educating and running the City of New York in James Blish's Cities in Flight series.
  • The Forever Machine) by Mark Clifton and Frank Riley (1954)

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  • Bossy, the "cybernetic brain" in the Hugo award-winning novel They'd Rather Be Right (a.k.a.
  • Gold, a "supercalculator" formed by the networking of all the computing machines on 96 billion planets, which answers the question "Is there a God?" with "Yes, now there is a God" in Fredric Brown's single-page story "Answer" (1954).
  • Mima, a thinking machine carrying the memories of all humanity, first appeared in Harry Martinson's "Sången om Doris och Mima" (1953), later expanded into Aniara (1956).
  • Clarke's short story " The Pacifist" (1956)
  • Karl, a computer (named for Carl von Clausewitz) built for analysis of military problems, in Arthur C.
  • Clarke's short story " The Nine Billion Names of God" (1953)
  • Mark V, a computer used by monks at a Tibetan lamasery to encode all the possible names of God which resulted in the end of the universe in Arthur C.
  • The Prime Radiant, Hari Seldon's desktop on Trantor in Second Foundation by Isaac Asimov (1953).
  • Vast anonymous computing machinery possessed by the Overlords, an alien race who administer Earth while the human population merges with the Overmind.
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  • EMSIAC, in Bernard Wolfe's Limbo, the war computer in World War III.
  • Named similarly to ENIAC, its name also resembles that of ' ipecac', a plant-based preparation that was used in over-the-counter poison-antidote syrups for its emetic (vomiting-inducing) properties.
  • EPICAC, in Kurt Vonnegut's Player Piano and other of his writings, EPICAC coordinates the United States economy.
  • MARAX (MAchina RAtiocinatriX), the spaceship Kosmokrator 's AI in Stanisław Lem's novel The Astronauts (1951).
  • The Machines, positronic supercomputers that manage the world in Isaac Asimov's short story " The Evitable Conflict" (1950).
  • Joe, a "logic" (that is to say, a personal computer) in Murray Leinster's short story " A Logic Named Joe" (1946).
  • The Brain, a supercomputer with a childish, human-like personality appearing in the short story " Escape!" by Isaac Asimov (1945).
  • van Vogt's The World of Null-A (serialized in Astounding Science Fiction in 1945)
  • The Games Machine, a vastly powerful computer that plays a major role in A.
  • The ship's navigation computer in " Misfit", a short story by Robert A.
  • Breuer's short story "Mechanocracy" (1932) Forster's short story " The Machine Stops" (1909) This is considered to be the first description of a fictional device that in any way resembles a computer.

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    The Engine, a kind of mechanical information generator featured in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels.













    Eye fi hack