Media Summary: Byte ordering, or boiled egg orientation, endianness is important! Dr Steve Bagley on the computer science topic named after ... How did early computers like EDSAC deal with programs? Professor Brailsford on the code David Wheeler wrote to make ... Just how do you go from a binary number to a printed out numeric character? Professor Brailsford takes us through Binary Coded ...

Ibm Ebcdic A Meg In A Box Computerphile - Detailed Analysis & Overview

Byte ordering, or boiled egg orientation, endianness is important! Dr Steve Bagley on the computer science topic named after ... How did early computers like EDSAC deal with programs? Professor Brailsford on the code David Wheeler wrote to make ... Just how do you go from a binary number to a printed out numeric character? Professor Brailsford takes us through Binary Coded ... Why do we have 8 bits in a byte? Professor Brailsford on the origins of the humble byte. Why Use Binary? The Mythical Man Month wasn't just about project management! The Professor continues this tale from the 1960's & asks "Could ... To send binary files via a text based system, they'll need encoding. Dr Steve Bagley takes us through the attachment system used ...

Professor Brailsford helped Adobe with PDF. His group helped move publishing forwards by publishing a journal about publishing ... After the multi-processor video we look at processors that are central-ish.... Dr Steve Bagley takes apart the old In the early days the UK had its own thoughts on how email addresses should look. Dr Julian Onions was there! Was the Y2K bug a complete non-event? Dr Steve Bagley on why it was 'a thing' and how it was worked around. Advanced ... You don't just 'run a cipher' - you need a mode of operation. Dr Mike Pound explains some relative to the Feistel cipher. **This ... Why some numbers just dont work when you're creating error proof codes. Professor Brailsford continues with the story of ISBN.

Mike talks through a binary search bug that was undiscovered for years! Correction : as oodles of commenters have pointed out, the clock face should go from 0 to n-1. Also, worth reminding people that ... An Apple I was discovered in a pile of electronics. It sold for $200000, but why so valuable? Dr Steve Bagley talks about this ...

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IBM, EBCDIC & A Meg-In-A-Box - Computerphile
Endianness Explained With an Egg - Computerphile
Bootstrapping EDSAC: Initial Orders - Computerphile
Binary Coded Decimal (BCD) & Douglas Adams' 42 - Computerphile
Where did Bytes Come From? - Computerphile
High Level Languages & the IBM 360 Series - Computerphile
Why Files Become Bigger in Emails - Computerphile
Verifying AI 'Black Boxes' - Computerphile
IBM PC - Computerphile
Discussing PDF@30 Years Old - Computerphile
Additional Processors - Computerphile
Email Endianness Problems - Computerphile
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IBM, EBCDIC & A Meg-In-A-Box - Computerphile

IBM, EBCDIC & A Meg-In-A-Box - Computerphile

Remembering when

Endianness Explained With an Egg - Computerphile

Endianness Explained With an Egg - Computerphile

Byte ordering, or boiled egg orientation, endianness is important! Dr Steve Bagley on the computer science topic named after ...

Bootstrapping EDSAC: Initial Orders - Computerphile

Bootstrapping EDSAC: Initial Orders - Computerphile

How did early computers like EDSAC deal with programs? Professor Brailsford on the code David Wheeler wrote to make ...

Binary Coded Decimal (BCD) & Douglas Adams' 42 - Computerphile

Binary Coded Decimal (BCD) & Douglas Adams' 42 - Computerphile

Just how do you go from a binary number to a printed out numeric character? Professor Brailsford takes us through Binary Coded ...

Where did Bytes Come From? - Computerphile

Where did Bytes Come From? - Computerphile

Why do we have 8 bits in a byte? Professor Brailsford on the origins of the humble byte. Why Use Binary?

High Level Languages & the IBM 360 Series - Computerphile

High Level Languages & the IBM 360 Series - Computerphile

The Mythical Man Month wasn't just about project management! The Professor continues this tale from the 1960's & asks "Could ...

Why Files Become Bigger in Emails - Computerphile

Why Files Become Bigger in Emails - Computerphile

To send binary files via a text based system, they'll need encoding. Dr Steve Bagley takes us through the attachment system used ...

Verifying AI 'Black Boxes' - Computerphile

Verifying AI 'Black Boxes' - Computerphile

How to we check to see if a black

IBM PC - Computerphile

IBM PC - Computerphile

The

Discussing PDF@30 Years Old - Computerphile

Discussing PDF@30 Years Old - Computerphile

Professor Brailsford helped Adobe with PDF. His group helped move publishing forwards by publishing a journal about publishing ...

Additional Processors - Computerphile

Additional Processors - Computerphile

After the multi-processor video we look at processors that are central-ish.... Dr Steve Bagley takes apart the old

Email Endianness Problems - Computerphile

Email Endianness Problems - Computerphile

In the early days the UK had its own thoughts on how email addresses should look. Dr Julian Onions was there!

Millennium Bug (20yrs on) - Computerphile

Millennium Bug (20yrs on) - Computerphile

Was the Y2K bug a complete non-event? Dr Steve Bagley on why it was 'a thing' and how it was worked around. Advanced ...

Modes of Operation - Computerphile

Modes of Operation - Computerphile

You don't just 'run a cipher' - you need a mode of operation. Dr Mike Pound explains some relative to the Feistel cipher. **This ...

X & the Book Code - Computerphile

X & the Book Code - Computerphile

Why some numbers just dont work when you're creating error proof codes. Professor Brailsford continues with the story of ISBN.

Bug in Binary Search - Computerphile

Bug in Binary Search - Computerphile

Mike talks through a binary search bug that was undiscovered for years! https://www.facebook.com/

Diffie Hellman -the Mathematics bit- Computerphile

Diffie Hellman -the Mathematics bit- Computerphile

Correction : as oodles of commenters have pointed out, the clock face should go from 0 to n-1. Also, worth reminding people that ...

Apple's $200,000 Computer - Computerphile

Apple's $200,000 Computer - Computerphile

An Apple I was discovered in a pile of electronics. It sold for $200000, but why so valuable? Dr Steve Bagley talks about this ...