Central Collective Archive: The Technological Revolution
While most archives credit the creation of “the Mill” by Charles Babbage and Michael Faraday’s in 1870 as the dawn of the technological revolution. Other less objective sources tie it directly to Thomas Edison joining the financial powerhouse of Vanderbilt and Carnegie, that would give birth to the American Industrial Syndicate (AIS), representing the first true merging of science and industry.
AIS undoubtedly heralded the popularization of technology that would drive the pending revolution, that would lead to today’s golden age of Integration, however the true birth of the Code which underscores today’s society, can be dated back several centuries earlier, to the work of 17th Century German scholar, Gotfried Leibniz, and even more notably to the work of Babbages mentor, and the creator of the worlds first difference, a young Hessian soldier and inventor by the name of Joseph Muller.
The following subscription provides daily updates chronicling key historical points throughout the technological revolution. Covering global social, political and economic trends dating from the earliest developments up to the age of Integration, and the DOS.