@@SLCtechie The same here, bruh! And guess what: that was the second video about the same subject without a clue of sound! I was already looking mad at my little cat, whose sport is biting my headphones' cables.
Thanks for the lovely video. I would have loved the sound though to remind me. I specialized on the Jacquard at Uni and wish I had one every day. Maybe one day... CJSCRAFTS
1:00 I wonder why they didn't also make a mechanism for automatically passing the shuttle left to right and operating the loop. Then it would be running by itself, without an operator?
Jacquard wasn't a weaver,he was an engeneer. He invented the process wich was not welcomed by the weavers! It took years to have it admitted into tje factories.
Do to the background music and narrator accent I had to quit watching it because music was an enormous distraction on my fascination to technology and human ingenuity.
Seems it must be that rods go down on the card, some go through, and those are the ones that get lifted or not-lifted every time, creating the design. I googled and looks like the card is on a metal block with holes, and it's lifted to the rods, rather than the rods coming down as I guess, but basically the same idea. Shown here th-cam.com/video/x_ijmjx7Xys/w-d-xo.html
Had a class on the history of computers at my college and this one I particularly found very interesting.
Ya same
Ohh
Wish the video had audio, curious what the machine sounds like
Thank you for confirming it had no audio, I just spent the last 10 minutes trying to figure out why my headphones weren't working.
It must be so beaultyful!
@@SLCtechie The same here, bruh!
And guess what: that was the second video about the same subject without a clue of sound!
I was already looking mad at my little cat, whose sport is biting my headphones' cables.
Thank God I saw your replies you see I was like what is happening over here
Strange to think that this concoction actually influenced the same machine I am writing on right now, and you are looking at my text on another :)
*contraption
Thanks for the lovely video. I would have loved the sound though to remind me. I specialized on the Jacquard at Uni and wish I had one every day. Maybe one day... CJSCRAFTS
We've always been very smart, not always wise.. but this is very impressive. I am amazed
An 8 bit punch, same as modern computers.
[Thanks for post it.] Simplesmente incrível.
1:00 I wonder why they didn't also make a mechanism for automatically passing the shuttle left to right and operating the loop.
Then it would be running by itself, without an operator?
Because humans were still unrivalled as providers of controlled mechanical power.
they did-it was developed later
At least I got to see a flying shuttle, here. Passing it by hand seems so onerous. THis is much better.
Jacquard wasn't a weaver,he was an engeneer. He invented the process wich was not welcomed by the weavers! It took years to have it admitted into tje factories.
Nambr 2 diba sun plzz
I like it very much. I love weaving.
the best beautiful
1801...1902?
It's very very old
Do to the background music and narrator accent I had to quit watching it because music was an enormous distraction on my fascination to technology and human ingenuity.
doooo dooooooo
jk
This video sucks. Doesn't at all explain how the punch cards are interpreted by the loom.
Seems it must be that rods go down on the card, some go through, and those are the ones that get lifted or not-lifted every time, creating the design. I googled and looks like the card is on a metal block with holes, and it's lifted to the rods, rather than the rods coming down as I guess, but basically the same idea. Shown here th-cam.com/video/x_ijmjx7Xys/w-d-xo.html
Useless video. Explains nothing.
your CELERY is ALWAYS FiLFY
@@lalalalexieI didn't know what that means but i laughed at the ridiculousness 🤭