{"id":4960,"date":"2016-08-16T03:11:05","date_gmt":"2016-08-16T08:11:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/computerization\/"},"modified":"2016-08-16T03:11:05","modified_gmt":"2016-08-16T08:11:05","slug":"computerization","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/computerization\/","title":{"rendered":"COMPUTERIZATION"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><i>But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book, even to the time of the end \u2026 and knowledge shall be increased. <\/i><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt; text-align:right;line-height:normal'><i>\u2014Daniel 12:4 <\/i><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>749<\/b><b> Age Of Computers<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>We live in the day of computers. According to Dr. Carl Hammer, director of computer sciences for the Univac Division of Sperry Rand Corporation, computers already do 99% of the clerical work in America. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>There are not enough people in the entire world to handle the work of the computers already operating in the US. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>In 1976 alone, about $23 billion were expended to install, operate and repair the 120,000 computers in America. In the 1980\u2019s computer business could be the largest single industry in the world, and dominated by American companies. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>750<\/b><b> The Microprocessors<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The big breakthrough in computer manufacturing came with the semiconductors. These are tiny electronic devices that can be equipped with memories to form miniature computers called microprocessors. Each year, the number of tiny wires and switches that can be made to fit on a single chip of silicon had been doubled. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>A single microprocessor, half the size of a stick of gum, can have enough components to provide as much calculating effects as the room-sized computer of a decade ago. According to scientists, the Univac I computer built twenty years ago, and filling up four rooms, could fit loosely\u2014output-wise\u2014into one little chip of silicon. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Thus, the computer is getting cheaper and easier to use\u2014and proliferating. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>751<\/b><b> Most Powerful Computer<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>According to the <i>Guinness Book of Records<\/i>, the world\u2019s most powerful computer is the Control Data Corporation\u2019s CDC 7600. It can perform 36 million operations in one second and has an access time of 27.5 nano-second. The cost? $15 million. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>752<\/b><b> Computerizing The Scriptures<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Homer Duncan discusses a computer which can assimilate into permanent storage 5 million words per second. Since the Bible has 850 thousand words, this memory is capable of assimilating the entire Bible six times in one second and bringing it out again, word by word, any passage, any verse, any place, on command, in 200-billionth of a second. No errors are allowed. Running at that rate, the unit has to pass a test in which it runs 24 hours without a single error. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>753<\/b><b> Home Computers<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>There are an estimated 5,000 home computers in America, but in three years, that figure will soar to an estimated 500,000 sets. The latest fad among electronics buffs is to build their own home computers. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The social implications of the home computer are enormous. The future will see a linkup of home computers with large outside data bases and with other home computers. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>For that to happen, communications networks, such as cable television, telephone systems and satellites, will have to be expanded to provide inexpensive and readily accessible links between computer users. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>If that can be accomplished, people will have at their finger tips access to financial reports, educational materials and whole libraries maintained in computer storage. Mail volume will be cut drastically because people will be able to communicate almost instantly by computer. The cost of a home system, available within the next decade on a wide scale would be less than $1,000 in today\u2019s prices, plus utility fees for the communications hookup. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>754<\/b><b> 1,000,000 Years Or 84 Minutes<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Remember the Apollo 13 mission was nearly aborted because the ship became crippled in space? A computer spent 84 minutes discovering and correcting the problem. Whereas a man with pencil and paper would have needed 1,000,000 years to solve the difficulty. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The on-board computer of every U.S. ICBM are programmed to make up to 800,000 mathematical calculations in the first nine minutes to flight. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>755<\/b><b> Check At One-Second Intervals<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The <i>Ben Ocean Lancer,<\/i> the first \u201cdynamically positioned\u201d oil-and-gas drilling ship built in Britain was launched on Scotland\u2019s River Clyde. The vessel could drill in a fixed position without being anchored in the conventional manner. Dynamic positioning is the computer-controlled process which involves auto matic checking of the ship\u2019s position at one-second intervals and adjusting it by making minute corrections in the propeller pitch settings. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>756<\/b><b> Computer-Controlled Traffic<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>From the nation\u2019s capital comes this report:<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The computer has now been handed the problem of traffic control in downtown Washington, D.C. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The experiment covers half a square mile near the White House. Electronic sensors, embedded in the streets monitor the flow of vehicles above. Telephone wires carry the information to a central computer that is programmed to analyze these data immediately, and to send back the appropriate commands to street lights. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Some 450 Washington buses are equipped with radio transmitters that will link them to the central computer. Thus, if the driver wants to set up a series of green lights for himself, he can press a button requesting the computer to give him those signals at cross streets. If the computer decides that the request is justified, it will send commands to the appropriate street lights. If the computer thinks otherwise, it will ignore the request. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>757<\/b><b> The Longest Root<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Since ancient times, mathematicians have been fascinated by the problem of determining the square root of 2\u2014that number which, when multiplied by itself, will equal 2. As early as 1750 B.C., the Babylonians computed a value that was accurate to five decimal places (1.41421). By 1967, researchers in England, working with a computer, had stretched the answer to 100,000 digits. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Now a Columbia University mathematician has surpassed even that prodigious effort. In what may well be the lengthiest computation of a mathematical constant of all time, Jacques Dutka has calculated the square root of 2 to more than one million places. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Starting with a rough approximation of the root derived from the mathematically well-known Pell Equation, Dutka devised a special logarithm (mathematical procedure) that enabled a computer to refine that answer to an extraordinary degree. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>After 47\u00bd hours of computer time and billions upon billions of individual calculations, the electronic brain ticked off an answer that was correct to at least 1,000,082 digits. It is printed in 200 pages of lightly spaced computer print-out, each containing 5,000 digits. The square root of 2 is what mathematicians call an irra tional number, one that runs maddeningly on without any repetitive patterns or predictable sequence no matter how far it is carried out. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Delighted by his success, Dutka is now eyeing more ambitious projects; calculating million-digit values for &#960; (3.14159 \u2026 ); the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter; and the mathematical constant (2.71828 \u2026 ), the base of natural logarithms and one of the most significant numbers in higher mathematics. Says Dutka: \u201cAfter that, I can well afford to call it quits.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt; text-align:right;line-height:normal'><i>\u2014Time<\/i><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>758<\/b><b> Wonders Of Man<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The work that the computer can accomplish in minutes astounds us. Yet it has been found that in order to match just one human brain, a computer would have to be as large as the Empire State Building! <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>759<\/b><b> Human Computer<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Perhaps the strangest human computer is Charles Grandemange of France. He was born in 1835\u2014a one-pound baby. But he was endowed with a prodigious brain. At age 14, he toured Europe in demonstration of his calculating ability. He lived in a wooden box only one foot wide, but he could multiply two 100-digit numbers by one another within thirty seconds. He could divide a 23-digit figure by another and find the remainder at one glance. He was billed as the most lightning of all lightning calculators. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt; text-align:right;line-height:normal'>\u2014Adopted from Ripley<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>760<\/b><b> \u201cI am God\u201d<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>A favorite story of research scientists is about a future president of the United States who assembled his scientific brain trust and asked them to build the biggest and smartest computer the world has ever known. \u201cWhen it\u2019s finished,\u201d he said, \u201cI want to ask it the most important question ever asked.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>When the giant electronic brain was completed, the president came before it and asked, \u201cIs there a God?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Lights flashed, wheels whirled, chemicals bubbled, and then came the answer: \u201cThere is now.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt; text-align:right;line-height:normal'>\u2014James C. Hefley<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>761<\/b><b> Meaning Of Gigo<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>You are anxious to know what \u201cGIGO\u201d means. It is an abbreviation for \u201cGARBAGE IN, GARBAGE OUT.\u201d It is technical slang for the mistakes made by modern computers. If a computer turns out misleading information, the operators say, \u201cGIGO\u201d\u2014\u201dSomeone fed garbage into the machine, so the machine feeds back garbage.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=center style='margin-bottom:6.0pt;text-align:center; line-height:normal'>WHEN COMPUTERS ACT UP<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>762<\/b><b> Monumental Mistakes<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>It would take one hundred clerks working for one hundred years to make a mistake as monumental as a single computer can make in one one-thousandth of a second. This insight is one we usually overlook. We usually think of all the labor-saving of which computers are capable, but if we ever got in trouble with a company that bills through computers, we would soon learn that it can be extremely difficult to get someone to reverse the mistake. For every rose there is a thorn, and for this great promise for progress there is also the promise of blunders and mistakes that are astronomical. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt; text-align:right;line-height:normal'>\u2014Ray O. Jones<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>763<\/b><b> $755 Million Dollar Debt<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>A young man in Casper, Wyoming, was looking for an income tax refund of $511 on his $8,000 salary. He probably would have settled for $500 or even $450. But he was totally unprepared for a notice from the government asking him to pay his overdue taxes within 10 days. The IRS claimed that he owed $755,935, 575. Obviously it was a mistake. But for a few moments the man was floored! <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt; text-align:right;line-height:normal'><i>\u2014Our Daily Bread<\/i><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>764<\/b><b> She Can\u2019t Get Rid Of Check<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>How do you get rid of a Veterans Administration check not yours? <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Cany Postlethwaite has never been in the military, but a misdirected check from the Veterans Administration has made its way to her doorstep for a seventh time and she can\u2019t seem to get rid of it. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>She received a VA check in the mail made out to one Ronald Lee Vest. She put it back outside for the postman to pick up on his next round. \u201cI got it back about four or five days later, in a different envelope,\u201d she said. So she telephoned the VA office here and was directed to send the stray check there. \u201cSo I did\u2014and I received it back again, in the same envelope.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Next she mailed it to the Treasury Department office in Kansas City where the check was issued, along with a certified letter advising that \u201cI did not know this person and this person did not live here.\u201d The check was returned once more, in a different envelope. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>\u201cThen I took it down to the White Rock (postal) station and gave it to the postmaster,\u201d she recounted. \u201cAnd I got it back again. Then I took it down personally to the Veterans Administration, again\u2014and I got it back, again. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>\u201cThis was last week, and they told me to mail it to (state) VA headquarters in Waco. And this morning I received it back again.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>After the seventh delivery, Mrs. Postlethwaite phoned the Dallas VA people once more. \u201cThey just said, \u2019Well, I don\u2019t know what else we can do, \u2019 she said. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>At one point she called the secret service and told one of its agents she intended to destroy the check. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The agent told her: \u201cYou can\u2019t destroy it. That\u2019s government property.\u201d All right, she\u2019d keep it, she told the man. And he replied, \u201cYou can\u2019t keep it. It\u2019s not yours.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Mrs. Postlethwaite is waiting for further instruction. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt; text-align:right;line-height:normal'><i>\u2014Associated Press<\/i><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>765<\/b><b> Computer Error In Israel<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Another news report: William Seitoun won his war against red tape after he threatened to blow up himself and his 10-year-old son unless the Israel Veterans Administration paid more money for his disability claim. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Zeitoun, 36, and a war invalid since 1959, parked in front of Tel Aviv\u2019s Veterans Administration building with his son and screamed, \u201cI\u2019ll give you seven hours to pay me my money or I\u2019m blowing up the car.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>He held a cigarette lighter to six cannisters of gasoline inside the car to keep away police and spectators. Some pleaded with him to release his son, but the boy shouted, \u201cI\u2019m staying with papa.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Zeitoun set up a placard, reading, \u201cI was disabled in the army and the government doesn\u2019t give me enough to live.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>Veterans officials checked Zeitoun\u2019s file and discovered what they called \u201ca computer mistake\u201d that chopped his monthly pension of 2,100 Israeli pounds\u2014about 525 dollars\u2014to 1,500 Israeli pounds\u2014375 dollars. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>766<\/b><b> Smart? <\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>A Dutch professor once fed this question into a very sophisticated computer. \u201cI have the choice between 2 watches; one is broken and irrevocably stopped, the other loses one second every 24 hours. Which one should I buy?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The computer\u2019s reply: \u201cThe one that is stopped, as it indicates the correct time twice every 24 hours; the other does only once every 120 years.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>767<\/b><b> Solving It\u2019s Own Problem<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The Vice President of one of our local banks objected to investing in a data-processing machine, considering it a needless expense. The board of directors outvoted him, however, and plans for installation began. When delivery day came, it was discovered that the components were far too large to fit into the bank\u2019s elevator. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>\u201cHow am I going to get this thing up to the third floor?\u201d the delivery man moaned. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent: 18.0pt;line-height:normal'>The vice President saw no problem. \u201cPlug it in,\u201d he said, \u201cand let it figure it out for itself.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal align=right style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt; text-align:right;line-height:normal'>\u2014R. M. Cordell<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>768<\/b><b> Epigram On Computerization<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-top:0cm;margin-right:0cm;margin-bottom:0cm; margin-left:18.0pt;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent:-18.0pt;line-height:normal'>\u2022&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One unemployed man to another: \u201cWhat hurts was that I wasn\u2019t replaced by a whole computer\u2014just a transistor.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-top:0cm;margin-right:0cm;margin-bottom:0cm; margin-left:18.0pt;margin-bottom:.0001pt;text-indent:-18.0pt;line-height:normal'>\u2022&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The perfect computer has been developed. You just feed in your problems\u2014and they never come out again. <\/p>\n<p class=MsoNormal style='margin-bottom:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height: normal'><b>See also:<\/b> Automation ; Technology. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the book, even to the time of the end \u2026 and knowledge shall be increased. \u2014Daniel 12:4 749 Age Of Computers We live in the day of computers. According to Dr. Carl Hammer, director of computer sciences for the Univac Division of Sperry Rand Corporation, &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/computerization\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;COMPUTERIZATION&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-4960","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-sermons"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4960","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4960"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4960\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4960"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=4960"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.biblia.work\/sermons\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=4960"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}