Search for crossword answers and clues
Kind of computer or clock
Answer for the clue "Kind of computer or clock ", 6 letters:
analog
Alternative clues for the word analog
Word definitions for analog in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. something having the property of being analogous to something else [syn: analogue , parallel ]
Usage examples of analog.
June 1968 Analog that suggested the quasars are actually interstellar spacecraft within our own galaxy.
August Analog has left me somewhat aghast and very disappointed in your apparent lack of scientific objectivity.
John Campbell who made Analog out of Astounding would probably not have bought all these stories if he were alive.
Certainly we want Analog to remain very much the same magazine it has always been.
Hopefully, it will evolve and grow along the lines that John Campbell set for Analog more than thirty years ago.
It will take the best that all of us havereaders, writers, artists, editorsto keep Analog strong and growing.
The mechanical analog would be a pendulum twisted to the side by a constant torque, resting motionless, cocked at an angle below the horizontal.
First he showed us his transmitter circuit: a small board loaded with resistors, capacitors, operational amplifiers, and analog multiplier chips.
X turned out to be a young man, serious and competent, carrying a computer loaded with software for simulating analog circuits.
This approximation is the sociological analog of the all-to-all coupling we encountered in the simplest oscillator models, where every firefly can see every other.
Science Fiction, Analog Science Fiction 6 Fact, The Magazine of Fantasy 6, Science Fiction, and Science Fiction Age all registered the lowest circulation figures in their respective histories.
I had inside me an analog to that forbidding shape, something equally stony and vast.
Others, he was as happy to tease me, take care of me remotely via analog transmission.
We sat in silence, reluctant to take the machine on-line, to bring up the doctored version of programs whose results, both digital and analog, we had no way of forecasting.
The only way we would ever be able to see the way the switches all assembled the messages they sent among themselves would be to create an analog to the language of the central nervous system.