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Ask HN: Is the Abacus a Digital Device?

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1 day agoby marcodiego
I usually define a digital device as "a device where internal values are represented in a discrete form" while an analog device is "a device where internal values are represented in a continuous form".

By these definitions I'm rarely concerned if the device is electronic, mechanical, biological (counting with fingers) or even imaginary. Also, by these same definitions, an abacus is clearly a digital device since internally, its values a represented in a discrete form. Unfortunately, there are conflicting (reasonably common or trustworthy) sources that disagree with me.

Usually, such sources are based of the fact that the abacus is not electronic or other considerations regarding its operation but not taking internal representation of values into account.

So, I'd like to question the HN crowd definitions, sources and (to a much lesser extent) opinions about this question. Is the abacus a digital device?

Remark 1: Since it is very common for an abacus to have 5 beads per pole (specially mimicking a counting method using the fingers of a hand), the abacus is probably (the most) classical example of a digital device: it literally mimics digitos (fingers in latin).

Remark 2: Also, I don't want to consider the common opinion among gamers that call a CD as an analog device when it is clearly digital, or controller with joysticks as analog because the mimic very close continuous states. A good example among analog controllers is the Atari one that had a variable capacitor and the capacitance was measured to infer its position. Although the measurement is digital, the controller, yes, was analog. Modern ones are not analog, they're fully digital.

Remark 3: I don't want tô fall into irrelevant technicalities like saying "an analog TV could be considered digital since it can have buttons in discrete" states, actually you're just choose analog values from a small set. Argument about electric charge in semiconductors ignoring thresholds fall in this same category.