Dead Computer Abacus, Cipher Decryptor
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Dead Computer Abacus, Cipher Decryptor
I used a dead laptop, a pizza box, and a cereal box to make my own abacus, the original computer!
Step 1: Materials: Dead Laptop, pizza box, cereal box, tools
Step 3: Remove the keys from keyboard
Step 4: Layout and make front panel for abacus
Step 5: Align keys, tape, and start calculating
Materials
Dead Laptop (found in trash)
Pizza box cardboard or box cardboard
Cereal box or poster board
Tape (Duct Tape always works)
Tools I used:
Jeweler's screwdrivers (to disassemble laptop)
Flathead screwdriver
Scissors
Knife
Pencil
Ruler
Disassemble Laptop
After removing all the screws in the laptop and using a flathead screwdriver as a pry bar, I removed the keyboard from the laptop. Note: This laptop was full of sand; it's circuits were underwater.
Remove the Keys
Layout and Make Front Panel
Align Keys, Tape and Start Computing
I laid all the keys out in a design for a Roman abacus, with 70 keys in 10 columns with two rows.
After aligning the keys on top of a piece of pizza box cardboard, line up the front panel cardboard on top.
Put tape around the edges, and you are ready to start calculating.
Note:
You can untape the front panel at any time, and rearrange the keys in any order. If you note the position of the keys numerically, you have an instant simple cipher coder/decoder.
For example, in my abacus, 'A' is in the 2 position. 'J' is in the 23rd position.