.... and the cycle completes.
Check the start of the thread for a response to the above question.
I understand your point womble. Computers far exceed what traveller (especially CT) had targetted at. effectively the modern day is a spraying of TL7-10, with some of the leading edge biological tech coming in close to the TL11 mark, while other technology is essentially unchanged from the WWII era equivalents. I was quoting the E25K and the X1 as TL9 systems (what I consider current day for computer systems - mainly to get access to parallel class CPU's under T20) for example.
Think of a computer as the machine and the environment required for it to run, rather then just as a notebook or desktop. Part of the computer is the environmental gear, distributed data storage, long term data storage, redundant buses and so on which is not found in smaller classes of machine. In terms of starship computers the size of the computer also includes all communications and sensor gear, with the actual "computer" taking up very little space on its own.
I think we are arguing somewhat different points of view. I was saying that the sizes of traveller computer systems were not completely inaccurate, a system running a large starship being several dTons is perfectly well in line with what currently exists. Especially when the systems generally don't have any dedicated personelle to look after them, and still rarely break. The other point I was making was that the usefulness of current computer systems is roughly equivalent today to what it was 20 years ago. This we might disagree on, but isn't terribly related to travller as such.
Thank you for the discussion.