Volume= 96x2.5xn=3000
240xn=3000
3000/240=12.5n
N=12.5
to calculate square feet you need a 2d shape
The area of a shape does not determine its measurements. You need to know its shape. All that can be said is that the perimeter of the shape must be at least 86.83 feet (approx).
If you are talking about a shape with an area of 7500 square feet and a thickness of 6 inches, the shape has a volume of 3750 cubic feet.
32 square feet.
Feet.
The first computer was huge compared to today's models. In feet, Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer (ENIAC) measured about 100 feet x 8 feet by 3 feet.
The Electronic Control Module is located under the carpeting at the front seat passenger's feet.
ENIAC was 8.5 feet tall and 80 feet long!
Volume = (length) x (width) x (height)Height = (volume) / (length x width) = (3000) / (96 x 2.5) = 12.5 ft
Charles Babbage, but he never built it. It was mechanical, slow, and very big. If he had built it, just the 1000 word data memory would have occupied over 250 square feet of floor space.
8 feet by 3 feet by 100 feet
No. ENIAC was invented at the University of Pennsylvania in 1943 and it took 3 years to build. It took up 1800 sq. Feet and used 18,000 vacuum tubes weighed 50 tons.
The very first computer was humungus the size of a buildingThat is a misconception. ABC the first electronic digital computer was about the size of an office desk. ENIAC the first programmable electronic digital computer occupied 40 standard 19 inch relay racks filling three walls of a typical classroom. Neither was the size of a building.Even the largest computer ever built, the AN/FSQ-7 built for the Air Force's SAGE air defense system near the end of the first generation, which occupied an entire floor of a large concrete building was not as large as a building.Most early computers simply looked like several metal boxes a bit taller than a man and two feet on a side so the boxes could fit through doors.
342 square feet is the area of this shape.
As regards the first electronic digital computers, the Atanasoff-Berry Computer, the Z3, the Colossus, and the ENIAC were early designs. They ranged in size from something on the order of a desk to several rooms full of equipment in the case of ENIAC. Use the links and check out the pics.
Built by IBM, the electronic numerical integrator and computer, or ENIAC, weighed 30 tons and spanned 1,500 square feet. This huge machine used 18,000 vacuum tubes for storage and arithmetic calculations.
No it wouldn't change the shape but it would make your base line about 63 feet.