Hello all! Sorry to say, I've forgotten the name of the Dutch
"lady with an egg in her hand" who constructed, among other beauties,
a strikingly handsome cryptographic machine of brass. (Tatjana ... ?)
Viewing the crypto machine, I came to think of Winkel's Componium,
a description of which is (actually not) included in Arthur Ord-Humes
book, "Barrel Organ."
No, it is _not_ the Componium itself but a similar machine which is
described there, as it seems that not even Messrs. Ord-Hume and Haspels
have succeeded to "master the principles of the Componium" themselves
-- at least not at the time of printing of my book (1978).
Now: How does the Componium actually work? Did it actually work!?
Or is Mr. Winkel sitting on a cloud laughing at us right now?
(Laughing all the way to the bank, as they say in England.)
Best regards from a cloudy Stockholm
Christofer Noering
[ She is Tatjana van Vark, visit http://www.tatjavanvark.nl/
[
[ Colin Hinz and Peter Wellburn reported on the "definitive book":
[
[ Componium: the mechanical music improvisor, by Philippe John
[ van Tiggelen -- published by Institut Superieur d'Archeologie
[ et d'Histoire de l'Art, Louvain-la-Neuve, 1987.
[
[ Hans van Oost wrote a nice summary of Diedrich Nikolaus Winkel,
[ "an extraordinary craftsman and inventor, but a lousy salesman!"
[ See 980820 MMDigest. -- Robbie
|