The Loom as a Computer: Unpacking African Algorithms
The Loom as a Computer: Unpacking African Algorithms The Kente cloth from Ghana to the untrained eye, it's a beautiful, intricate fabric. To a computer scientist, it's a living archive of algorithms. Every thread in a Kente loom makes a binary choice: over (1) or under (0). The master weaver follows a complex, unwritten algorithm that dictates patterns of repetition, variation, and recursion. This isn't just art; it's a precise set of instructions, a "code" that generates a stable, yet infinitely adaptable, design. Fractal Logic: Just like a fractal image contains smaller versions of itself, Kente patterns embed smaller, self-similar motifs. This fractal logic is the backbone of modern data compression (JPEG, MPEG) and intricate CGI graphics. Modular Self-Similarity: African social structures and village layouts often mirror this. A family unit's logic scales up to the village, and the village's logic scales up to the kingdom. This m...