A billiard-ball computer, also known as a conservative logic circuit, is an idealized model of a reversible mechanical computer based on Newtonian dynamics, proposed in 1982 by Edward Fredkin and Tommaso Toffoli.
Computronium is a material hypothesized by Norman Margolus and Tommaso Toffoli of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to be used as "programmable matter," a substrate for computer modeling of virtually any real object.
Tommaso Buscetta | Filippo Tommaso Marinetti | Tommaso Campanella | Tommaso Toffoli | Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa | Tommaso Minardi | Tommaso Grossi | Tommaso Giordani | Tommaso Redi | Tommaso Gazzarini | Tommaso Francini | Tommaso Diplovataccio | Tommaso Costanzi | Tommaso Besozzi | Tommaso Audisio | Raimondo Tommaso D'Aronco | Dario De Toffoli |