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Article comparing Apollo 11’s simple and precise guidance computer with modern smartphones, highlighting how disciplined design and focus enabled a lunar landing

The phone in your hands is more powerful than what put humans on the moon
The device in your hands is much more powerful than the computer that took humans to the moon.
Not a little more. By a large margin.
When NASA landed Apollo 11 in 1969, it relied on the Apollo guidance computer, a system with about 64 kilobytes of memory and a processor running at about 1 megahertz. By today’s standards, that’s almost nothing. A modern smartphone handles billions of operations every second and holds gigabytes of memory, far beyond what was available at the time.
However, the mission succeeded.
The Apollo computer was not designed to be powerful. It’s designed to be accurate and reliable. Every instruction had to be carefully planned in advance, because there was no room for error and no ability to update anything mid-flight. The software itself is physically integrated into memory, making efficiency essential.
Even then, things didn’t go perfectly.
During the lunar landing, the system began sounding overload alarms – the now-famous 1201 and 1202 warnings. He’s been fed more data than he can handle. In most cases, this was enough to force a miscarriage.
Instead, the system was adapted. I dropped non-essential tasks and focused only on what was most important to land. This ability to prioritize critical functions kept the mission on track.
Today’s devices work very differently. Smartphones are designed to handle multiple tasks at once—calls, navigation, video, apps—and they all work together without interruption. They are much more powerful, but also much more complex.
This is what makes the comparison interesting.
The moon landing was not the result of advanced hardware by modern standards. This was the result of disciplined design, where every part of the system was built for a clear purpose.
This is more difficult to replicate.
Because even though computing power has grown exponentially, the ability to use it with that level of focus and restraint is something that still depends on how we choose to build it — not just how much power we have.
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Delhi, India, India
April 29, 2026, 7:15 PM IST
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