Just finished a super-nerdy amateur hobby project: An exhibit and website to show kids how cool mechanisms are!
Sadly, kids don't get much tangible experience with machines anymore. Ideally, this exhibit will inspire some to explore engineering, even if they are not "book learners". The website provides content to back up the exhibit, with videos and 3D printing files.
The project is inspired by engineering exhibits from the past. Check out the research page for more.
The project will be open-sourced to enable people to make their own and extend it. If you want to collaborate, LMK.
--Steve
The mechanism should remain in one state and then go to the next as indicated by the table, repeatedly. How would you mechanically implement this? A face cam with many grooves perhaps, starting and ending at different angles? https://i.imgur.com/aNPBcdh.png - while always moving a follower from the center of the wheel through the groove to its edge, with something like a https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chebyshev_lambda_linkage, so the wheel stops at the next angle representing the current state?
The fact that there does not seem to exist a simple answer for even this seems to partially explain why mechanical computers were quickly given up on.