In this paper we revisit one of the first models of analog computation, Shannon’s General Purpose Analog Computer (GPAC).
The GPAC has often been argued to be weaker than computable analysis. As main contribution, we show that if we change the
notion of GPAC-computability in a natural way, we compute exactly all real computable functions (in the sense of computable
analysis). Moreover, since GPACs are equivalent to systems of polynomial differential equations then we show that all real
computable functions can be defined by such models.