Friday, April 20, 2007
Crunching Numbers
An important date in Technonerd history passed last February 1st, and I didn't even notice it. It was the introduction of Hewlett Packard's venerable HP-35 scientific calculator, February 1, 1972. Its introduction, in one fell swoop, almost instantaneously relagated every slide rule in existence to the back corners of office and classrooms desks and turned them into historical oddities.
The thing was a technological marvel of it's time. There were no home computers yet, and businesses were just beginning to use some of the first generations of mainframes to do their accounting processing and such. What started as a desktop calculator turned, at the behest of the CEO of HP, into something he "could fit into my shirt pocket." Initial plans called for a production run of a mere 10,000 or so, due to the high cost. ($395.00 new. Almost $2,000.00 in today's money.) Production ran to 300,000 before the model was discontinued in 1975 for more advanced, programmable designs.
In 1972, I was one year into secondary school, learning the art of mechanical design The teacher bought one through the school for us to use, and we were all mesmerized by its ability to do trigonometric functions with ease. Square roots! Arcs! Sines! Cosines and tangents!! All at the mere touch of a button for crying out loud! No more laboring with paper, pencil, and slide rule. in 1976 I bought a used one from the company I worked for at the time for $20. It served me long and well before the red LED display started fading, and eventually burned out. It was replaced with a solar powered Texas Instruments (With a LCD display.) that I still own and use to this day.
The thing was a technological marvel of it's time. There were no home computers yet, and businesses were just beginning to use some of the first generations of mainframes to do their accounting processing and such. What started as a desktop calculator turned, at the behest of the CEO of HP, into something he "could fit into my shirt pocket." Initial plans called for a production run of a mere 10,000 or so, due to the high cost. ($395.00 new. Almost $2,000.00 in today's money.) Production ran to 300,000 before the model was discontinued in 1975 for more advanced, programmable designs.
In 1972, I was one year into secondary school, learning the art of mechanical design The teacher bought one through the school for us to use, and we were all mesmerized by its ability to do trigonometric functions with ease. Square roots! Arcs! Sines! Cosines and tangents!! All at the mere touch of a button for crying out loud! No more laboring with paper, pencil, and slide rule. in 1976 I bought a used one from the company I worked for at the time for $20. It served me long and well before the red LED display started fading, and eventually burned out. It was replaced with a solar powered Texas Instruments (With a LCD display.) that I still own and use to this day.
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
The Virginia Massacre
I'm absolutely surprised that no one has made a connection between this character Cho Seung-Hui and the Oklahoma bomber Timothy McVeigh.
The parallels are stunning to me. Both were young men who had significant problems with modern day society. Both were incredibly angry, yet, relatively intelligent. People who knew these guys weren't surprised by the outcome.
I've come to the conclusion that, same as the Oklahoma bombing, strict gun laws wouldn't have stopped this tragedy. All this talk of too much or too little of gun control is avoiding the real issue.
We, as a modern society, have to quit treating mental illness as a moral defect.
Until then, nothing will change.
I now return you to your normal feed of misplaced outrage.
EDIT: In an odd bit of irony, today, April 19, is the 12th anniversary of the Alfred P. Murrah building.
The parallels are stunning to me. Both were young men who had significant problems with modern day society. Both were incredibly angry, yet, relatively intelligent. People who knew these guys weren't surprised by the outcome.
I've come to the conclusion that, same as the Oklahoma bombing, strict gun laws wouldn't have stopped this tragedy. All this talk of too much or too little of gun control is avoiding the real issue.
We, as a modern society, have to quit treating mental illness as a moral defect.
Until then, nothing will change.
I now return you to your normal feed of misplaced outrage.
EDIT: In an odd bit of irony, today, April 19, is the 12th anniversary of the Alfred P. Murrah building.
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
*Sigh*
The copier in our office, non-functional for a week and a half, has featured a sign that stated "Service called."
The guy showed up today.
It now sports a sign that says "Parts Ordered."
I highly doubt they'll be here before another week and a half passes.
The guy showed up today.
It now sports a sign that says "Parts Ordered."
I highly doubt they'll be here before another week and a half passes.