slowmotion
Quite dreadful
- Location
- lost somewhere
I'm curious @User13710 . How does that work? I know nothing about type or printing.I could cast off a whole book using type tables.
I'm curious @User13710 . How does that work? I know nothing about type or printing.I could cast off a whole book using type tables.
Keuffel and Esser man, myself. Had a dang holster for the thing, as well. Then my cousin, an engineer at NASA, showed me an electronic calculator, which blew my 10 year old mind. Also had a holster. Never used the holster, as I would have been branded uncool. I had enough of those points against me already. It was some time before prices and availability made calculators available to all, but I knew what was coming. What shocked me most about the first electronic calculators was the light emitting diode numbers. Never saw anything glow like that from within before. It was a revelation. Too rock stupid to make anything of it though.It's neither of those though I did have a Faber Castell. When I peeked in geekiness I used to participate in slide rule calculation competitions that my sixth form physics teacher used to organise. We used to talc the grooves to minimise friction on our slip sticks and stop the jumping past the aimed values which required correction and slowing down the calculations.
Do they still teach logarithms at school ? im sure i have a log book knocking around somewhere still .On the nostalgia front I've just unearthed a slide rule and, much to my amazement, I can remember how to use it.
A very large computer, or just a putting green?When I was at university there was one computer, in the Maths department. You had to make an appointment to look at it. The computer had its own room and was operated by two men in white lab coats, who spent most of the day playing golf on it.
Do they still teach logarithms at school ? im sure i have a log book knocking around somewhere still .
It involves a cursor - but the swear filter might object.They do, I have had the pleasure of revisiting this with son's maths homework. Once they understand the principle of why you add and subtract logs it becomes easy to explain
I am just a bit too young for slide rules and have never used one. How do they work? I presume it is logarithmically based but no idea of the detail
They do, I have had the pleasure of revisiting this with son's maths homework. Once they understand the principle of why you add and subtract logs it becomes easy to explain
I am just a bit too young for slide rules and have never used one. How do they work? I presume it is logarithmically based but no idea of the detail
Mine was probably a Faber and Castell one having googled.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/like/1614...3=1&ff11=ICEP3.0.0-L&ff12=67&ff13=80&ff14=108
55 quid!!!!!
When I was at university there was one computer, in the Maths department. You had to make an appointment to look at it. The computer had its own room and was operated by two men in white lab coats, who spent most of the day playing golf on it.