[Elecraft] OT: High school drafting class, ~1975
Louandzip
louandzip at yahoo.com
Mon Apr 26 17:07:56 EDT 2021
HP-35! Hah. Came out my second year in college. $400. The rich kids got them. That's over $2k in 2021 dollars. I had to keep stroking my slide rule for another year until the Ti SR50 came out. I waited in line with a bunch of other nerds at the doors of Macy's (!) when they had a sale on them...around $125 IIRC. The doors opened and we all rushed the counter...probably 35+ of us. I don't know if everybody got one but I did. That thing lasted me well through graduate school and my first few jobs.
On Monday, April 26, 2021, 9:34:45 AM MDT, SteveL <lawresh at woh.rr.com> wrote:
I envied a friend in a EE program and the University of Cincinnati. He had the first HP-35 I’d ever seen the year it was introduced (1972), but it was way out of my budget as a new freshman studying Engineering.
A couple of months after my friend acquired the HP-35, to my fascination he received a letter from HP detailing a list of obscure calculations the device performed in error (the tangent of 98.2352…, etc.) . The letter went on to describe that these were determined and then verified by computer simulation of the computational algorithms used internally - a concept new to this budding engineer. And, if he returned the calculator, it would be repaired and corrected.
And to think we basically flew to the moon on a slide rule? Who could ever imagine a computer that could fit into one room? (Paraphrasing a line from early in the Apollo 13 movie.)
Who carried around a CRC book of tables of various calculations in lieu of an unaffordable scientific calculator?
Or programming FORTRAN on punch cards?
Or PDP-8 on paper tape after toggling in the boot loader through the front panel switches?
We’ve come a long way! I love the reminiscences…
Steve
aa8af
>
> I scraped and saved my summertime active duty pay to buy a Bomar 901 four-function calculator in 1972 for $150, about $950 today. Hewlett-Packard had introduced their milestone HP-35 scientific calculator that year for $400, about $2535 today. Extremely few students could afford that.
>
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