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Posted by: mormon nomore ( )
Date: August 26, 2018 07:25PM

There is an old joke about an engineer and a mathematician who both die in the same accident. The guy from the gates of heaven tells them they cannot enter because they have led an unholy life (of science) so to hell they’ll go, but before that, they’ll each go into a tunnel, in which, at distance d there is a very beautiful and, well, naked lady waiting to satisfy them. In the first minute, they’ll go half the distance, then in the next minute the half of the remaining distance, then the half of the remaining distance and so on… The mathematician shouts that 1 - 1/2 - 1/4 - 1/8 - 1/16 - 1/32 means I’ll never ever reach the woman, this is boolshit, please take me directly to hell. The engineer takes out his pocket calculator, pushes some buttons and then says: well, I’ll be at ~1 centimeter from that lady in about six hours, and stay at that distance, give or take, for a very, very, very long time… that’s fine with me.

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Posted by: caffiend ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 12:20AM


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Posted by: StillAnon ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 12:47AM

And a pocket protector. I grew up with NASA engineers and astronauts. They had slide rules on their hips, pocket protectors full of mechanical pencils.

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Posted by: summer ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 06:20AM

I remember those days. I believe I passed my father's slide rule on to my nephew.

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Posted by: DaveinTX ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 10:33AM

My dad, one of the original computer jockeys in UT, gave me a Pickett Slide Rule in 1970. It was a really good one, and probably cost him several hundred dollars. I still have it and can still use it. I didn't get a calculator until I started college in 1974...….

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Posted by: StillAnon ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 06:15PM

Cool. There's very few people that even know how to use a slide rule (or an abacus). I learned because all my neighbors were using them to put men on the moon. Most could use them better than explaining HOW to use them. Those guys could knock out numbers as quick as the new Texas Instruments new calculators back then. They ought to teach elective courses on slide rules, while we still have people alive that used them for a living.
I was in mission control when Apollo 17 astronaut, and neighbor, Gene Cernan walked on the moon.
Years later, while visiting my Mom in Clear Lake, I took my 7 year old daughter to NASA. I was talking to an old timer and he noticed my BlackBerry. He told me that my phone had more computing power than all the banks of computers used in mission control during the Apollo program. Kind of mind blowing.

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Posted by: GregS ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 11:03AM

I heard a similar comment in my quantum mechanics class from a visiting astrophysicist from Rensselaer. He used to work for NASA, and told us that they needed a large room, filled with computer banks, to have just a fraction of the computing power in our handheld calculators.

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Posted by: GregS ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 10:56AM

My dad had a metal Pickett that he used as a consulting engineer into the early 80s.

He had a number of different slide rules, including a circular one, but the Pickett (I remember it because of its distinctive leather case with a belt loop) was the cream of the crop. The circular slide rule was more of a novelty since it wasn't practical and required extra steps or notations for more complicated calculations.

I had my pick of the rest (most of them plastic) when I did structural calculations for him.



Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 08/28/2018 11:14AM by GregS.

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Posted by: ificouldhietokolob ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 11:47AM

GregS Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> The circular slide rule was more of a novelty
> since it wasn't practical and required extra steps
> or notations for more complicated calculations.

Yeah, but you could do quaternion math with the circular ones!
I'm not even kidding!

:)

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Posted by: GregS ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 12:28PM

I actually had to look up what hell quaternion math was. My hat's off to the circular slide rule, then. :)

Quaternion math really wasn't required for calculating the tension and compression of trusses.

An aside: My dad had a drafter's "trick" for calculating stress on trusses with only a protractor and a ruler, but I still had to "show the work" with the slide rule.

What was the point in showing me a shortcut if I still had to take the long way around to present the results to the client? That just seemed cruel to an already surly teenager who could have used a Surly.

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Posted by: Backseater ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 12:34PM

In USAF Navigator School at Mather AFB in the late 1960s, we used a specialized circular slide rule for air navigation problems. One side was the E6B wind/vector computer, and the other side was the slide rule. It had a specialized scale for converting airspeed from "indicated" to "calibrated" to "equivalent" to "true" ("ICE-T"). Don't know what they're doing now.

I've still got my old K&E log log duplex decitrig. Once I took it to school to show the students. I said, "I got this slide rule as a high-school graduation present in 1963, and I haven't had to replace the batteries yet. A kid was looking at it and asked, "Where do the batteries go?" I wouldn't make stuff like this up.

Today, it's framed over the desk with a placard that reads, "In case of power failure, break glass."

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Posted by: ificouldhietokolob ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 01:54PM

Backseater Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> In USAF Navigator School at Mather AFB in the late
> 1960s, we used a specialized circular slide rule
> for air navigation problems. One side was the E6B
> wind/vector computer, and the other side was the
> slide rule. It had a specialized scale for
> converting airspeed from "indicated" to
> "calibrated" to "equivalent" to "true" ("ICE-T").
> Don't know what they're doing now.

GPS and computers that do all the work for them.
If that stuff goes out, I wonder how many could navigate their way to the nearest landing strip? :)

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Posted by: StillAnon ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 03:25PM

You'd be surprised. My kid, at 15, won a scholarship to the National Flight Academy School at NAS Pensacola. It was a 10 day program. They lived in a land based replica of a USN aircraft carrier. They all learned basic navigation (as well as computer based nav.) by vectoring using basic math, circular slide rules and protractors. I couldn't do that today. They planned rescue missions in oceans 9,000 miles away. Learned a lot. Her highlights though, was front row seats at the Blue Angels practice, put on just for their class, and hitting the Floribama.

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Posted by: ificouldhietokolob ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 04:33PM

That's cool, especially for your daughter!
I'm glad they're still teaching "old school" techniques in case the power goes out!

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Posted by: StillAnon ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 04:48PM

Yeah. I was jealous. I've been fortunate in life to do some pretty cool things. Been around the Australian Grand Prix track with Mario. Around Long Beach with Johnny Rutherford and Dez Wilson. Fontana with Paul Newman, Chip Hanauer and James Garner. But, I would've loved to attend that flight school. The simulator technology is so realistic. The kids had to fly, refuel, deal with weather and anything else that they threw at them. But, like you said, they could function when the power went off. My local grocery store can't. Nobody can do basic math, add up products, plus tax or make change.

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Posted by: Backseater ( )
Date: August 30, 2018 04:56PM

Back in the 1960s, the plan was that all the electronic navigation aids (Loran, Tacan, VOR, etc.) would be turned off when the war started, to keep the enemy from using them. The emphasis was still heavily on celestial, which is available most of the time (when you're at high altitude above the clouds) and cannot be jammed or interfered with.

As I said in another post, desk calculators were available as early as the 1950s--but I did not see a pocket personal calculator until 1972, and even then they were expensive novelties. The big surge of personal calculators came in the mid-seventies. I was out by then, but I'm sure there was some friction getting calculators into the AF program. I did read somewhere that the Apollo missions all carried the latest HP calculators.

In the good old days, it was all done with the E-6B computer/slide rule, a watch, a sextant, three volumes of Navy Hydrographic Office sight reduction tables (HO-249), the Air Almanac (still available online), and specialized worksheets for applying the multitudinous corrections (atmospheric refraction, dome refraction, Coriolis forces, Precession and Nutation of the Equinoxes, etc.) It was complicated, but straightforward and logical. The course was geared to produce B-52 navigators; but I went straight from there into F-4s, and never touched a sextant or a sight reduction table again.

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Posted by: sbg ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 03:11PM

I learned on a circular, it was easier to stick in my purse back when girls still had to wear dresses to school. When I tried to switch to a straight I kept screwing up and went back to my circular. Still have it somewhere.

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Posted by: Backseater ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 01:38PM

I read a lot of pulp science fiction magazines in the 1950s and 60s. AFAIK, none of the science fiction authors of that era--not even the great Robert Heinlein or Poul Anderson--foresaw the pocket calculator. They all had astronauts using slide rules to navigate their spaceships and starships. This in a time when every lumberyard office had at least one Friden electro-mechanical desk calculator.

FWIW, it just this minute occurred to me that they didn't foresee the cell phone or the GPS either.

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Posted by: Heartless ( )
Date: September 06, 2018 07:24PM

I'm still waiting for my Dick Tracy radio/tv watch.

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Posted by: ificouldhietokolob ( )
Date: September 07, 2018 09:54AM

They've been around a while...:)

https://www.apple.com/watch/

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Posted by: Backseater ( )
Date: September 10, 2018 03:13PM


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Posted by: babyloncansuckit ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 01:09AM

Is that a slide rule in your pocket or are you just happy to see me? Those were the days of thinking in logarithms, which is lost today. It was closer to nature.

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Posted by: The_documentor ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 08:55AM

I think a classic variant is "close enough for all practical purposes"

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Posted by: sbg ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 10:16AM

Here I thought it was because the first one they sent installed air conditioning.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 08/27/2018 10:27AM by sbg.

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Posted by: ificouldhietokolob ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 10:24AM

Reminds me of the joke entry in the glossary for Kernighan and Ritchie's book "The C Programming Language:"

Recursion, see Recursion

Yeah, this is the sort of thing programmers (software engineers?) think is funny :)

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Posted by: Happy_Heretic ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 10:45AM

I love the play on one of Zeno's paradoxes.

HH =)

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Posted by: Richard the Bad ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 12:08PM

Based on the recent proliferation of round-a-bouts, they should be getting a large influx pretty soon.

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Posted by: rhgc ( )
Date: August 27, 2018 08:05PM

My brother, a Mechanical Engineer, tells a very different story. This is how it goes: a mistake is made and an engineer (deserving heaven) is accidentally sent to hell. There, he immediately begins projects such as the installation of air conditioning in hell. Well, St. Peter learns of the mistake and contacts the Devil (aka Satan)to discuss the mistake. Satan refuses to release the engineer so St. Peter says he'll sue. Satan then says: "and where will you find a lawyer? How can you sue?"
My brother did work on, among other things, the Apollo project. I had a engineering minor in ME minor at MIT. My younger brother majored in Physics.

(I am a lawyer)



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 08/27/2018 08:09PM by rhgc.

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Posted by: eternal1 ( )
Date: August 28, 2018 11:02AM

"(I am a lawyer)"

Does this mean we know your eventual destination? lol

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Posted by: rhgc ( )
Date: September 06, 2018 05:52PM

No. Although, like Perry Mason, I have never lost a criminal jury trial, I also will only eventually make money from a book I am writing about a serial killer who framed one of my clients.

I hope to be a rare lawyer who ... just saw lightning and heard a loud burst of thunder .... will somehow get to go above. I do NOT wish for the "Celestial Kingdom" which would make be too tired, but just for a simple afterlife.

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Posted by: elderolddog ( )
Date: September 06, 2018 10:47PM

if you need a reader/copy editor, I'm here for ya! I'm honest and not the least bit bashful.

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Posted by: rhgc ( )
Date: September 10, 2018 08:57AM

I may get in contact.

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Posted by: Lot's Wife ( )
Date: September 10, 2018 03:24PM

EOD has done that already for another ex-Mo writer.

I know because of the stone in my hat told me.

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Posted by: elderolddog ( )
Date: September 10, 2018 11:40PM

you know, it took me awhile to remember! But yeah, that was interesting: It was the Canadian/Scot's memoir of his Japanese mission. It was both fun and interesting!

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Posted by: smirkorama ( )
Date: August 30, 2018 06:03AM

much MUCH funnier /better story than the one in the original post

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Posted by: chipace ( )
Date: September 07, 2018 01:48AM

Reminds me of this joke...
A lawyer was sitting in her office late one night, when Satan appeared.
The Devil told the lawyer: "I have a proposition for you. You can win every case you try for the rest of your life. Your clients will adore you, your colleagues will stand in awe of you, and you will make embarrassing sums of money. All I want in exchange is your soul, your husband's soul, your children's souls, the souls of your parents, grandparents, and parents-in-law, and the souls of all your friends and law partners."
The lawyer thought for a moment, then asked: "So, what's the catch?"



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/07/2018 01:56AM by chipace.

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Posted by: rhgc ( )
Date: September 11, 2018 04:33PM

She should have known, having seen the Simpson's show when Homer sold his soul to the Devil. Bart was counsel for the defense and won. Bart found that in a picture Homer had given to Marge, he had given himself body and soul to Marge and, hence, did not have it to give. Similarly the woman lawyer only had to give her soul to her husband first. As for the other souls, she didn't possess them. See, I'm a bright lawyer.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/11/2018 04:34PM by rhgc.

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Posted by: blind mule ( )
Date: September 10, 2018 09:13AM

Ahh the Apollo program, I love Gene Cernan, This is a great thread... Keep it going. yeah I know, its off topic

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Posted by: StillAnon ( )
Date: September 10, 2018 03:30PM

Did you know Gene? He was a genius. A fighter pilot that got an aeronautical engineering degree. Great guy. Are you from the Clear Lake area? Cape Canaveral? I also had a few cocktail with Alan Bean and knew Fred Haise. Susan Lovell was my classmate. Back then, to us kids, space flight was an exciting challenge. After I got older, I realized what a huge risk those guy were actually taking.

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