Forums › Archives › Archive – News & Events › Mile High Mayhem 08?
- This topic has 28 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 17 years, 8 months ago by
Bruce R. Schaefer.
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January 19, 2008 at 4:34 am #46441
Bruce R. Schaefer
Slipsticks? Ken, you’re showing your age. I used to until those new-fangled calculators showed up! Check out Mike K’s Web site: http://sliderulemuseum.com/
January 19, 2008 at 4:38 am #46442Anonymous
I found a slide rule the other day – a relic of the past that I packed away in a box. It turned up when I moved to Iowa. I showed it to my kid, who thought I was joking.
FWIW, I was STILL able to use it with some level of expertise. This is quite incredible, insomuch as I can’t even remember where I parked 😯 It is even more amazing in that I am not a math geek. Gimme Shakespeare!!
JW
January 19, 2008 at 4:44 am #46443Ken Plattner
ParticipantHey, I’m not that old. OK, well maybe I am. Man, those things bring back bad memories. I still remember my first
TI-55 programmable calculator with a red led dot-matrix display. Bought it circa 1977. Now that was bleeding-edge.January 19, 2008 at 5:50 am #46444Bruce R. Schaefer
Gimme Shakespeare!!
As You Like It… Act V, Scene I… CEL. “Why, how now, Ganymede? sweet Ganymede.” Hey, JW, how did Shakespeare know about a Jupiter moon, hmmm? 8) And, the largest one in our solar system? 😯 Oh, that’s right… he and Galileo were around at the same time.
January 19, 2008 at 6:02 am #46445Anonymous
Gimme Shakespeare!!
As You Like It… Act V, Scene I… CEL. “Why, how now, Ganymede? sweet Ganymede.” Hey, JW, how did Shakespeare know about a Jupiter moon, hmmm? 8) And, the largest one in our solar system? 😯 Oh, that’s right… he and Galileo were around at the same time.
Actually, as you and I are both astronomers, methinks you are asking a trick question? Most of the celestial bodies are named after characters from Greek mythology (and Ganymede was was a Trojan boy whom Zeus carried away to be cup bearer to the gods – my hunch is that Bill Shakespeare ripped of mythology ’cause he ran out of cool names).
Note I said MOST celestial names are from mythology. The moons of Uranus are named after PML kits 😆 In reality, the Uranian moons are all named after characters from Shakespeare… which I think is cool. PML then named a series of kits after some those moons – namely Ariel and Miranda. PML also named some kits after the Jovian moons of Io and Callisto….
January 19, 2008 at 6:15 am #46446Bruce R. Schaefer
Note I said MOST celestial names are from mythology. The moons of Uranus are named after PML kits
By Jove, you are correct, sir! Speaking of “the Calculus”, Newton and that German brother of mine, Liebnitz, came later. 😉 Well, it’s all Greek to me, my friend!
January 19, 2008 at 11:57 am #46447SCOTT EVANS
Note I said MOST celestial names are from mythology. The moons of Uranus are named after PML kits 😆 In reality, the Uranian moons are all named after characters from Shakespeare… which I think is cool. PML then named a series of kits after some those moons – namely Ariel and Miranda. PML also named some kits after the Jovian moons of Io and Callisto….[/quote]
Moons, I thought they were named after Woman !!
January 19, 2008 at 12:12 pm #46448SCOTT EVANS
Hey, I’m not that old. OK, well maybe I am. Man, those things bring back bad memories. I still remember my first
TI-55 programmable calculator with a red led dot-matrix display. Bought it circa 1977. Now that was bleeding-edge.Hey I remember my Dad (he was an engineer) holding up a calculator, he had just bought in the late 70s showing my Mom. He said, this thing has more power than the computer we had at Egland (Air Force Base) that took up an entire room! Probly the same one Ken! MORE POWER LOL!!
😆
Scott eJanuary 20, 2008 at 6:23 am #46449Bruce R. Schaefer
Scott, I had one of those calculators, too. TI something or other. Plus in 1970 used an IBM 360 at DePauw University in Indiana, which DID take up a room and used punch cards, between my junior and senior year in high school. Great summer project and fun.
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