Sure that is what they want you to think..............
I know that, that's why I make the dog wear the watch.........
Sure that is what they want you to think..............
Neat find @MRC01.
I am not going to the start of humanity but Curta's great-grandfather must have been the abacus, who had the offspring we call slide rule, which wikipedia refers to as "Mechanical analog computer".
I started in college w/HP-35 that had cost this poor college student near $500 USD. It came with a leather holster. Two weeks after purchase, I saw the HP-45 in the college store and was able trade-in the HP-35 for it, for an additional $50. At the time, the ReversePolishNotation (RPN) had sounded like an ethnic joke and took me a whole weekend to learn how to use it. But had great ROI along with many dividends. Mine had made mince meat of our finals that included heavy polar-to-rectangular (Cartesian) coordinate conversion. At that time, there was no rules about NOT using a calculator during the finals. It so happened that when I handed my final back to the professor within 30 minutes, he had not realized how powerful an HP-45 (scientific calculator) could be. It turned out that some of his answers were wrong because he had used a slide rule for them.
To this day, I still can't use a standard calculator, bcuz I only speak reverse-Polish (Fist#, Enter, Second#, function, third#, function) and the equal sign (=) does not exist in an RPN calculator.
View attachment 181709
I must have 'calculator OCD" as I had not realized how many calculators I have amassed since college… Until I assembled them for this family portrait shoot.
A tourbillon for mere 5'000 USD/CHF: https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/is-the-luxury-watch-market-facing-a-democratic-revolution-/47273652Watches in the 21st Century
That maybe a tracker watch in an unintended way. At least in the USA.
I don't think the Red Army (allegedly) are particularly interested in where I walk the dog. I have a friend who worked for Huawei in the UK and met Ren Zhengfei (ex-Red Army general) when he visited. I'm told he didn't have much interest in meeting the staff and just wanted to have his lunch and watch Wimbledon on the TV (he'd been to see our Prime Minister earlier in the day).
Hey buddy; do as I did and try to buy "the most authentic fake" Panerai Luminor Marina... if you can source it since the clamp-down on clones.Hey buddy let's think really big. How about if I was a billionaire, had a house in Aspen and a 150' yacht?
I only have one question. Are you some kind of aWhich reminds me of an amusing story of needing an exact time when out in the middle of the ocean ...
I'm with you on RPN. The only hand-helds I ever use are HP 11c's. And I use the RPNcalc 11c app on my computer. I think my brain is RPN - algebraic notation slows me down.Neat find @MRC01.
I am not going to the start of humanity but Curta's great-grandfather must have been the abacus, who had the offspring we call slide rule, which wikipedia refers to as "Mechanical analog computer".
I started in college w/HP-35 that had cost this poor college student near $500 USD. It came with a leather holster. Two weeks after purchase, I saw the HP-45 in the college store and was able trade-in the HP-35 for it, for an additional $50. At the time, the ReversePolishNotation (RPN) had sounded like an ethnic joke and took me a whole weekend to learn how to use it. But had great ROI along with many dividends. Mine had made mince meat of our finals that included heavy polar-to-rectangular (Cartesian) coordinate conversion. At that time, there was no rules about NOT using a calculator during the finals. It so happened that when I handed my final back to the professor within 30 minutes, he had not realized how powerful an HP-45 (scientific calculator) could be. It turned out that some of his answers were wrong because he had used a slide rule for them.
To this day, I still can't use a standard calculator, bcuz I only speak reverse-Polish (Fist#, Enter, Second#, function, third#, function) and the equal sign (=) does not exist in an RPN calculator.
View attachment 181709
I must have 'calculator OCD" as I had not realized how many calculators I have amassed since college… Until I assembled them for this family portrait shoot.
I am surprised no one made a comment about the lack of "wrist" watches...
I use the ExcaliburV2 (32bit) FREEware on windows since the Win97 days.I'm with you on RPN. The only hand-helds I ever use are HP 11c's. And I use the RPNcalc 11c app on my computer. I think my brain is RPN - algebraic notation slows me down.
Lots of places are selling fakes. Customs tries to stop them, but the sellers ship through intermediaries.Hey buddy; do as I did and try to buy "the most authentic fake" Panerai Luminor Marina... if you can source it since the clamp-down on clones.
What is wrong w/this picture?
I am surprised no one made a comment about the lack of "wrist" watches...
It's useful for navigation.Which reminds me of an amusing story of needing an exact time when out in the middle of the ocean ...
I only have one question. Are you some kind of aland-sharklawyer?
Something like 30 years ago, I worked for SAIC and got sent to visit an aircraft carrier to fix a weather acquisition and analysis system. It received polar orbiting satellite data with a SMQ-11, which has a rotating antenna that points to the satellite as it tracks across the sky (about 15 mins horizon to horizon). But they hadn't captured a satellite pass for a week, which is why they flew me out there.It's useful for navigation.
Eh, all he really needed was one of those Viking sun stones......It's useful for navigation.
I had just thought that he was a disoriented lawyer lost at sea.It's useful for navigation.
A 150' yacht in Aspen will certainly make an impression.Hey buddy let's think really big. How about if I was a billionaire, had a house in Aspen and a 150' yacht?
Aspen on a yacht?A 150' yacht in Aspen will certainly make an impression.