Fascinating walk through the past. I took mechanical drawing in my freshman year. Our high school was 4 years and no junior high. Mechanical drawing was by far my favorite class. I learned a lot about dimensions, angles, areas - basic geometry. It made math make sense.

My first novice station in 1962 was a Halicrafters S38E receiver which was terrible and a one-tube transmitter built from salvaged TV parts that was in the 1962 ARRL Handbook - which I still have complete with burn marks when I dropped the soldering iron on it.   My father gave me a Lafayette HE-10 receiver for Christmas that year. It was much better.

Ham radio and my familiarity with electronic circuits led me to a class in Autocoder, an assembly language for an IBM computer from the 60's. I don't recall what model. But - bits and bytes made perfect sense because to me they were just a series of switches and the logic of ANDs, ORs, XORs, etc were easy for me to visualize. I just thought of current making its way through a matrix of on or off switches. I proceeded to take ever computer class offered in that community college.

Although there have been many working titles for someone who writes code, and I've had about a dozen, I've always been proud to call myself a computer programmer. Nothing more and nothing less.

73, Doug -- K0DXV

On 4/26/2021 2:19 PM, John Saxon via Elecraft wrote:
  I have greatly enjoyed the memory fest here.  Wasn't going to join in, but, 
Steve, your email really hit close to home.  I replied to Steve, intended for 
whole group.

Took 'Mechanical Drawing' in Jr. high, loved it.  Also had drawing classes 
(course also included slide rule) first semester of college.

I was a co-op student in EE and worked for NASA 1962-1967.  I was placed in a 
software group, kinda out of my degree, but I liked it and spent my career as a 
Software Engineer (in the day we were called 'programmers.')
I was greatly blessed to be working at NASA at the beginning of operations in 
Houston.  The first computer I worked on was an IBM 7094, 32K of 36 bit words, 
2 microsecond cycle time, mag tape OS, no disk.  We were located in what had 
been the PBS TV studio on the University of Houston campus, reworked to be a 
computer center - the space center (MSC) was under construction.  Languages 
were FORTRAN II, assembly (FAP) and eventually FORTRAN IV and assembly.  Punch 
cards of course.
Slide rules indeed!  However, we also had a Friden mechanical calculator which 
could do square roots!!

Ham rig at the time was a homebrew 6AU6-6146 from a QST article and 
Hallicrafters S-19R with Heathkit Q multiplier, dipole on 40m cw.
As you, Steve, indicated I could not afford the HP 'digital slide rule' -- bought 
the TI version about a year later for a cost 1/2 of the HP, used it for years.  
Still have my K&E DECI-LON (and a B-29  'Load Adjuster' slide rule from WWII).
I remember all the items you mentioned.
Finally (at last) I often tell younger folks (I am 77) that they have orders of 
magnitude more power in their cell phones than we had in our gigantic computers 
-- BUT -- we put men on the moon with 'em.
Sorry for the wide bandwidth,73,John  K5ENQ



     On Monday, April 26, 2021, 10:36:33 AM CDT, SteveL <[email protected]> 
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
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