Back in about 1962 I joined a government research lab. My boss had bought a HP 
voltmeter (I remember it as being about a yard cubed)
and a HP printer (also a yard cubed) and it printed out on 2 inch wide paper, 
like a cash register record.
My boss's problem was that he wanted more precision in measuring a time 
dependent process. My problem was to trigger the voltmeter/printer to sample at 
exact intervals of time. I found a tuning fork standard (might have been GR) of 
400 hertz, so a I built a divider using neon Dekatrons. These had ten 
electrodes in a circle visible from the end, and subsidiary electrodes would 
steer the glow to the next electrode when the tube was triggered.
Each of these anodes must have had a separate load resistor, because I found 
each one had a voltage drop when it was illuminated. I used this with rotary 
selector switches to select divide integers by using the anode pulse to trigger 
a monostable (12AX7 ) to reset the Dekatron to zero and start counting again.
We did not have logic circuits in those days, this was known as "Pulse 
Techniques" as used in military radar, which is where I got much of my early 
education.
I have forgotten the voltmeter resolution it might have only been 4, 5, or 6 
digits, but the data from the paper tape was then hand typed into an IBM card 
punch and the cards were couriered to head office to be fed into the main frame 
(probably IBM)
We have come a long way in data acquisition and computing since then.
cheers, 
Neville Michie
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