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5 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Hahaha! SheltieLover Aug 2025 #1
Back in those days I loved my slide rules. Tried a few varieties including circular. erronis Aug 2025 #2
I still have a few, including a circular one. The advantage is that the outer scale is 3 times longer than the diameter Bernardo de La Paz Aug 2025 #16
Yeah, I had one in H.S. that came with a cheap vinyl pocket protector Conjuay Aug 2025 #33
Wow, I didn't know that. My dad had one. electric_blue68 Aug 2025 #17
Love the reports of young people meeting up with a slide rule! Attilatheblond Aug 2025 #3
Better yet, ask them to rebuild the carburetor. indusurb Aug 2025 #4
Timing belt? Is that what holds pants up, but only for a certain amount of time? Attilatheblond Aug 2025 #6
Germans can tell time on analog clocks Old Crank Aug 2025 #41
80's computers were more fun. usonian Aug 2025 #5
Boy, anything with 5+ bands really fires up my geek juices. erronis Aug 2025 #39
I presume you mean scales on the slide-rule for "bands" usonian Aug 2025 #46
Yep - scales. I knew there used to be a term in the brain but it didn't bubble up soon enough. erronis Aug 2025 #47
Glad that you survived. usonian Aug 2025 #48
Oh hell, they can't even read cursive! Totally Tunsie Aug 2025 #7
WW2 :( fernlady Aug 2025 #8
And many professions had their own slide rules sorcrow Aug 2025 #36
Glad I saved my abacus. Sneederbunk Aug 2025 #9
I remember seeing "Apollo 13" in the theater . . . hatrack Aug 2025 #10
I love that movie. Scientists were the heroes! yardwork Aug 2025 #14
This is one of my favorite scenes from that movie. WinstonSmith4740 Aug 2025 #20
It's the same thing that made The Martian so appealing - a movie about people solving problems . . . hatrack Aug 2025 #27
Yeah, the audience can laugh all they want.... sdfernando Aug 2025 #30
I took about 50 of my fellow NASA employees to a matinee showing of Apollo 13 lapfog_1 Aug 2025 #52
I designed and built my first microprocessor based computer in high school. hunter Aug 2025 #11
All of those computers and other technology were invented by and developed by Boomers. MineralMan Aug 2025 #12
On a Teletype Model 33? LiberalArkie Aug 2025 #29
IBM 1620. MineralMan Aug 2025 #49
Thank you! usonian Aug 2025 #37
My first encounter with a "computer" was a tabulator, sorter, printer programmed with plug boards. erronis Aug 2025 #40
I'm so old I know people who refused to surrender their use of slide rules. NNadir Aug 2025 #13
Proverbs 16:18 littlemissmartypants Aug 2025 #15
Had to Rebl2 Aug 2025 #19
For the followers of Eastern religion: usonian Aug 2025 #38
What makes you think that this is of interest here? ... littlemissmartypants Aug 2025 #44
I had a circular slide ruler LogDog75 Aug 2025 #18
Spock Celerity Aug 2025 #21
Slippery Stick Liberal In Texas Aug 2025 #22
I've seen videos of the millennials trying to use a dial phone....it's hilarious! PortTack Aug 2025 #23
No kidding. I showed my dial telephone to a young colleague. FuzzyRabbit Aug 2025 #25
I wonder if engg undergrads still are taught how to use Vernier Calipers jfz9580m Aug 2025 #24
I was a whiz with the slide rule and loved logarithm tables. LiberalArkie Aug 2025 #26
I learned ot use a slide rule in High School, and in my very first engineering class in college. Happy Hoosier Aug 2025 #28
We went to the Moon with slide rules. Turbineguy Aug 2025 #31
And built Little Boy/Fat Man, the Golden Gate Bridge, Hoover Dam, the Model T . . . hatrack Aug 2025 #42
Put a man on the moon using them. paulrevere2018 Aug 2025 #32
Move! mdbl Aug 2025 #34
Great story! You should put it all in handwriting and the young 'uns would never be able to read it FakeNoose Aug 2025 #35
Similar Story ProfessorGAC Aug 2025 #43
They'd be lost if you gave them a manual typewriter, a stack of blank papers, and an ink ribbon. Talitha Aug 2025 #45
I monitored multiple mainframe systems 12 hours a night Skittles Aug 2025 #50
I've never used a slide rule. sakabatou Aug 2025 #51
LOL...I think at one time or another, we ALL had a TI-83. Totally Tunsie Aug 2025 #54
Newest of the new. Modern technology. Early adopters. The Tandy 5000 Norrrm Aug 2025 #53
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