Dogman
Veteran
I have no idea what you guys are talking about. My computer is white with a picture of an apple on it. 'Bout all I know about the thing.
I have no idea what you guys are talking about. My computer is white with a picture of an apple on it. 'Bout all I know about the thing.
I speak your language.
When I was hired out of college, 1981- the market was super-hot for computer scientists. I was hired to write code for a Vax 11/780 with an FPS-120b attached array processor and for the Texas Instruments Advanced Scientific Computer. I loved that machine. The person that was going to be my new boss asked that I stay around. Told him it would take someone offering me a job to write code for a HAL-9000 to get me away from the ASC. I recently had some of the vector instructions from that computer implemented in FPGA for an embedded project. Still the best instruction set of any computer ever built.
We had a couple of wide-spread Internet outages this weekend. I use stand-alone computers for real work, so it did not impact me EXCEPT the DVR missed recording Bugs Bunny and Road Runner on Saturday morning. Probably was a DNS attack. Stupid Internet.
Not the same one I have, mine's the older Sinclair Scientific, not the Cambridge Scientific. Mine's RPN (not well implemeted), fixed-point display (5+2) and has no memory. Another I have is the Cambridge Programmable, which looks very similar to yours but is programmable (clue in the name) and runs off a 9V PP3 battery. I also have a Sinclair Enterprise Programmable, arguably the best calculator Sinclair ever made.Ha ha! Yes!
I've been using it for about 45 years...!
Love the purple LEDs, but it eats batteries, thinks to itself when calculating (do anything complex and the display flickers for a few seconds before the answer appears) and if do a calculation in different ways, the last digit after the decimal point may differ (rounding errors!). The numbers printed on the buttons wear off, so every decade I end up buying a scrap calculator to steal its buttons! Who says electronics don't last - nearly half a century of use!
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Your cat is suspicious of HAL9000
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I also worked on IBM 360 and DEC PDP-11’s, DECsystem 10’s, and VAXes. I still love assembly language - got to write some ARM assembly language not too long ago.