On Jul 14, 11:53, Fred Cisin wrote:
What about an under $10 one for a
MICROCOMPUTER/PERSONAL COMPUTER?
I will lay claim to the dubious honor of inventing that. (even though
it was so obvious that MANY people must have done so)
In 1983, I wanted a digitizer for blackboards. As a "proof of
concept", I attached a one foot long piece of clear plastic (a
ruler) to the shaft of a potentiometer. At the other end of it
I attached another potentiometer, with another foot long piece
of clear plastic attached to the shaft of that one. That made
for an upper arm hinged at the edge of the board with a
potentiometer, and a forearm hinged at the end of that with a
potentiometer at the "elbow".
There was a very similar device around in the early 1980s; I can't
remember what it was called but it hooked up to one of the machines at
the college I worked in then, so it must have been for a BBC Micro
(around 1983) or an Apple ][ or PET (about 1982). Its operational area
was about an A4 sheet.
Anybody else try depositing carbon ( either pencil lead or other
substances )
on a flat surface and work out the math to get X-Y?
Jim Davis.