Doug Yowza wrote:
On Tue, 12 Jan 1999, Ward D. Griffiths III wrote:
Well, I was reading before my fourth birthday,
but there weren't any
(kid accessable) computers in 1959. I had to use paper.
You wouldn't have had to use paper if you had been reading the right mags.
I know of at least three distinct computer-like things that were available
for under $40 in 1959: the Geniac/Tyniac/Brainiac (I'll count those as
one), the Calculo analog computer, and the Microlog.
When I was 3-4 years old, those magazines weren't available to me and
I didn't have much spare cash anyway. And I didn't develop interest
in mathematics until 3rd grade, when my teacher introduced me to it
in an attempt to get me to start passing arithmetic. (I went to
college as a mathematics major, but I _still_ hate arithmetic -- it's
why I carried my slide rule through high school, and hated that I
couldn't afford $400 for an HP-35 my junior year, it was faster and
_lighter_ than that 10" Pickett in leather case).
--
Ward Griffiths <mailto:gram@cnct.com> <http://www.cnct.com/home/gram/>
WARNING: The Attorney General has determined that Alcohol, Tobacco,
and Firearms can be hazardous to your health -- and get away with it.