Bloom County by Berkeley Breathed for December 05, 2023

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    Uncle Kenny  about 1 year ago

    I still have mine, gathering dust on a bookshelf. I got it out awhile ago, and the only functions I could remember how to do were multiplying and dividing.

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    LivelyClamor  about 1 year ago

    Run!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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    Imagine  about 1 year ago

    Slide rules rule!

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    win.45mag  about 1 year ago

    At first, I thought it was Gumby.

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    markkahler52  about 1 year ago

    Is the old remote in there, also?!

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    mwest  about 1 year ago

    I know mine is around here somewhere. My first year in college (1972-73), it got me thru physics, but by the time I decided to major in engineering a few years later, I got a calculator. But we did get to the moon on the strength of slide rules, didn’t we?

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    ladykat  about 1 year ago

    He uses a calculator now. I still use pencil and paper, because I keep losing my calculator and forgetting that my phone has a calculator.

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    Red33410  about 1 year ago

    “Lately, you’ve seemed so distant.”

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    old_geek  about 1 year ago

    And to think that the moon landings were calculated using slipsticks…

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    mindjob  about 1 year ago

    They came out with circular slide rules when I was in high school. They fit inside your pocket protector perfectly

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    Robert Wilson Premium Member about 1 year ago

    We were taught to use a simple one in our junior high school math class. This was in 1966.

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    PoodleGroomer  about 1 year ago

    Slide rules delivered 3-1/2 digits accuracy. Scientific implementation was always “close enough”.

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    Drbarb71 Premium Member about 1 year ago

    I hated that thing. Our chem professor didn’t trust them newfangled calculators. Every desk in our 100 person classroom was covered with penciled calculations.

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    Mark Jackson Premium Member about 1 year ago

    I think the K&E log log duplex trig slide rule I won in a math competition when a senior in high school is up in the attic somewhere. As an undergraduate physics major (1965-69) I used it very little. There were big electromechanical calculators available for heavy work, and by senior year I had access to a Friedan electronic calculator (a couple of feet deep, little CRT screen with a stack of four operands, decimal point adjusted with a click wheel). In grad school the research group had a small desktop 4-function plus square root nixie tube display thing, replaced within a year or two by HP35, and then HP45, RPN handhelds.

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    ron  about 1 year ago

    Sadly my K&E Log-Log Duplex Decitrig got wet in a flood and was ruined. Discovered it when I felt nostalgic and pulled it out of storage. That saved me from having to admit I could not do everything it was capable of doing.

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    Bill D. Kat Premium Member about 1 year ago

    When the apocalypse comes, there is no power grid and all the batteries are dead, those old slide rules will come in handy for those of us who know how to use them.

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    coffeeturtle  about 1 year ago

    this time we will let the rules slide. but if this ever happens again…!

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    Sisyphos  about 1 year ago

    I still have my old slide rule (from my High School years), not in a closet but at the back of a desk drawer. Teddy bears, which I used to buy as gifts for Mom, abound all through the apartment….

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    cherns Premium Member about 1 year ago

    I had a fairly simple bamboo slide rule through high school, and a slightly more complicated one starting university. (I seem to recall that various chemistry calculations involved log-log scales.) I also picked up a small circular one.

    When I was in grad school, the local Student Store found a box in the attic and sold the contents—$1 for a 6" slide rule and $2 for a big one. I got a small simple one, and a Pickett log-log duplex with the traditional nerd leather belt case. The latter has so many scales that I have no idea how to use.

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