Hi Everyone! This is my first mega and I thought I would start simple around something that I think is interesting and that is the history of the first handheld calculator as well as introduce Lynn Conway, a trans woman and electrical engineer that helped pioneer the modern CPU we have today. Lynn recently passed away but her personal website is still up:
I think I hit the limit or picture limit or something and it’s not letting me add more pictures so I’ll post what I have and will update with more stuff as more things come to mind. Thank you and have a great week.
Shortly after the invention of the transistor in the 1950’s companies like Sharp were looking to build the first transistorized calculator. This would be significant because at the time, Vacuum tubes were comparatively large and fragile. That changed in 1964 with the introduction of the first truly transistorized calculator such as the Sharp CS10.
Now at the time this predated the “Integrated Circuit”, aka the little black chip filled with transistors. Below is a picture showing the construction of this desktop size calculator, filled with boards with many components each. Not to mention the display for this was the Nixie tube, basically a little specialized neon tube.
Now something like the CS-10, or any portable calculator would require many hundreds of transistors, plus the passive components required meaning that with the technology in the 1960’s a handheld calculator was a futuristic concept. For context, the Apollo space program was one of the earliest projects to attempt to fully utilize this new IC technology, and even then each IC would only hold a few transistors per chip. Below is an image of one of these IC’s, a 3 input NOR gate.
This concept of increasing density of electronics is something called integration, with varying acronyms indicating some further refinement (LSI - Large scale integration, VLSI - Very large scale integration). Essentially what they were doing at the time was figuring out how to make transistors smaller and to squeeze more on per silicon die. You can imagine at the time this was cutting edge technology thus very expensive and companies were looking for ways on how to be able to justify this cost. By continuing to shrink the size of transistors, integrate more into a single chip and have that same chip also increase in functionality led the way.
By the late 1960’s and early 1970’s electronics were transitioning (not a pun I am just bad at writing) from discrete, individual transistors, to IC’s that had a few transistors each and composed of logic gates, to devices that had tens or hundreds of transistors on a single die. This integration soon led to “chipsets”, where the functionality could be accomplished by a handful of IC’s instead of hundreds of individual transistors.
A calculator company in Japan named Busicom wanted to build a new innovative calculator taking advantage of the new breakthroughs in this LSI (Large scale integration) technology and partnered with a company called Intel to create this new calculator. What they came up with was the implementation of one of the first true CPU’s, the Intel 4004. Although the 4004 would soon be surpassed by other devices, this “chipset” concept and reduction to a single circuit board was groundbreaking.
By this time in 1971-1972 the holy grail for the first truly portable handheld calculator was within reach. A chip (or small set of chips) that could contain all of the functions needed for a calculator that could run on a battery. During this era there were many, many handheld calculators but it can generally be agreed that the earliest breakthroughs came from Texas Instruments, HP, Sinclair and Casio and some others and the market was flooded with these calculators.
Within a few years the price of a handheld calculator would plummet from a few hundred, to around 100, to less than 100. Without the calculator it’s arguable that the development of the modern CPU would have been set back years or decades thanks to the major contributions that calculators had in pushing LSI technology forward.
Source: http://www.vintagecalculators.com/index.html
Join our public Matrix server!
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As a reminder, please do not discuss current struggle sessions in the mega. We want this to be a little oasis for all of us and the best way to do that is not to feed into existing conflict on the site.
Also, be sure to properly give content warnings and put sensitive subjects behind proper spoiler tags. It’s for the mental health of not just your comrades, but yourself as well.
Here is a screenshot of where to find the spoiler button.
Real ones make it back to the trans mega without the pin, took me a while but I’m back
I HRT myself today
Obligatory “loosing the domain name as a joke was not ok” but if I loose this site and all the people here I’ll be really sad 😭
I can’t tell who anybody is without the pfps :blob-no-thoughts:
Slowly but surely everyone’s changing into “exbe” in black letters on a white background for me
Okay I lied before why is every image visit hexbear.net? Also my browser cache must have been carrying before, Jerboa is broken and I didn’t even notice the image thing until I logged in on mobile.
domain machine broke
on desktop browsers, you can use this workaround https://chapo.chat/comment/5913357
on mobile, you can only access the site through chapo.chat, but the workaround might also work if you can figure it out
Got tired of seeing
Whenever I opened chapo.chat so I made a Lemmy.ml account and now I can see everyone’s pfps again
Issue is images still don’t load do that sucks
everyone looks better with longer hair
doesn’t have to be long long, but longer
We should rename the site to Hexpup
Where were you when bear site kill
Lurking every mega because I’m nervous and don’t want to lose you all :(
Don’t worry. We’ll meet each other again in the afterlife.
What happened?
deleted by creator
I’ll see y’all on the other side…
Anyway as of right now I only need to use one browser for my accounts due to the neat nature of domains and browser cookies. I have a feeling everything will be fine
chapo.chat
Damn this doean’t load anymore. Well, the image was :blair-sotrue:, which will become one of the first emojis on hexbear 2.0 along with :lesbians:, which I would post the image for if it didn’t just show “VISIT HEXBEAR.NET”!
All the messages in the trachat are encrypted for me, how do I stop that?
You can try clearing your cache or using the /discardsession command. I couldn’t see your messages either despite the fact that my account and the room are both on the same homeserver, which is strange. Did you verify your session?
Reopened the app and it magically started working again so idk, also the session is labeled in verified in devices
Am i doing trans wrong if i am not a programmer
i hope not, im too deep into the dumb bitch juice to learn to code
you cowards couldn’t even handle femme orc x butch elf
whose taller?
In math there’s so many really annoying conjectures that are true and you can just tell but we just can’t prove it
Like the goldbach conjecture. Every even number is the sum of 2 primes (after 2, which itself is prime). You try a few and yeah that’s pretty convincing, which isn’t enough of course cause it can always prove false higher than you checked. Except we’ve checked very high with computers and it it’s true for everything we’ve checked, which isn’t a proof of course but come on.
Cause while you can tell it’s probably true, you get conjectures that seem true but aren’t after some finite number. It can be a high finite number, it can be so high we can’t actually enumerate it, but it is finite regardless. If I ever get frozen for centuries, the proof of the truth or falseness goldbach conjecture is one of the first things I wanna check
The way I look at it is that the interesting part of problems like the goldbach conjecture isn’t whether they’re true or not, but the proof itself. Like the real problem isn’t whether or not it applies to every even number, cause it probably does, it’s how you can prove that
We need to normalize vibes-based proofs