dr_phil_physics: (hal-9000)
My Physics Classes Are SO Getting Linked To This

Not only clever lyrics, but impressive graphics skills. Even on TI Graphing calculators!


I Will Derive

Thank you, Michelle!

Dr. Phil

New To Me Anyway

Wednesday, 12 August 2009 22:53
dr_phil_physics: (writing-winslet-2)
Look! Another Hewlett-Packard Calculator

Thanks, Bob and Jerry, for the "new" HP-42S calculator. Amongst the many HP calculators I've used and collected over the years, I have the 20S, 22S and 32S in a particular form factor -- the HP-42S is the same casing but more sophisticated. Despite the numbering, it is not a removable storage unit like the HP-41 series or the HP-48S or -48GX. And unlike the nifty but somewhat retro HP-35s, this is definitely a menu driven machine. Indeed, while it shares much of the functionality with the HP-32S II, it only has one function button, instead of the two functions and much busier silkscreening of the faceplate of the -32S.



But don't let appearances fool you. The HP-42S is a serious scientific calculator and a lovely unit for a self-confessed HP RPN calculator geek. (grin)

Resurrection Mode

First of all, the HP-42S came to me sans case and was dead. Fortunately the three Eveready 357 silver oxide batteries hadn't leaked, so I didn't have to deal with cleaning it out. A stop by Walgreens in Allendale solved the battery problem. Second, this machine had definitely been used and the exterior felt a little sticky. Once powered on, I discovered the right hand column of keys seemed very reluctant to work. So I whacked the calculator hard on its side and then pressed the buttons repeatedly. Cleared up much of the problem. Some shots of canned air did it a little better. One suspects it sat on the desk or lab bench and earned a lot of crumbs in its life.

Bottom line – it works, though I will have to watch the display and make sure it is actually doing the operations for a while. But I can throw it in my "commuting bag" I take down to the Kitty Room for writing during my sabbatical. Never know when I have to do Physics calcs for my hard military SF stories. (For example, 4 days 14 hours 10½ minutes to accelerate from rest to 41.67% the speed of light at 32g acceleration.) And anyways, I always run my calculations at least twice even with a first line calculator. (grin)

Cool!

Dr. Phil

An Ah-Ha Moment

Tuesday, 21 April 2009 15:38
dr_phil_physics: (upsidedown-winslet)
It's Quiet -- It's Too Quiet

Actually, it's about right. In the midpoint of the middle of my three Final Exams. Will be a lot more crowded in here tomorrow. A lot of the Noon section of PHYS-2070 has bailed on this exam time because of a transportation conflict between the main campus and the engineering campus -- no way can you get from one to the other in the allotted fifteen minutes between finals. I can't remember now, did Northwestern have an hour between final time slots and Michigan Tech half-an-hour? Either would be more civilized.

How To Use A Calculator

So far no calculators have clattered to the floor, which during an exam always prompts Dr. Phil to announce "gravity works". But, sitting here and taking a break from typing -- and switching from my office glasses to regular so I can see the students -- I noticed something.

My high school Advanced Chemistry class was the first class in the city of Greensboro NC that was allowed to have calculators. It took most of the year, but we nearly all bought the same model, a Texas Instruments SR-51A. I'd seen an HP-65 at UNC-G once, never dreaming that at Northwestern I'd own one -- once the price came crashing down in February 1977 when the HP-67 came out. (grin)

But nearly everyone I knew used a single index finger to push the calculator buttons.

These Kids These Days

About half of the engineers in this class seem to be holding the calculator upright, not flat on the desk, and working their thumbs. Dammit, Jim, they're texting, not calculating!

Huh. I suppose, now that they know how to do that...

Dr. Phil

Profile

dr_phil_physics: (Default)
dr_phil_physics

April 2016

S M T W T F S
     1 2
3 4567 89
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Links

Email: drphil at

dr-phil-physics.com

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Friday, 15 May 2026 09:58
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios