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#1
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Posted to rec.bicycles.tech,rec.audio.tubes
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Amazon is about to deliver my Kindle, so I went into the loft to bring
down my Newton (1), thinking I could use it well-made leather case for the Kindle or, if not for the Kindle, for my Wavetek Meterman 37XR digital multimeter, since both of them share some dimensions with the Newton. As one expects from pricey Apple gear, the Newton still works quite as well as it did back in the day (1985? -- too lazy to look it up), but since the batteries went flat, including the memory battery, in the five years since I last used it for taking notes in concerts, it has lost what it learned of my handwriting. Since I'm the only person whose mother ever returned a handwritten letter with a request to typewrite it, and whose physician has better handwriting, it is surprising that the Newton, starting from scratch, gets it approximately right: "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" becomes, intriguingly, "No Alien few fox guys be tie am dog" -- which on RBT and RAT on bad days can pass for pure genius (and in the oeuvre of Gene Daniels for maximum comprehensibility!). Andre Jute Visit Andre's books at http://www.audio-talk.co.uk/fiultra/THE%20WRITER'S%20HOUSE.html (1) Thanks to the faithless ingrate (to Steve'n'Steve, the WYSIWYG Guys) who with his recent unprovoked sideswipe at the Newton reminded me I still have one. For those of you too young to remember it, the Newton is the granddaddy of all personal digital assistants, and in some respects still superior to and more attractive then the current crop. It harks back to the days of 300bps modems (I have one of those too!) yet its technology has only now matured in Apple's iPad. |
#2
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Posted to rec.bicycles.tech,rec.audio.tubes
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![]() "Andre Jute" wrote in message ... Amazon is about to deliver my Kindle, so I went into the loft to bring down my Newton (1), thinking I could use it well-made leather case for the Kindle or, if not for the Kindle, for my Wavetek Meterman 37XR digital multimeter, since both of them share some dimensions with the Newton. As one expects from pricey Apple gear, the Newton still works quite as well as it did back in the day (1985? -- too lazy to look it up), but since the batteries went flat, including the memory battery, in the five years since I last used it for taking notes in concerts, it has lost what it learned of my handwriting. Since I'm the only person whose mother ever returned a handwritten letter with a request to typewrite it, and whose physician has better handwriting, it is surprising that the Newton, starting from scratch, gets it approximately right: "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" becomes, intriguingly, "No Alien few fox guys be tie am dog" -- which on RBT and RAT on bad days can pass for pure genius (and in the oeuvre of Gene Daniels for maximum comprehensibility!). Andre Jute Visit Andre's books at http://www.audio-talk.co.uk/fiultra/THE%20WRITER'S%20HOUSE.html (1) Thanks to the faithless ingrate (to Steve'n'Steve, the WYSIWYG Guys) who with his recent unprovoked sideswipe at the Newton reminded me I still have one. For those of you too young to remember it, the Newton is the granddaddy of all personal digital assistants, and in some respects still superior to and more attractive then the current crop. It harks back to the days of 300bps modems (I have one of those too!) yet its technology has only now matured in Apple's iPad. ****ing idiot!!! |
#3
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Posted to rec.bicycles.tech,rec.audio.tubes
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be tie am dog
bip bip be tie am dog bip bip be tie am dog yula wan few dot belong betibetie am dog jute is Jamacan amazin' |
#4
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Posted to rec.bicycles.tech,rec.audio.tubes
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On 9/23/10 11:07 PM, kolldata wrote:
jute is Jamacan Jute is a long, soft, shiny vegetable fiber that can be spun into coarse, strong threads. For the person Andre Jute, I like to say Jute to rhyme with hoo-tay. Andre Hoo-tay! Kevan |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.tubes
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Hi RATs!
I started with 110.5bps on a TTY 33. It was the "console" for a PDP-8E. Computers used to be fun. Now they just give a voice to people with nothing good to say. Progress? Happy Ears! Al |
#6
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Posted to rec.bicycles.tech,rec.audio.tubes
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"Andre Jute" wrote in message
... (1) Thanks to the faithless ingrate (to Steve'n'Steve, the WYSIWYG Guys) who with his recent unprovoked sideswipe at the Newton reminded me I still have one. For those of you too young to remember it, the Newton is the granddaddy of all personal digital assistants, and in some respects still superior to and more attractive then the current crop. It harks back to the days of 300bps modems (I have one of those too!) yet its technology has only now matured in Apple's iPad. ![]() Nautical Almanac and fudge the spherical trig, but by then Clinton had banished selective availability and the GPS market had taken off in a big way. The biggest difficulty was programming the thing to do even the simplest task. It took literally just a few evenings to punch Meeus's coefficients into a HP handheld calculator, giving it a perpetual ephemeris of navigation stars and bodies, while I was still struggling in that same time to simply get the Apple's development tools installed and running. It was, as I said, one of the snickiest gadgets of all time, but still looking for relevance. I haven't given up on it altogether even today. I might still build a shrine for it to honor Apple's perspicuity of future technology. |
#7
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Posted to rec.bicycles.tech,rec.audio.tubes
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On Sep 29, 7:07*pm, "MikeWhy" wrote:
"Andre Jute" wrote in message ... (1) Thanks to the faithless ingrate (to Steve'n'Steve, the WYSIWYG Guys) who with his recent unprovoked sideswipe at the Newton reminded me I still have one. For those of you too young to remember it, the Newton is the granddaddy of all personal digital assistants, and in some respects still superior to and more attractive then the current crop. It harks back to the days of 300bps modems (I have one of those too!) yet its technology has only now matured in Apple's iPad. ![]() Nautical Almanac and fudge the spherical trig, but by then Clinton had banished selective availability and the GPS market had taken off in a big way. The biggest difficulty was programming the thing to do even the simplest task. It took literally just a few evenings to punch Meeus's coefficients into a HP handheld calculator, giving it a perpetual ephemeris of navigation stars and bodies, while I was still struggling in that same time to simply get the Apple's development tools installed and running. It was, as I said, one of the snickiest gadgets of all time, but still looking for relevance. I haven't given up on it altogether even today. I might still build a shrine for it to honor Apple's perspicuity of future technology. Next year in Jerusalem. I prefer to think of the Newton as a brilliant device the relevance of which has not yet been revealed. I have my Newton, brought down from the loft, on my side table next to the Kindle 3rd series 3G that arrived a couple of days ago, itself a very impressive piece of applied technology. In principle the Kindle is a much less capable device, even allowing for twenty years of constant electronic and software development. Of course, the difference is that the Kindle works, exactly because those advances made it possible. Andre Jute Visit Andre's books at http://www.audio-talk.co.uk/fiultra/THE%20WRITER'S%20HOUSE.html |
#8
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Posted to rec.bicycles.tech,rec.audio.tubes
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On Sep 23, 8:53*pm, "Shaun" wrote:
****ing idiot!!! I think that's his stretch goal, actually: to become a ****ing idiot. |
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