Originally posted by SueEllen
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Previously on "Don't teach the little beggars Office, teach them to code."
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They're only finishing with competence what Labour started with incompetence etc etc...
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Really? Sod it. That's another plan B out of the window...Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostBeen there, done that, doesn't pay well and doesn't last beyond about 25 years old.
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Been there, done that, doesn't pay well and doesn't last beyond about 25 years old.Originally posted by Lockhouse View PostMale model.
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I just remembered about this stuff:
Plated wire memory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Used in the Shuttle.
Box 4-7: Shuttle Engine Controller Hardware
The computer chosen for the engine controllers is the Honeywell HDC-601.
The Air Force was using it in 1972 when the choice was made, so operational experience existed.
Additionally, the machine was software compatible with the DDP 516, a ground-based Honeywell minicomputer, so a development environment was available.
Honeywell built parts of the controller in St. Petersburg, Florida and shipped those to the main plant in Minneapolis for final assembly; within a couple of years, all the construction tasks moved to St. Petersburg.
By mid-1983, Honeywell completed 29 of the computers177.
The HDC-601 uses a 16-bit instruction word.
It can do an add in 2 microseconds, a multiply in 9.
Eighty-seven instructions are available to programmers, and all software is coded in assembly language178.
The memory is 2-mil plated wire, which has been used widely in the military and is known for its ruggedness.
It functions much like a core memory in that data are stored as a one or zero by changing the polarity in a segment of the wire.
Each machine has 16K of 17 bits, the seventeenth bit used to provide even parity179.
Plated wire has the advantage of having nondestructive readout capability.
Last edited by zeitghost; 28 November 2011, 15:51.
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And they had mother-racks instead of motherboards.Originally posted by zeitghostAnd it was all made out of TTL and ECL (for those who wanted it to go a bit faster).
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The point is not to make programmers or IT staff. The point is that understanding computers & digital technology at a fundamental level drives a deeper understanding of the modern world of things around you, in the way that basic latin and greek knowledge confers a better understanding of language. It's the sort of fundamental stuff that every schoolchild ought to know.
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I think I'd have been a test engineer of some sort seeing as I'm only really any good at breaking things.Originally posted by Doggy Styles View PostTimes change. 40 years ago there wasn't much of an IT industry outside those making the hardware, just a few boffins. What would the IT people on here have been doing instead?
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Times change. 40 years ago there wasn't much of an IT industry outside those making the hardware, just a few boffins. What would the IT people on here have been doing instead?
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1. I never trust a politican. Especially when the duopoly have almost identical policies.Originally posted by TheFaQQer View PostI completely disagree - David Cameron admitted "we're not doing enough to teach the next generation of programmers", and said there would be action on that.
Linky (3 minutes in)
I trust him implicitly to do just that. In the same way I trust him to cut the deficit, not the NHS.
2. There has been a war on contractors for several years. Have the Tories repealed IR35?
3. IT has been used as a proposed sacrifice to get access to BRIC markets
4. It seems to be very easy to get visas to work in the UK if you are in IT
But if there is action then I will be the first to give credit where it is due.
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I completely disagree - David Cameron admitted "we're not doing enough to teach the next generation of programmers", and said there would be action on that.Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostI can't see the government backing IT. It has become clear that we are seen as glorified typists. And we can all be offshored. Yet another reason why the government are totally out of touch.
Linky (3 minutes in)
I trust him implicitly to do just that. In the same way I trust him to cut the deficit, not the NHS.
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I've encouraged my kids to learn to program, but I've firmly discouraged them from entering the world of IT.
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I can't see the government backing IT. It has become clear that we are seen as glorified typists. And we can all be offshored. Yet another reason why the government are totally out of touch.Originally posted by zeitghost View PostStone me.
BBC News - Coding - the new Latin
What a good idea.
Maybe I'd get esteemed customers who could actually program then.
Or not as the case may be.
One of the current intake had to be shown how to get capital letters out of the keyboard.
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