03-26-2005 12:45 PM
05-13-2005 08:08 AM
05-16-2005 03:54 PM
10-14-2005 07:23 AM
See reply #9 in this thread.
http://forums.ni.com/ni/board/message?board.id=170&message.id=146961#M146961
where Dennis tells his HP VEE story.
Ben
04-15-2009 09:53 AM - edited 04-15-2009 09:55 AM
One of the users on the forum reminded me of another "Sea Story".
Years ago while working at DEC I had the oppertunity to help out Mister Rogers and his group with an issue they had with printing some reports. Yes that is the real Mister Rogers from public TV fame. This was a rather unique experience for me because they weher not your average group of computer users. I was given the tour of thier offices and was mystified by the attitude of everyone because they ALL acted just like Mister Rogers!
So after determining I was not going to be able to get them fixed up before the end o the day I delivered the bad news and was bracing for the normal "WHAT DO YOU MEAN...." reaction but instead was suprised when my contact responded;
"That's OK Ben. Want a cookie?"
The real charater in that group was Mr McFeeley who in fact was the writtern of all of those shows (Prior to learning that fact I was convinced that Fred just stepped in front of the camera and sstarted winging it.) His office walls were completely covered with pidgeon holes that held every script of every show they ever did. So before returning to visit them again, one of the office secrataries i worked with asked me to get her some autographs. The Mr Roger's gang was more than happy to comply and even through some T-shirts but the autographed picture from Mr McFeely that read;
"Stop down some time and find out how I got my name."
(where is that bug-eyed emoticon when you need one?)
Ben
04-16-2009 12:50 AM
04-19-2009 07:54 PM
This was pre-LabVIEW, but very amusing.
A company developed a new "torpedo" (well it wasn't quite a torpedo, but that's being technical). It ran off very high temperature and pressure nitrogen. The problem with getting it to work was the sealing. Finally, they found an o-ring that could handle the temperature and pressure.
So they put it in and brought it to us to test. It was a very short test because it did not work. Eventually, we found out why.
The high temperature, high pressure o-ring was also water soluble. When they took it apart, it was all goo.
(Torpedos are used underwater, for those of you who didn't know.)
04-20-2009 12:39 PM
Durring a weekly meeting we where reviewing the contents of a new report (POVIS) and someone asked about if the account balances can be rounded of to the nearest whole dollar. My boss replied;
"On the POVIS, I don't plan on showing any sense (cents) at all!"
Ben
04-21-2009 07:22 PM
The "Somewhere in the Irish Sea" commercial is based on an apocryphal story that has circulated in the naval community for several years, mentioned in snopes.com "Lighthouse and Aircraft Carrier" with the supposed dialog almost verbatim. Pretty funny ad though, benn using Silva compasses for a long time myself.
04-22-2009 02:06 PM
Here's why I became a consultant.
Years ago, I was working for an institution where most of the management should have been institutionalized. Honesty was not allowed under any circumstances. Anyway, I figured out that there was a slight nonlinear relationship with sensors that they had been using and that they were automatically setting the zeroth order coefficient to 0.0. By using a fourth-order polynomial fit, I was able to dramatically reduce the error and allow them to do tests in regions that they could never approach before (by an order of magnitude). Did they like that? NOOOO!
One guy told me that the extra coefficients took up too much hard drive space (this was in the early 90's, a 1 G HD cost about $1000). Right. He also told me that the calculations would slow down the testing. Since I had also reconfigured the test so it took 30 minutes instead of 4 hours, I had a hard time seeing his ridiculous point. (And if you did figure it out, it would add less than a second to the entire test).
Then another guy told me that it was a spring, and springs obeyed Hooke's law, so it had to be linear. He said if I put that on a Physics test he would give me a zero. I pointed out to him that I majored in physics, pulled out a 300 level mechanics book, and pointed to the spot where it stated that Hooke's law was an approximation of a Taylor Series and therefore, an infinite polynomial.
Finally, they hired a consultant at $10K per day to come in and tell me I was wrong. Two weeks after he came in, I still hadn't heard anything. Seems he said I was right, I finally found out. I knew I had a future in consulting.