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374 lines
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Episode: 2968
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Title: HPR2968: Life and Times of a Geek part 3
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2968/hpr2968.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 14:02:07
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---
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This is HPR Episode 2968 for Wednesday, the 18th of December 2019. Today's show is
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entitled The Life and Times of a Geek Part 3, and it's part of the series How I Found Linux.
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It's hosted by Dave Morris and is about 41 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is Part 3 of my personal story of experiences with computers.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthost.com. Get 15% discount on all shared hosting
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with the offer code HPR15. That's HPR15. Better web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthost.com.
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Hello everybody. This is Dave Morris. Welcome to Hacker Public Radio. I started a series of shows back in 2014.
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I was talking about my own personal experiences. I called it Life and Times of a Geek. Today I'm
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trying to put together Episode 3 in this series. It's been a long process. I did one show in 2014 as I
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said and won in 2015. There's been a long gap in between and it was partly because I wanted to
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research the various things I was telling you about. I found that looking for them on the internet
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was extremely difficult. A lot of the things that I wanted to talk about were not there. I think
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it's largely because these devices or people or places or whatever events were happened before
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the internet came into being and have never really been transcribed to it. One case I tried
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was some laboratory equipment I thought might be of interest and I contacted the company which still
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exists from 40 or 40 years ago, 45 years ago and asked them about it and they said that they had
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kept no records because it was equipment that they couldn't sell now for safety reasons.
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It's been a bit of a dispiriting process and it makes you feel very old as I say in the notes here.
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But it's something I've grasped and tried to finish off in the recent past so this is the
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result of that. So in Manchester around 1973 I was a student, a PhD student which is what I talked
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about in my last episode. I'm going to talk a bit more about this and hopefully tell you some
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things of interest to hackers along the way. So when I went to Manchester to work as a
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PhD student I was mainly based in the animal house of the zoology department. This is in the
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basement of a building on Kooplin Street. I just mentioned this in case you want to look at the map
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of that area. Part of the sort of main old Victorian university area. This is not an ideal location.
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Some of these buildings are quite old. They were connected by tunnels, utility tunnels which had
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phone lines and heating pipes and these tunnels were filled with cockroaches and mice and various
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other nasties. And they'd come into the animal's room and I'm going back or to keep these down.
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During my life in second year there another animal has became available in the same sort of region
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and it's been previously owned by the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology
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called U-Mist in those days. It's now been absorbed within Manchester University.
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This became free and it was on the top floor of what I think was called the Rusco Building.
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So many of these buildings have changed use and been demolished in some cases so I'm a little
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bit hazy about where it was but it wasn't a huge distance away from where we were across Oxford
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and in it there were multiple rooms for offices and laboratory spaces and animal housing
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places for experimental operators so it's really a advantageous move and these were rooms that
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could be holds down to clean being purpose built this. There's a fair amount of work moving across
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and some of this involved my research apparatus. So I'll tell you a bit about that now. The thing
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about working in a biology department, the biology department in those days was there was an
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expectation you'd be able to build your own apparatus so there was a workshop in the department
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some very skilled people who could build all manner of stuff but they were busy. They were catering
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for staff and students through a moderate-sized department. I did have some equipment built for me
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which I won't go into detail about but I also ended up making some of my. First of all,
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I needed an arena in which my Barbary doves, experimental animals, would be placed and I could
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observe their behavior. There was a wooden arena available from a previous piece of research
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when I first started but it wasn't all that useful because in order to use it you had to stand
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beside it, look through a one-way viewing window and the bird that was inside, this thing would
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rustle, it could hear me breathing, it could hear me moving and hear the rustle of this thing,
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of the window which was one-way mirror, two-way mirror type thing. So it wasn't brilliant.
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So I ended up building my own arena and I used a metal angle thing with holes in it called
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Dexian and put a reference to it in case you're interested. I did say in my footnote that I acquired
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some of this from my last job because it was being thrown out so I've actually used it to build
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a shelving system up in my attic. It's really useful stuff. So what I built was an arena where the
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birds were placed which was a meter square and above it I built a four-sided pyramid for observation
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and so I didn't want to actually be looking in there myself. There was a viewing window in it but
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I didn't want to be looking in there while the bird was doing its thing. So I had access to a monochrome
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video camera and that was mounted at the top of the pyramid. Much of my disappointment I couldn't
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point the camera downwards because it just stopped working when I got tilted that way. No idea why.
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So I had to set up a platform with it on in a 45 degree mirror. The camera recorded stuff onto
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a real-to-real video record. So it's a sort of big half-inch tape device. Sure John Cobb would be
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delighted to have access to such a thing and in order to analyse the behavioural stuff to grab
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the data from I had to play the tape back to a little black and white monitor that I had in there
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but working area. The arena was painted white and the camera was looking down into it and there
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were fluorescent lights which shone onto the white surface but didn't get in the way of the camera
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and so that was to give best visibility and on the floor of this arena I was actually made of
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liner or something like that, plasticky sort of surface painted white. There were little feeding
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stations placed randomly around the floor and in each one of these stations the bird would find
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a meter to my grain. So I had a copy of the plan of the arena floor in a form that could be
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duplicated so I could transcribe the movements of the bird and various other very information about
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things that have been set up onto these once I was analysing the video tape. Now I say just as
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an interruption here that one of the things I was trying to do while I was preparing this was to
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find pictures of some of this stuff and just yesterday as I remember recording this I found
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some slides that I'd taken of some of this equipment. At the moment I can't add them to the notes
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because they're 35 millimeter colour slides so I don't have any means of turning them into
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JPEGs or whatever but before this show goes live I plan to do the necessary scanning and prepare stuff.
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So there are some pictures of some of the things I'm talking about. So another piece of experimental
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apparatus I was using was called a Skinner Box. This is a chamber which is also called an operant
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conditioning chamber. There's a link to Wikipedia info in which an animal is trained
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performs some action in response to a stimulus and then you can use it with the trained animal to
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produce behaviour of interest to whatever it is you're studying. So a Skinner Box is I think we
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just had one I can't remember that but anyway it consisted of a small box which had metal panel
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sides probably aluminium sheet or something and a transparent door which we could see through.
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The wall opposite the door was fitted with a panel with perspex keys on it and there were two
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and the bird was able to peck them or one of them and depending on how you wanted to operate things
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this could this would operate a micro switch trigger a switch and then you could make it
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deliver food to the bird because there was a place where a food hopper was set into the wall
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and the bird could reach down and take food out of the hopper but the hopper could move
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be raised and lowered so in the lowered position it couldn't feed when it was raised it could.
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So you needed to train the bird to peck the switch and then we'd receive a wall.
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The whole operand conditioning thing is quite long and complex I guess it's probably not that
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end of interest to the HPR audience though I'll happily talk more about it if anybody's interested
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but the birds most of them were able to learn this stuff quite effectively. Pigeons are not
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I don't want to say they're stupid because they're not they're just not equipped with
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behavior which is good for this type of thing. Their behavior is all about flying and finding
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food from a height and you know they eat grains and seeds and stuff so they're not the brightest
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and as clever as like cup crows and jackdaws and similar birds anyway it would do this and
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so there was a light behind these perspex panels when the light came on the bird learned
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that if it pecked the right color then it would get a reward. The box itself was made in the
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department and it was you it was made by the workshop and they used a product called handy tube
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which is I don't know whether it still exists though I did find a link to it. Square section steel
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tubes with jointing pieces that are that are metal with a plastic outer layer you could hammer
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them into the ends of the tubes and join them together and also configurations. You take them out
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again too but not not easily and fall apart it held together really tight but it was really
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good for making this type of equipment. I believe I have a photo of this in the slides. The Skinner
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Box has its stud just was bunch of switches and lights and a motor to drive the feeding hopper.
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So in order to make it do the things you wanted to say turn on a light, provide a reward when
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certain behavior was detected. You needed something to program it. Now these days it'd be easy
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you stick a raspberry pie on it and simplicity to do but in those days it wasn't anywhere near
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as easy. We used programmable laboratory equipment which came from a company called Camden
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Instruments Limit. This was the company that I mentioned I contacted and it consisted of a
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series of metal units, boxes containing components which were to be clipped to metal rods
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in a rack and they got their power through the metal rods through the clips. I don't have any
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records of what power they needed but I do have a brochure PDF of a brochure from a later device
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that the company made and it required 22 to 30 volts DC through the power rails through a
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maximum of 50 milliamps. So it's not trivial maybe that's the source of danger that people were
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worried about. We paid it no heed at the time but if you'd had wet hands and grabbed the positive
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and negative you'd got a shock whether it would have killed you I don't know. You had a weak heart
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maybe it would. Anyway the departmental workshop had constructed floor standing racks for these
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units so that you could get several rows into it. I have pictures of some of this stuff which I'm
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hoping to be able to include in the notes and it looks like a 19 inch rack actually so I think
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they probably adapted a 19 inch rack at the end of the day. I don't remember that very well.
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Anyway the boxes contained a variety of electronics. Many of them were logic gates such as a simple
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and or and also inverters so you can make nands and norgates. The things like chart recorders and
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counters and the whole principle of it was you put a bunch of these together like a sort of leg of
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set almost and you could connect the output of one to the input of another with piece of wire.
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We had made up specific bits of wire using very flexible copper, copper multicore wire which had
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snap on connectors pressed stud type things on them which fitted onto the the face of the units.
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You could do things like count the number of key presses or something like turn on the such and such
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light or keep a record of which of the two keys in the scanner box had been pressed and you could
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trigger the raising of the hopper. All of this could be done through this so it's like building
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your own computer in some respects. The birds behavior I believe was recorded on a paper chart so
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there was a sort of time base with ticks on it to show when it did thing and I remember configuring
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this system to when the experiment was finished which was something like after the number of rewards
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a number of key presses or something turning on a red light and I didn't actually stay in the room
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with it, the room dedicated to this kit. I was down the corridor in my office and I'd run some
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wires down the corridor and the light came on outside my office or in office I can't remember.
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I also made a work to how to do I can't remember whether it was a flip flop or an oscillator of
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some kind which I guess the two are fairly similar. I don't remember much about this now but the
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oscillation of this thing would be triggered when the experiment was over and connected to it
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was a little speaker so it would buzz, very low level buzz, series of clicks or something. So I
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I could I could even be asleep in my office which I wasn't but and this thing would be going
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b-b-b-b-b-b to say the thing was finished so I could go and change over to the next bird in the
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sequence so and of course all my data was being collected automatically so I mentioned Camden
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instruments and the fact that this sort of kit went out of favour because it was potentially
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dangerous. I thought it was really cool I was learning about logic and boolean algebra and
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stuff in the context of computers and having a sort of leg of set that let me do this was
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pretty cool. So leaving aside the research I'm going to a lot of detail about what it
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one white was and what we did with it and stuff because I don't think it's really likely to be
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of interest here but I want to do other personal anecdotes as postgraduate student you ended up
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being a demonstrator. A demonstrator is a term I think it's a British, Britishism for a more advanced
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student who's helping out with teaching of undergraduate students so that was all about
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assisting in lab sessions and we were paid for we were paid reasonably well it certainly seemed
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a pretty fair wage so we were quite happy to do this we all we all ended up doing this you couldn't
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you couldn't escape it if you wanted to but most people were very keen to you know the only
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downside of it was that you had to prepare yourself quite well for the sessions because you're
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going to be asked any sorts of questions and you didn't really want to be calling the main lecturer
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to answer them because otherwise being paid for. So in America it's just the undergrads of being
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taught stuff that wasn't necessarily something we learned ourselves as undergrad. I don't remember
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all of the lab sessions we worked in over the years but I do remember a few remember doing
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dissection lab for first year students so they were sort of classic dissect a frog,
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dissect a rat and stuff. Remember that we also did initial classes for the medical students
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at the school down the road and they were the ones who made the most appalling mess of
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bits all over the place. I'm not sure if medical students are a special breed or what. We did
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microscope labs. I remember them being quite detailed because what you're doing there is you're
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looking at slides. The slides have been stained so you can identify the individual tissues or whatever
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you're looking at and you need to find the relevant bit and make drawing of it so you understand it
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but using a microscope had its difficulties. First of all to actually find the thing that you're
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looking for given that you move in a slide around with your hands and it's magnified a lot and
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so the tiniest movement translates to a huge movement in the view find as you're looking down
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the microscope and so many people would go I can't say anything and they'd wind the microscope
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down towards the slide to get it in focus for getting that it was quite capable of hitting the
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slide and crunching it out which often did the microscope was robust enough to deal with that
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the slides suffered. This was a fairly common thing we used to say to them if you need to do that
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wind the lens down by looking at it not by looking through the eyepiece wind it down as low as
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possible then look in the eyepiece and wind it up that way you can't crunch it don't ever wind it
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down when you're looking through anyway but significantly large amounts I should say.
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It was also involved in physiology labs this was where we were looking at animal physiology recently
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killed frogs for example or cockroaches were quite popular where you monitored nerve impulses
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with an oscilloscope you had to learn about using an oscilloscope and teach me how to do it
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and also I seem to end up being the person who always caught the cockroaches was a tank full of these
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anyway it's a technique statistics lab I was in I was involved in that lab because as a
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biologist you need to do a statistical test on data then I was involved in helping up with that
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and trying to explain what the statistical tests actually meant that was quite hard work
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again my own head around what it meant and finally I was involved in some brain labs that my
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supervisor ran where we went down to the medical school anatomy section and we had a sort of back
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room there where we had each had a human brain to to cut up and examine and draw and whatever
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identify all the pieces which was a little bit slightly harrowing probably the most harrowing
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was going through the anatomy lab where there was rows and rows of of slabs with with the corpses
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cadavers on them people kind of up but you can get used to all sorts of things yeah we had to learn
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quite a lot about the structure of the human brain more rapidly than we had expected in order to
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do this course justice that it's not a simple matter because brain tissue is just sort of I
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suppose it's been preserved tends to be a sort of uniform gray jelly like material so spotting
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where one one area ends the next begins it takes takes some experience and skill there were tons
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of panic books I could say about events and stuff of course but I think it's it's probably going
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way outside the the remit of HBR to do this so I'll stop at this point so obviously
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since I ended up working in computers there was a you look gathered there was a fair amount of
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access to computers I was doing this zoology one instance was using the computer graphics unit
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which was a section of the the main IT part of the university so I had all these sheets of paper
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with plans of my arena and I'd drawn animal tracks and stuff onto it from the video recordings
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and I needed to turn these into coordinates for analysis the computer graphics unit could help me
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and they had a pdp 11 computer which could be used for for the data capture and analysis I didn't
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use that very much though but particularly the particular devices a device I would use was called
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a a DMAC digitizer and made by a company called Dobby McKinney's of Glasgow then's the the DMAC
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name now this is an incredibly difficult thing or has been incredibly difficult thing to find
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much information about they were they were fairly common around at that time but very little
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information has been preserved about them I found a stack exchange article that I've referenced
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here and it shows some information and pointed some pictures of this thing but not necessarily when
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I was using now basically it was a heavy glass topped box like table thing in my particular case it
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was on some substantial legs where it could be tilted so it had a sort of pivot underneath it so
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you could tilt it for freeze of use I think the top was maybe a meter square I don't remember maybe
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I'm overestimating that it was glass topped and under the transparent top was a space where an
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X and Y sensor moved about the principle of this was that you placed a mouse or puck wasn't
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wouldn't have been referred to as a mouse puck would have been the name you on the table and as
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it moved around it would be followed by the X and Y device underneath usually you would just move
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this puck and then you'd press a button on it it was connected with a piece of wire to the
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device itself you'd press a button on it and the X and Y would would search for it and find it
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and would then output the coordinates that they found that the puck had and I think it had a
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perspex window on it with a with crosshair so you could line things up quite precisely this was
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used this particular device was used quite a lot in the map making industry I recall but
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anyway there is some information in my list of links which might give you more information if
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you're interested as this device normally operated it had an eight hole paper tape punch on
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so it would just punch the X and Y numbers onto tape as you hit the button but you could
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figure it to do also think you could configure it to produce output in a continuous way as well
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sampling every so many sure distance or it was time-based I don't know I never used that
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anyway I would put my sheets on the table one at a time use masking tape to hold them down
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and then zero the whole thing to corner of the picture and then I could follow the track
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of the bird producer paper tape and the track of the bird could be traced and I pressed the
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output button each point visited and the end product would be a paper tape the graphics unit
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stopped providing this service during the period I needed it I can't remember why maybe they had
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a lot of pressure for the for the the equipment I can't remember but I found out through
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contact that there was a a DMACC at the local hospital the Christie hospital which is not
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very far from university and I was able to go and use that to finish off my data capture just as
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a an aside really as I was working in the in an office in the animal house at in the Zoology
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department I had a moderate sized office I didn't share with anybody else for some reason I can't
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|
remember why the there was a research group next door who was studying fish vision and they had
|
||
|
|
bought a mini computer which was a data general nova which I've referenced in the links I think
|
||
|
|
it was a 1200 I think I'm got a picture in my slide which I hope hopefully will include but
|
||
|
|
it they were going to use it to run experiments in the next door lab but it was initially set up
|
||
|
|
in the office I was using and they said if you want to use it go right ahead the machine was a
|
||
|
|
16-bit basis quite a large moderate sized thing in a 19 inch rack the the the memory of it was
|
||
|
|
fairite core which gives you some idea of its vintage I don't know how much memory there was maybe
|
||
|
|
16 or 32k don't know it did have paper tape reading capabilities and a punch I'm pretty
|
||
|
|
certainly had a teletype otherwise how on earth would you do anything with it how would you print
|
||
|
|
anything I don't have pictures of it unfortunately I remember there being a four-tran compiler in the
|
||
|
|
form of paper tape which I remember experimenting with it so to start the machine you powered it up
|
||
|
|
of course then you had to enter a bootloader by hand using the switches on the front panel then
|
||
|
|
when you then having tugged that in put that in for the switches I can't remember how many steps
|
||
|
|
10 or 12 maybe maybe less I don't know then when you set that to run then it you could make it
|
||
|
|
load a loader program from paper tape and then that loader could be used to load the compiler
|
||
|
|
organ there was no operating system on this one anyway and so it's just a case of loading this
|
||
|
|
to load that to load that and so you would develop a program which would run on the the sole
|
||
|
|
thing running a bit like sort of our do we know each type of things I guess you'd say these
|
||
|
|
just mentioned that for interest I used the facilities the University of Manchester regional
|
||
|
|
computer centers I talked about in my last episode and in particular I mentioned the ICL 1906A
|
||
|
|
and I found there was a room of terminals terminals in the glass box monitor the monitor with
|
||
|
|
keyboard type thing but there's also a lot of ASR33 teletypes and these connected to various of
|
||
|
|
the computing facilities the teletypes were connected to the 1906A and the operating system
|
||
|
|
called George which I mentioned before and I was able to access it and use it using the teletypes I
|
||
|
|
think there might have been 12 or 15 of them in the room it was a big room used first for teaching
|
||
|
|
so I had a lot of equipment in it but these were generally available to computer users used a
|
||
|
|
an interactive part of the operating system called MOP or multiple online programming so it's
|
||
|
|
possible to prepare work on the ICL using this mop and then to submit it as a batch job to
|
||
|
|
the big CDC 7600 and the version of George that they were using at UMRCC had been modified to allow
|
||
|
|
this so they they had hacked on this I'm going to talk more about George 3 and later
|
||
|
|
ended up using it quite a lot George 3 or George 4 and I just noted here that it's possible to run
|
||
|
|
an emulation of George 3 on the Raspberry Pi have not done it I'm not sure I will but maybe
|
||
|
|
be worth it just to see some get some sort of idea of how how it works what what it does so there's
|
||
|
|
another computer I used at UMRCC but just doesn't it has been an exploration of what it could do
|
||
|
|
this was the cyber 72 another CDC compute my memory of this machine is pretty hazy now
|
||
|
|
might have been a cyber 76 perhaps the 72 was replaced by 76 at some point I can't remember I remember
|
||
|
|
vaguely recall cyber 72 and 76 maybe they had them both this was a big setup a lot of money had
|
||
|
|
gone into anyway this machine had terminals with with quality screened monitors and good
|
||
|
|
keyboards unlike the teletypes and in particular it offered programming language called APL
|
||
|
|
which means a programming language and it's a it's a strange symbolic sort of language where you
|
||
|
|
can write quite complex mathematical expressions it didn't it doesn't handle all of the or didn't
|
||
|
|
handle all of the symbols that were defined for APL but there were compromises make that work and
|
||
|
|
I tried using it to do some simple statistics and found that you could try a really really small
|
||
|
|
program to do some quite powerful thing never really took it any further it didn't seem entirely
|
||
|
|
appropriate just mentioned that money was an issue being a postgraduate I had started my first
|
||
|
|
year and paid for my first year myself with money saved from a year out working during that
|
||
|
|
which I mentioned the last episode I did manage to get some grant funding for one or two years
|
||
|
|
but this wasn't really enough I managed to get a part-time job within the zoologist department
|
||
|
|
as a laboratory technician so that helped with the funding as a lab tech I was involved in
|
||
|
|
setting up laboratory sessions but mostly I was the the departmental driver so I'd ferry students
|
||
|
|
around from time to time pick people up from the station buy or collect things for the department
|
||
|
|
and I had to go a ferry it matches this fairly big city by UK standards so I got to learn my way
|
||
|
|
around a fair bit of it and I just wanted to mention a few events that I recall being a driver
|
||
|
|
one was taking a fellow post-grad student to who couldn't drive and she wanted to collect fresh
|
||
|
|
water muscles in a stream we just tapped to be right next to the joggeral bank radio telescope
|
||
|
|
so I couldn't put a picture of that here just for all time sake somebody else I took to collect
|
||
|
|
shellfish that landed no bay in north Wales that's a little bit further away from Manchester
|
||
|
|
but it's an interesting day trip as I recall I don't think I've ever been back there since
|
||
|
|
into north Wales but I had to go and collect maggots on a regular basis and local fishing
|
||
|
|
supply shops I'd come back with boxfuls of maggots or arriving I can't remember who who used
|
||
|
|
that and the one I think it was just the one so maybe a couple of times I was asked to go and
|
||
|
|
collect dead girls around one of the reservoirs in central Manchester I think it was
|
||
|
|
ordinary reservoir somebody was researching parasites in these girls I came back with a van
|
||
|
|
with I don't know half a dozen ten dead girls in the back and as I was driving along one that
|
||
|
|
was apparently dead and picked up and put in them thing suddenly woke up and started flapping
|
||
|
|
around in the back it didn't last much longer it was really sick I remember going to catch helped
|
||
|
|
catch fish in lakes in the possibly in the peak district in Derbyshire somewhere nearby
|
||
|
|
we were catching perch which were being used by the group that were doing studying on fish vision
|
||
|
|
and I also remember being asked to go to a local abattoir where an arrangement would have been made
|
||
|
|
for me to pick up something like a couple of buckets full of cows blood again one of the parasitologists
|
||
|
|
was maybe it's for a lab session or something like that yeah abattoirs are not my favorite places
|
||
|
|
well I had a few hobbies while I was a student of Manchester one in particular was I was trying to
|
||
|
|
learn a bit about electronics in particular I wanted to own a calculator and I'd seen the
|
||
|
|
Sinclair scientific in the newspaper adverts and it was a kit that you could build yourself
|
||
|
|
needed a bit of soldering of course I learned to solder at school but in a very basic way using
|
||
|
|
what I found out is called a tinsmith's soldering iron it's a big chunk of copper or a torpedo
|
||
|
|
shape on a handle that can be heated in a gas flame then you just use that to melt solder and we
|
||
|
|
were building stuff out of tin plate which is steel I think steel with a layer tin over the top
|
||
|
|
you could make joints with solder also when I was younger I'd done some soldering at home using
|
||
|
|
my dad's electric soldering iron quite a primitive thing as I recall but it did the job but
|
||
|
|
around this time in Manchester I bought myself an electric soldering iron an antex one 25 watts
|
||
|
|
relatively small tip and I also bought some other equipment to to help helps things out
|
||
|
|
particularly little aluminum heat sink that you can clip onto whatever you're soldering which
|
||
|
|
prevents the heat being transferred onto sensitive things which was quite important with this
|
||
|
|
Sinclair scientific which is pretty small there's a picture of it in the notes cost £9.95
|
||
|
|
in a kit form seems to ridiculous this small amount these days anyway I got it built one small
|
||
|
|
mishap where some internal bit got melted a little bit just a little bit not enough to damage it
|
||
|
|
but with the device it was a bit of a disappointment to be honest it used reverse polish to enter
|
||
|
|
calculations so you used instead of doing two plus three you put in two enter three enter plus
|
||
|
|
and then it was adding it together that that's not unusual you find that in other contexts
|
||
|
|
in programming languages and that type of thing and other more advanced calculators back it didn't
|
||
|
|
have a decimal point calculator you had to put it in an exponential notation in order to
|
||
|
|
and when you did things like multiplication then and division you'd find that the device was
|
||
|
|
actually doing repeated additions it was quite clever in the sense that fair bit had been squeezed
|
||
|
|
that really tiny little device but it was it was no it was a bit disappointing that it would take
|
||
|
|
a long time particularly if you tried to run functions like log or anti log or sign and cosine
|
||
|
|
and stuff like that these are all iterative as well so the calculator was extremely slow when
|
||
|
|
you wanted to do anything typed stuff in and then set it back and wait for it to come back with
|
||
|
|
the nuns still it was an interesting voyage I'm still quite pleased that I tried it even though
|
||
|
|
my £9.95 didn't get me a huge lot there's I put a lot quite a lot of information about this in
|
||
|
|
the links so if you're interested you can go and have some of the background of this device so the
|
||
|
|
last thing I want to say is that towards the end of this process which should take it four years
|
||
|
|
working on this PhD some of which come out of my pocket some had come from a grant after doing this
|
||
|
|
for four years then I was strongly wondering whether I was doing was getting me any I realized
|
||
|
|
that the research topic that I was following was not really going to go anywhere very
|
||
|
|
and yeah I also realized that I'm not much of a researcher I don't have that necessarily the
|
||
|
|
patience I can think now 45 years on of ways I could have solved some of those problems but at the
|
||
|
|
time I was not mature enough or able to think clearly enough to make much of it my experimental
|
||
|
|
animal was not ideal pigeons are great now but they're not all that bright we were asking them to
|
||
|
|
differentiate between different values of food quantities and that type of thing and I think to
|
||
|
|
a lot of in a lot of the environment that doves and pigeons live that's not really a big consideration
|
||
|
|
and they they don't operate as individuals as much as in flocks you see a flock pigeons landing
|
||
|
|
on a field to to go through looking for seeds and that's a competitive element and we didn't
|
||
|
|
pay much attention to anyway that's outside the the subject that we're really dealing with here
|
||
|
|
I had learned stuff about electronics quite a lot of biology by doing the demonstrations and
|
||
|
|
that sort of stuff that's also interested in how Jim was researching reading about the subject
|
||
|
|
quite a lot and I also picked up a fair bit of computer science just by being involved with
|
||
|
|
the computers that were available so I thought that rather than struggling to finish this PhD
|
||
|
|
I might be best to leave the about to get a job preferably in IT and possibly finish off the
|
||
|
|
PhD away from the away from Manchester for that never came to be but I did get a job in IT and
|
||
|
|
moved away and I'll tell you more about this in the next episode which I hope won't be in
|
||
|
|
another five years or whatever it was so that's it hope you found that interesting at least in part
|
||
|
|
okay then bye bye
|
||
|
|
you've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org
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||
|
|
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