We ended up with Teams too. The chat function or whatever was great, but then some people used the Teams calendar, some people used Outlook. So now you had to check in both places.
Anyway, I think pen and ink drafting is long gone. Doing it on a computer is so much better.
Actually, I think that slide rules are probably cheaper than electronic calculators again. This past year, I made a class set of 24 of them, for much cheaper than I could have gotten 24 calculators (there was some of my labor involved, too, of course, but even valuing my marginal labor cost at $30 per hour or so, they were still cheaper than calculators). The difference is that, in the 1970s, precision tools of the sort needed to make slide rules were a rare thing, but now, they’re commonly found in all sorts of places.
I’m a little amused to see the turntable stylus as an example in the OP. You can go on Amazon and buy a whole array of them, there’s various audio stores with wide selections (LP Gear, Crutchfield, etc), local sellers include Best Buy, Micro Center, local record stores and others. Manufacturers include Audio-Technica, Ortofon, Jico, Grado, Sumiko and more – it’s not one joint out there making them.
Sure, it’s not 1979 any longer, but declarations of Buggy Whip status back in 2008 may have been premature.
Late reply to an ancient post, but I had a boss who purchased a fully functional rotary phone that he attached to his cellphone to make calls the old way. Obviously some modern technology was hidden inside, and he probably had an app on the cellphone to handle the I/O…
This was in the advertising industry, which does attract eccentrics and jokers.
That typewriter Tom Hanks gave to Colbert on his show recently? That came from a small typewriter repair and sales shop here in Portland, Type Space. A little closer to where I live is Ace Typewriter and repair.
This was probably over a decade ago now, but that reminds me – After a flight once my checked bag didn’t show up on the carousel, so I went to the airline’s baggage office. The agent took some information and then handed me a printout of my claim – printed on a dot matrix printer, complete with the little holes on the edges of the paper. (I note that Epson still lists airlines as one of the industries using them).
My bag got delivered to my house the next day, if anyone’s wondering.
A brand-new HP-15c was $130 last I checked. Slide rules… Faber-Castell had some 2/83N’s for 89€, but that could have been new old stock. I honestly am not sure who is manufacturing new, good, slide rules.
This might be weak evidence in favor of slide rules being cheaper, or at least not more expensive.
Last you checked must have been a while ago, given that that calculator was last made 37 years ago. I’m not sure what the modern equivalent (scientific but not graphing) would be, given that TI so dominates the standalone calculator market now, but they push their graphing calculators so hard. A used HP-15 probably would still be better than whatever TI is making, but we’d be looking at long-past-used prices for both the calculator and the slide rule, and both probably vary wildly.
There probably are a lot of high-quality used slide rules that are owned by people who’d be willing to part with them cheaply, given that most people nowadays don’t even know how to use them. Heck, a couple of folks have given them to me for free. But by the same token, because they don’t know what they are, it probably wouldn’t occur to most people to offer them for sale. On the other hand, most people who still own an HP-15, even if they think it’s obsolete (it’s not), would at least know what they have.
Another confounding factor is that if a calculator was stored for decades with batteries in it, the batteries might have corroded enough to ruin the calculator. But there’s no equivalent failure mode for a slide rule.
Give me some credit: when I say “new”, I mean that HP/[HP-authorized official licensee] is still making them (it is a good model and gets revived periodically). The latest ones are not more than 2–3 years old: HP 15c Collector's Edition - HP Calc
[a brief search suggests that the new ones are manufactured by Moravia as a brand licensee, as in today they “continue the development, production, distribution, marketing and support of any HP-branded calculators”, and also that an HP-15C from the original run (1982–1989), in good condition, will cost you over $350 today.]
In the sixties, my dad bought a high-end one for his kids to take to college. He got one with bamboo sliders because it was touted as “self-lubricating”.
It’s not exactly a huge trend sweeping the nation, but there has been a small resurgence of interest and use of typewriters of late. This site has info https://typewriterrevolution.com
and I am part of a tiny movement called SLOCOM, for Slow Communication, that types and mails letters and newsletters. The Revolution Lives.