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The E6-B Flight Computer Is 75 Years Old, Still In Use (informationweek.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Few devices have been around this long, have had cameo appearances in Star Trek, and remain in use today. The current E6-B looks almost exactly the same as the first one manufactured 75 years ago. It was designed by U.S. Naval Lt. Philip Dalton in the late 1930s. When he completed the final version, it was introduced to the Army in 1940, and later used widely during WWII. Today is a required instrument for flight training, and has appeared on Star Trek original series several times, as Mr. Spock used a E6-B for critical calculations.

6 of 132 comments (clear)

  1. Happy Birthday by zamboni1138 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I remember being 14 and learning to use an E6-B flight computer for the first time. It's pretty amazing to be able to sit down and develop a to-the-minute flight plan from departure to arrival and then be able to go out and execute that plan. Flying along hitting all your waypoints at the proper time, getting your enroute crab angle correct for the given winds aloft and not killing yourself along the way was always exciting. Hats off to Lt. Dalton. Your invention will always have a place in my flight bag.

  2. Re:TODAY IS REQUIRED INSTRUMENT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    That is very little of why the Soviets achieved so much, tbh - central planning did that, just as in China, but it was combined with some horrible racism and paranoia on Stalin's part. Britain ensured the death of more people in engineered famine in India, and it had very little to do with the underlying regime.

    As for "human life as a commodity", the idea that everyone is someone from whom you profit - i.e. objectified by reduction to their usefulness in trade - is the core tenet of capitalism. Hell, we even have a profession for those engaged in management of such resources: "human resources". Stalinism was yet worse, but it wasn't because of the underlying economy, rather because he was a cunt.

  3. Student Pilot Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The E6B is a rite of passage for all student pilots, but I haven't found anyone that kept using it. An electronics calculator from the 70s is much faster and easier to use in a cockpit, but despite not being part of the practical test, every designated pilot examiner wants to see every student use one, because they used one as a student.

  4. I'm with Turning on this issue. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A computer is a device that can compute...

    Using that definition my hand is a computer also...

    When Alan Turing did his seminal work on computing and computability, he used "computer" to mean both a human with a pencil and paper and abstract mechanical devices generalizing and simplifying what this human computer did.

    I'm with Turning on this. A "computer" is any system that computes, whether it is entirely made out of live meat, made out of meat plus mechanical, electrical, and/or electronic aids, or made purely of such aids. The term may also be applied to aids that require a made-of-meat operator (or mechanical simulation of one) in the absence of the operator.

    By this definition, both slide rule s and nomogaphs qualify as "computers".

    --
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  5. Re:TODAY IS REQUIRED INSTRUMENT by dryeo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's so true. at least the Americans would never use human life as a commodity, buying and selling people based on their colour, having a civil war about it and then finding lots of other ways to treat the same people as less then a commodity.
    Americans would also never steal peoples land on the principle that they're just a bunch of savages as well, nope they found an empty continent and just moved in.
    And today Americans would never blow up weddings and such on the chance that there might be a bad guy, with bad guy being defined as someone not happy with having their home blown up, in the name of freedom of course. Another thing is that American business would never move their manufacturing to 3rd world countries where workers are treated like commodities just to make more profits.

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    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  6. Re:TODAY IS REQUIRED INSTRUMENT by davester666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The difference between what Stalin did and what Corporations under Capitalism do would be zero, short of the gov't stepping in and actively stopping them from doing so.

    Under capitalism, corporations are fine with beating, starving and enslaving their workforce, poisoning land, sea and air, really, whatever they can think of to make a little more money. Unfortunately, the US is rapidly becoming more fascist, in that corporations are literally writing the laws they want enacted, and just giving them to the politicians, who then pass them, but the voters keep reelecting them, so they must want more of the same.

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    Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!