Did you have a housing for it back thenmy Commodore 64
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Did you have a housing for it back thenmy Commodore 64
Where do you suppose those dive tables came from in the first place? The computers involved might have filled a small room and been running FORTRAN, but they were otherwise no different than the ones on your sons' wrists.Computers are great but the knowledge must be there first.
I never used dive tables - never learned anything about them. But I did learn COBOL in college. Should I start writing code instead of using this cool internet thing and software packages that do it all for me?
I learned assembly language for my Commodore 64. Who needs a compiler?
You are not going to successfully dive with any operator we have dove with in Cozumel while following tables.You are correct on the dive profile not matching. But my point is the computer is great as long as they understand what is going on in the computer and once they can use the be tables then they can use the computer which is much more exacting.
Not bashing computers but re enforcing their ability to dive without.
That's an interesting idea. One minor downside I discovered diving with two computers on a liveaboard is that it meant one more buckle to do and undo five times a day. It's the kind of thing that makes it very tempting to just start leaving the second one behind, because what are the odds. But then if you end up needing it, it won't have all your previous dive info. If computers came in pairs as a rule, I imagine they might come in some type of bracket to either strap them both on your wrist side by side with one strap, or to have them on two sides of the same console.I have always felt that computers should be sold in pairs... primary and backup.
One minor downside I discovered diving with two computers on a liveaboard is that it meant one more buckle to do and undo five times a day.