I reread this thread this morning, and it reminded me very much of my first college chemistry class. There was one guy in the class who had this really cool device for doing all the math . . . it was small and had buttons and did the calculations for you. It was made by Texas Instruments, and we all wanted one. But we had slide rules, devices that were really kind of complicated to use and required a fair bit of learning and practice. I'm glad I learned to use one, but they are curiosities today, and the successors to that very expensive Texas Instruments device are now so cheap and so small that you can hang one off your keyring. There is no way that I would recommend that every high school student learn to use a slide rule today -- they actually taught you a fair bit about logarithms, if you understood how they worked, but they're really irrelevant in the real world.