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jakedata 3 hours ago

Visiting Bletchley Park and seeing step-by-step telephone switching equipment repurposed for computing re-enforced my appreciation for the brilliance of the telecommunication systems we created in the past 150 years. Packet switching was inevitable and IP everything makes sense in today's world, but something was lost in that transition too. I am glad to see that enthusiasts with the will and means are working to preserve some of that history. -Posted from SC2025-

dekhn 2 hours ago | parent [-]

I wanted to learn more about computer hardware in college so I took a class called "Cybernetics" (taught by D. Huffman). I thought we were going to focus on modern stuff, but instead, it was a tour of information theory- which included various mathematical routing concepts (kissing spheres/spherical code, Karnaugh maps). At the time I thought it was boring, but a couple decades later, when working on Clos topologies, it came in handy.

Other interesting notes: the invention of telegraphy and improvements to the underlying electrical systems really helped me understand communications in the 1800s better. And reading/watching Cuckoo's Egg (with the german relay-based telephones) made me appreciate modern digital transistor-based systems.

Even today, when I work on electrical projects in my garage, I am absolutely blown away with how much people could do with limited understanding and technology 100+ years ago compared to what I'm able to cobble together. I know Newton said he saw farther by standing on the shoulders of giants, but some days I feel like I'm standing on a giant, looking backwards and thinking "I am not worthy".