Scientific Specific Units
|
12-07-2015, 05:53 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-07-2015 05:54 PM by Claudio L..)
Post: #26
|
|||
|
|||
RE: Scientific Specific Units
(12-05-2015 07:07 PM)luisphysics Wrote: I notice a lot of people love the 50g. If I had to guess the reason HP didn't just upgrade the 50g hardware and roll over the software, was likely because the firmware/software/hardware are actually one fused unit. The 50g isn't a fused software/hardware unit. It is nothing but an emulator running an even older platform. Now the emulated platform (Saturn) was very tightly integrated and "maxed-out". Now regarding the specific unit you want... did know that the 50g has 'c' (speed of light) defined as a unit? So as long as your speed of light is defined as 1_c (as opposed to in m/s), any operation where you use the speed of light will not be numerically replaced, and your results will come out in MeV/c^2 directly. So yes, the old maxed-out platform was very flexible and worked very well for physics and engineering. No wonder so many people still love it (me included). If you see it as a tool, then a fancy color screen doesn't beat "getting the job done". |
|||
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »
|
User(s) browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)