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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: tlug: parallel-port IDE
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: Re: tlug: parallel-port IDE
- From: Karl-Max Wagner <karlmax@example.com>
- Date: Tue, 13 Oct 1998 15:50:55 +0000 (GMT)
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- In-Reply-To: <Pine.LNX.3.96LJ1.1b7.981012113957.4627R-100000@example.com> from "Jonathan Byrne - 3Web" at Oct 12, 98 11:54:47 am
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug@example.com
> Yeah. The modernization of Japan that began in the Meiji era is a great case > in point. Japanese sea power, as one example, in a very short period of > time went from oar galleys to a modern, world-class navy that shattered > Russian naval power in decisive battles. Less than a century after the U.S. Sure. It helped, though, that the Czar regime at that time as well as the Russian aarmy at the time was pretty much in shambles. > government forced the Tokugawa shogunate to open the country , Japan had a > real shot at defeating the world's great powers in a major war (not total > defeat, but they could have had a negotiated peace and kept most or all of > what they had gained). All it would have taken was for the Japanese navy to > have blown the tank farm at Pearl Harbor and to have approached Midway with > the same seriousness and sense of danger with which it approached the Pearl > Harbor operation. Hmmm....they wouldn't have gotten towards Pearl Harbour at all if the US government ( which knew about the impending attack on Pearl Harbour well in advance ) wouldn't have allowed it in order to prepare the American public for entering WW II. As for world class excellence of the Japanese military technology of that era - please read the excellent book "Maboroshii no reedaa Wuertzburg" ( Panoramic radar system Wuertzburg ) by Kiyokazu Tsuda. It reports about the joint German - Japanese efforts of setting up production of the "Wuertzburg" class panoramic P-band radars. According to that book, tubes more complicated than triodes were not manufactured in Japan. Key parts of the system had to be imported from Germany with German submarines because there were no Japanese submarines that could go most of the way from Germany to Japan without refueling. Telefunken Corporation also sent an engineer to their partner company Nihon Musen ( aka JRC ) named Heinrich Foders. This guy must have been a real genius with knowledge ranging from the details of tube manufacturing to the intricacies of complex radar circuitry. Upon arrival he found out that for the most part components suitable for the Wuertzburg were unavailable. Thus he first set up factories for that. The stock tube at the time was the RV12P2000 and he had LOTS of hassles until this tube could be made reliably in Japan. Concurrently he set up operations to get the rest manufactured. It appears like a wonder - but some days before the surrender they completed one of these systems. Four others were already around in an uncomplete state. If you call that "world clas", well.... I call this "substandard"..... However, in 1941 the US military wise weren't a serious adversary. They in fact were so badly underequipped that they had to ask the US hams to turn in their equipment to equip the army with radios ..... ! ( Read the wartime QST's for that - fascinating reading, particularly their lead articles that were always called "It seems to us..." ). > Granted, the leadership that achieved such industrial modernization seems > rather lacking now, but Japan has demonstrated many times since it entered > that modern era that once it finally acts, it moves quickly and usually As I showed in the above, it was rather the exploitation of gross negligencies of its competitors than anything like a "full steam ahead" mentality. Particularly, it was always ad hoc - without any effective long range planning. > successfully. This was shown in auto making, and in electronics as well. It > will happen in computers, too. It's not in computers. It's in INFORMATICS. Computers are just a tiny ( albeit crucial ) part of this. For informatics, the scenery is pretty much set: the point of all events is the INTERNET - and I fail to see how that could be changed anytime soon. Certainly not by a single country - an entity far inferior in power to the Internet. Whoever wants to play a role in informatics, must play a role in the Internet - the most dynamic environment there ever was. ================================================================ "It was hell. They knew it. Karl-Max Wagner But they called it karlmax@example.com W-I-N-D-O-Z-E" ================================================================ --------------------------------------------------------------- Next Nomikai: 20 November, 19:30 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 Next Meeting: 12 December, 12:30 Tokyo Station Yaesu central gate --------------------------------------------------------------- Sponsor: PHT, makers of TurboLinux http://www.pht.co.jp
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