These are the days of miracle and wonder. Sometimes, though, we forget that.
Every year my family has a reunion near the beach, and last week we all
gathered in Cape May. Marybeth and I sailed there from our home in
Baltimore. 20-some siblings, spouses, children and my parents had a few
days of sun and fun in a hundred year old house situated in an even
older neighborhood.
Two couldn't make it " my son, in school in New Orleans, and one of
my nieces who is studying in Australia. But Katie did make an hour-long
virtual appearance via video Skype. The laptop's
wireless link let it run untethered in the garden while horse-drawn
carts, carrying tourists down the street, hailed back to an earlier
era.
My 80-something parents were amazed. They had no ideas such
technology exists, and reflected on how even a plain old telephone call
between states was a house-rocking event not so many years ago. I
remember how the words "it's a long distance
call!" would electrify the family. Long distance! It was so
expensive that we never, ever made inter-state calls.
An hour-long video chat with someone on the other side of the world
was truly unimaginable to the oldsters. Neither could fathom how it all
works, and both marveled for a day about the technology.
Yet in 1866, within the lifetime of my great-grandfather, it cost
$100 to send a ten word telegram through Cyrus Field's
transatlantic cable. A nice middle-class house cost $1000 at
the time.
Later I ferried my dad and one of his equally old friends out to our
anchored sailboat. There they both exclaimed about the GPS
and AIS
(a system that tracks ships
via signals they transmit every few
seconds). Jim had been a sailor all of his life but had never
used a
GPS.
"You mean it's accurate to a few feet?" he asked. Yet both of these
gents had been engineers in their careers; both had been in the
business of creating incredible new technology, one in the space
business, the other as a chemical engineer.
My dad was born in 1927, the year Hubble figured out those blobs
were galaxies, not clumps of gas, and the year the Atlantic was first
breeched non-stop by air. It was just a year after Schrodinger
revolutionized quantum mechanics. The neutron hadn't been discovered.
In a single lifetime the universe grew from a single galaxy to 100
billion, and the microscopic expanded from two fundamental particles to
an entire zoo of quarks, muons, neutrinos and more.
A few people were privileged to travel at a breathtaking 100 MPH; by
the 60s a few people had traveled at 25,000 MPH. Perhaps also within
that single lifetime Virgin Galactic
will send tourists " tourists! - into space for less than the
value of the Lindberg's Orteig prize, in inflation-adjusted dollars.
In "The Boy In The Bubble," Paul
Simon sings:
These are the days of miracle and wonder
This is the long distance call
Most of us blithely accept the amazing new technologies without
wonder and go about our lives. I sometimes get a bit frustrated with
dealing with my folks' computer problems, but their sense of awe about
what most of us view as commonplace makes me realize just how right
Paul Simon is: These are indeed the days of miracles and wonders.
Jack's Embedded Poll Question for you this week is "What's the most amazing invention?"
To vote, go to the Embedded.com
Home Page.
Jack G. Ganssle is a lecturer and consultant on embedded
development issues. He conducts seminars on embedded systems and helps
companies with their embedded challenges. Contact him at jack@ganssle.com. His website is www.ganssle.com.