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"Len Over 21" wrote:
Heh, I have to admit that, in undergraduate classes on Calculus I, II, and III, my grades were A, B, and barely C, respectively. A problem with night classes and working all day yet still trying to maintain contact with other people. :-) I never got an "A" in math. I did get an "F" once and had to take the class over. However, the remainder of my math grades were "B" and "C," and I was darn thrilled to get that "B" occasionally. I did just fine in all my other classes. (snip) Having to know morse code for a hobby activity involving radio regulation by licensing is much more PRIMITIVE than sitting down and doing a series equation to obtain a logarithm or other transcendental numeric value. No doubt the ardent Credentialists in here will come up with some kind of BS about "needing degrees" to understand it all. :-) You won't get any argument from me. I probably wouldn't touch most math today without a calculator (and most others wouldn't either). And code is a primitive way of communicating. If that's one's cup of tea, there's absolutely nothing wrong with that. But it is fairly absurd to continue to require it of everyone else. Dwight Stewart (W5NET) http://www.qsl.net/w5net/ |
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