cazalea[Seiko Moderator]
20750
Yes doctor, that is INK in my veins
This is motivated by Casey's scanning tale. Forgive me for being so verbose.
My first job was at a newspaper, on a machine collating the sections before dumping them in a cart for delivery to the paperboys. It was there I was told "You can't trust the sales dept; they'll say anything to sell an ad" and "Don't trust editorial; they'll write any old thing just to fill the white space between ads". So "just concentrate on production and keep your head down" and I might say, your hands and arms black with ink and bulging like Popeye after a can of spinach.
Then I went to a publisher who was still setting type by hand and eventually progressed to Linotype machines. I was in editorial by then. Finally I moved to a company that did hard bound books; here's the plate for embossing a cover.
A few years later I was manager of all the editorial systems, as we transitioned from OCR readers scanning type done on IBM Selectrics and converted to paper punched tapes for output on typesetters. A massive leap forward came in 1983-4 when 16 of us got our own b/w terminals on a DEC computer. I was sent off to school to learn typesetting / programming. Eventually that progressed to developing the first electronic auto repair manual library in the late 1980's but still before Windows came out. That's my hand and ring (no watch shown) using a light pen which I decided was the best pointer device for greasy-handed mechanics.
Then I got diverted into developing systems that would serve the whole "enterprise" in automotive service and repair. The white board was our strategic development tool. I did the thinking and other guys did all the hard work of coding and so forth. But I had to talk the bosses into funding the whole thing - sometimes they did and sometimes they didn't.

This job drew information from a variety of providers and sources so required a lot of travel and fast talking. Concept to reality is much harder than people think.
After that project ended I moved into publishing math textbooks. This got me back to my roots (from a production point of view)
Notice there is no math on my computer screens! And I am wearing my new MIH hot off the presses from Switzerland.


Actually here I was not packing books, but sending a $15,000 AP perpetual loaner watch back to its rightful owner, SteveH. I'm wearing the Rolex I still own.

I retired about 10 years ago but continue doing 1-2 books a year for myself or friends and relatives.

This chronicles our discovery of 1000 whales in one year

And that led me to developing iBooks.

Writing about watches on the web is right up my alley.
Cazalea