JF Ptak Science Books Quick Post
Of the numerous things that "won the war" for the Allied forces--besides Churchill, and Roosevelt, and millions of Soviet soldiers, and Eisenhower, and V Bush, and cracking Enigma and MAGIC, and the enormous production capacity of the U.S., and so on--there was "also" the warm electrical/dusty scent of active vacuum tubes, which somehow always remind me of "precision". The importance of RADAR I think cannot be overstated, plus SHORAN, and the Harvard Mark I, directional finders, and etc., all combined into a massive electronic war-winning effort that certainly helped define victory in WWII.
This is sorta what I was thinking about when I saw this lovely Concord Radio catalog for 1946--the enormous vacuum tube in which various military ops were happening, and then the troops marching out of it on the bottom, back into civilian life, carrying the promise of the new electronic world with them to home, industry, and business, and that electronics was here to stay. Another "here to stay" thing here was the female worker--if you look closely at the crowds returning to their lives-left-behind there is no shortage of women, which I think was pretty progressive for 1946.
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