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To: Paul R.
and encourage a whole new generation of scientists, engineers, and technicians, to create far more than thinner laptops and computer games.

I was just thinking about that today. We have high tech, yes, but it seems to be limited to just the computer software industry. Surprisingly, computer programmers know very little math and physics. Our educational system really fails in this regard and that is also something that needs to be addressed.
2,194 posted on 01/26/2012 9:33:48 PM PST by ari-freedom (If SOPA/PIPA passes, we will lose our Free Republic.)
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To: ari-freedom

There may be more high tech around than you think: It even significantly affects items as seemingly mundane as loudspeakers (though I’ll grant you that speakers with nanotube cones are not in my budget range!)

However, you are absolutely right: The sciences and math are not given enough attention in our present educational system, and there is relatively little “out there” to encourage interest. Even Star Trek in the various series always had an engineer who was often a hero in his own way — and THAT Trek has gone by the wayside, with no real replacement. We live in a world of miracles at every turn, yet few stop to think of or appreciate how those miracles came to be, or how the changing needs of the future will be fulfilled. Every perceptive person I know in the “tech” fields outside of computer software is worried about (as a whole) the next generation’s incompetence, and what it means for the U.S. It used to be that the worry was staying ahead of those coming up!


2,239 posted on 01/26/2012 10:24:01 PM PST by Paul R. (We are in a break in an Ice Age. A brief break at that...)
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