Many children were born into poverty, and thus had no apparent reason to try to succeed. That was the case with Mahlon "Dick" Palmer. Dick was the youngest of four boys and was certainly not a welcome addition to the Palmer family. He was born in the midst of the greatest depression the country has ever experienced, thus another mouth to feed. There was one positive benefit though; this child did provide a cheap source of labor. As you will discover, Dick was expected to work 12 to 14 hours every day until he left home to join the Air Force when he was seventeen years old.Dick's very best…mehr
Many children were born into poverty, and thus had no apparent reason to try to succeed. That was the case with Mahlon "Dick" Palmer. Dick was the youngest of four boys and was certainly not a welcome addition to the Palmer family. He was born in the midst of the greatest depression the country has ever experienced, thus another mouth to feed. There was one positive benefit though; this child did provide a cheap source of labor. As you will discover, Dick was expected to work 12 to 14 hours every day until he left home to join the Air Force when he was seventeen years old.Dick's very best childhood friend was his dog King, who is on the cover of this book. Without King, Dick's childhood would have been very very difficult, for they were always together.Life was about to change dramatically when Dick joined the Air Force when he was 17 years old. The title of the book, "Destiny," is very appropriate since it was at that time when destiny played a major role in Dick's life.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Dick grew up on the family dairy farm in upstate New York. At the age of seventeen, immediately following graduation from high school, he joined the US Air Force, where he served four years as an air weather observer. Although Mahlon (Dick) has no college education, he began working in the field of data processing when that world consisted of IBM punched cards in the early 1960s. Almost immediately, Dick became fascinated with the IBM 650 computer, and he quickly decided he must learn how to program it, thus the beginning of a thirty-plusyear career in the field. He has programmed virtually every make of computer up through the early twenty-first century using the same meth¿¿¿¿ology. Dick began designing computer systems in the Bahamas on a large navy contract named AUTEC (Atlantic Underwater Test and Evaluation Center) when he built his first computer system for that contract. The design techniques that he developed and used on that system would become the blueprint that he used for the next twenty-five years while designing systems for the Air Force to include BMEWS and the DEW Line_ and NASA for Apollo 11 and 12. He then built the largest business system in Lockheed Martin Corporation, which is still operational today after nearly thirty years of successful operation.All the skills that were necessary, to accomplish the above-detailed tasks were self-taught. Those skills not only served him well throughout his professional career, but also were invaluable in the pursuit of his many hobbies, adventures, and ultimately, retirement.
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