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This is a page from a children's book about Bill Gates. There is a picture on page 74 that seems a little odd.
Here is the link to a photo of the page: Linky
Now... look at it closely and read the copy printed on the page.
Then see if you can find anything wrong with it.
:black:
I see a Macintosh PC .....
I have an astronomy book inside a cardboard box in storage, buried under a ton of other books in cardboard boxes, that was published in 1906. The author talks about a U.S. university's giant telescope that is so big, it can only be steered by a control that fits in the palm of your hand and is called — wait for it — wait for it — a mouse.Second, the first mouse was invented by Douglas Engelbart of the Stanford Research Institute in 1964
I'm pretty sure that that "mouse" was what we now call a "joystick." (Though probably a lot stubbier than the modern fighter-plane-style joystick.)M$'s usual crock.I have an astronomy book inside a cardboard box in storage, buried under a ton of other books in cardboard boxes, that was published in 1906. The author talks about a U.S. university's giant telescope that is so big, it can only be steered by a control that fits in the palm of your hand and is called — wait for it — wait for it — a mouse.
I don't know whether Engelbart knew of this thing or whether anyone knew of it after all those years. The guts inside might be different enough for a legit patent, but he sure as blazes didn't invent the name. And I also wonder whether the memory of this turn-of-the-20th-century mouse was purposly buried. Engelbart certainly gained fame and awards for inventing it.