03-03-2006 05:25 AM
03-07-2006 03:43 PM
03-08-2006 03:03 AM - edited 03-08-2006 03:03 AM
Message Edited by Dynamik on 03-08-2006 03:04 AM
03-20-2006 08:42 PM
I've been a user of LV since 1986. I don't remember what the first version I had was, but a bundle from NI containing 1.2 came just days after whatever my original copy was came. About a dozen blue floppy disks! So, 1.2 or something earlier, who knows.
We ran it on Macs, of course-- 128k with some sort of RAM upgrade and a GPIB card, then the SE, then the IIci and IIcx (marvelous machines, truly the high-water mark for package design of a desktop PC). Later, I beta tested LV 2 and got featured in an ad, with a quote right next to one from John Fluke!
Eventually, my group beta'd version 3 for both the PC and the Mac. Along the way, we received a patent for an automated alignment approach for lining up lasers, cavities and optical fibers-- first patent to cite a LabVIEW example, in fact. The USPTO patent examiner initially rejected the example, saying that patent office rules required a textual description of embodiments rather than pictorial, and so we were ordered to replace the "flow chart" with the equivalent source code! The company attorney and I had to go before the three-judge board of appeals in Washington DC to straighten that out. In fact, the attorney was going down in flames, so I interrupted and asked if I could approach the bench, then gave a demonstration of how to build a VI on my PowerBook. The judges got the point, and the LV code stayed in the patent.
LV 4 might well have been my favorite, with its built-in compiler and compact executables. Sigh. But I can't imagine life without some of the goodies in the later releases and LV FPGA.
03-20-2006 09:28 PM
Goodies such as "undo"? 🙂
@Scott Jordan wrote:
LV 4 might well have been my favorite, with its built-in compiler and compact executables. Sigh. But I can't imagine life without some of the goodies in the later releases and LV FPGA.
03-20-2006 09:55 PM
03-23-2006 04:49 PM
03-23-2006 06:28 PM
@scoobydoo wrote:
Back in the early 1990's I was given a copy of Labview and told to build a system to monitor temperatures and airfows. Now, this was in the days of DOS and floppy disks. So I sat down with the stack of floppies and spent the better part of the day running the install
[snip ]..... [snip]
I think promptly put all the floppys back into the labview box, put the box back on the shelf, grabbed the box that contained my trusty Borland C compiler; spent the rest of the day feeding Borland floppys to my PC, and built the system from scratch.
03-23-2006 06:58 PM
03-23-2006 07:01 PM