
It's funny how things go--isn't it? I lust after all things that plug in, take batteries, light up, beep, tweet, chirp, or hum. You can probably tie my adult techno-geekery to my youthly nerdiness, when Warren Hudgens and I tried to communicate with distant shores from a 25-in-one kids radio experiment kit that probably cost $12. Of course it didn't work, but I loved it. We both loved it, making up our kid stories about being tracked down by vigilant policemen or angry, pipe-wrench bearing construction workers whose radio conversations about women and booze we might have interrupted with our peeping voices and rampant giggling. It was Warren who told me about a new device, all in discrete transistors, called a flip-flop that would allow one of the huge mainframe computers to start getting rid of tubes and magnetic cores. It was the beginning of the digital computer revolution. Cool. I haven't seen Warren in years, not even heard a word from or about him. I hope he is still geeking.

