Digital
Watches
The first models (circa 1972) were very expensive and
featured a flat black screen. One needed to press a small button on
the side to see the time light up inside. These were LED (Light
Emitting Diode) watches.
The pulsar, from HMW, was the first all-electronic
wristwatch. The pulsar utilised LED that would light up as red digits
at the push of a button. For a paltry $2100, a piece of the future -
The Time Computer - was yours. Or you could wait a couple of years and
buy the first watch ever made for under $20.
That watch was the latest in technological wizardry:
the digital watch with the LCD (Liquid Crystal Display). The new
technology improved readability, reduced power consumption, and best
off all, was continuous in display and did not require a button switch
for time. Everyone was strapping on the simple metal band with the
push-button knob and plenty of nifty features: a stopwatch, an alarm,
a light switch when you were caught in the dark. Could it get any
cooler?
This new-fangled contraption took the world by storm, and the
foolproof timepiece promised the future. The next step was the handy
calculator watch: the smallest calculator and computer in the world.
Not just for pocket-protector wearing nerds, this seemingly harmless
device - no larger than your wrist - created junior Einsteins in
Algebra class. Okay, so that perfect score wasn't because we memorised
theorems, but wasn't that what technology was for? Taking away all the
boring work?
Over the years, digital watches came to feature everything from
video games to data banks (to store telephone numbers and messages) to
cool blue 'Indiglo' lights, enough to make any traditionalist give up
the hands for a tiny piece of the future. The digital watch catapulted
science into a new realm, a constant reminder that one day, "Beam me
up, Scotty" would be as casual as "Excuse me, sir, do you have the
time?". |