On Friday afternoon, I discovered that HP is running a trivia game on their home page that asks" "Can you guess the Product?", where the game shows what they consider to be the most significant and revolutionary products that they've created in their nearly 60 year history. I don't know that there can ever be a better measure of the fact that you're getting old than to have someone ask what function these various products served, especially when you do not need to guess but can remember the serial numbers of the copies you owned. Amazingly, the three products that appear in the game immediately after the very famous 1939 HP200A audio oscillator are the 1964 cesium-beam clock, the 1966 HP2116 computer, and the 1968 HP9100 Scientific Calculator. All three of these products were a very intimate part of my life. Thus, yesterday, I spent the afternoon putting together a more detailed history of these HP products, from a very personal point of view. The URL (which is an isolated set of looping pages) is: http://aics-research.com/history.html The pages are heavy on graphics, so they will be slow. The period covered is from 1963, when I was first introduced to the extraordinary quality of HP instrumentation, to 1976, the birth of AICS Research. These are non-commercial pages, just a fond remembrance of fine times and superior products. Wirt Atmar