From Spreadsheets to Saving Mankind
I
have a thing for spreadsheets and have for decades. In a recent backup, I found
10 Excel spreadsheets in my Math History folder. The largest spreadsheet holds the
entire history of Mathematics and is 998 KB. Yeah, it is big. It starts from 40,000 BC with the first artifact found
in Africa and leads to the implementation
of Common Core. It includes Babylon’s first calendar from 4,700 BC, Heron’s
practical geometry in 150 A.D., and the amazing preservation of Greece’s math
books by Islam’s greatest mathematicians. I am Gabrielle,
and I am a spreadsheet addict. (This is where you say, “Hello Gabrielle.”)
Before
I owned a personal computer, I hand made my own spreadsheets. I am very emotionally
attached to these spreadsheets. My favorite handmade spreadsheet that I created
is the History of Art, where I tracked all of the art artifacts I have read
about, from the Upper Paleolithic era in 35,000 BC to Roy Lichtenstein’s work
in the 1990s.
One of my many hand drawn spreadsheets on the history of art
Moreover, though
I often attribute my spreadsheets to my fascination with art and science history,
it goes beyond chronological notations. I have
also saved my banking spreadsheets from 1992. I love to go back and see how I
tracked my college finances, month-to-month, and survived on Spaghetti-os and
popcorn.
My
fascination with spreadsheets has been with me most of my life. I will never forget the rush I got the
first time I worked with VisiCalc, the forerunner to SuperCalc and Lotus 1-2-3.
The process of writing, drawing, and taping
huge spreadsheets together came to a
long, drawn-out, emotional separation the day I met VisiCalc.
VisiCalc was the very first computer spreadsheet program; it
was introduced by Apple II.
VisiCalc was a game changer on many levels
because Apple implemented it on bug compatible
platforms. In other words, Apple began executing backward compatibility, which
allowed for interoperability with older versions each time VisiCalc had an
update. This changed the future of
computing on many levels. Here is a subtle implication: Lotus Development
Corporation duplicated this process to create the mind-blowing Lotus 1-2-3. This
theft did not go unnoticed. On April 13,
1987, SAPC, Inc. sued Lotus for stealing VisiCalc’s “look and feel.” But, as we have learned from the Edison theft
of Tesla’s work, sometimes theft leads to better progress. (No offense to the
Tesla purists!) The duplication of VisiCalc was a game changer to the future of
data development.
By
Odacir Blanco [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
I
began working with Lotus 1-2-3 in the 80s and genuinely fell in love with this
application so much that I completely memorized the Functions and Macros Guide.
At one point, in my data preservation processes, I was known around the
cubicles as the Lotus Queen. I seriously earned that title! No joke! This served me no purpose once Excel hit the
scene.
Nevertheless,
Excel. Yeah, I know it’s a fragment. But, Excel! Pull down menus! Click capability! The
day I met Excel, my glasses fogged up. Granted it was a humid day. But still! It was Monday, November 30, 1987. I
was working nights in the recording studios
and started my day job at an accounting firm in Beverly Hills. Because I am a fast learner, I immediately picked it
up. I didn’t want to go to the studio
that night. I wanted to stay at the firm and keep working on Excel.
We
all know Excel. The last person on the planet
who never knew Excel was my old boss, who, in 1996, conveniently pandered his son’s Excel spreadsheet homework
off on me because he couldn’t figure out
how to sort alphabetically. I hope I got an A on that assignment.
Excel
was my best friend during my second Bachelor’s degree. I was able to set up
tremendously large spreadsheets that provided data needed for Linear Algebra
and Differential Equations. For probability, statistics, and game theory, Excel
served as an extension of my brain.
By
Pacomartin (Own work) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
With
Modelling, I was able to determine the slow rate of Denver’s housing development
compared to the city’s accelerated population growth. Between the limited
housing and more traffic, it looks as though the city has a challenge their
hands. That said, though Excel cannot move mountains, it can help Denver
determine how much mountain they will need to move
into to maintain its desperately needed
housing development problem.
My
most recent love with Excel comes with the beauty of creating fractals. If you
Google fractals and Excel, you will find numerous (pun intended) Web sites that
will open your eyes to a whole new Excel world and the beauty of fractals.
Mandelbrot sets are becoming commonplace in Excel, as individuals and
mathematicians set out to create beautiful works of fractal art. By plotting a
set of complex numbers, one can create a gorgeous fractal boundary. The cool
thing about this is that one can take a complex set that is found in the mathematics
of nature, finance, trajectories, etc.,
and create visual art in Excel.
By
Yami89 (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/)], via Wikimedia Commons
If
you are interested in creating fractals in Excel, one of my favorite
sites is FractalForums.com, where likeminded
nerds can exchange fractal building tips. Daniel Brian Scott has a blog (that I
love to read!) called The Drafting Table. He provides an excellent process for
creating a Mandelbrot set in Excel, which you can find here: http://danbscott.ghost.io/mandelbrot-set-in-excel/
. At http://slicker.me/fractals/excel.htm you
can find only 16 lines of Visual Basic code that can get you up and running as well!
For data nerds, like myself, the
future of spreadsheets and the future of Excel can be intoxicating as it becomes more
collaborative and immersive. Data can now be pulled from multiple sources, manipulated
on the fly, and used in the cloud. Additionally, data sets are getting larger because of the ability to compute these large sets with minimal processing time. The
applications are becoming larger and numerous, which means that, like the evolution
of VisiCalc to Excel, we will see, as we have in the past, a beautiful evolution of Excel into something bigger, more
powerful, more engaging, and more responsive. It goes beyond just tracking
numbers, to seeing and understanding mathematics in nature, to evaluating
social economics, to understanding the tremendous
speed at which areas of our world are growing and seeing the painful stagnation at which
areas of our world still suffer. It's not just a simple calculator. It's an application that can provide us tremendous insight. The development of data creation and spreadsheets is vast, ongoing, and exciting. VisiCalc was a simple and wonderful idea. And, as with all amazing inventions, it has evolved to help us better understand ourselves.
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