IML: Help with "AutoPilot" homework
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IML: Help with "AutoPilot" homework
- From: "Hugh & Therese" <hugtrees@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 7 Mar 2005 22:54:30 -0600
I received an e-mail today from a Dutch technical university student whose
assignment was to describe the development of cruise control. He found that
it had been first introduced in the 1958 Imperial, and he ended up at the
museum's web site where Mrs. Blueberry, "my" 58, has a rather large section
devoted to it.
In reply I referred him to the Imperial club's web site and the two articles
there that describe how the system works and an impression of how it felt
when operated. He was absolutely delighted to see the articles and thanked
me very graciously. He had done a web search of his own and had not come
across them. Isn't nice to be of such help to someone so far away?
Now, I guess I am passing on his thanks to whoever was involved in adding
those articles. I think I have one of them so one may have come from me but
I actually don't think so and it's hardly the point. What it got me to
thinking was, and I have noticed this myself, how difficult it is to find
the Online Imperial Club when doing web searches. Now I know we all found
it, or else we wouldn't be on this mailing list. And I am also absolutely
not launching a broad side against the site either. It is truly amazing. I
think all I am doing is pointing out that somehow or other it does not rank
very highly in most search engine results, or at least it seems that way to
me.
For some reason, my museum's web site does. I get e-mails from all over the
place asking the most bizarre questions. Maybe the webmonsters do as well
and I, obviously, don't know about it. I "borrowed" a great reply I once
saw from Brad Hogg, a rather witty fellow who has come up with some of the
best one liners I've ever seen on this list. He said, in reply to one very
weirdly unrelated question that came to the webmonsters while I was, very
briefly, among that worthy group, "May I just take a moment to ask you how
it was you came to ask us this question? The subject matter seems
significantly distant from our intended purpose and we'd love to know what
gave you the impression we might be able to help you." (Brad phrased it
better.) The response is polite yet communicates the befuddlement the
question has caused to the recipient.
So, one way or another, we, as a group, helped a lost individual to find his
way to good information about a great Chrysler, and indeed, Imperial
innovation. I think that's pretty cool. My car does not have AutoPilot,
but I know one or two others on the list are so equipped. The young man
might enjoy hearing from you if your system still works after all these
years. I'd wager many people on the list might also be interested. E-mail
me off list and I'll give you his address.
Hugh
hugtrees@xxxxxxxx
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