"Let's go." "This has been going on for weeks." "Look, I'm not trying to push you." "Just go with me, all right?" "Just go with me one time." "Leave me alone." "I don't want to go anywhere!" "AII right?" "Just go with me one time." "Hey, what's going on here?" "There's nothing going on!" "Get in!" "Get in!" "charlie Two, I've been shot." "Start me priority backup." "This is an aII-too-famiIiar event in the modern world." "In fact, this one's an exercise:" "A SWAT team, training for the day when they'II have to do it for real, and real events happen somewhere every day." "This program looks at how those events can happen at all, but not at the hostages or the criminal pIan-- at the fact that what puts all the pieces together-- the guns, the explosives, the computers," "that chopper up there, and to start with, the anesthetics waiting in the ambulance for this injured officer-- what puts all the pieces together is history, because history is all about "Getting It Together."" "In 1783, two French brothers called MontgoIfier amazed the world with the first human flight." "By 1800, hot air balloons were the space satellites of the day, doing spy flights and weather watch." "Then, in 1875, a doctor called paul Bayer, interested in why the newly discovered laughing gas sent people unconscious, realized that doing this did too." "Now, surgeons needed to know how to knock people out for specific lengths of time, so paul Bayer started experimenting on high-aItitude baIIoonists, concentrating above all on their consciousness and how they might lose it." "So for seven years, he ran trials on himself to see what the effects of different gases would be, and he discovered that what mattered wasn't how much gas there was but what pressure the gas was at." "So he tried an anesthetic mixture-- five parts laughing gas, one part oxygen at 1 1/2 times atmospheric pressure-- and he went unconscious." "But he came to again, so he was obviously on the right track." "What he needed now was an oxygen-pressure field trial under survival conditions at high altitude." "Bayer sent up a couple of volunteers carrying bags filled with oxygen to breathe when the high altitude caused them to start to black out, and it worked." "well, half worked." "The one guy who went ahead and did it came back to a tumultuous reception." "Bayer now had all the data he needed to go ahead and invent anesthetic gas and take the world of surgery to new heights of expertise, the prospect of which was, for his colleagues in the medical profession of the time," "music to the ears." "meanwhile, back to the MontgoIfier brothers." "One day in 1795, one of them, Joseph MontgoIfier, had a great idea for upgrading the royal amusements, which, amazing as it seems, you're looking at:" "the VersaiIIes water gardens, hydraulic engineering back then being the Iast word in gee-whizzery." "Now, you're not going to believe this, but back then, the way aristocrats had fun was by squirting water about, so MontgoIfier's idea fitted right in." "It worked just like this toy." "You compress air so that it builds up behind a water reservoir, and then when you release the water, this happens." "MontgoIfier compressed his air by dipping the whole contraption in a stream." "The faster the stream, the more it compressed the air, the harder it rammed the water, so he called it his hydraulic ram-- just the thing for irrigation, canals, water gardens, fountains, and squirting aristocrats." "Ho, ho." "50 years later, MontgoIfier's water squirter sets in train something rather boring." "See, mid-19th century, the king of Sardinia, who happens also to be king of a Iot of northern italy, decides it's high time he does something about his province of Savoy, stuck on the wrong-- that is, the north side" "of the alps." "And besides, the entire European railway system and most of the roads stop at the alps, depriving the king of lots of lovely tourist money." "So in 1857, they started boring a tunnel under the alps." "The work involved standing around while people hand-driIIed holes for explosives and blew them up." "Then you dug." "15 inches of tunnel a day was all they could manage, until the chief engineer brought in a version of MontgoIfier's hydraulic ram to compress air for pneumatic drills, and they started doing 15 feet a day." "The breakthrough handshake came on Christmas Day 1870, and it was champagne all round." "Cutting through mountains became even more fun when somebody invented dynamite, so by the turn of the century, there were three tunnels under the alps and a new luxury way to get to istanbul... on the Orient Express." "Now, by an extraordinary irony, the three chief engineers building all three tunnels died of heart attacks, the irony being that the nitroglycerin they were using could have saved them." "See, before dynamite, the main use for nitroglycerine was as medication to relieve the symptoms of a heart condition, because in one form, nitrogIycerine opens up the constricted blood vessels that can lead to a heart attack." "There was one other less drastic medical use for nitro." "It was discovered that handling dynamite every day could give you what was understatedIy known by doctors at the time as a dynamite headache, relieved by taking nitrogIycerine... until, that is, things took a turn for the botanical." "This little plant is called meadowsweet, and back in 1835, a French chemist had extracted some stuff from it called acetyIsaIicyIic acid." "Found out it wouId cure headaches, but the process took so long, he gave up." "Anyway, the botanical name for meadowsweet is spiraea ulmaria." "Now, a few years later, when every German chemist was going nuts trying to extract anything they could find from the new wondergunk throwaway by-product of gaslight: coal tar." "One of them came across a chemical called phenol, with which you could artificially make acetyIsaIicyIic acid quick and fast, so he made up a name for it." ""A" for acetylsalicylic acid," ""s-p-i-r" from the botanical name for meadowsweet, and nobody knows why he chose the Iast two letters, "i-n."" "And that's why aspirin is called aspirin." "From 1899, when aspirin first went on the market, headaches would never be dynamite again." "meanwhile, don't forget the name of the chemical it came from:" "phenol." "The other name for phenol was carboIic acid, and it got a surgeon called Lister all excited because it apparently disinfected cows, so in 1867, Lister tried dabbing it on his patients, and it worked." "For the first time, a surgeon could make an incision and be pretty sure he wouldn't be committing murder." "By1871 , Lister was squirting carboIic acid all over his hospital, thus giving every British surgeon from then on the chance to kick off any operation with that immortal gag, "Let us spray."" "Then in 1893, a German engineer picked up this spray idea-- you probably don't know him-- name of Maybach-- working with a better-known fellow called DaimIer, whose sales chief had a daughter, whose name you certainly do know:" "Mercedes." "Maybach put the spray carburetor he invented into the car named after the girl." "The carburetor basically jets a fine spray of air and gasoline into the cylinder, where a spark plug explodes the mixture, and the explosion drives the cylinder piston up and down." "This up-and-down is converted to round-and-round, thus moving the car wheels and anything else that needs to turn at high speed," "like the turbine fans inside the engine of the police chopper, spinning on a blast of air, superheated by a spray of burning fuel, driving the rotors, and keeping the aircraft in the air." "So the chopper is here, thanks to the string of events that started back with anesthetic gas." "Remember?" "Okay." "This chopper's run by computer." "Now, the reason the computer was available to work out this entire SWAT scenario, one reason the computer exists at all, is because one day in August 1949, this happened." "The U.S.S.R. detonated their first nuclear bomb." "The shocked American response was to set up an entire new defense system, stretching the full length of the northern coastline of alaska and Canada-- a chain of over 50 radar stations called the Distant early Warning Line," "that from the beginning, gave them four hours' notice of the arrival of any Soviet atomic bombers and then, as the system became more advanced, several minutes' warning of an intercontinental ballistic missile impact." "The signals from all the radar stations in the network were transmitted in real time to the new command and control center and to Cheyenne Mountain in colorado, where massive IBM computers analyzed every incoming track, identified the enemy planes," "and automatically guided fighters to a descent." "There was one other bunch of people with the same level of vigilant concern for what was going on in America's skies at the time:" "American airlines." "only their particular concern wasn't so much what a plane was as who was on it..." "or, rather, wasn't, because it was becoming painfully clear that airline reservation systems just weren't fast enough to keep up with the rapidly rising customer demand for tickets." "Fascinating thing about it is that an operator can access" "And then one day in the spring of 1953, a senior sales representative from IBM happened to be on an American airlines flight from Los angeles to New York." "In the next seat was a chap who turned out to be the airline's president." "When both men discovered they were both called Smith, they got into conversation." "It may have been one of the more meaningful conversations on an airplane ever because of the way it affected virtually everything here in the modern world, because it didn't take those two men back there long to realize that what IBM was doing for national air defense" "linking a network of stations thousands of miles apart, synthesizing massive amounts of data from all those different locations, making it available to anybody with a terminal, acting on their instructions, and doing all that in real time" "was, back in 1953, just what an airline reservation system needed to be able to do if it were to be ready for the jet age of the '60s." "well, great." "Let me get my people from Santa Monica together, and we'II set up" "They agreed to take things further." "30 days later, IBM made a proposal." "After nine years of development, the new Saber Reservation System, as it was called, was up and running." "Before Saber, going fIat-out, it used to take you 90 minutes to book a seat." "From 1962 on, you could book your seat and anything else you wanted for the flight, as you can today, in a few seconds." "So as soon as you get your dates set, give us a call back." "We'II be happy to help you." "Today, Saber handles over 1 million passenger names every 24 hours, it processes 900 million telephone calls a week, sends 4,000 reservations messages every second, and deals with every other aspect of the airline's business at the same time." "But the real reason an airline reservation system changed everything and generated places like this was because what Saber had done was to bring the computer out of the military arena into the business world in a major way for the first time" "and show the business world the tremendous potential of what the computer could do for it." "So today, all over the world, places like this exist because of that one chance meeting on a flight in 1953." "Round trip or one way?" "You're going out at 1 :51 in the morning." "The time difference will get you there at 1 :35 in the afternoon into Newbury, and you will arrive in Chicago here at 5:35 in the afternoon, and you'II be departing at 10:35 in the morning." "Thank you for calling American." "Bye-bye." "See, back in 1798, napoleon invaded Egypt, and as soldiers have done throughout history, after awhile, his men started sending home souvenirs-- in this case, the Kashmir shawls that the Egyptians were importing from India." "The shawls were traditionally made as marriage gifts, and they often took months to weave." "They were supposed to be so fine, they would go through a wedding ring, and the patterns were copies of ancient fertility symbols." "Anyway, fertility aside, the fashion caught on in Britain, where it kicked off a whole new textile industry in a place in scotland called PaisIey, where they started to turn out cheap cotton and wool imitation Kashmir shawls" "for the lower end of the market." "As a matter of fact, if you happen to own a paisley pattern tie or scarf, that's where the pattern got its name." "Anyway, in 1890, these Indian weavers head their products on to the American market." "That same year, a young engineer called Herman HoIIerith happened to be working on the U.S. census, and he was desperate for an automated way to count people." "Now, his brother-in-Iaw happened to be in textiles, and he told him about a new loom going around that would do Kashmir shawl patterns automatically." "It worked a bit like this:" "You take a piece of paper and put a pattern of holes in it, a bit like this pianoIa roll." "Okay, you set up a bunch of wire hooks on springs, and you'd push the whole lot against the paper." "Where there's a hole, a hook goes through and hooks up a particular thread-- the particular thread you want for that particular part of the pattern, all of which makes weaving even the most complex stuff like this" "a piece of cake." "Back in the States," "HoIIerith used the idea of holes in paper to represent every kind of census data the government wanted." "If you were a male married carpenter from Oshkosh, you got a male hole, a married hole, a carpenter hole, and an Oshkosh hole." "Okay, you pushed a sprung, electrified set of wires against this card." "Just like the Kashmir Ioom, if there was a hole, the wire went through." "It made an electrical contact on the other side;" "the signal worked an electric counter that added up the population." "Did it so successfully," "HoIIerith went on to set up a business that later changed its name to international Business Machines." "Now, the guy on the Ieft here, a fellow called James Powers, was HoIIerith's partner, and he designed a machine that would use the holes in the card to represent numbers for bills, inventory data, balance sheet totals," "sales reports, that kind of stuff." "But the link to the SWAT exercise going on throughout this program was how you put the holes in the card." "With a ten-key punch like this one." "I wonder if the design of those keys she's punching might remind you of something else you find in an office..." "like a typewriter?" "That's why, in 1927," "Powers took his idea to the Rand Company, the biggest office equipment outfit in America, selling over 4,000 office products, from card indexes to typewriters." "They'd bought a company that made typewriters." "The typewriter had been invented in 1867 by a fellow called ShoIes, who'd based it on the idea of piano keys." "Anyway, in 1873, he took his prototype to a company called Remington, the company Rand would end up buying." "And by 1888, they couldn't keep up with demand." "Now, Remington had bought the typewriter pattern from ShoIes just after the civil War, when they were looking around for something else to do with the machine tools in their factories." "During the war, the machine tools had been making something very different from typewriters." "And it was something that brings us back for the Iast time to the SWAT exercise, because..." "Remington had previously made the most successful military rifle in the world and sold over a million to armies in Denmark, Sweden, Spain, Egypt, France, and the U.S." "So finally, the weapon in the hands of this SWAT counter sniper here is here because the computer is here." "Okay, the guys indicated he's gonna come out with a weapon, and he's very hostile." "I advised the perimeter that if he comes out with the hostage with a weapon, they have authorization for a diversionary device, and the C.S. has the green light to take a shot." "Okay, another exercise safely concluded, theirs and mine, and as I hope I've shown, with the connections between anesthetics and explosives and engines and guns and computers, and as the SWAT team here would undoubtedly agree," ""Getting it Together" is what it's all about."