Four senior clerks in the central pulpit are collecting the future
weather as fast as it is being computed, and despatching it by
pneumatic carrier to a quiet room. There it will be coded and
telephoned to the radio transmitting station.
Messengers carry piles of used computing forms down to a storehouse in
the cellar.
In a neighbouring building there is a research department, where they
invent improvements. But these is much experimenting
on a small scale before any change is made in the complex routine of
the computing theatre. In a basement an enthusiast is
observing eddies in the liquid lining of a huge spinning bowl, but so
far the arithmetic proves the better way. In another
building are all the usual financial, correspondence and
administrative offices. Outside are playing fields, houses, mountains
and lakes, for it was thought that those who compute the weather
should breathe of it freely. "
(Chapitre 11/2, pages 219-220)