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"In WWII, they had a saying that there are no atheists in foxholes. I think the modern equivalent of that is that there are no jaded, bored people in the high-tech industry, in the land of really good hardcore geeks."
- Neal Stephenson

Flight Stick  
  A kind of flying device.  

Niven enjoys his plays-on-words; pilots will enjoy the reference to a "flight stick".

The flight stick was a lift-field generator and power source built into five feet of pole, with a control ring at one end, a brush discharge at the other, and a bucket seat and seat belt in the middle. Compact even for Svetz's age, the flight stick was spin-off from the spaceflight industries.
But it still weighed thirty pounds with the motor off. Getting it out of the clamps took all his strength. Svetz felt queasy, very queasy.

He straddled the flight stick and twisted the control knob on the fore end. The stick lifted under him, and he wriggled into place on the bucket seat. He twisted the knob further.

He drifted upward like a toy balloon.

Technovelgy from Get a Horse!, by Larry Niven.
Published by Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1969
Additional resources -

Compare to the broomstick speeder from Waldo (1942) by Robert Heinlein.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from Get a Horse!
  More Ideas and Technology by Larry Niven
  Tech news articles related to Get a Horse!
  Tech news articles related to works by Larry Niven

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