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Comment Re:Made in China ? (Score 4, Interesting) 176

Hopefully this strip is not made in China I'm crossing my fingers

According to the link from cryptome than an AC has provided further down here, the hardware is indeed mostly made in China. What makes this US made to the satisfaction of the government is that the software that makes this thing what it is, is made in the US, replacing all the original code.

This document goes on at length about how that can be. As an EE, not a lawyer, I found the information that the "brain" is a SheevaPlug to be more interesting.

Comment Re:So much for definitions... (Score 1) 241

Actually, the main difference between fog and clouds is a matter of location: If you're looking at it from the outside it is a cloud; if you are inside it is fog.

As a buzzword this seems very similar to the nebulous definition that .NET had about 10 years ago -- it was supposed to do everything but no-one could explain exactly what it was or how it was supposed to do it.

Comment Repurposing (Score 1) 309

Re-puposing sounds better than hoarding, though there are elements of that too. Machines and devices that still work are kept, even if they are obsolete. Things that don't work and there is no point in repairing them have power supplies, memory chips, sometimes power transistors, relays, or connectors, removed and the remainder goes in the recycling pile. Dead hard disks are taken apart and the motors, bearings, and platters are used for some other project. Even if this just stays a bunch of related parts in a box for a couple years...

I don't usually throw out things that work, or are sufficiently valuablet that I one day will get around to fixing them.

Of course, eventually all the old machines running various server jobs around the house and yard fail and have to be replaced, so there is a gradual attrition of the oldest machines, typically 486s or early Pentiums capable of running at least some Linux 2.2 or 2.4 variant. Old Slackware or Red Hat systems typically, are nice and light-weight. Of course, in these days of Picotux, Gumstix, and Raspberry Pi, these dinosaurs have only the fact that they aren't broke and thus need no fixing going for them.

And new old machinery always arrive when family members discard machines that still have some good life left in them, or there is something nice available at the junk-auctions of the radio-amateurs club.

Ashtead

Comment Re:Most people don't travel or do business so glob (Score 1) 990

Over here, we say "0.4" for the drink of that size (many places sell beer in 0.4 L glasses) or the traditional 0.5L, the "half-liter" literally. Then there's the "0.6" for the thirstier people... none of this gets to be any more complicated than the "pint" or "cup". The latter is for coffee only, and comes in various sizes, so it isn't really quantified.

Comment Re:Carpentry (Score 1) 2288

A10, M10 one millimeter apart? I'd rather use existing colloquialisms like "two by four" (even if the material in question actually measures 48 mm by 98 mm). Like for pipe threads, the size has become more of a label identifying the standard size rather than the measurement of the size itself, what with 1/2 inch pipes being closer to an actual 3/4 inch or 20 mm... Besides, M10 is already used as a designation for 10 mm threads of various pitches: M10 x 1.5 is the regular coarse thread, M10 x 1.25 is finer, and M10 x 1 is another, even finer pitch commonly used with light sockets, faucets, and brake line connectors.

Which reminds me, the purported metrication of iron pipe and standard pipe threads is bad enough. We still talk about 1/2 inch, 3/8 inch and so on, sizes of pipe threads, even if the external diameters are larger than that (1/2 inch pipe thread is nearly 20 mm in diameter) but lately the catalogs are advertising these in the style of R20, R25, R32 -- the number after the R being some approximate value of millimeters from the original inches, R20 being 3/4 inch pipe threads for example, which are about 24 mm outside diameter. At least, copper pipes has been metric for years, with sizes from 8mm and up, and the size label is the same as the actual size.

I have seen a renovation job done in a 100 year old house, where some rotten joists had to be replaced. These were original "2 by 4" as in actually measuring 51 mm by 102 mm. The replacements were made from the next larger standard size material, and no need to depend on the stores having the old sizes.

Comment Re:Pretty cool... (Score 1) 141

Kleinhenz, who are making the picotux, have had a server crash apparantly, according to http://www.kleinhenz.com/

Not sure if one could get Qt going on the Picotux however, besides, the startup time there is about 90 seconds from poweron to the time the busybox banner and prompt appears on the serial console.

The equipment shown in the featured blog is identified as a Renesas MS7724 development board. It has quite a lot more peripherals.

Comment 1986-09-03 file T.PAS (Score 1) 375

This is one of my early efforts in Turbo Pascal, a program to convert temperature values between the Fahrenheit, Celsius, and Kelvin scales.

There might still be some 5.25 inch floppy disk lying around here somewhere, with some BASIC code from the lab PCs dating from 1984; and I do have some printouts of FORTRAN IV code that I wrote back in 1981 or so, but this is the oldest file that I still could find.

Comment Cars, then fiber internet, after everything else. (Score 1) 637

Last to go would be the car insurance

Second last to go would be the high-speed internet connection which also includes a landline-style phone.

Third last would be the Mobile phone and data: I don't use the mobile phone for data connections, so can easily do without paying for that.

As for the rest:

Health insurance: provided by the government around here, it is paid in as a part of taxes.

Gym membership: I am not a member of any gym. I have a pre-paid card that allows me a dozen trips to the municipal swimming pool, during the summer there are plenty of lakes and beaches that are available. Once the twelve visits are completed and the card is empty, it may be re-charged as and when necessary. No charges unless it is actualy used.

Current account with non-pharma drug provider: Not applicable either, unless we're talking about the Eurodiet stuff, but as of now, if push really comes to shove, some specific items from the grocery store can be easily substituted. And this doesn't cost anything unless I put in orders for more food anyways, in the same way as with the swimming pool.

Birth control pill prescription: That would be for the other 50% of the audience...

NPR membership: Not applicable here; there is the TV license thing, that they charge twice a year, if anything that would be the first to go. It is supposed to be non-political, but the place is full of socialists anyways -- I'd like to talk with the tax people, to have this deducted as an expense for supporting a political entity. There is such a deduction for union membership fees that ought to be able to be used for arguing this as well. But come crunch time, buh-bye TV and associated license

Comment Different conventions probably (Score 1) 1

Money is apparently not standardized by SI.

The financial people also seem to like to use the single quote for "thousand" and B or b for "billion" I've noticed. I've also seen lower-case variants m or mm for "million" making it look more like 1/1000, millimeters or meters.

Makes for hard reading when being used to SI prefixes, where case differences of the letter M can mean a 10^9 difference of the value.

Comment Put a roof over it or something? (Score 5, Interesting) 478

One wonders how much it would take to put some kind of roofing over the most vulnerable exterior equipment. Something like corrugated tin on a steel frame or whatever.

Or maybe a roof over the cafeteria and the rubbish bins, so that birds can't just come and steal baguettes.

I've never heard of such deleterious effects of a bird dropping anything on outdoor power station switchgear ... what kind of vulnerable kit is this anyways?

Comment Same here (Score 1) 12

I've become used to seeing the messages link on the front page, but that is gone. And it took a while to figure out where the link was; finally I found it somewhere in the Journal area I think. It keeps moving around, but now I've got the link http://slashdot.org/my/inbox stored as a bookmark, so it is possible to go straight in and not having to hunt for where the message-list has gone to.

I'd like to have that information back tho; it can't have been that expensive to keep in the front page? Oh well, maybe the message-list will be re-instated sometime.

And on previewing, it looks like slashdot made a link of the inbox URL above. That's kinda useful.

Comment Re:aftenposten (Score 1) 4

Thanks for the pointers as to where to go looking for the various decoders and suchlike. I did get the DVD playing working to some degree -- but this was definitely non-trivial action.

Aftenposten is a privately owned newspaper, so any lobbying to the government probably doesn't do much about that. Most of the other papers and media use Flash, which does work reasonably well.

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