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Comment My Model M keyboards (Score 1) 338

Of course, some of us love the old Model M keyboard. I do, and I have four of them in reasonably heavy use.

I also have a computer with an Intel motherboard that uses RIMM memory. That's being a web server, so I can't nuke it yet; but when the next power supply fails (I have two that I've been swapping and repairing -- the RIMM motherboards used a funky 6-pin connector where the modern ATX uses the PCI-4 or PCI-8 connector) it will be time to start looking for a replacement. The machine I used until just recently for my home development, though, is even older -- a Pentium IV 1.6GHz without even hyperthreading.

I do have a Windows 98 machine with a SCSI card that I'm putting back on line so that I can play Riven from the deck of five CDs... SCSI lets me have four external CD drives.

And there's no point putting a perfectly good 100Base-T switch on the raw output from my "broadband" connection, as it peaks at 2.5Mbps; while I had to retire the 80's era 10BaseT hub that I used for that when its fans failed, I am using a 90's era 8-port 10BaseT hub for that now.

Comment Re:Thiophane (Score 1) 179

Here in BC a building exploded from a natural gas leak some ten+ years ago. The leak was not in the building but some distance away, and the gas traveled through the soil to reach the building. This was a well-used building, yet nobody noticed the mercaptan smell. Gas company experts concluded that in its passage through the soil, the marker compounds got stripped from the gas by the same process that makes gas chromatography work -- larger molecules are slowed by passage through what was effectively a packed column.

Not saying this is what's happening in Boston; I'm not there, I don't know. But it is possible. I suspect that something similar may have happened in that neighbourhood in Cali that blew up due to an undetected gas leak -- last year was it?

Sleep tight...

Comment Re:Worthy Cause: Education (Score 1) 291

Who says computers donated to this place are "old"?

Typically, these people get computers that have been in the school system for a couple years and are physically abused. School kids don't treat school computers very well. Electronically they are still sound, and recent in enough cases that DDR3 is a serious option. Granted, they also get rafts of (relatively) ancient computers from businesses, but the update / recycle of school machines that have only suffered physical damage is, as far as I understand it, still a pretty big part of their job.

Comment Worthy Cause: Education (Score 5, Informative) 291

I don't know where OP is from, but in BC, Canada, there is a group called Computers For Schools BC, who are in the (government-funded) business of taking old computers and buffing them up for use in the school system. I suspect they would be pleased to receive something as close to current as 4GB DDR3... and they do enough volume that 500 of them would likely be used up in a month.

Comment Started with Debian (Score 1) 867

Debian would run on the Alpha machine I was playing with at the time. Shortly after that I got a Fedora distro running on a second machine. That combination stayed with me until the Alpha died, and the next install, one I actually had to do real work with, was Ubuntu. I did a number of Ubuntu installs but got fed up, and now new installs are Mint. I have three Fedora, one Ubuntu, and one Mint under my direct control right now, and I am about to bring up a second Mint box for gaming -- thank you Humble Bundle.
Science

Submission + - Bill Gates to help China build traveling wave nucl (yahoo.com)

BabaChazz writes: Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates says he is in discussions with China to jointly develop a new kind of nuclear reactor. During a talk at China's Ministry of Science & Technology Wednesday, the billionaire said: "The idea is to be very low cost, very safe and generate very little waste." Gates backs Washington-based TerraPower, which is developing a nuclear reactor that can run on depleted uranium.

TerraPower is a spinoff from Nathan Myhrvold's Intellectual Ventures.

We've discussed traveling wave reactors earlier: http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/11/03/21/2312211/a-new-class-of-nuclear-reactors
http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/10/03/23/1323204/bill-gates-may-build-small-nuclear-reactor

Comment Re:Deliberately behind the times (Score 1) 362

This client is not keen on having executables increase in size by 125% (e.g. from 500k to 1125k). We have warned them that this will result in a program that is hard to maintain as the tools become superannuated, and they have agreed that if issues develop, they will cover our costs of rebuilding on a more modern platform to get assistance from MS, but that they will then want the fix back-propagated. It is something to do with the size of their distribution media, I believe. While CD-ROM has been pretty much superseded by DVD-ROM, there doesn't seem to be a lot on the pipeline larger than 4.7GB.

It's more "The client will pay for his decision."

Comment Re:Deliberately behind the times (Score 1) 362

No, they use SLM, which IMHO is only slightly better than VSS, and which seems, according to MS devs, to have as its sole advantage over VSS that it is CLI only and does not suffer the slowdowns of the visual windowed interface.

Not to say I am a rabid VSS supporter; I have considered switching. As with any system, of course, there is the cost of switching -- how much does it cost to import ten plus years of VSS data? If it could be done, I'd definitely be interested in switching to something better supported (read: FOSS)...

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