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Hardware

Recovering Moldy Electronics? 512

cookiej writes "We just completed having our basement gutted and our house decontaminated from mold. The finished basement is gone, my office floor has been removed as well as 24' of drywall around the base of the room. So, we had a full home theater downstairs along with a couple of computers in the electronics closet that were completely immersed (rainwater, not sewage). We moved them to a sheltered area outside and covered them with a plastic tarp. Since the electronics were off when the water hit them, 1) do I have a chance of recovering them? 2) If so, is there a way to clean them with some sort of liquid bath that would not damage the electronics? and 3) I don't want to bring moldy pieces back in the clean house. How could I decontaminate the electronics themselves, pre-bath? Not looking to save the speakers, just the amp, DirecTV box, video switch, etc. Thanks for any help, here, Slashdot." Read on for more details of this reader's plight.

Comment Re:Hyrid system worked best for me (Score 1) 171

You're completely right. I've done the same thing and it allowed me to separate the software developers from the build process. By separating the definitions from the build engines, I've made it so that developers can't run amok on the build targets. I also saw that same performance gains and gained some more by using the winkin utliity of Rational's clearmake. As well, the developers can concentrate on programming and not on learning a whole new build file syntax.

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