Search results

  1. J

    The Nehalem Preview: Anandtech

    Putting aside the environmental aspects of lower power processors, I'd like to see them for the ease of cooling. It would be nice to have multi-core processors running at a decent clock speed, but dissipating 10 watts or less. That means passive cooling would be possible. Couple that with a...
  2. J

    Beijing Olympics

    I agree that NBCs coverage stinks. If you didn't know any better you would think all the Olympics had was beach volleyball, swimming, diving, and gymnastics. It's a pity one of the big networks has to have a virtual monoploy on coverage. That being said, it is exactly the fact that I see most of...
  3. J

    Opting out of Internet Advertising

    Not to mention that in general when a product needs heavy advertising to sell it's proably a case of a company trying to sell what they feel like making as opposed to what the consumer wants. Good products sell themselves via word of mouth.
  4. J

    TWC RoadRunner Speed Boost?

    I'm not bragging about anything. I just wanted to see if anyone on TWC was getting more than the advertised 16 Mbs. By the way, my service was down most of yesterday. When it came back I did a few more bandwidth tests. Best result was 26695 Kbps. I read up a little more about so-called...
  5. J

    TWC RoadRunner Speed Boost?

    It was the original one on mine also until I refreshed the page.
  6. J

    TWC RoadRunner Speed Boost?

    No, just standard which was recently bumped from 10 to 16 Mbps. This surpised me because prior to the most recent speed bump I was getting just under 10 Mbps late nights (and usually less other times). Now I'm getting 20+ Mbps late nights. Maybe they just opened the pipe all the way, figuring it...
  7. J

    TWC RoadRunner Speed Boost?

    After getting in the area of 10 Mbps for the last year or so I had heard RoadRunner bumped the speed to 16 Mbs. Turns out I'm even getting a bit more than that: Anyone else experiencing similar speeds now?
  8. J

    Dimmable CFL Floodlights for Recessed Lighting

    What wattage were you using? The regular 14 watt ones are actually smaller than an incandescent lamp in many cases. I think Home Depot also carries these. They look like a regular bulb. The downside is that they're only available in up to 14 watts, and likely use the same slow-starting amalgam...
  9. J

    Nichia Develops 60 Lumen Per Watt White LED

    Don't know about Osram but there are generally about six months to 1 year in between a lab announcement and actual product with Cree. The GE outdoor lighting sounds exciting: "The GE outdoor LED area light improves visibility and quality of light versus standard HID systems by providing a...
  10. J

    Dimmable CFL Floodlights for Recessed Lighting

    One interesting difference between the regular and downlight type CFLs besides the longer starting time is the lumens. The 14 watt warm white downlights are 640 lumens. The regular 14 watt soft whites are 900 lumens. The losses are undoubtedly due to the reflector and the enclosure but it can be...
  11. J

    Dimmable CFL Floodlights for Recessed Lighting

    No, I was referring to their 4-packs of standard 14 watt spirals. Our local Home Depot usually has them. They would work just fine in a downlight also although you might lose some lumens compared to a CFL with a reflector. They look like this:
  12. J

    Cool robot

    Won't do anything for the smell however. If this smells as bad as the gas tools the local gardeners use I wouldn't want to be anywhere within 100 feet. Cool robot though. Am I the only one thinking it would look and sound like a giant mosquito if you added another pair of legs, wings, and a long...
  13. J

    Dimmable CFL Floodlights for Recessed Lighting

    Yes, the downlight type CFLs usually use a mercury amalgam to better deal with the temperatures. It's also better for fixtures with frequent starting. The downside is the long warmup time. The 4 pack of 14 watt CFLs I had recommended has no such problem. They come to about 75% brightness pretty...
  14. J

    Looking for power bricks

    MPJA has a whole bunch. You need 12 volts and I'd say around 4 amps. This one might do.
  15. J

    Dimmable CFL Floodlights for Recessed Lighting

    That might be a timer of some sort. Either way, so long as the circuit doesn't use an electronic switch then a CFL should be OK. If you hear a click right before the lamps go off then it's using a mechanical relay and all is well. It it's totally silent then it might be using a triac. This may...
  16. J

    Dimmable CFL Floodlights for Recessed Lighting

    Tim, if you get fairly low wattage CFLs (i.e. 13 or 14 watt which is equivalent to 60 watt incandescent), then it shouldn't be a problem in your open fixtures. Home Depot has a great line of n:vision CFLs. I have a pair of 14 watt ones operating in a totally enclosed fixture with no problems. It...
  17. J

    End of the World As We Know It

    No, I'm against people feeling they're entitled to live in a certain way just because artificial factors have made that way of life possible in the past. The era of cheap energy and sprawl is coming to a close. There's just no way the free markets you love can sustain it. Government shouldn't...
  18. J

    End of the World As We Know It

    You're 100% right but hasn't the model for business in the US in the last decade been "private profit, public risk"? When you have companies like Walmart who actually tell their employees how to get Medicaid and welfare subsidies instead of paying them a living wage, well, you don't think other...
  19. J

    End of the World As We Know It

    Speaking of socialism, you conveniently left out a few socialist aspects of government which you probably benefit from: 1) The home mortgage interest deduction is effectively the government paying part of your mortgage interest in the form of reduced taxes. If a similar break was available to...
  20. J

    SSDs - State of the Product?

    Price parity I'd say within two years for notebook drives, perhaps 3 to 5 for desktop drives. I'd be willing to pay a 50% premium at this point for SSD, and I'm cheap. I imagine there would be a huge market even at 100% premium. Let's not forgot hard drives were once $300 items even on the low...
  21. J

    World's Worst Software

    Flash without a doubt takes the cake. It may fail your second criteria sometimes, but I say it's still bad doing what it's designed to do because animated .gifs and scripting can be made to do practically the same thing. Now that I've been on broadband for a few years I've almost forgotten how...
  22. J

    The Toyota you Don't Know...

    Honestly, those conditions are no worse than many jobs I've worked. 80 hours a month overtime is 20 hours per week. I did that and more for months at a time. That engineer probably had health issues which would have killed him even with a 40 hour week. Besides that, on all of the jobs I had I...
  23. J

    Luxim develops 140 lumen per watt plasma lightbulb

    I saw this a while back. Seems to be geared more towards streetlighting/warehouse light than home lighting due to the enormous output (not that I wouldn't mind one in my workroom ;) ). I wonder if it can be scaled down to a 20 to 50 watt size more appropriate for home lighting without losing...
  24. J

    Best Present for 1st time builder

    I think the case/PSU is the best thing to give her if you can convince her to upgrade. A good case can last forever, and the PSU is arguably the most important part of the computer. I use the Lian-Li PC-60 on all my builds along with a Seasonic high-PFC power supply. It probably adds over $100...
  25. J

    U.S. is still most obese country in the world

    Actually, BMI between 25 and 29.9 is considered overweight. BMI>30 is obese, or "obeast" as my late father used to pronounce it. Still, point taken-Americans are the fattest people on Earth, but the EU is catching up.
  26. J

    Big Brother commeth...

    You ever think this bill will even see the light of day? The cost of compliance would put most small retailers out of business.
  27. J

    America's suburban dream?

    Here is another interesting read on the subject. What is really happening is inevitable. Think about it for a while. Suburban living is basically spread out living, but with infrastructure close to the standards of a more densely populated city. A mile of sewer pipe or electrical line or road...
  28. J

    It's HOT

    Just taken a few minutes ago: Humidity is at or near 100% as well. Probably feels like 120°F. :( I almost got heat stroke just opening the door.
  29. J

    Something Random

    Are they using incandescent lighting in the trains or just in the stations? Honestly, I'm surprised they're still using it at all. NYC has been using fluoro in the trains since the R10 in 1948, and in most of the stations since the 1970s/early 1980s. From my childhood I remember the D line when...
  30. J

    Why C.A.F.E Standards are Dumb

    Actually it doesn't quite work that way. Our house naturally holds about 20 to 30 °F above the outside temperature due to solar heating, body heat, and electrical appliances. As a general rule we don't need to heat until the outside temperatures drop under about 45° to 50°F. Even if it's 20°F...
  31. J

    Why C.A.F.E Standards are Dumb

    Yeah, a Mr. Fusion would be nice but there is such a thing now. It's called the electric car and electric train. A nuclear power plant generates the energy which charges the car's battery, or in the case of the train powers the catenary from which it draws it's power. And yes, at the current...
  32. J

    Pharmacy industry's manipulation of the public

    Besides the problems I mentioned, simple lack of money prevents access to medical care if you're unisured like I am. My income is low enough to qualify for EIC. You do the math. I can neither afford medical insurace nor can I pay out of pocket. I don't qualify for any of the insurance programs...
  33. J

    Pharmacy industry's manipulation of the public

    It works for me but here's a link to an article on Yahoo News about the same study.
  34. J

    Pharmacy industry's manipulation of the public

    I doubt I've even close to that number, and I'm 18 years older than you are. The only prescription drug I recall taking was penicillin/amoxicillin when I had root canals done. Very occasionally I'll take an OTC cold/fever remedy if aspirin doesn't work. In a way it's a blessing that I react...
  35. J

    Pharmacy industry's manipulation of the public

    Really disturbing article: Over half of Americans on chronic medicines Now I can understand an unfortunate person with a chronic genetically caused condition or injury of some sort needing medication, but according to the article a lot of these medications are simply used to counter an...
  36. J

    Nichia Develops 60 Lumen Per Watt White LED

    Not really. You have to put them on every train for starters. That makes it way more expensive. Electronic equipement and trains don't mix due to the huge amount of RFI generated by the motors. And many tunnels might not make decent projection screens. This is especially true in NYC where you...
  37. J

    Global Overpopulation: The gorrila in the room?

    In essence supporting a person takes neither air nor water nor food because all of those can be recycled indefinitely given an arbitrarily advanced technology and a certain amount of energy. Energy is really the only external input life of any sort requires. On a global scale, that's exactly...
  38. J

    Dell's Eco bamboo PC, lol!

    Put a P4 in that thing and you have a heat source to make a bamboo steamer(shown in right of picture). Now your PC can both be eco-friendly and heat up lunch/dinner at the same time. BTW, my next door neighbor has been growing bamboo on his front lawn. It's actually a pretty plant...
  39. J

    Something Random

    Ironically, poison Western culture results in the premature deterioration of bodies but the ability to keep one around in a not so great state for 20 or 30 years. I'm sure money is the motive. Hospitals don't make money off healthy people or dead people. The idea is to first start the downward...
  40. J

    Mileage, Safety, Affordability: Pick Two

    See here. "California Vehicle Code: "No person operating any motor vehicle or bicycle shall wear any headset covering, or any earplugs in, both ears. The prohibition of this section does not apply to any of the following..." Exceptions include hearing aids." I can understand the reasoning...
  41. J

    Something Random

    That's the nature of having a small group unfortunately. I've already met a few locals from CPF but then again their membership is in the tens of thousands. Anyway, if you're ever in NYC give me a holler.
  42. J

    Mileage, Safety, Affordability: Pick Two

    The problem in a word is aerodynamics. See here for an interesting discussion. Somewhere along the line car makers suddenly decided to make boxes. Mentioned in the article was someone who put some aerodynamic add-ons to a Honda Civic EX, boosting the mileage from 40 mpg to 70 mpg in the process...
  43. J

    Mileage, Safety, Affordability: Pick Two

    There's talk of using hydrogen as an energy storage medium for home electrical generation. The reason this might work is because solar panels currently aren't very efficient. If a process can be found to allow solar energy to dissociate water into hydrogen and oxygen more efficiently than...
  44. J

    Mileage, Safety, Affordability: Pick Two

    The problem with hydrogen is the inefficiencies inherent in the process. You get far less energy using the hydrogen in a fuel cell than you spend making it. I think you only get out about one-third of what you put in. Grid electricity charging a battery is way more efficient (I think overall...
  45. J

    Mileage, Safety, Affordability: Pick Two

    Because money talks-the same wonderful companies which sell us gasoline also have their hands in coal and natural gas. Why do you think those two things are being pushed heavily? And why do you think there is a push for fuel cells and the so-called "hydrogen highway"? Same reason-centralized...
  46. J

    Mileage, Safety, Affordability: Pick Two

    What's really interesting is that it is real problem here is not one of engineering, but rather of legislation and societal expectations. I can illustrate this best by comparing the US and Japanese expectations and design philosophies regarding railways. The same line of thought has carried over...
  47. J

    Nichia Develops 60 Lumen Per Watt White LED

    I have seen LED bulbs using Crees which give in excess of 60 lm/W. However, all of these are 12VDC based MR16 lamps, not 120VAC GU10s. Dimmability has to be built in to the bulb. I suspect most bulbs these days aren't dimmable. Like I've said many times, LED isn't quite there yet for home...
  48. J

    Something Random

    It depends where in the country you live. By NYC or LA standards at best she's average. I see loads of people who look better just walking down any random street in Manhattan or Flushing, or going on the subway. Just about all my female friends in HS were better looking. My sister at nearly 44...
  49. J

    Something Random

    Amen to that! They would have to pay me $1000 an hour to do anything with her. What a disappointment to find out that's what Spitzer ruined his career over. At least if she was drop-dead gorgeous I might understand a little. This guy was smart enough to get 1590 on his SAT and dumb enough to...
  50. J

    Nichia Develops 60 Lumen Per Watt White LED

    This came up on CPF a month ago. Bottom line is they're talking about a luminous efficacy of 300 lm/W, or in other words the efficiency of the emitted spectrum, not the luminous efficiency, or lumens out per watt of power in. A typical white LED actually has a luminous efficacy of about 330...
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