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  1. J

    Suggest a decent 19" LCD monitor

    I wish my 19" could do 2048x1536. The screen door effect of seeing the individual pixels annoys me. I'd probably still notice them even at 2048x1536, but that's as high as most video cards go. Where are the superresolution displays? What I would really like would be about 4000x3000 in a 21"...
  2. J

    Something Random

    I actually notice the extra tire drag while cycling over recently paved asphalt roads. It takes a few weeks for the asphalt to cure enough so that the tire drag becomes "normal". I do notice even less tire drag on the few local roads which are made of concrete. As a cyclist the main downside to...
  3. J

    Something Random

    Except that capitalism rarely works that way. A lot of success in our society has more to do with knowing the right people, or being in the right place at the right time. I know plenty of people who have busted their butts and are still poor. I personally had to take jobs at $5 an hour at times...
  4. J

    Something Random

    Article about the system. The things you mentioned drive up the cost of roads also. It's an across the board problem with public works projects which needs to be fixed. Mass transit has an additional factor going against it-a strong vested interest by many with influence to make sure it...
  5. J

    Something Random

    And that's pretty much how we arrived where we are. GM et al would buy up trolley (nowadays termed light rail) lines, not maintain them, cut service, etc. Eventually they would shut the line down due to the "poor ridership" which occurred on account of their neglect. They would replace it with...
  6. J

    Something Random

    Thank you, Tim. The numbers for the big dig in Boston are even more obscene. $14.6 billion for 7.5 miles of underground roads. Literally a money pit. All that money spent and the travel times you mentioned are worse than a typical express subway train. Regarding modern subway costs, here's...
  7. J

    Something Random

    This isn't a light rail system. And light rail systems often don't make money because it seems politicians purposely put them in places where they're doomed to failure just to say "we tried and it won't work so let's just keep everyone in their cars." BTW, no form of transportation makes money...
  8. J

    Something Random

    The total output of the locomotives was 25,000 HP, (about double normal) and they were running a much shorter trainset (3 cars instead of 8 or 10). Both things were necessary to reach the speed record. In regular service the locomotives develop 12,000 but only about 8,000 HP of that is needed to...
  9. J

    Something Random

    $20 million and up but that's not much more building a road (and maintenence is less). Speaking of roads, I remember the cost for Boston's big dig was obscene. And the DOT spent something like half a billion on a highway interchange in Texas IIRC. around $20 million 512 per set but two sets...
  10. J

    Something Random

    It may be old news to me as it happened in April but I'm still blown away by the videos. I thought it was kind of funny that they had to use a jet for the aerial shots. Remember that this is not a maglev. It's regular steel wheels on steel rails just like any subway. Same track guage in fact...
  11. J

    Oops I did it again...your BMI?

    I wonder if there's one person who does the voices for all the female reporters. It certainly seems like it. And yes, the "reporter voice" is exceedingly annoying.
  12. J

    Something Random

    Yep, that's exactly how I feel. When I'm in a car with someone driving 75 mph on a long trip I feel bored just watching them drive. I couldn't imagine trying to hold that speed for the whole trip if I were the one driving. And it annoys the engineer in me that the law should require that I do...
  13. J

    Something Random

    Now see why I have no desire to drive? I probably wouldn't be as lucky as you, given that this is your first ticket in 7 years. If I had gotten a license, in all likelihood it would probably have been revoked by now, along with a good amount of jail time, and a nice pile of speeding tickets. I...
  14. J

    Oops I did it again...your BMI?

    Funny but I was thinking the same thing.
  15. J

    Something Random

    The NYC subway opted for radar-based speedometers because they're more accurate and reliable than wheel-driven ones, so, yes, they can be very accurate.
  16. J

    Oops I did it again...your BMI?

    Britney Spears is nouveau riche white trash. Always has been, always will be. Six months of her income and I'd be set for life. What a shame. I don't care to go any place so remote that I need a car to get there, so I'm not limiting my options at all. Besides, you can go a lot more places than...
  17. J

    Oops I did it again...your BMI?

    I'm with you there. This is doubly true for me because I live in the largest city in US. Moving anywhere else would seem boring by comparison. Besides, if it doesn't have a subway or four seasons I wouldn't be interested. I just don't want to get into the expensive hassle of car ownership or...
  18. J

    Seagate owes us money

    Agreed. Giga-anything means one billion or 1,000,000,000. The operating systems have had it wrong for years, and are the ones who should change how they report disk capacity. It all started when software designers started called 1024 bytes a kilobyte because 1024 was close enough to 1000 that...
  19. J

    Oops I did it again...your BMI?

    I remember getting down to 140 after my first semester in college because the food wasn't palatable. That's a BMI of around 20 for my height, and yes, I did look anorexic. I could see my ribs. For me 160 to 165 is ideal, perhaps 170 now that I have more muscle mass. A guy I knew in high school...
  20. J

    Oops I did it again...your BMI?

    5' 9.5" 195-205 lbs My BMI usually hovers right near the line between being overweight and obese but a lot of the weight is due to muscle mass in my legs from years of cycling. That's why computing BMI on the basis of weight and height is a poor method. In truth I am overweight, no denying it...
  21. J

    Should There be a Ban on Incandescent Lamps?

    Actually the loss figures are closer to 20% to 25%, depending upon the fixture. The best T5 linear fixtures using aluminum mirrors only lose about 5% of the light. Don't forget that unless you have a bare CFL hanging from the ceiling there will be fixture losses there also. Let's just say that...
  22. J

    Should There be a Ban on Incandescent Lamps?

    Actually it's around 5800K. Due to the filtering of the atmosphere it appears as roughly 5500K when directly overhead, or as low as about 2500K just before sunset/sunrise. Average appearance is probably around 5000K. The sun appears yellow simply because the sky is blue. It's all a matter of...
  23. J

    Should There be a Ban on Incandescent Lamps?

    Funny but I also see a collector's market for old light bulbs. Obviously nobody who intends to use it will pay $100 for a light bulb. The only reason people still use incandescents is because the initial purchase price is less than the other options. Once they're no longer made the price will...
  24. J

    MAC question

    Basically, that's my take on Apple stuff as well. Sure, very nice industrial design, cool factor, etc. but the price and proprietary everything are the big show stopper. Yes, it looks better, perhaps is made better, but not worth the extra $ for most people. As Merc said, if you want...
  25. J

    Cool App: DOSbox

    Sorry to bump such an old thread but I recently tried version 0.72 available here. My main reason for trying this was because EMM in cmd hasn't been working for some time (I think it happened after I upgraded my video card). My DOS-based PCB CAD program sometimes needs EMM when working on a...
  26. J

    Should There be a Ban on Incandescent Lamps?

    Let's see, 30 hours of constant output runtime on 3AAAs equals about 0.135 watts (assuming that the AAAs are 1200 mAh and average 1.25V). Even if we assume decent LEDs (80 lm/W) and 100% conversion (i.e. no regulator losses), that's at best 10.8 lumens. In practice I'd say it's closer to 5. No...
  27. J

    Should There be a Ban on Incandescent Lamps?

    I think it's bad simply because linear fluorescent is 50% more efficient than CFLs. Besides that, the tubes last anywhere from 3 to 5 times as long, depending upon brand. And when the tube goes bad you just throw away the tube, not the tube along with the entire ballast as with CFLs. It's not...
  28. J

    Samsung makes 64 Gb NAND flash chip

    Actually, isn't that Lumileds you're thinking of? ;) They're the ones who hyped their K2 for months before it was available. When it finally was, it turned out to be a bust. Cree usually delivers production product within 18 months after it first appears in the lab. Same here. SLC are also more...
  29. J

    HD's to supplant SSD flash in <20+yrs? :p

    Interesting. Despite it's present wide-spread use, flash RAM is by no means necessarily the path to the future. Perhaps MRAM or something like this will be used instead. I don't see anything inherent in this technology which necessarily requires a spinning disk, though. I tend to think for...
  30. J

    Should There be a Ban on Incandescent Lamps?

    You're thinking of one specific, rather narrow example of where CFLs don't work particularly well, and forgetting the majority of times where they work just fine. Motion detector lights are not a big consumer of energy overall. They go on for a few minutes, then may be off for hours. Why sweat...
  31. J

    Samsung makes 64 Gb NAND flash chip

    Samsung Electronics revealed that they have made a prototype 64 Gb NAND flash chip using a 30 nm process. Production is expected to start in 2009. The new process promises to improve cost efficiency as well as increase capacity to 8 GB on a single chip. I remember back when 8 GB represented...
  32. J

    Something Random

    That seems like a lot of damage given that you were only at running speed. About 20 years ago I went down after hitting a pothole at 37 mph but didn't suffer near that many injuries. I think I had some road rash on both my knees and one elbow. I was back on the bike next day. It more or less...
  33. J

    Loner beats the odds in auto fuel efficiency

    I agree here 100%. The auto industry is more entrenched than any other industry in history, period, even the railways of the early 1900s (and the robber barons who ran those were notoriously resistant to innovation). Along those lines of thought, GE seems to be showing little interest in LEDs...
  34. J

    Terrapass

    That's really the main value I see in this. The concept of buying carbon credits seems like a shell game to me, but at least getting people to think about this stuff is an important first step in getting them to take action. In truth, I'd also like to see some estimates of the cancer deaths a...
  35. J

    Intel proposes new interface for Flash devices

    Considering that flash RAM cell dimensions are shrinking by a factor of two each year (meaning four times the storage on the same chip), that may come sooner than you think. Today 16GB flash drives are at roughly the same price point as 500 GB hard drives. In 2010, or 3 years time, those same...
  36. J

    Making a 4GB USB drive bootable

    It works with the Win98 system files also. I guess making the drive bootable required a complete reformat rather than just using the sys command. While I'm at it I might as well put a bunch of diagnostic tools on the drive since there's plenty of space left, even with all my digicam pictures...
  37. J

    Making a 4GB USB drive bootable

    Well, I tried the procedure here and it worked with a single FAT32 partition. The HP USB Flash Drive Format Tool used the Windows ME system files. Maybe the Win98 system files just don't work for whatever arcane reason? I don't care either way. So long as I can boot into some sort of DOS it's...
  38. J

    Making a 4GB USB drive bootable

    I'm just interested in booting to DOS for now. XP doesn't have an MS-DOS mode like '98, and I have a few programs I still use which don't work correctly under XP's DOS emulation. In the future I may also want to set up a flash drive to emulate the XP install CD, or perhaps as an emergency boot...
  39. J

    Making a 4GB USB drive bootable

    I finally bought my first USB thumb drive. I've been wanting one for a while, but the prices for a given capacity point were too high for my tastes. Staples had a nice 4GB drive on sale for $29.99 last week. This seemed reasonable, so I bought it. Anyway, I figured it might be useful to make...
  40. J

    Intel proposes new interface for Flash devices

    Interesting. I remember mentioning a few years ago while discussing NVRAM either here, or at SR, that future PCs would probably have slots for NVRAM. This would either completely replace separate hard drives, or at least supplement them. Seems this will actually happen. Half a gigabyte per...
  41. J

    Cool ('green') Car

    I really love the design. Those are exactly the kinds of cars I thought we would be riding in by the 21st century, not hulking, boring SUVs. As for being unsafe, if everyone were using them it would be fine. It's the huge mass differential between vehicles which makes smaller vehicles less safe...
  42. J

    Something Random

    You're lucky to have a lifestyle where you can do this. A lot of people are stuck in 9-to-5 jobs for whatever reason, and at most get a week or two off a year. The last time I worked for someone else we didn't even get vacations, either paid or unpaid. You got fired even if you were sick for...
  43. J

    Should we ban disposable batteries?

    That is definitely a concern because you need to charge at 0.3C or better to get a reliable end-of-charge signal. 300 mA is only 0.15C. That being said, the Eneloops are high quality cells, so the charger might still be able to pick up the slight voltage depression near the end of charge. Also...
  44. J

    New Road Bicycle

    Actually it's the left arm. It's counterintuitive because the ball bearings exert torque in the opposite direction a regular bearing would. I installed a sealed bearing bottom bracket adaptor on my other bike in order to get rid of the high-maintenance one-piece crank. I didn't notice that they...
  45. J

    Should we ban disposable batteries?

    They're faily easy to use once you read the instructions. They're better in that you can find bad cells, or match cells for capacity if you'll be using them together in the same device. I've been capacity testing my cells for years using my own setups, and writing the capacity on the cell with...
  46. J

    Should we ban disposable batteries?

    Forming means charging the battery at 0.1C for 16 hours. The purpose is to evenly distribute the electrolyte so that the battery has maximum capacity and voltage, and also to restore batteries which are performly poorly. You can read about it in the MH-C9000 instructions. Since the MH-C9000...
  47. J

    Something Random

    I'll agree quality of life is more important than age but nothing worse than working your whole life, then not having much of a retirement because you die fairly young. My uncle was only retired a few years. Because he got sick, they weren't as good years as they could have been. Even my dad...
  48. J

    Something Random

    We were hoping the cancer would go into remission as it had a few years ago. No such luck. My uncle was a heavy smoker, so little doubt that was a strong contibuting factor. My condolences to your friend. 58 is really, really way too young to die. BTW, I said young because in my family...
  49. J

    Something Random

    My uncle (my dad's brother) passed away October 4. I went to the funeral yesterday. He was only 69. Too many people dying young lately, and not just in the family. Ironic that the two brothers died only 18 months apart. Online obituary in case anyone is interested.
  50. J

    1GB then and now

    I came across this article about a state-of-the-art 1GB hard disk from 1980 recently. This really makes you appreciate today's technology. The first picture comparing the drive to a 1GB flash card is really a hoot. A more apt comparison would have been to compare a 16GB card to the roomful of...
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