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geocrasher

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geocrasher
·29 hari yang lalu·discuss
The DNS Song seems appropriate. Even if it's not DNS in this case.

https://soundcloud.com/ryan-flowers-916961339/dns-to-the-tun...
geocrasher
·bulan lalu·discuss
I gave OpenPOV a try with FS 2024, and found it really disorienting. It was not useful at all. I went to a Meta Quest 3 and that actually made me feel like I was inside an aircraft. At on point I tried to lean on a bulkhead. Oops.
geocrasher
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss


   memories of slashdot rush in
geocrasher
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I don't want to crap on peoples ideas. Really, I don't.

But getting some closet case computer with unknown hardware and turning it into a server, at scale, is an impossible scheme.

The only way to make it work would be to buy hundreds of laptops at once and refurb, new storage, and standardize with custom power delivery. Because who wants hundreds of laptop PSU's plugged into power strips. And those do in fact die.

And then there's the horror of manually removing wifi hardware and batteries. Battery disposal is an issue. And having worked on hundreds of laptops, some of them are major pains in the neck to get to the battery. Consumer HP's come to mind. The bottom cover can be difficult to remove without breaking any of the clips.

Point of Reference: 27 years in web hosting
geocrasher
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I recall as a teen wondering if the 486 was so good, how amazing a 1086 was going to be someday :D
geocrasher
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
My first PC was a 286/12 with an AMD chip in it.

I well remember the 486SX/2-66's and how terrible they were. I liked to say that Compaq put the "sorry" in Presario.

In the late 90's, between around 96 and 98, I made good money building AMD 486 DX/4 133's. Those things were blindingly fast for the price. As I recall there was even a 150MHz variant.

Still, my favorite CPU of all time remains the AMD K6/2-450. It wasn't until the Phenom II BE950, a dual core that I unlocked to quad core , that I felt I had a CPU that matched the K6/2-450 in value. Since then I've had a couple of Ryzen's for my daily driver/work machine, and couldn't be happier. AMD has done a fantastic job keeping price and performance in tune. But, it goes even further if you shop smartly.

Overall, this was an excellent read, and brought back a lot of memories. The 6x86 for example- too much promise for what they actually delivered. And, thanks to this article I now know why so many cheap motherboards had their CPU's soldered. It wasn't a technology decision, but a legal one. I had no idea of that at the time.
geocrasher
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
My uncle Richard is one of the inventors on Honeywell’s early phase‑detect autofocus. Patent US4333007A, which figures out both the direction and amount the lens needs to move instead of hunting.

Modern systems like Canon’s Dual Pixel AF in bodies such as the EOS R5 are very direct descendants of that idea, just implemented on‑sensor with far more processing power.

Every time I see an article such as this, I beam with pride. (Pun intended).
geocrasher
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I've never been afraid to share bad ideas because the best way to get to a good one is to go through the bad ones. Sometimes my bad ideas will spark a good idea from somebody else or sometimes it even turns out that my bad idea isn't bad at all and people like it and we end up adopting it.

Either way, not being afraid to look dumb keeps the juices flowing. And keeps the conversation going. Or sometimes it starts the conversation that nobody else is willing to start.
geocrasher
·4 bulan yang lalu·discuss
At first, I felt smart about knowing what a TCXO is. Then, it went downhill from there. Great analysis. I figured it would have been the heater component that failed, then reading the comments here, I realized I'd conflated TCXO with OCXO. Similar but not.

I tried :D
geocrasher
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I learned next-level defensive driving by bicycle commuting to work 5.5 miles each way on busy roads in rush hour traffic. On a bicycle you're invisible, and if you expect any less, you're going to get hurt. As it was, I had some very very close calls- at least one of them had the potential to be fatal. Ironically, the only time I ever crashed was my own fault.

But now even when in a car, I retain that "I'm invisible" mentality, which makes me much more aware of what other drivers are doing, and much more skeptical of their ability to make good decisions. This has saved me several times.
geocrasher
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/27_Club

   The 27 Club is an informal list consisting mostly of popular musicians who died at age 27. Although the claim of a "statistical spike" for the death of musicians at that age has been refuted by scientific research, it remains a common cultural conception that the phenomenon exists, with many celebrities who die at 27 noted for their high-risk lifestyles.
geocrasher
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
My organization is, for now, using OpsGenie.

My pager noise: https://www.soundjay.com/transportation/sounds/train-crossin...

That will not only wake the dead, it'll wake me no matter how asleep I am.
geocrasher
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I had the same thing for Slashdot.org for many, many years. Both the reflex and the browser autocomplete. I still miss the old /. It was like HN + Hackaday + Usenet.
geocrasher
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Yep, have been on constant "pager duty" for 2+ years, although I have more help now and I get paged 1-3 times a week instead of per night. Still, carry my lappy everywhere I go. Bought an ARM Windows laptop to get that 20hr battery life so I could worry less during my travels. You know, fancy things like going get food or going grocery shopping.
geocrasher
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
That was my point. They used the wrong filament. And there isn't really a right one for the cowl of a single engine aircraft
geocrasher
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Yes but are they printed with PLA or PETG, or even ABS? Or are they using material designed exactly for their use case, and tested thoroughly before being certified for flight?

Or do they get their parts from some vendor at a swap meet who spends most of his time fiddling with his Ender 3?
geocrasher
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Just added to my cart. Thanks. Working from the car sucks, but it happens now and then. This should make it a lot easier.
geocrasher
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
The ability to spot poor information is what keeps the end user a vital part of the process. LLM's don't think. [Most] humans do.
geocrasher
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
LLM's follow the old adage of "Garbage In, Garbage Out". LLM's work great for things that are well documented and understood.

If you use LLM's to understand things that are poorly understood in general, you're going to get poor information because the source was poor. Garbage in, Garbage out.

They are also terrible at understanding context unless you specify everything quite explicitly. In the tech support world, we get people arguing about a recommended course of action because ChatGPT said it should be something else. And it should, in the context for which the answer was originally given. But in proprietary systems that are largely undocumented (publicly) they fall apart fast.
geocrasher
·9 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Wow. I have never heard of this. Thank you. I just Googled it and while not all of the symptoms fit, a good number of them do. It's rather interesting, I know how to use numbers- I've done several types of analyses over the years, professionally. And my own budget/savings is done in my own self-designed spreadsheet, calculated/balanced down to the cent.

But ask me to do subtraction? Forget it.