Driver to drive?

On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 10:06:48 -0700, Jim Thompson wrote:

On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 11:43:26 -0500, Keith Williams <krw@att.bizzzz
wrote:

In article <hfl5t0p8hj7h8l7tjcgv2gf4qovdcvd062@4ax.com>,
thegreatone@example.com says...
[snip]

I've got an amazing DC story for you...

Summer of '61, like 1AM, can't find my way to the Arlington bridge.

Pulled up beside a parked cabby and asked directions.

He said, "Follow me" !!!!!!!

Took us right there.

You're right. I find that amazing. In fact, knowing DC, I find it
incredible. ;-)

It was 43 years ago... probably wouldn't happen now :-(

Forty-three years ago, it was safe to pick up hitchhikers. Heck, it was
even reasonable to hitchhike! It was possible for two guys to hitchhike
together and get rides!

I think my Mom met my Dad hitchhiking. He was on his way to school out of
state, and she was on her way to her new job in the big city, or something
like that. (He and a friend were driving, and she and her friend were
hitchhiking. I have no idea who the friends were or what became of them)
I guess the job was piano-playing and copy writing for the local radio
station. Dad became a traveling salesman. Mom was a farmer's daughter.
Lucky for me, they didn't meet by him running out of gas in front of her
farm - Grandpa would have put him to work chopping wood, and they'd have
never met!

Cheers!
Rich
 
Guy Macon wrote:

n2mp wrote:


* conductivity cells usually consist of two 1cm2 plates of platinized
platinum correctly embedded


I have always used pure Gold plating for conductivity meter electrodes.
Do you have any information as to why Platinum would be prefered?
The overvoltage of hydrogen to platinum in water is zero volts.

Rene
--
Ing.Buero R.Tschaggelar - http://www.ibrtses.com
& commercial newsgroups - http://www.talkto.net
 
John Larkin wrote:
On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 18:01:38 GMT, Fred Bloggs <nospam@nospam.com
wrote:



John Larkin wrote:

On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 12:52:41 GMT, Fred Bloggs <nospam@nospam.com
wrote:



Clarence_A wrote:



Next time you there, have dinner at "Hook's Point" in the hotel courtyard.
Really fabulous!

What a stinking, lousy, superficial, materialistic, hedonist and p.o.s.
you are. Here's hoping you choke to death on your next meal,
good-for-nothing, self-indulgent, vermin, peasant and riffraff that you are.



Right! Damned epicurian snob. Cold gruel and tap water is good enough
for anybody.

John


I know- just returned from a Blue Ridge resort where there was nothing
but the so-called haute cuisine establishments, and was therefore forced
to drive 10 miles out of town to the nearest Aunt Sarah's for their
famous (and uncomplicated) all-you-can-eat pancakes 'n chicken special
for $3.25.


Do they have dumplings? Biscuits and gravy? Pot roast? I love stuff
like that. My favorite French dish is cassoulet, basicly baked beans.
This would be Lexington, Virginia- they pride themselves in several old
taverns and inns (restaurants)- dating back to early 18th century and
fully restored- that still serve the Olde English fare. There are a few
French restaurants too.

But... pancakes and chicken?
Yes- the chicken is not battered, very meaty, moist, and succulent, and
the two dozen three inch pancakes slathered in butter and hot maple
syrup makes for a surprisingly good combination- and all the coffee you
can drink too. I am sure that chicken is local- the other franchises
throughout the state do not have chicken quite as good.
 
Is there a reason you don't want your posts archived
or don't you realize that you have that bit set?
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/sci.electronics.design/browse_frm/thread/21eb34f433dbe2dc/4c14e055773a42b2?_done=%2Fgroup%2Fsci.electronics.design%2Fthreads%3Fgvc%3D2%26&_doneTitle=Back&&d#a9e960206f7e4faa
 
One additional note about Cadsoft's Eagle product. The freeware/light
editions are fine for simple boards, but limit you to 1 schematic sheet
and 2 layers (100x80mm area max.) If you need a little more complexity
for your project and aren't using it to make money (eg. hobby or
academic use), they have a single-user 'non-profit' version that is
equivalent to their 'standard' version (4 layers, 160x100mm area, unltd.
sch. sheets) for $125 US.

http://www.cadsoftusa.com/nonprofit.htm

-Troy

Wayne wrote:
A very good freeware package that I have used for several years is Eagle
http://www.cadsoftusa.com/
You can either get support from Eagles good news group or the Yahoo group I
setup located at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/eaglecad/

Cheers

Wayne
 
Si Ballenger wrote:
Google for userport.zip to get userport for access to the
parallel port.
Thanks, initial tests indicate that userport will solve the problem.
mike
 
JeffM wrote:
Is there a reason you don't want your posts archived
or don't you realize that you have that bit set?
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/sci.electronics.design/browse_frm/thread/21eb34f433dbe2dc/4c14e055773a42b2?_done=%2Fgroup%2Fsci.electronics.design%2Fthreads%3Fgvc%3D2%26&_doneTitle=Back&&d#a9e960206f7e4faa
I gotta admit that I have no idea what I'm doing. I think I'm using the
default settings in the Netscape 7 mail/news reader.
Is there a reason I WOULD want my posts archived? And where would I set
the bit?
Thanks, mike

--
Return address is VALID.
Wanted, Slot 1 Motherboard
500MHz Tek DSOscilloscope TDS540 Make Offer
http://nm7u.tripod.com/homepage/te.html
Wanted, 12.1" LCD for Gateway Solo 5300. Samsung LT121SU-121
Bunch of stuff For Sale and Wanted at the link below.
http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Monitor/4710/
 
On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 17:17:08 -0800, mike wrote:

I gotta admit that I have no idea what I'm doing. I think I'm using the
default settings in the Netscape 7 mail/news reader.
Is there a reason I WOULD want my posts archived? And where would I set
the bit?
Thanks, mike
In the headers X-No-Archive: Yes

I think JeffM was referring to the post from Si Ballenger.
 
Mike,
Your posts look normal.

The query was for Si Ballenger.
I tried to get the link to point to his post
but it looks like I don't have it quite figured out
on the NEW IMPROVED Google Beta. (Yeeck)
...or maybe THEY don't have it debugged yet.
 
On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 18:17:54 -0700, Jim Thompson
<thegreatone@example.com> wrote:


Look back thru my MC1494/95/96 threads. Particularly the
linearization of the multiplier core.

...Jim Thompson
Did you do the 1494?

John
 
On Thu, 30 Dec 2004 00:26:04 +0100, Rene Tschaggelar wrote:

Guy Macon wrote:

n2mp wrote:


* conductivity cells usually consist of two 1cm2 plates of platinized
platinum correctly embedded


I have always used pure Gold plating for conductivity meter electrodes.
Do you have any information as to why Platinum would be prefered?


The overvoltage of hydrogen to platinum in water is zero volts.
Aaahhh! Thanks for this, Rene! Suddenly, the image of the Pt catalyst
in the cat.conv. sprang to mind. Hydrogen and Platinum LOVE each other!

Thanks again!
Rich
 
.. In this case, you can figure out the
currents. You might want to convert to a voltage and hit an emitter
follower with an active load on its emitter. You might not.
how does one convert? thanks for the cool web reference!

SB
 
"John Larkin" <john@spamless.usa> schreef in bericht
news:2c1ps01b8hm56dq6of2hquoneepfrm15b4@4ax.com...
On Fri, 24 Dec 2004 21:28:22 +0100, "Frank Bemelman"
f.bemelmanq@xs4all.invalid.nl> wrote:


Grandma *is* more important. Complaining about a 20x boot time is
nonsense.
How many times do you boot? I turn on my computer each morning, get a
coffee,
turn on the radio and see what's in my inbox.

Windows takes a lot of time to boot, because it checks a lot of things
during
the boot. Depending on what you installed on top of it, it may take a
while
longer. In a network, it takes another extra amount of time, getting a
new
IP address perhaps, making connections to other PC's that were part of
the
game the day before. Yes, that takes a bit of time.

As a result, you can swap hardware, or put your entire drive in a new
PC and it will work. Windows will discard old drivers for hardware that
has dissapeared and try to find new drivers for the new hardware. That
is incredibly impressive.


Microsoft didn't invent loadable drivers (hell, they barely *have*
loadable drivers) or 3rd party hardware or documented APIs. They just
stole others ideas, played catch-up by pre-announcing their products
years ahead of availability, turned out bug-ridden crap, charged
everybody to fix it, and ruthlessly and illegally leveraged the OS to
kill off the people whose ideas they stole.

Microsoft recently announced another ripoff of somebody else's market
and product, bundling it with the OS, thus killing the company that
pioneered the concept. When Bill was asked how the victim company
could possibly survive, he said that they should "learn to innovate."
I agree that their business codes are nothing to be proud off. Well,
they got a nice fine from the EU.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/3563697.stm

Still, peanuts for Bill. Perhaps the US government should squeeze
a bit more money out of Bill ;)

Maybe that is what really bothers you, their attitude. Their products
are not too bad though (anything after WIN3.x, that is).

--
Thanks, Frank.
(remove 'q' and 'invalid' when replying by email)
 
On 29 Dec 2004 04:57:20 GMT, cfoley1064@aol.com (CFoley1064) wrote:

CARE
151 Ellis Street
Atlanta, GA 30303
800-521-CARE
www.care.org
I suppose anyone who goes there will see it (unless this code is
dependent on IP address), but care's website is not working as I write
this, it gives this error message:

Microsoft VBScript runtime error '800a000d'

Type mismatch: 'major'

/includes/common.asp, line 18

It's of course a really bad time for their website to be down, and
also a bad advertisement for Microsoft (even if the problem is the
code written by the web designer).

Thanks for your time and considering giving them a hand.

Chris
-----
http://mindspring.com/~benbradley
 
On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 20:41:22 -0700, Jim Thompson wrote:

On Wed, 29 Dec 2004 22:24:34 -0500, Active8 <reply2group@ndbbm.net
wrote:

On 29 Dec 2004 18:06:35 -0800, seanbroderick20003@yahoo.com wrote:

. In this case, you can figure out the
currents. You might want to convert to a voltage and hit an emitter
follower with an active load on its emitter. You might not.
how does one convert? thanks for the cool web reference!


Personally, I always think of a bjt as a voltage controlled device,
[snip]

Barf ;-)
Ok. I learned a lot from the h-param equiv circuit with beta and
all.

Maybe you could comment on my confusion over that author saying it's
best to never convert to a voltage after the diff stage. What could
he have meant?

--
Best Regards,
Mike
 
You might try the following link

http://www.ScienceOxygen.com/apparatus/69.html

It is just a link with a collection of links about Geiger counter.
I am not sure if you can find a schematic over there. But you might
start from there to get some information...
 
Rene Tschaggelar wrote:
Guy Macon <http://www.guymacon.com/> wrote:

I have always used pure Gold plating for conductivity meter electrodes.
Do you have any information as to why Platinum would be prefered?

The overvoltage of hydrogen to platinum in water is zero volts.
Could you give a bit more detail about the practical results of this?
I am a lot more familiar with electronics than I am with chemistry,
and you are using the term "overvoltage" in a way that I am unfamiliar
with.

--
Guy Macon <http://www.guymacon.com/>
 
I read in sci.electronics.design that Rich Grise <richgrise@example.net>
wrote (in <pan.2004.12.29.21.44.32.419393@example.net>) about 'project
design-revisited', on Wed, 29 Dec 2004:

If your water gets too murky for IR
to shine through 1/8" of water, you must have some very strange fish.
;-)
Neurotic octopuses.
--
Regards, John Woodgate, OOO - Own Opinions Only.
The good news is that nothing is compulsory.
The bad news is that everything is prohibited.
http://www.jmwa.demon.co.uk Also see http://www.isce.org.uk
 
www.goldmine-elect.com hasn't had that kit in years.

However, this appears to be the tube they used:

GM tube, alpha window, $54
http://www.imagesco.com/catalog/geiger/geiger.html
 
In article <41d2c745$0$6219$e4fe514c@news.xs4all.nl>,
Frank Bemelman <f.bemelmanq@xs4all.invalid.nl> wrote:

Well, I am going to use the 'safer' QS2 output to cascade
to the next one. Under what conditions would one prefer the
QS1 output?
Perhaps the original Qs and Qs' outputs appeared in the
original CD4094 to cope with 4000-series CMOS deficiencies.
Both outputs have to still be there in a modern 74HCT4096
for compatibility, but have now maybe lost their relevance.

--
Tony Williams.
 

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