magnetic field

On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 17:17:57 +0000, Guy Macon
<_see.web.page_@_www.guymacon.com_> wrote:

rgregoryclark@yahoo.com wrote:

John, I really don't see why you're arging this point.

Because he is under the mistaken impression that he is an engineer.
A real engineer has the all-impotant attribute of listening to what
people tell him. You can tell Larkin how lifters work and explain
that the only reason they have wires going to them is because the
power supply is too heavy to lift all day, but it won't get you
anything but questions and - eventually - personal abuse. Ignore
him.

Have you calculated whether a big stack of coin cells driving a
DC-AC inverter and then a Cockroft-Walton stack will be light
enough to fly yet? what number are you getting?


The "thin nylon wires" are used to hold the lifter in place so it
won't fly away. They are not the conducting wires for the power
supply. Lots of amateurs have made lifters with no tethers: they
usually fly up far enough to disconnect the power supply wires or
damage the lifter. There are many web sites online discussing the
lifters which you can find by Googling. You can write the authors
of these web pages if you don't believe how they work.

You are wasting your time explaining. Usenet being what it is,
I strongly advise you to look at how helpful each person who
responds to you is and to not reply to the non-helpful. I even
wrote up a nice explanation of how this works so folks can quote
it. Here it is:
---
"I even"...? Just more of your narcissitic bullshit, Macon.
THE STANDARD ADVICE:

There is a way to influence what gets discussed in a newsgroup that
works well, and another way that has never worked no matter how many
people have tried it.

What works: Post articles on the topic you wish to see discussed,
and participate in the resulting discussion. Use killfiles and
filters so that you don't see the articles that you dislike.
If you don't know how to use a killfile, use good old fashioned
discipline and don't read the articles that you dislike.
---
Geez, how do you expect to know whether you'll like them or not unless
you read them? Just another of your badly thought out schemes which
you offer as the infallible "Macon's way".
---

Never, ever respond to articles that you dislike.
---
See above.
---

What doesn't work: Respond to articles that you dislike, complain
about articles that you dislike, complain about posters that you
dislike, complain about how terrible everyone else is for not posting
what you want them to post. Talk about how to respond to articles
that you dislike. Make the articles that you dislike the center of
attention, the main topic of discussion, and a personal crusade.
---
I've seen you not take your own advice on that, so you're advising "Do
as I say, not as I do."?

Also, what I've seen you use killfiles for is mainly to get the last
word in and not have to pay attention to rebuttals. Burying your head
in the sand, of course, so _your_ reality is the only one which exists
and you don't have to admit error to those you don't like.

--
John Fields
Professional Circuit Designer
 
On Fri, 8 Jul 2005 16:35:05 -0500, "Jim Douglas"
<james.douglas@genesis-software.com> wrote:

Sounds like you may have some "google envy", whereas another individual
shows up more on google that you do! WTF, who cares, get over it!
The funny part is that the same search criteria on Google can and will
yield different results in as little as minutes to hours sometimes, at
least in the order of importance...if I am not mistaken.

Tom

"Frank Raffaeli" <SNIPrf_man_frTHIS@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1120858144.503205.322690@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
John Larkin wrote:
On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 15:53:08 +0000, Guy Macon
http://www.guymacon.com/> wrote:




The best way to find a consultant is through Google. Let's
say you want the very best consultant who specializes in
electronics; Google search on 'electrical engineer resume' or
'electronics engineer resume' or 'electronic engineer resume':

http://www.google.com/search?q=electrical+engineer+resume
http://www.google.com/search?q=electronics+engineer+resume
http://www.google.com/search?q=electronic+engineer+resume

Google has a sophisticated algorithm that is quite good at
identifying the resume of the very best engineer and putting
it at or near the top of the results listing.



Such a coincidence: the very first search pulls up

http://www.guymacon.com/

who, technically, isn't an engineer at all. Sounds like Google
actually has a rotten algorithm.

More vanity and stupid web tricks. What a pretentious fathead!

John

You may have overestimated the search engine,

For example, If you Google "poor to nonexistent" engineer:

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&safe=off&q=%22poor+to+nonexistent%22+engineer&btnG=Search

Just an observation.

Frank Raffaeli
http://www.aomwireless.com/
 
On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 22:30:18 -0400, keith <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote:

On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 22:12:13 +0000, CWatters wrote:

Google Envy... That's a good one!

Na, can't be that. Otherwise well just try searching for "dumb terminal
engineer" see who's number 3 on the list :)

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=terminal+dumb+engineer

Oh, crap! He can't keep a job!
Gosh, any ideas why?

John
 
Guy Macon wrote:
Jim Douglas wrote:

Frank Raffaeli wrote...

You may have overestimated the search engine,

For example, If you Google "poor to nonexistent" engineer:


http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&safe=off&q=%22poor+to+nonexistent%22+engineer&btnG=Search

Just an observation.


Nope, Google is doing exactly what it's supposed to do.
I wrote those words because they are true, and anyone hiring me
needs to know what i am excellent at and what I am poor at.


Sounds like you may have some "google envy", whereas another individual
shows up more on google that you do! WTF, who cares, get over it!


Google Envy... That's a good one! Maybe he's like Larkin,
intimidated by his technical and social superiors.
On your best day, you might consider yourself to be lucky
if you were 1/10th of Larkin on his worst.

Ed
 
ehsjr wrote...
Guy Macon wrote:
Google Envy... That's a good one! Maybe he's like Larkin,
intimidated by his technical and social superiors.

On your best day, you might consider yourself to be lucky
if you were 1/10th of Larkin on his worst.
Yes, agreed. But to be taken more as a very well-earned and
well-deserved compliment to John than a slam to Guy. Frankly
I wonder if Guy has acquainted himself with John's technical
accomplishments as they've been detailed here in the last few
years. And to John's revelations about the SF cultural scene.
Perhaps Guy's been completely oblivious to it all.


--
Thanks,
- Win
 
On 9 Jul 2005 17:24:07 -0700, Winfield Hill <Winfield_member@newsguy.com>
wrote:

ehsjr wrote...

Guy Macon wrote:
Google Envy... That's a good one! Maybe he's like Larkin,
intimidated by his technical and social superiors.

On your best day, you might consider yourself to be lucky
if you were 1/10th of Larkin on his worst.

Yes, agreed. But to be taken more as a very well-earned and
well-deserved compliment to John than a slam to Guy. Frankly
I wonder if Guy has acquainted himself with John's technical
accomplishments as they've been detailed here in the last few
years. And to John's revelations about the SF cultural scene.
Perhaps Guy's been completely oblivious to it all.
Here is a hint:
http://www.geocities.com/sgraessle/folder1/incomp.htm

--

Boris Mohar
 
On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 13:38:52 -0500, John Fields wrote:

On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 17:17:57 +0000, Guy Macon

What doesn't work: Respond to articles that you dislike, complain
about articles that you dislike, complain about posters that you
dislike, complain about how terrible everyone else is for not posting
what you want them to post. Talk about how to respond to articles
that you dislike. Make the articles that you dislike the center of
attention, the main topic of discussion, and a personal crusade.

---
I've seen you not take your own advice on that, so you're advising "Do
as I say, not as I do."?

Also, what I've seen you use killfiles for is mainly to get the last
word in and not have to pay attention to rebuttals. Burying your head
in the sand, of course, so _your_ reality is the only one which exists
and you don't have to admit error to those you don't like.
Of course, though you've put it very well! Why else would he forward to
dev.null. He thinks he's the master of the Usenet. Perhaps he does know
all the tricks, but using them makes him no less of a twat.

--
Keith
 
Guy Macon wrote:
Jim Douglas wrote:

Frank Raffaeli wrote...
[snipped ...]

Sounds like you may have some "google envy", whereas another individual
shows up more on google that you do! WTF, who cares, get over it!

Google Envy... That's a good one! Maybe he's like Larkin,
intimidated by his technical and social superiors.
That's a new one - usually only my best clients question my social and
technical skills, and this guy hasn't paid me a dime! I'm not sure if
he's joking, as he claims in the search engine thread, or if he really
believes his own bullshit.

In case there is any doubt, here is one possible scenario when
performing a search for the following:

{dumb engineering guy} top of the list
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&safe=off&q=dumb+engineering+guy

any serious critique, and we may
{see guy flame the engineer} (also number 1)
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&safe=off&q=see+guy+flame+the+engineer

and in case there was any doubt, we may rest assured, for we have:
{proven macon is dumb}
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&safe=off&q=proven+macon+is+dumb

Hope this helps

Frank Raffaeli
http://www.aomwireless.com/
 
On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 20:52:32 -0400, Boris Mohar
<borism_-void-_@sympatico.ca> wrote:


Here is a hint:
http://www.geocities.com/sgraessle/folder1/incomp.htm

I find the psychology of design to be fascinating, and too little
studied.

Arrogance: On one day, you have to stand in front of a bunch of
customers or fellow engineers and state calmly and confidently that
you can certainly fit 16 channels of whatever ghastly thing onto a 6U
Eurocard, meet insane specs, and deliver in three months for $200 a
channel.

Discipline: now you have to design it, manage all the tradeoffs, cram
it onto the board, and not screw up, because there's no time for a
respin.

Fear and paranoia: after it's on paper, and you're about to etch
boards, you have to question the sanity and competance of the morons
who designed it; you just know that these guys made a half-dozen
stupid, fatal mistakes.

Despair: when you occasionally do find a fatal mistake, and before you
come up with a work-around.


One key to success is to accurately gauge one's own incompetance, and
to take carefully calibrated risks in only the situations that demand
it.


John
 
On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 08:58:23 -0700, John Larkin wrote:

On 9 Jul 2005 07:44:47 -0700, rgregoryclark@yahoo.com wrote:

John Larkin wrote:
On 7 Jul 2005 10:22:15 -0700, rgregoryclark@yahoo.com wrote:

John Larkin wrote:
On 6 Jul 2005 21:07:52 -0700, rgregoryclark@yahoo.com wrote:

John Larkin wrote:

...
Suppose you had a light, high-voltage, high-current power supply. You
connect one power supply terminal to the lifter body. Where do you
connect the other?

John

This page shows construction of a lifter:

How to build an HexaLifter for your experiments.
http://jlnlabs.imars.com/lifters/hexalifter/index.htm

One lead from the power supply is connected to wires at the top of the
lifter. The other lead is connected to metal foil at the bottom. You
have insulators separating the wires from the foil. Then the air
between the wires and foil serves as a dielectric for a capacitor. The
asymmetric geometry of the two sides of the capacitor, the wires
compared to the flat metal foil, causes a flow of ions from one to the
other.


Bob Clark


But that's not the way the hexalifter is wired. External (grounded)
+HV is run through a wire from the power supply to the upper wire
array, and no connection is made to the foil thingie.

If you did make an unthethered lifter, with no return current path to
ground, its ion emission would quickly build up a huge net potential
on the whole structure. Has anybody ever got this to work?

There's a much more efficient way to convert electrical energy to
lift; a helicopter rotor.

John

Perhaps the second wire connection is not visible on that page, but
all lifters are made in this same way. See for example this page:


The hexlifter page says that one wire supplies hv to the lifter's
upper wire array, and that it "is maintained with three thin nylon
wires to the styrofoam base plate" which doesn't sound conductive to
me.

So the single uplink wire replentishes the charge lost by creating
ions. If you float the power supply onboard, and still eject ions, a
huge charge will quickly build up on the structure.

Has anybody ever built a self-powered, unthethered lifter?

John

John, I really don't see why you're arging this point.

Because I'm an engineer.

The "thin nylon
wires" are used to hold the lifter in place so it won't fly away. They
are not the conducting wires for the power supply. Lots of amateurs
have made lifters with no tethers: they usually fly up far enough to
disconnect the power supply wires or damage the lifter.

But can they fly with *no* wires?

Yeah, it's sounding to me like, "Put up or shut up" time. Hell, if
I'm allowed to use an extension cord, I can fly a fuckin Muffin fan. ;-)
--
Flap!
The Pig Bladder from Uranus, still waiting for that
hot babe to ask what my favorite planet is. ;-j
 
On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 13:38:52 -0500, John Fields wrote:

in the sand, of course, so _your_ reality is the only one which exists
and you don't have to admit error to those you don't like.
Yeah, unlike me, who, whin I admit the error of those I don't like,,
wuh-oh! freudian los sof track of what the fck point I was going to
make. Oh! Yeah. Take My REality! PLease! And then three was some gag
in threr about error and those I don't like.

Oh, yeah, now I remember. I'm happy to admit the errors of those
I don't like, but they so seldom admit to their own! ;-P I'm more
than happy to point out the error of your ways. It's just that
there's approx. 6E9 ways to be wrong, and only one o fme. )-;
....<time passes while Rich refreshes his drink>...
Yeah, I'm gonna go ahead and his tend. heh! Hit Send!

'Kay! Bye!
 
On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 16:35:05 -0500, Jim Douglas wrote:

Sounds like you may have some "google envy", whereas another individual
shows up more on google that you do! WTF, who cares, get over it!
http://www.google.com/search?num=50&hl=en&lr=&safe=off&q=%22Rich+Grise%22&btnG=Search
http://groups-beta.google.com/groups?q=%22Rich%20Grise%22&num=50&hl=en&lr=&safe=off&sa=N&tab=wg

:)

Cheers!
Rich
 
On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 21:43:21 +0000, Guy Macon wrote:
Jim Douglas wrote:
Frank Raffaeli wrote...

You may have overestimated the search engine,

For example, If you Google "poor to nonexistent" engineer:

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&safe=off&q=%22poor+to+nonexistent%22+engineer&btnG=Search

Just an observation.

Nope, Google is doing exactly what it's supposed to do.
I wrote those words because they are true, and anyone hiring me
needs to know what i am excellent at and what I am poor at.
Well, yeah, but ... um ... what about the things that you're
not very good at, but don't know it?

Sounds like you may have some "google envy", whereas another individual
shows up more on google that you do! WTF, who cares, get over it!

Google Envy... That's a good one! Maybe he's like Larkin,
intimidated by his technical and social superiors.
What? Now you're badmouthing John Larkin? What's he ever done to
you except tell the truth?

Sheesh!
Rich

Oh, wait. Guy Macon has me plonkfiled, so he doesn't have to hear
any rebuttal from me.

That's a hell of a way to run an engineering business - close
oneself off to feedback.

Oh, well.
 
On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 22:12:13 +0000, CWatters wrote:

Google Envy... That's a good one!

Na, can't be that. Otherwise well just try searching for "dumb terminal
engineer" see who's number 3 on the list :)

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=terminal+dumb+engineer

Only joking!
"Cryptographic atomic-decay random number generator..."???

Heck, even _I_ know what all those words mean! ;-D

Cheers!
Rich
 
On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 12:26:28 -0500, John Fields wrote:

On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 22:21:32 +0000, Guy Macon
_see.web.page_@_www.guymacon.com_> wrote:




\CWatters wrote:

Google Envy... That's a good one!

Na, can't be that. Otherwise well just try searching for "dumb terminal
engineer" see who's number 3 on the list :)

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=terminal+dumb+engineer

Only joking!

big smile

I loved those old ADM-3 Dumb Terminals.

Kindred spirits?
You wish! ;-) ;-) ;-)

I've built a dumb terminal. Kinda like the "TV Typewriter". Hey,
didn't Don Lancaster write that TV Typewriter article? I was
so frickin' proud of myself, because I pipelined the character
ROM. ;-) IIRC, my "dumb" terminal had a uP in it, just to
initialize the video sync generator, and manage shuttling
characters from the input to the screen. It might have been
a Z-80; I don't specifically remember which uP it was - it might
have been a Motorola - it was so long ago. *-) - except that I _do_
remember that my keyboard thing used a 6502. I had got a naked, raw
keyboard at some swap meet - each key had two terminals sticking out of
the plastic behind it. 64 (or so) individual SPST switches; and I
had a passel of uPs and RAMs and stuff, because I was working at
the video game place where they'd bring in an obsolete video game,
and for about a tenth the price of a new game, they'd refurb
the cabinet, and swap out the board with a 'Mr. Do!'. They
tossed the OE board. Everything from Asteroids to Space Invaders
to games nobody's even ever heard of - I had dozens of discarded,
but still fully functional, video game boards. This is a PCB
about the footprint of a PC Motherboard.

Sigh, those were the days.

I also once as a programming exercise, wrote a dumb terminal.
I admit, I used CodeView, the popup debugger, to steal somebody
else's COM port interrupt handler, but the rest of it was a
piece of cake. ;-)

Cheers!
Rich
 
On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 15:30:39 -0700, John Larkin wrote:

On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 22:30:18 -0400, keith <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote:

On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 22:12:13 +0000, CWatters wrote:

Google Envy... That's a good one!

Na, can't be that. Otherwise well just try searching for "dumb terminal
engineer" see who's number 3 on the list :)

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=terminal+dumb+engineer

Oh, crap! He can't keep a job!


Gosh, any ideas why?
Yeah, but it wouldn't be polite to list them. ;-P

Thanks,
Rich
 
On Sun, 10 Jul 2005 16:31:36 GMT, Rich Grise
<eatmyshorts@doubleclick.net> wrote:

On Fri, 08 Jul 2005 22:12:13 +0000, CWatters wrote:

Google Envy... That's a good one!

Na, can't be that. Otherwise well just try searching for "dumb terminal
engineer" see who's number 3 on the list :)

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=terminal+dumb+engineer

Only joking!

"Cryptographic atomic-decay random number generator..."???

Heck, even _I_ know what all those words mean! ;-D

Cheers!
Rich
Silly, though. A zener noise generator makes a lot more sense.

John
 
Rich Grise wrote:

Oh, wait. Guy Macon has me plonkfiled, so he doesn't have to hear
any rebuttal from me.
No I don't. Do you wish me to?

That's a hell of a way to run an engineering business - close
oneself off to feedback.
Sophmoric namecalling is not feedback. It's noise injected into
the feedback loop.
 
Rich Grise wrote:

"Cryptographic atomic-decay random number generator..."???

Heck, even _I_ know what all those words mean! ;-D
Don't blame me. The customer was quite specific as to what he
wanted.
 
On Sun, 10 Jul 2005 22:41:21 +0000, Guy Macon
<_see.web.page_@_www.guymacon.com_> wrote:

Rich Grise wrote:

Oh, wait. Guy Macon has me plonkfiled, so he doesn't have to hear
any rebuttal from me.

No I don't. Do you wish me to?

That's a hell of a way to run an engineering business - close
oneself off to feedback.

Sophmoric namecalling is not feedback. It's noise injected into
the feedback loop.
---

It _is_ feedback, but not feedback which a freshman could be expected
to appreciate.

--
John Fields
Professional Circuit Designer
 

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