Search results

  1. J

    Something Random

    I agree. The more I read about this the madder I get. Sadly, in the end BP will likely end up paying for a fraction of the damage they caused, the area around the Gulf of Mexico will be messed up for generations, and then we'll all wait until the next screw-up occurs. Only next time it might...
  2. J

    Foxconn Kills

    No, like I said, absolutely no money to travel. Going into Manhattan is about all I can manage as far as trips these days. Also, no time for it. I'm not one for flying ( uncomfortable, risky, basically a totally uncivilized way of traveling ), so a trip to the Far East would mean three days...
  3. J

    Foxconn Kills

    Yep. That would be what BP calls a "junk shot". :mrgrn:
  4. J

    Foxconn Kills

    Nope, never been there at all. I just don't have the money or desire to travel. What you say is certainly true, but I have heard of company heads and politicians offing themselves in the past. Those times are probably mostly past though. Nowadays from what I've read Japan is getting to be...
  5. J

    End of the World As We Know It

    I'm anti anything which isn't sustainable for the long haul. The very idea that everyone, including the lower income brackets, should own a home is what created both the real estate bubble ( and the subsequent crash ) and a lot of exurban sprawl. If enough people living in suburbs are willing...
  6. J

    End of the World As We Know It

    In theory you may be right except for the fact this doesn't work in practice due to the strange way many suburbs are zoned. You'll have a residential area, and the nearest commercial area might be 3 miles away, despite the fact that there is nothing but empty land in between the residential and...
  7. J

    Foxconn Kills

    It's not only acceptable, but often expected, for a public official who massively screws up to take his/her life for the sake of honor. If BP, for example, were a Japanese company the President would probably have killed himself already. As much as I hate to say it, this concept has a certain...
  8. J

    End of the World As We Know It

    No, we'll probably need sustained prices over $5 a gallon for that to happen. Also, I should point out the problem isn't one of gas prices, it's one of infrastructure. Much of the infrastructure supporting suburbia was built a few decades ago, at much less in real dollars than it would cost to...
  9. J

    End of the World As We Know It

    Well, I'm actually seeing something like that. You'll have many ( most ? ) people either in cities or relatively dense suburbs, with those in other areas needing to be pretty much self-sufficient as far as providing their own power, growing their own food, etc. Either way is actually...
  10. J

    End of the World As We Know It

    It's actually worse than that And more to the point Note the date on the first article-well before any of this happened, and IMO the last half of the article is way too optimistic. The mortgage crisis simply accelerated an underlying trend. The exurbs are dying, while cities are mostly...
  11. J

    Foxconn Kills

    This is what happens when you treat people like worker ants: “Foxconn’s production line system is designed so well that no worker will rest even one second during work; they make sure you’re always busy for every second,” says Li Qiang, executive director of the China Labor Watch, a New...
  12. J

    Display timewarp

    I'm curious as to why monitors haven't increased pixel count so that they display at 300 dpi or better. We're still stuck at ~100 dpi when today's PCs can easily handle displays with much higher resolution. The goal should be to have the pixel size roughly equal to the eye's resolution at the...
  13. J

    What motivates people

    Interesting. This explains why I've spent more hours than I care to think helping improve MS Train Simulator, and then basically gave away whatever I learned. Same thing for a bunch of others involved. None of us cared about money. In fact, there really wasn't money involved because nobody...
  14. J

    Nichia Develops 60 Lumen Per Watt White LED

    The reason Americans typically have large refrigerators has to do with yet another inefficiency-sprawled out living. Many people shop for groceries at big box stores perhaps once or twice a month. As a result, they need the space to store a large amount of perishables. Back in the days when...
  15. J

    Nichia Develops 60 Lumen Per Watt White LED

    Unless of course you get the replacement LED for free like I did. :mrgrn: I tested a bunch of LED bulbs for someone on CPF and got to keep them. Most weren't that great ( i.e. they used 5 mm indicator LEDs which are prone to fading ). A few are decent. The one I stuck in the fridge uses...
  16. J

    Nichia Develops 60 Lumen Per Watt White LED

    Probably closer to 3:1 for typical household refrigerators. Also, the room is a closed system, so the net amount of heat added is only whatever the compressor uses. For example, if a 100 watt compressor moves 300 watts of heat, yes, you will have 400 watts total coming out the back ( or...
  17. J

    3TB hard drive from Seagate

    Yes, probably Samsung and WD will release their own 3 TB drives in a relatively timely fashion after Seagate. What really excites me more than the increase in maximum capacity is the fact that this development should decrease prices of 1 to 2 TB drives. A 1.5 TB drive will now be two-platter...
  18. J

    3TB hard drive from Seagate

    Actually, I read an article about hard disk manufacturers seriously considering migrating to 4K sectors instead of 512. The reason was 4K is commonly the smallest unit used by various file systems. I don't know if Seagate plans to do this with the 3 TB drives or not but it would make sense...
  19. J

    When did you give up training?

    I haven't giving up on exercise ( i.e. cycling in my case ), but I've found a combination of things keep me from doing as much as I'd like. For one, the weather doesn't always cooperate. Rain or snow forget it. Temps under about 30°F ( or much over about 80°F unless the humidity is low )...
  20. J

    Good, actually silent refrigerator

    http://www.candlepowerforums.com/vb/showpost.php?p=2439222&postcount=178 Much colder than your needs ( I've had it down to -58°F ), and much more expensive ( IIRC I spent over $1000, and about 3 years of my free time, trying different things ). Next time I have a big stretch of time free I may...
  21. J

    Something Random

    Speaking of high-speed trains and China ( udaman's post a few pages back ): China Offers To Build High-Speed Rail to California China Wants 380 km/hr Trains First off, given the cost overruns and delays typical of any infrastructure project done by American workers, I think California should...
  22. J

    Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution premier

    I've consistently ate breakfast my entire life. It still didn't stop me from gaining about 35 pounds from my mid 20s up until now ( actually, my weight has been stable at 195-205 for at least the last decade ). I might be losing some lately between cutting out soda and getting on my bike at...
  23. J

    Something Random

    It sounds like your mortgage broker was dealing with him.
  24. J

    Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution premier

    All I said was these programs don't spend a lot of money on overhead. Their insolvency is another issue entirely. At least what funds they do take in are mostly paid out in benefits. Social Security's overhead is only around 1%. Now remember that the recent health care bill will require...
  25. J

    Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution premier

    They should have went with single payer to start with. If the government is going to force me to buy insurance one way or another ( and I'll agree that it has no business doing this ), then to me single payer makes a lot more sense. The other way I pay insurance company, insurance company...
  26. J

    Socket G34, 12 cores @ 1.9 GHz or 8 cores at 2.4 GHz?

    Until we're able to commercially produce light-based CPUs ~3.5 to 4 GHz is about as fast as we're going to be able to go. There are inherent limits on clock speed due to things like trace capacitance/inductance. You really can't economically get around these limits. This is why we started...
  27. J

    Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution premier

    There are organizations that already do this. They're called insurance companies. They're far worse than any government "death panel" would ever be. Not only do they often not cover things they claim they do as part of your policy, but they'll drop you altogether once you start costing them...
  28. J

    Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution premier

    In the legislative chambers of course. Judging by some of the laws being passed, it looks like they're already smoking some strong stuff. :drinka:
  29. J

    Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution premier

    I'll agree the latest push to take ALL salt out of restaurant is misguided. However, there's nothing good about smoking, transfats, or for that matter high-fructose corn syrup. I'm glad we've gotten rid of transfats. I hope we do the same with HFCS, and any other junk currently in food which...
  30. J

    Something Random

    Ouch! I feel a little better now. I spent ~$7000 on dental work from 1993-1995, didn't see a dentist again until last year, and then spent close to $4000. End result though is 29 teeth still remaining, 2 of the three pulled ones are wisdom teeth, the other is a second molar. 15 teeth ( all...
  31. J

    Twitter..wtf?!?...do U tweet?

    Possibly the first instance of Twitter actually being useful for something besides massaging people's egos: Back on Madison Avenue, Austin Horse quickly realized his bike was gone and immediately took out his cellphone and posted to Twitter (“STOLEN BIKE! My orange gangsta just got stolen 28th...
  32. J

    Eneloop Alternatives (or Cracking The Battery Lingo Codewords)

    That makes three of us. All the eneloop AAs I bought cost me $2.50 or less per cell. That's cheap enough in my book. I wouldn't even want the Eneloop Lites unless they cost like a buck each.
  33. J

    Council rates

    That's another thing I neglected to mention. In general power plants will upgrade as time goes on in terms of both efficiency and emissions. ICE cars on the other hand generally get worse once they leave the factory. That goes double these days when many are struggling just to pay for fuel...
  34. J

    Could Cars Have Caused the Mortgage Meltdown?

    And foreclosing doesn't do you much good when the house is worth less than the mortgage on it.
  35. J

    Using GPU for math operations

    I found a whole site dedicated to using GPUs for general purpose computing: http://gpgpu.org/ Unfortunately, it doesn't look like anyone has developed a driver of some sort which can reroute floating point operations from any application from the CPU to the GPU.
  36. J

    Council rates

    To save you a bit of time, here is a link about the power grid. About halfway down the page: Transmission and distribution losses in the USA were estimated at 7.2% in 1995. In general, losses are estimated from the discrepancy between energy produced (as reported by power plants) and energy...
  37. J

    Sandisk PATA SSD's

    I'm wondering about that myself. I though PATA was dead for all intents and purposes.
  38. J

    Using GPU for math operations

    Not only that, but a CUDA supported GPU isn't even available for the AGP 4X/8X slot on my M/B. Looks like I'm out of luck then. :(
  39. J

    Using GPU for math operations

    I'm using Circuitmaker 6.0 student version. It's not longer supported or updated by the original programmer, so no chance of the code being updated to take advantage of GPUs. Like I said first post, I'm more curious for academic reasons if I can get this and a few other computation intensive...
  40. J

    Using GPU for math operations

    I've read about some programs greatly increasing calculation speed by using the GPU for floating point calculations. Is there any software or drivers which could make a computer do that with any program? I'm just curious because lately I've been doing a lot of circuit simulation, and I'm...
  41. J

    Something Random

    The appeal is that unlike a lot of the lame shows/movies we see nowadays, you can't predict the outcome ten minutes into the show. It's that element of unpredictably, with the occasionally dark horse nobody thought stood a chance winning it all, which makes sports more appealing then most...
  42. J

    Something Random

    I can't stand NBC's coverage, either. Too many commercials, too many inane human interest stories, and the worst part is mixing up events as if the viewers are all on Ritalin. I'd like to be able to watch, say, bobsledding, at such and such time ( preferably live ), without seeing 10 minutes...
  43. J

    Nichia Develops 60 Lumen Per Watt White LED

    In 2008 when that was written LEDs weren't cost effective relative to the alternatives. Now the answer is it depends. LED street lighting is starting to get there, with smaller lighting needs actually being cost competitive in terms of total cost of ownership. The claim of "greater...
  44. J

    Council rates

    I appreciate the sentiment, and agree that I'd rather see people like those here reproduce, as it might improve the human race instead of heading the other way as we seem to be doing. That being said, for me personally the point is moot regardless of whether I desire children or not. Point of...
  45. J

    Council rates

    Everything I've read on the subject tells me CA desperately needs both the HSR and much more public transit. It isn't to improve traffic. Rather, it's to keep everything from grinding to a halt ten or twenty years from now. I forgot by what percentage CA is expected to grow in that time...
  46. J

    Council rates

    First off, Doug is right about the Prius. The electric motor and battery are just a black box designed to increase mpg by recapturing some kinetic energy when the car is stopped. Second, I agree that hybrids aren't really a great idea. They give slightly better fuel economy in exchange for...
  47. J

    Council rates

    Our system is pretty similar except the local property taxes are assessed based on property value, rather than income, and pay for the bulk of education ( along with other things such as garbage collection, public transit, roads, etc. ). That's mainly the reason they're so high. While state...
  48. J

    Could Cars Have Caused the Mortgage Meltdown?

    It's like anything else in life-if the good outweighs the bad, then it's worth it overall. I'd say the biggest issues with living here are the high housing costs ( only an issue if you're in the market, my mom's house is long paid for ), and the air quality. Oh, and the poor drivers. They...
  49. J

    Could Cars Have Caused the Mortgage Meltdown?

    My mom's paying over $2000 a year for her 2006 300C. She gets the good driver discount and hardly uses it. If she drove more than about 10K miles a year she would pay more. My brother is paying about $1000 a year just for basic liability on his 1993 Mark VIII. If I got my license, as a new...
  50. J

    Could Cars Have Caused the Mortgage Meltdown?

    Very interesting read, especially the comments. The big problem with living in a place where you depend upon a car to get around is price volatility. If gas suddenly spikes from $1.50 to $6 per gallon you really have no choice but to pay it. When you depend upon walking, biking, or public...
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