I mean, let's say you did kill us. Or didn't. There could be torture. Whatever. But somehow you found the goods. What would your cut be?

Mal ,'Out Of Gas'


Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?  

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Gudanov - Mar 06, 2006 12:07:22 pm PST #7381 of 10003
Coding and Sleeping

I installed MythKnopp, to test my hardware, but I didn't want to go that way for the real thing. I will say that MythKnopp was easy to install, but it runs much better now. MythKnopp may run better with a bit a tweaking, which I didn't do since I just wanted to make sure all the hardware worked.


le nubian - Mar 06, 2006 2:45:10 pm PST #7382 of 10003
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

anyone having trouble with gmail?


Lee - Mar 06, 2006 2:45:43 pm PST #7383 of 10003
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

It was hellaciously slow this morning, but not since then.


DCJensen - Mar 06, 2006 3:25:36 pm PST #7384 of 10003
All is well that ends in pizza.

Power tools are the vanguard of new battery tech: [link]

Excerpts:

... a new line of teeth-rattling 36-volt cordless saws, rotary hammers, and drills from DeWalt, a division of Black & Decker, finally delivers. The potent black-and-yellow beasts have twice the power of standard 18-volt tools and run for twice as long per charge.

Cofounder Yet-Ming Chiang, a materials science professor, succeeded in shrinking to nanoscale the particles that coat the battery's electrodes and store and discharge energy. The results are electrifying: Power density doubles, peak energy jumps fivefold (the cells pack more punch than a standard 110-volt wall outlet), and recharging time plummets.

A123's real target, however, is your car. Chiang says A123's cells could lighten a Toyota Prius' 100-pound battery by as much as 80 percent and help boost any hybrid's performance. The quick recharging time - the M1 takes five minutes to reach 90 percent capacity - plus high peak power also would be ideal for plug-in versions of gas-electric vehicles.

It's basically Lithium Ion batteries liberated from the hazards they've been worried about, dropping, heating, etc.


Typo Boy - Mar 06, 2006 4:28:56 pm PST #7385 of 10003
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Toshiba has something of the sort coming on line as well.

[link]

Or is the M1 it?

t On edit

Nope, a competitor, and apparently beat Toshiba to it.


Gudanov - Mar 06, 2006 6:52:35 pm PST #7386 of 10003
Coding and Sleeping

First recording with commercials on the Myth box appears to have worked perfectly. The commericals were cut out completely leaving out a brief fade to black and back.

I haven't have much time to mess with it, but even in it's incomplete state, the MythBox is awesome. The only problem is that now I have to work configuring it around it's scheduled recording times. Still need to make sure that SSH is configured and working, gotta get the web server starting up and add access control, gotta add network icons to pretty up the display, and gotta set it all up to start mythTV automatically. Then comes the quieting and putting in the ethernet cable to the living room.


aurelia - Mar 06, 2006 9:10:54 pm PST #7387 of 10003
All sorrows can be borne if you put them into a story. Tell me a story.

ita, I have this air purifier in my bedroom and I've been happy with it. [link]


§ ita § - Mar 06, 2006 9:14:17 pm PST #7388 of 10003
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Would putting that under your desk be useful? Or would it have to be on top?


aurelia - Mar 06, 2006 9:19:58 pm PST #7389 of 10003
All sorrows can be borne if you put them into a story. Tell me a story.

Under might work most of the time, but on top would be more likely to catch the strong trigger scents before they reach you. It does blow air out in a relatively directional way which might make your legs cold if it's under the desk.


§ ita § - Mar 06, 2006 9:20:52 pm PST #7390 of 10003
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Cool. Thanks.