A super-efficient insulating material has a conductivity of 5 mW/mK.
Does anyone know how to translate that into R value per inch?
'Sleeper'
Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
A super-efficient insulating material has a conductivity of 5 mW/mK.
Does anyone know how to translate that into R value per inch?
le nub, if you were anywhere near downtown LA, I'd happily come over and install it for you for free.
Sean, you kick ass. Unfortunately, I'm in the Eastern timezone - probably for the next 2 years at least. I need the card installation before then! :-)
There are small computer fix-it shops around here (Boston) who probably install wireless cards for people all the time and for a very reasonable price, I'm sure!
Might there be such a thing as a wireless "pod" that attaches to a desktop computer via USB or suchlike?
LeNube - If you took apart your TiVo, installing a wireless card in a computer will probably be less tricky.
Might there be such a thing as a wireless "pod" that attaches to a desktop computer via USB or suchlike?
Absolutely. I picked up one of these [link] cheap at Best Buy over a year ago. I could only afford the one, and I wanted something that I could swap between my desktop (W98) and my laptop (WinMe) when necessary. It's worked out pretty well.
Ooooh, nice! And a lot easier to deal with for a person like me!
I used to use one of those. The range isn't very good.
Yeah, I was going to say--I got one from Linksys for my parent's home Dell box, and the thing was no more than five feet from the wireless router and it dropped the signal at least once or twice an hour. I don't rec them at all; for a desktop it's worth getting the stronger and more stable card, and for laptops with a card bus, totally worth it to get an adapter.
Or at least get one of the larger-sized USB ones -- like the ones TiVO uses.