Re: "Doublefuck!! Wrong [rebooted|powered-off] Computer!"
No, you make the DEV background FLASH.
779 publicly visible posts • joined 4 Jul 2007
fits into a 19" rack... Then grab the front bezels of some old DELL servers and stick them to the front.
As those bezels are full of holes and gaps and general lack of design, grab a stack of old Hot-plug disks, cut the end with the locking arm off, connect wires to the LEDs in that piece and stick them to the door before placing the bezels.
For extra points, fit pressure transducers to the shelves and use an arduino to display the number of lagers on each shelf as a RED LED among the Green ones.
Yes, you can use a RPi to connect it to the network and show it all on a fancy website, but what's the fun in that?
What a pile of sorry code. They say that it's the last computer BillG was in on the programming of the OS on.
I believe it. If you start any of the built-in programs fresh out of the box you'll get an error.
Also, unlike what the Americans think, it wasn't the first 'laptop'
the Epson HX-20 came first.
And is a much more capable machine, too.
Yes, I have them. I also have the TRS 80 Model 102. Mostly a slightly slimmer 100.
I have the Osborne.(First portable. No, I don't count that movable IBM), the Commodore SX-64, and a few others.
The Epson PX-8 is extra nice...
I have the Amstrad NC-100 and 200. Anyone got a 150 for sale?
I have Apples, I have Newtons, I have the eMate...
Even a non-toasted PowerBook 5300.(Popularly known as the Hindenbook because of its tendency to catch fire... But only the model with Li-Ion batteries, supplied by Sony, did that. Mine's a Ni-mh model)
I have Psions, a cratefull even, and a Geofox among them. I have Palms, I have REXes.
I could use a BBC Model B, though. Is it export limited or something?
The correct way to handle it is to tell either the crew that is on the case, or their manager, what you happened to find when you were messing about on your own time.
Let them decide if it's a fix, or tempporary patch, or just a wild shot in the dark.
Also, as this was during the slow transition from XP to Win7, it's possible they had already decided that they would use this to get he stragglers to finally update!
And THAT is the only thing you're supposed to look for when doing statistics on tickets; all the easily fixed 'nuisance tickets' with the same cause.
Find the worst offender, and fix the root cause, then the next worst offender and so on.
Anything else in the system is not relevant and can probably be faked anyway.
It's a CLEAR cover. That won't stop anyone stupid enough to mess with the cables at all.
If the socket can't be hidden under a raised floor, use a 60309-something instead.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEC_60309
Then use distribution rails in the rack with IEC 60320 C13 sockets. Most Rack-mount kit can work with a standard C13 - to - C14 cable.
Well, besides Cisco...
If you have to worry about inserting the wrong set, or labelling tapes, you don't have a large enough robot.
In a robot, there are 3 sets of tapes; protected(tapes written to, and that should not be reused for a certain period), the 'Scratch tapes'(any tape not protected by a time limit) and the cleaning tapes...
Tapes you NEED to remove for offsite can be exported, and you replace them with scratch or new tapes.
And you can get LTO tapes already labelled from the factory.
I think the idea being that the team members will stop calling the people in other departments for simpering idiots or neanderthals, and actually start cooperating with them...
The only thing a Teambuilding dofus manage to get them to agree on is that the dofus needs to be taken out back and playfully rolled through a few cow patties.
Other than that, what everyone wants to do is forget everything that happened, and hope that the simpering neanderthals in the same group also does, otherwise they might have blackmail material on you.
NO ONE has yet managed to prove that Teambuilding exercises actually work!
One of those components was the HPFS file system. M$ owns that, and IBM paid royalties from it, so every time IBM sold a license, BillG got tingly...
I believe at least some M$ marketing drones were told to FUD OS/2 as much as possible, too.
I heard one once say that HPFS was critically flawed. (He was pushing NT server 3.51... talk about flaw... )
I immediately stood up and asked when M$ was going to fix it, then since it was their product and all...
I feel the urge... to hit someone...
Also, since OS/2 is being maintained you're allowed to use present tense when mentioning it.
I can never remember seeing an error screen on an OS/2-based ATM. But you can't walk through a large shopping mall or international airport without seeing at least a few winblows-based ATMs, ticketmachines or info-screens with either white text on blue or a dialog box that someone needs to click away...
He should NOT feel guilty about the guard.
It was the guard who decided to move what he believed to be a dangerous explosive device. Or some mangler or other ordered him to do it.
Had he done his job, and called it in, the bomb squad would have told him to under no circumstances toucht it. Then they'd send a team to deal with it.
It could also have been an Osborne, a Compaq Portable, possibly a Kaypro(can't remember the size of the screen).
It probably wasn't the Commodore Sx-64, though, as it had a smaller screen.
And the Panasonic Sr. has a 9" screen, not a 7" as mentioned in the article.
Trade me the sr for a Cambdridge Computers Z88? New in box... Yes, original carboard 'attache case' packaging.
No?
It's not hayfever, it's allergy.
Probably to the pollen from Euphorbia pulcherrima
Commonly known as 'Poinsettia' and very popular as Christmas decorations.
One of the big bosses at my office was allergic, and she finaly got the building owners to stop giving one of those wretched things to every employee in the building.
Compaq servers had so many quirks that they brought with them to HP, that ILO was a must unless you had your office right next to the server room.
Proliant 1600 with a triple PSU instead of the single?
Will halt on boot if one of the PSUs doesn't have power or is non-working for other reasons.
AAAARGH!
At least my insistence on ILO saved me from an hour-long journey to push a key.
I actually have something where that is a real issue. That being the wires going to the seat belt tensioner on my first Gen Citroën Berlingo. Whenever the airbag light doesn't go off a few seconds after switching on the ignition, it's time to reach under the seat, find the plug and unplug and plug it back in a few time, and it'll be OK for a year or two again.
I have one of those Organisers. Not 'Organiser I' or 'Organiser One' as they're listed on some sites. The original.
No it wasn't all that useful... Unless you got the Math Pak for it. That contained an early version of OPL.
(Organiser Programming Language)
I want that Pak.
I have a few IIs, too. A CM, an LZ64, a POS250 and a POS350(same as a II XP, but with 96KB RAM and none of the regular programs installed)
I even have the printer. And incredibly, the 'Plug'n Play' works! Plug it in, switch the II on(or off, then on if it was on when plugging it in), and drivers were loaded from the Printer. The same with the serial cable.
I actually used the LZ64 actvely until about 10 years ago. I kept lists of my comics and book collection on it, and used it when browsing in used book stores.
Please, NO!
Every time someone mentions Asimos 3 bloody rules I want to barf!
The whole concept is so feckin flawed it's not funny.
Here's a better worded explanation than I can put up:
https://mindmatters.ai/2019/09/the-three-laws-of-robotics-have-failed-the-robots/
For a funnier, but still relevant view, read the comic FreeFall by Mark Stanley.
I challenge you to try the Slippery Road courses here in Norway...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnzvsRZE8CQ
When your wheels lock they create too much friction, and heat up and melts the top layer of ice so that your wheels suddenly float on top of water cushions. No 'snow buildup' will stop that.
I call BALLS on that. I drive all year round in Norway, on any and all conditions.
Wintertime is the time of the year that I really wish I had ABS in my car. Icy roads aren't uniformly icy or wet, so grip with one wheel can be extremely different from what a wheel on the other side of the car experiences. without ABS you end up braking, correcting, braking, correcting, braking, swearing, correcting, swearing... with a bit more swearing mixed in if you need to stop quickly.
And no, you don't brake better if the wheels stop rotating. That just means they're now sliding on the surface and you've lost control of your vehicle.
On an icy surface this means your wheels are melting the top layer as it passes over, and creates a very thin layer of water to ride on. That's nature taking it's Friction toy back and ppointing its nose at you.
Yes, I know Petter Solberg does powerslides in his rallycar... and that the Finns and everyone else also does it. It's still loss of control. And quite a few of them go end over ass into the geography. It's a calculated risk for them. We try not to calculate that in on public roads. Those of us that don't intend to wreck our cars, that is...
I've been driving for 30 winters on icy roads now, and somehow I'm still alive...
Still want ABS, though.
The print outs is because sometimes they use sodding different length and diameter all over the place.
Sure, the bottom may be fastened with M3 screws, but one is 4mm and the rest is 6mm long, and if you install a 6mm in the place of a 4mm, you break something expensive. And I suspect they've designed it like that on purpose.
The Magnetic trays are good, but take it one step further;
Take pictures of the area you're working on, and print those and place over a magnetic sheet.
Draw with a red marker around every screw you replace for that step. And place the removed screw on top of the picture of it.
Also, check out a Wowstick on whatever's your favorite/least hated Chinese shopping site. The 1F+ model has a built-in rechargeable battery, LEDs around the tip, and comes with a magnetiser/demagnetiser thingie.
I bought my first Wowstick after I had to open HP Elitebook 840 G3s... They have literally a DOZEN screws holding the bottom in place.
And are you willing to pay for large capacity HDDs that has been used for a year or three, in an environment you know nothing about?
I just threw out a crate of old 3.5" size HDDs(from ancient 40MB PATA, to 1TB SATA that were still 'among the living')
Just made a couple of holes with an 8mm drill bit first...
(One was an old IBM 'Deathstar' HDD... they make a funny sound when the bit hits the platter)
I would have trusted those HDDs more than random disks used in any mining rig.