Severe weather with hail and tornado warnings interspersed with trying to edit a newsletter without losing my work if the power goes out...
That about sums it up. Enough challenge without trying to come up with anything witty to say here. Lots of pyrotechnics and rain, but so far the really bad stuff has missed us.
That about sums it up. Enough challenge without trying to come up with anything witty to say here. Lots of pyrotechnics and rain, but so far the really bad stuff has missed us.
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Date: 2008-08-05 01:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 02:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 04:17 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 04:30 am (UTC)120v = 100 batteries. I've got some at 2600mAh, so 260Ah.
So how many amps does a word-processing computer take? The power supply on Atomicat's machine seems to have three boxes, neither of which are checked. I'll go with 5A, so 52 hours. Or 7 hours, if you use the largest number on the grid of things (which sounds better).
Heee, I want to try it, now! Maybe I could skimp and go for 20 batteries. It seems each device only takes something up to 12 volts, though I'm sure the power drain from the board can be immense. In my experiences, things tend to work fine until the power draw becomes too much. Then it resets.
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Date: 2008-08-05 07:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 11:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 11:22 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 11:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 11:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 12:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 02:52 pm (UTC)Our little piece of McHenry Co. seems to lead a charmed life. I suspect it has something to do with the terrain contours. We are in a slight depression sheltered from prevailing wind directions by the crest of the Marengo Ridge moraine. Storms and high winds often seem to veer off just to the north or south of us. The disadvantage is that the rain follows the winds too, and we get less even rain than the rest of the area.
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Date: 2008-08-05 06:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-05 06:08 pm (UTC)http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/weather/chi-080805-big-storm-photogallery,0,3819845.photogallery
The storm just squeaked by to the south of us, with tornado warnings for Kane County but not for McHenry.
The brown looking fog was apparently a trick of the dawn light. By the time I left for work it was the ordinary white stuff, very dense at the crest of Marengo Ridge but completely gone in town when I got here.
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Date: 2008-08-05 07:05 pm (UTC)Those older computers lacked a lot of what I would say is essential to our current object-oriented GUI. I do some graphics work, so it would have to have enough memory to support the images (which would mean more than a few KB), and a 32-bit colour screen.
Sure, I could make some basic read-write system that could take keyboard input and display to a tiny digital-clock-like display. I think I had an organizer quite a bit like that, and it runs for years on watch batteries. But I need more lines and a more complex screen and a much larger memory.
Maybe if they made the screens like older gameboys, where it was great to have a lot of light. These current back-lit LCDs are disgustingly horrible to use in direct sunlight, and account for at least 50% of the power cost of a laptop.
There was nothing better than playing a game on the Gameboy Advance and finding that optimum beam of sunlight to make all the colours sparkle.
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Date: 2008-08-05 07:13 pm (UTC)I find that today's typical laptop has a battery that lasts four hours when new, but if used and recharged regularly quickly begins to deteriorate until it's only good for an hour or two, often less.
The desktop machine isn't designed to be conservative with power. It eats more just running the fans and power supply than a laptop uses to run full blast.
Yes, my old machines are text editors. But that's the single most important application I use. While I find graphics editing (photos or drawing) useful at times, the rest of the GUI I'd just as soon do without. It just wastes energy, time, and CPU cycles in my opinion. That's why I like Linux, where it's more configurable and a lot of stuff is optional and not required.
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Date: 2008-08-05 07:26 pm (UTC)My laptop, which I used for two years and did a whole cycle on the battery every few days, tended to keep at three hours, but that was if I kept my screen brightness to a minimum and didn't task the processor.
You know what, I haven't the slightest clue about the efficiency of recharging a car battery. I know they DO stop working after a good long while, but just how often are they drained? I'd think they're usually kept mostly topped off, unless you leave things running while the car is off.
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Date: 2008-08-05 07:42 pm (UTC)Auto and marine batteries are lead acid cells. The batteries in most emergency lighting systems and UPSes are also lead acid, though usually gel electrolyte rather than the spillable liquid used in the auto and marine battery. Those perform best when kept topped up, constantly trickle charged. They have a hard time recovering from deep discharges, and repeated deep discharge weakens them.
The lead acid cell would power a typical laptop for a much longer time than the NiMH cells do. My point was that the typical loaded desktop machine eats electricity the way a Hummer eats gasoline. So even the lead acid cell wouldn't be able to power it for long.
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Date: 2008-08-05 10:59 pm (UTC)This is very weird. Suddenly all my IP adresses like FurryMuck and Tapestries and LavaddomeFive are gone and now I cannot connect nor do anything please.
Yet we are now going to delete our internet and our TV be outside of this forum for a while at least. Money mostly. TV is gone and so is our Internet
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Date: 2008-08-06 02:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-13 01:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-13 01:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-08-13 01:39 pm (UTC)Compared with the open plains states like Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma, we really don't see a lot of tornado activity. We do get quite a lot of severe thunderstorms, though, with large hail that damages crops and vehicles, sometimes very heavy rates of rainfall that cause flash flooding, and straight line wind speeds of 60 mph or more.