They are difficult to find in the shops, but I'll sell you my spare set for £50.
I expect hipsters will have a kickstarter for a half-hearted gray version in 2025
They are difficult to find in the shops, but I'll sell you my spare set for £50.
Those near UV fluorescent tubes were called black lights. They have their uses but not as Christmas lights.
Beige is the new grey which was the new beige which was an improvement of the previous brown.
Are you stuck at ~1985 (beige) or ~1995 (grey), or is this the wheel of time going round again?
I think I'm at 1960s shiny silver and black myself.tggzzz wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2025 4:41 pmAre you stuck at ~1985 (beige) or ~1995 (grey), or is this the wheel of time going round again?
Arrow of time? Maybe w.r.t. physics. But the Hindus are right when it comes to human affairs (we are back in ~1935 )
Hot Black Desiato, for starters...tggzzz wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2025 9:31 amWasted on 8% of men and 0.1% of women.nixiefreqq wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2025 1:54 am but what if you need more than 16 million colors? don't we all need 20 to 30 million colors in our holiday display?
Besides, who wants almost-but-not-quite black lights outside a house (Unless you are designing a black control panel front door bell illumination, of course).
I was talking with one of my friends the other day about COVID-19 era predictions that never came true. We were remembering the speculation there was that there'd be a period of prosperity like the Roaring '20s after the previous pandemic. My friend's comment was that we totally skipped over the Roaring '20s and landed in 1937. I'd have to agree.bd139 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 10, 2025 10:22 amI think I'm at 1960s shiny silver and black myself.
But yes society is definitely mirroring the mid 30s. Hopefully someone will shoot all the problems away before we have to get involved.
Pray, do tell, where is this place?bd139 wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2025 8:15 pm Civilisation comes in waves I suspect. People who lived through wars tell stories. Eventually they wear off and new people demand more wars.
——
And now for something completely different… or not. Another civilisation failure. Just spent the day wandering around here …
IMG_3837.jpeg
Civilisations rot from within. A classic warning sign is when an unnecessarily high proportion of the total wealth is held in too few hands, and too many people feel they will never be able to access sufficient wealth to live tolerable lives.
The giveaway is the relief of Silenus resting on a wineskin. Must be the corner of Via della Fortuna and Via del Vesuvio.And now for something completely different… or not. Another civilisation failure. Just spent the day wandering around here …
Do try some local excessively sensual fresh fruit, but don't gorge on them. Ficus carica, of course.
If you like that, seriously consider Sicily. Even though she was less than 4yo, my daughter still remembers the amphitheatre and temple at Segesta, and the monks strung up in the Catacombe dei Cappuccini, and the reason they stopped stringing them up: Rosalia Lombardo.Edit: discovered how to travel and stay in (nice) places cheaply thus have been spending the TE budget on that. I can’t remember if I posted last month’s excursion. This one’s a bit easier.
I was still thinking about the Keysight promotional PCB ruler that I never received the next day after I wrote that post about it on November 4th and ended up browsing eBay. One seller offered a set of three PCB rulers for a reasonable price and free shipping so I ordered two sets on the 5th of November. The free shipping from China wasn't the fastest though and they arrived in Canada a couple of days after Canada Post went on strike. The strike lasted about a month before the government effectively legislated an end to it and then there was the backlog of mail that built up. The rulers finally arrived today. I barely had enough time to unpack them and get a picture of them before heading to work this afternoon (I slept in. I needed it. I was exhausted.) but here they are:25 CPS wrote: ↑Mon Nov 04, 2024 7:37 pm I got a marketing email from Rhode & Schwartz the other day. They had the fill out a form to receive an RF spectrum allocation poster promotion going on and that made me realize something:
I filled out that promotion several years ago and I never received the poster.
Then I realized I filled out a Keysight promotion form even longer ago for one of those RF PCB rulers they were giving away and I never received that either.
This leaves me wondering if these large companies are hyping up promotional giveaways to get people to fill out their information so marketing databases can be populated without actually sending out any of the items in question except to high profile social media personalities who contribute to the marketing hype while regular people see nothing.
I would disagree---- in my experience, the silly side switches on the 8060A were a "pet hate" of Electronics Techs.AVGresponding wrote: ↑Wed Jan 15, 2025 6:37 pm Yeah I think the 8060A was aimed more at electronics guys, the rubber baby buggy bumper brigade are more a sparky thing.
@Robert, identifying the connector on this seems the sort of thing you excel at: [youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdHZahE ... DJDMxpZBFm[/youtube]
nixiefreqq wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 12:06 am took me 10 minutes to figure out that you guys like to rhyme things.
ginger beer apparently equals engineer?
what's next....videos of morris dancing?
guess that's what happens when you are isolated on a little island. too bad the roman empire pulled out and left you to alone to develop your strange ways and culture. AND you fucking drive on the wrong side of the road.
edit am old and senile.....and forgot for a moment that swmbo was naturalized here but born a brit. ok.......that's something else that annoys me about the UK (but not as much as morris dancing).
edit 2 so what are the rules about UK citizenship? any chance you will take her back?
Haven't heard that, but Cockney rhyming slang continually mutates. If it is that, then you would only ever say "ginger"; the "beer" must be omitted.nixiefreqq wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 12:06 am took me 10 minutes to figure out that you guys like to rhyme things.
ginger beer apparently equals engineer?
Most people recognise the concept that you should try everything once, except morris dancing and incest. Morris dancing is principally an excuse to go out to a country pub, and become gently sozzled.what's next....videos of morris dancing?
You almost got that correct; better luck next time..AND you fucking drive on the wrong side of the road.
I'm from a very large island, & I don't really know if the Brits use the term "ginger beer" or not, but it is common in Australia.nixiefreqq wrote: ↑Thu Jan 16, 2025 12:06 am took me 10 minutes to figure out that you guys like to rhyme things.
ginger beer apparently equals engineer?
what's next....videos of morris dancing?
guess that's what happens when you are isolated on a little island. too bad the roman empire pulled out and left you to alone to develop your strange ways and culture. AND you fucking drive on the wrong side of the road.
edit am old and senile.....and forgot for a moment that swmbo was naturalized here but born a brit. ok.......that's something else that annoys me about the UK (but not as much as morris dancing).
edit 2 so what are the rules about UK citizenship? any chance you will take her back?
I didn't like the slide switches at first either and didn't find them intuitive until it clicked that they form a truth table for function selection. That part of the 8060A and the other similar meters that Fluke made with that setup was definitely something that was designed by a digital guy for sure. For electronics use, particularly audio, the 8060A's AC bandwidth and dB relative measurement functions beat the 77. According to the history out there on the 8060A, audio electronics considerations were a major design influence which explains why it's well suited for that application, function switch notwithstanding.vk6zgo wrote: ↑Wed Jan 15, 2025 11:18 pmI would disagree---- in my experience, the silly side switches on the 8060A were a "pet hate" of Electronics Techs.AVGresponding wrote: ↑Wed Jan 15, 2025 6:37 pm Yeah I think the 8060A was aimed more at electronics guys, the rubber baby buggy bumper brigade are more a sparky thing.
@Robert, identifying the connector on this seems the sort of thing you excel at: [youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdHZahE ... DJDMxpZBFm[/youtube]
It was common to see them with one or more of the buttons missing, making them less than useful.
The 77, with its offset knob, offered a much more rugged way of using a DMM "one handed".
The early desktop Fluke DMMs were not really popular with Techs, either, as they tended towards fragility, leading to the less than complimentary "slogan" ----"if it works, it's a Fluke"!
No doubt,"ginger beers" liked them!