Hi,
Anyone on here using Charter Telephone VOIP service? I've currently
got Verizon, but the wife hates it because our phone lines get flaky
all the time, esp when it rains.
So I'm thinking to save money and combine all my stuff onto Charter.
I've already got High Speed internet and regular old cable. Not wild
about Digital Cable since I'm happy with Tivo and I don't want yet
another set top box to have to deal with...
So, any horror stories about Charter Phone VOIP quality and service?
Thanks,
John
>>>>> "Jon" == Jon \"maddog\" Hall <jon.maddog.hall(a)gmail.com> writes:
>> The trouble with the old machines is the
>> eventual death of irreplacable hardware -- Pentium-MMX CPU Fans, PATA
>> disks and the like.
Jon> Emulators and virtual machines.....allow old copies of the OS to live forever.
Jon> I am, however, waiting for the "virtual car", for the time that
Jon> people can no longer get the little embedded systems that allow
Jon> modern-day cars to run. The era of "fixing up an old car" which
Jon> both trained you in auto mechanics and "gave you wheels" is
Jon> coming to a close.
Did you see the new game on early release on Steam? System Build
Simulator? Where you get to build a new PC in a simulation? Heh...
Another great resource is this blog, http://righto.com, who works on
old IMB 1401 systems with card punches, etc. Lots of great info
there.
John
>The trouble with the old machines is the
>eventual death of irreplacable hardware -- Pentium-MMX CPU Fans, PATA
>disks and the like.
Emulators and virtual machines.....allow old copies of the OS to live
forever.
I am, however, waiting for the "virtual car", for the time that people can
no longer get the little embedded systems that allow modern-day cars to
run. The era of "fixing up an old car" which both trained you in auto
mechanics and "gave you wheels" is coming to a close.
md
On Sat, Mar 31, 2018 at 9:04 AM, Michael Voorhis <mvoorhis(a)cs.wpi.edu>
wrote:
> On 03/30/2018 10:43 PM, Robert Schwein wrote:
> > http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/apps/linux-puppy-der-
> turbo-fuer-uralt-computer-a-1194437.html> Interesting use of Linux.
>
> Any OS that can be used with embedded systems will work well on
> mid-to-late 1990s PCs. The trouble with the old machines is the
> eventual death of irreplacable hardware -- Pentium-MMX CPU Fans, PATA
> disks and the like.
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Wlug mailing list
> Wlug(a)mail.wlug.org
> http://mail.wlug.org/mailman/listinfo/wlug
>
>
On 03/30/2018 10:43 PM, Robert Schwein wrote:
> http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/apps/linux-puppy-der-turbo-fuer-uralt-comput…> Interesting use of Linux.
Any OS that can be used with embedded systems will work well on
mid-to-late 1990s PCs. The trouble with the old machines is the
eventual death of irreplacable hardware -- Pentium-MMX CPU Fans, PATA
disks and the like.
Hey Gang,
Our next meeting is April 12th, 2018!
Would people be interested in talking about security oriented versions of
Linux?
We all know about Tails, and in consideration of the issues that Richard
ran into with getting stuff installed on Kali, it might be interesting to
compare / contrast the different options out there.
What do people think? I'm thinking this would work best as having a couple
of people each showing off a particular distribution.
Thanks,
Tim.
--
I am leery of the allegiances of any politician who refers to their
constituents as "consumers".
On Mon, 2018-03-26 at 21:47 -0400, John Stoffel wrote:
> Adafruit.com has some stuff like this for sale. They're not always
> the cheapest, but they have great tutorials and example code.
Found a LWN article on NFC:
https://lwn.net/Articles/645843/
He used a "PN532 NFC/RFID controller breakout board" and "FTDI Serial
TTL-232 USB Cable" to connect via USB. It is supported by libnfc.
His article talks about the Linux NFC being a better design and the
future of NFC for linux. I haven't looked to see if it has progressed
enough since his article to replace libnfc.
> Looks like a good start. Probably cost you about $50 total to get
> started, if you dont' have a raspberry Pi kicking around.
(Still haven't got a raspberry Pi. I consider myself a software guy and
not as interested in "raw" hardware. I got the PocketCHIP from
kickstarter because it was a finished product. However I seem to be
descending into hardware. I purchased TinyCircuit's TinyScreen Video
Game Kit and they sent me a TinyArcade to port my Pac-Man clone to.)
> This could be a really fun thing for the cubs to do! Especially if
> you could then sign their figures so that when they hit the reader,
> it knows it's them. Or something like that. Ask the kids for ideas!
Definitely plan to ask the kids for ideas. Just plan to test enough
that I feel confident it is doable before asking them. Yesterday I took
pictures of Skylanders to see at what scale they still look good. At 64
pixels wide they are a little grainy. 128 pixels wide looks pretty
good. Skylanders apparently has catch phrases for characters so I would
like to get each kid to record a catch phrase for their character.
Dennis> Does anyone have a recommendation for a RFID reader/writer for
Dennis> Linux (and Windows if possible)? I'm looking for a relatively
Dennis> inexpensive solution.
Adafruit.com has some stuff like this for sale. They're not always
the cheapest, but they have great tutorials and example code.
https://learn.adafruit.com/adafruit-nfc-rfid-on-raspberry-pi/overview?gclid…
Looks like a good start. Probably cost you about $50 total to get
started, if you dont' have a raspberry Pi kicking around.
Dennis> My kids just got Skylanders Imaginators. I found some code to
Dennis> read the characters. I started thinking about the Game Design
Dennis> merit badge for Cub Scout Webelos. I'm wondering about the
Dennis> viability of building a "portal" device and having the kids
Dennis> make clay figures with rfids inside the base. Obviously the
Dennis> game would be as complex as Skylanders. I'm thinking 2D using
Dennis> pictures of the models.
This could be a really fun thing for the cubs to do! Especially if
you could then sign their figures so that when they hit the reader, it
knows it's them. Or something like that. Ask the kids for ideas!
Does anyone have a recommendation for a RFID reader/writer for Linux
(and Windows if possible)? I'm looking for a relatively inexpensive
solution.
My kids just got Skylanders Imaginators. I found some code to read the
characters. I started thinking about the Game Design merit badge for
Cub Scout Webelos. I'm wondering about the viability of building a
"portal" device and having the kids make clay figures with rfids inside
the base. Obviously the game would be as complex as Skylanders. I'm
thinking 2D using pictures of the models.