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Lopatir wrote: I'm over keeping old crap "just in case." That's Mrs. Wife's job - except for the stuff she wants to keep.[^]
I know I'll need that 360KB floppy at some point, or it will go up in value . . . or I can use it when telling stories to disbelieving grandchildren of proof that what I'm saying is true.
One day, you'll again need something and won't have an accidental backup - and you'll never forgive yourself!
Ravings en masse^ |
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"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you are seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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On my last PC build my collection of old crap saved me some heartache...
I had bought an AMD motherboard that could take a regular AMD CPU - or an APU. The APU provides the on-board graphics output, but I didn't need that, so I bought just a regular CPU without that extra stuff. I was going to use my NVidia GPU instead.
I thought I'd plug the card in, plug the CPU in, then boot up and the BIOS would auto-recognize it didn't have an APU, and use the PCIx slot instead where my GPU was...
Nope.
So there I am - my options being: Buy a different CPU or buy a different motherboard. I couldn't return either of the ones I had because they were long out of the return window. Sigh. What to do?
Hmm - well, the motherboard had an empty PCI slot - so I dug thru my pile and found an old 8 meg PCI graphics card. I hoped it would work...and it did!
Booted up into the BIOS, changed the defaults to use the PCIx slot for video, then rebooted and all was fine. Had I not had that old video card, I would've been out a couple hundred dollars or more.
I keep all kinds of old "junk" - because I never know when I will need it. It's saved my bacon so many times in the past.
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Maybe this sounds like going off-track, but it isn't!
Looking all the way back to your first use of a computer: What sort of backup medium have you used over the years? (If you want to rephrase that to "What backup medium would I have used if I had practiced good backup routines?" - that's OK with me.)
I have made backups (or had original files) on 8", 5.25" (two varieties), 3.5" (three varieties) and even 2" floppies. Half-inch open-reel tape. Even punched paper tape. Two different QIC cartridges. Two types Travan tape cartridges. DAT. SCSI disks. FW 400 disks. FW 800 disks. External USB disks with classical B, mini B, micro B and micro B SuperSpeed connectors. SDHC cards. xD cards. DV tape. USB2 memroy sticks. And don't get me started on analog media for sound, still pictures and home movies...
Part of the explanation of this mess is that I always wanted to be in the forefront, using the newest technology, under the assumption that it would last the longest. I have spent many hundred hours moving files from one medium to another one, and I must admit that sometimes, I started too late: I could borrow an reader for an evening, but had to prioritize which tapes to read - time didn't allow them all to be saved. I had to sacrify some of it. In other cases, I could save none of it: No reader was available when I came across those backups in my archive that I had forgotten about.
That is just the first step. I have a pile of "saved" files, but no program that can read Lotus Manuscript documents. Or AMI documents. Or Notis documents. For most sound files I have codecs - but for some of them, I have to boot up an old Win98 PC. Similar with some strange photo formats.
For a number of years now, I have calmed down the race towards the latest and greatest technology: I soon have moved everything over to high capacity USB2 disks, under a single backup structure. USB2 won't disappear overnight. When another technology has proven to be similarly stable, moving the files over will be far simpler/faster than playing card tricks with floppies, tape cartridges or flash cards. USB2 is no longer state of the art, but I don't want that: I want the longlevity gold medal winner.
People are not going to loose their backup files because the backup disk is lost or stolen or the substrate deteriorates so that the files cannot be read. Most private files will be lost by not having the equipment available to read them. You may have the reader, but your current PC does not have a suitable interface. If it has, maybe no driver for the reader has been available since Win98. If you have a driver, the file format may be unreadable by the software you've got available. I had to buy another SCSI cable when I bought a new unit requiring then ninth kind of SCSI plug in my setup. I complained to the salesman, he said "You are lucky! There are at least 14 different plugs used for SCSI!" - that's when I decided to boycott SCSI for all new equipment.
For most cases, you can in principle send the disk, tape or whatever away to some company that specializes in recovering old files. It could cost you hundreds of dollars, maybe more. And it could take weeks. It is very tempting to conclude "Sh*t happens", and forget that you ever had those files. Actually, I have kept a fair share of all the backup media I have ever used, as a "computer museum" - at least a couple units in each format. But for those I couldn't save all the information, I have given up all hope of ever completing the transfer.
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Not software engineering, the real one. Software engineering used to compare with the latter like astrology compares with astrophysics.
But now?
In my bitter experience, many brand new products doesn't work properly from the very start. I'll name few examples: a GPS watch, a blood pressure monitor, a TV soundbar, even a vacuum cleaner.
On the other side, my Windows 8 never crashes, seldom hangs.
Are engineers, collectively, on sabbatic leave?
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I kinda know what you mean, but ... my suspicion is that it's the "software engineering" side of new devices that lets down the hardware engineer side.
A sous vide I bought, with WiFi and BlueTooth. That works wonderfully, if you ignore the WiFi and bluetooth (and definitely the app that comes with it)
I don't own a GPS watch, or even a smart watch: mine has hands, is made of titanium, and was a gift last century!
Vacuum cleaners ... blame the EU, I do. I have a "old" 2200W mains machine which works, even on cat hair. Modern ones ... the EU cut the max power in two stages to 900W and they suck. In both senses. They are rechargeable mostly because the manufacturers needed to find something to sell them on, since "actually cleaning" was no longer an option.
Sent from my Amstrad PC 1640
Never throw anything away, Griff
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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It really isn't so much about the power as you might think. It's all about air flow. It's a bit like with amplifiers. Twice the power only gives 3db more sound
And modern vacuums simply are to small to have a proper airflow.
If you have the space you should buy one of these[^].
They never were more than 1000w but they will last you your lifetime.
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"Twice the power only gives 3db more sound"...
That's a bit misleading. Twice the power gives twice the 'sound'. Sound pressure level has a logarithmic scale of measurement where +3db is a multiplying factor of 2. A logarithmic scale of measurement is used because the human ear is also logarithmic, automatically compensating for increases in sound pressure level so the perceived increase in loudness isn't linear.
An increase of 3db is a doubling of the SPL. It's twice as loud, although to the brain doesn't seem so, but that's a physiological phenomenon.
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"request quote"
I'm sure that'll be inexpensive for home use. Right.
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In the long run, actually yes.
The price tag is normally €250.
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OriginalGriff wrote: Vacuum cleaners [...] they suck You only wish they did.
In the near future, they will stop in the middle of cleaning, download a firmware update, and fail to start again because of a licensing issue.
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That's OK - I'm used to switching the hoover off and back on again anyway...
Sent from my Amstrad PC 1640
Never throw anything away, Griff
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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In my past it has been if there is an Engineering problem it's too late to fix it or it will cost too much so let the Software Engineers fix it they can make it work so we code around problems and at least make it work till the next version (hate it)
But then again " It's software that makes Hardware Happen"
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Hardware is always worsened by software.
I always cringe when I see a device that claims to be "powered by Java".
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Quote: "powered by Java
How many Ampere does Java deliver?
It does not solve my Problem, but it answers my question
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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Practically nil.
It's a consumer anyway.
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How many Ampere does Java deliver waste?
FFY.
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I'm more concerned about the time wasted waiting for a DVD or Blu-ray player to boot up, then check for updates, and determine whether or not the licence is valid, then not allow me to press the eject button until it confirms that there's no disc in it...
These sorts of things worked just fine before they became infected with Java.
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It reminds me the infective behaviour of certain antiviruses.
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PIEBALDconsult wrote: I always cringe when I see a device that claims to be "powered by Java".
Think of it as a warning label.
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Be patient - these are all AI aided devices... With time they will learn and improve...
"The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge". Stephen Hawking, 1942- 2018
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Then retire to the Caribbean.
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Always check the quality stamp before buying.
It starts with: "Made in..."
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don't be so harsh, you know there are some quality goods out of china,
but out the back door of the same factory are all the below/failed spec "same same, we only change name" versions of the identical product.
(they can do quality, just that their pass yields are still not good.)
Message Signature
(Click to edit ->)
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You're the one that filled in the dots.
But generally it's a question about getting what you pay for.
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