WaterWaiver

joined 2 years ago
[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 2 points 19 hours ago

TIL there are thumbnails in feeds. Cheers :)

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 1 points 1 day ago

I was contemplating restyling the page. But this won't bring back the proper article descriptions.

 

It looks like they chose August 1st as a date to disable access to the old interface. I'm very sad, I really don't like the new one:

  • Padding everywhere (touchscreen-shique, even for things you can't tap on like paragraphs)
  • Bigger text on narrower text columns (a LOT more scrolling)
  • News articles arranged left-right as well as up-down (not as nice to navigate as a single list).
  • News articles summaries/blurbs often just one sentence, far too little. I have to click on a lot more articles now to even find out what they're about. (I worry this is an engagement metric that makes them think the new interface is working better).
  • Defaults to only showing you articles for your state. This makes me really uncomfortable (is the average person only expected to care about what happens in their state?).

/vent

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 2 points 3 days ago

The ringing comp is interesting: it's completely synthetic (sensorless). The chip models what it thinks the ringing should be based off some physical parameters (that can be configured over I2C), then drives the coil in a way that it hopes would counteract the ringing, but never actually knows if it has succeeded.

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 1 points 3 days ago

Similar to how you can do current sensing in motors

I do not think there are not enough variables here to make this work. Reading coil current won't give you any information you don't already know if you're already controlling coil current. You need to be reading at least one more variable that is somehow related to coil position.

Turning off the coil drive and shorting the coil temporarily to measure current is unlikely to give you anything but the same current you were driving it with (minus some losses). Ie still not an extra variable.

you can send and receive with the same coil in a metal detector.

This introduces new variables! Reflected signal magnitudes (and distortions & phase delays) that depend on distance to a nearby metal object that you intentionally install near the coil (eg the metal casing).

Not sure how easy or reliable this would be to do in practice. I have my doubts but I could be wrong :)

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 3 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (6 children)

Woah. I thought it was 3mm, not 3cm. This this is huge.

Maybe you could also use it for laser experiments, not just cameras? Variable laser focus or for tuning distances to match.

 

Source: https://lcsc.com/product-detail/Vibration-Motors_Lian-Xin-Technology-XDMD-YB200-08_C47118014.html

Applying current changes the vertical position. You would glue a lens onto this and place it above your camera sensor.

Machine-translated page from the datasheet:

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 3 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Read-only, or the ability to edit filenames & upload files?

Read only: as per other answers here, basically any HTTP server. The easiest one I know would be darkhttpd, because it requires no config files and can be run without root.

Read write: I like WFM https://github.com/tenox7/wfm

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 17 points 1 month ago

+/-1 least significant digit at a minimum.

"I'm sorry frog, but you might actually weigh 0". Little buddy noooo

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 5 points 1 month ago

Adorable fella :)

His front legs look like how mine feel getting up in the morning. We're here for you bud.

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 2 points 1 month ago

OP HAS BEEN REPLACED

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 4 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Absolutely amazing. Going to go for the offline port though, I don't trust my save data to my browser.

N.B. Only worked in Chromium (not Firefox) for me. Could be due to addons though, not sure.

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 3 points 1 month ago

Yeah Bruce we're gonna need to double-check that boundary, put the totalstation over on that rock. Nah mate they can't have the macadamia, that's ours.

[–] WaterWaiver@aussie.zone 16 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

$BILLIONS

I mentally read this in the same voice I read $VARIABLE with.

9
submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by WaterWaiver@aussie.zone to c/fuckcars@lemmy.ca
 

3 animations, choc with metaphors on the wastes of car infrastructure and the robbing of choice.

I do not know if the author intended for these to be dystopic or utopic, I have a hunch they are playing both games. They try to improve supermarket visit efficiency by expanding the use of cars at the cost of everything else.

Concept 1 (main link): Indoor drive-through shopping. . Less than a few percent of floor space is actual store, the rest is road. The store sprawls across multiple levels because there is no longer any safe space for humans to work or walk in the customer areas.

There is also no basket or trolley to store things in and change your mind. You grab an item and within seconds one of the approximately (by my count) 100 cashiers scans it and bags it. Made a mistake? Just buy your way out of it, you're holding valuable customers up, tut tut.

Concept 2: Drive-through shopping in private. How awfully lonely. A car keeps you apart from others even when you're not in it. Who wants do be vulnerable when not behind the armour of steel and glass? All aspects of life should be like being in a car.

Concept 3: Outdoor drive-through shopping.. After all of this driving we realised we're missing our connection with the outdoor world. Nature.

We could go camping. Shopping outside is a more practical compromise.

Also all the employees were getting hypoxiated from concept 1, so we decided to hide them underground. Now they are kept alert by road debris falling on the pre-sliced kiwifruit trays.

 

I was reading up on the life expectancy of different building materials when I came across this gem.

Screenshot is of page 122 https://www.portseattle.org/sites/default/files/2025-02/SEA-SIPP%20Technical%20Report%20Appendix%20C%20Life%20Expectancy%20of%20Building%20Materials.pdf

I guess the ethernet cables could last that long, but they rate house wiring to a lower lifetime. Ethernet cables are not "wireless", however.

The only other wireless systems I can think of are garage door openers, but they are definitely not expected to last 50 years.

 

You can do all sorts of nifty things when you're designing silicon. Including this abomination.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carcinisation

Source: datasheet for LM161, a high speed (20ns delay) moderately high voltage (30V) comparator. I'm going to try and make a discrete version of some bits of it and see how well it works. Maybe not this triple-emitter NPN though, I draw the line at components that require livestock sacrifices.

 

FR2 is the brownish material that many cheap circuit boards are made of. It's a mixture of phenolic resin and paper. Apparently it's quite useful to make gears out of:

Phenolic Gears exhibits superior shear force, help reduce machinery noise, absorbs destructive vibration unlike metal gears, phenolic is non-conductive, protects the mating metal gear train, and are known to outlast metal gears under severe continuous service. (source: https://www.knowbirs.com/phenolic-gears )

(Main pic stolen from here)

(Many more pics here)

Has anyone seen these used anywhere? I've read a hint regarding pool equipment, but I have never seen them there. I assume the fibres allow them to last longer than plastic/resin only gears.

 

Two different sizes shown. Each has two inductors (grey bits) stuck to a capacitor (middle) with some metal end caps acting as terminals. There is a third terminal underneath the capacitor. Grid in background is 1mm, pics stolen from LCSC.

I think this taped picture is also really cool (stolen from here):

Datasheet: https://www.murata.com/en-global/products/productdata/8796766699550/ENFE0002.pdf

 

About a handspan wide, more than half a meter deep (can't see all the way in at any angle), deep under my house.

 

The thickness of the board beneath it gives deceptive scale. It's about 50mm tall and the toroid is 85mm in diameter.

https://www.lcsc.com/datasheet/lcsc_datasheet_2408061709_Ruishen-RSCM11548-5mH-3P_C37634003.pdf

I was looking for much smaller CMCs. Also the datasheet for this part doesn't have impedance-versus-frequency graphs so I refuse to buy it anyway :P

 

Context: I am not a fridgy, I work with electronics. I would love to answer my question by tearing open a dozen different aircon units, but I'm sorely lacking in that department.

Question: Are there some optional components or fancier materials that are simply too expensive to use in the lower end aircons; but are used in the higher efficiency expensive units? The range of COP/EER I see advertised is wild, from 2 to 6 or so.

I already vaguely understand that these things help efficiency:

  • Bigger indoor & outdoor coils with more metal in them (working fluids get returned hotter/colder gives better carnot efficiency)
  • Operating compressor at its optimal power level (I believe they have an efficiency vs power curve with a single peak, so it's better to use a bigger compressor if you need more power output)
  • Inverter control instead of on/off control (most situations, but technically some use cases will have them on par)
  • Choice of refrigerant (but that seems to be controlled in my market, I have not seen many options)

Is there anything else they change? Or is that most of the difference?

 

According to my mum: "if you even miss a single day they throw the entire jury out and have to restart the whole court case again so that the new jurors can hear all the evidence". I feel that would make longer cases exponentially impractical.

I can't find anything about this on the internet, other than for someone asking this question in America.

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