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What is this and what is it used for


@altenbach wrote:

Hey look, I found some blank media 😄

 

 


I think I can still find some of the round cases we used to store "programs" save to paper tape. I may even have some of the patch tape that we would use when we to repair the paper tape.

 

Useless trivia...

 

never try to punch mylar tape with an ASR 33.

 

Very bad idea.

 

Ben

Retired Senior Automation Systems Architect with Data Science Automation LabVIEW Champion Knight of NI and Prepper LinkedIn Profile YouTube Channel
Message 261 of 294
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See, now we must explain that in later days, particularly in industrial environments (Numerical Controlled Machine Tools, predating CNC machines) that punched tape largely went from paper to mylar, not as susceptible to water, or cutting oil. Nice and rugged, but as you point out, much to tough to punch on the Teletype model ASR33 punch, would really mess things up.

 

I really was cooking when we got an optical tape reader, much better than the electromechanical ones (they had little "feeler wires" than would fall through the holes in the tape, making contact, indicating that "bit" was punched). They ran orders of magnitude faster than the mechanical ones, were more reliable as well. I had to go into the lab of a local steel mill to clean there mechanical one, the crud in the air (and on everything, and in your lungs) would make it unreliable pretty quickly.

 

 

Now ask me about when we chisled the holes in the rock tablets for the earlier computers.... Actually, molding the counter pieces in clay for the abacus was fun! 😉

Putnam
Certified LabVIEW Developer

Senior Test Engineer North Shore Technology, Inc.
Currently using LV 2012-LabVIEW 2018, RT8.5


LabVIEW Champion



Message 262 of 294
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@LV_Pro wrote:

See, now we must explain that in later days,...

 

Now ask me about when we chisled the holes in the rock tablets for the earlier computers.... Actually, molding the counter pieces in clay for the abacus was fun! 😉


I used to explain data storage in terms of how long the data would be preserved. It went;

 

Bit in a register

Computer memory

Disk drive

Tape drive

Paper

Papyrus

Stone

 

So my better-half and I attended a seminar by the local beer brewing groups. They ran to gambit from nut case "I harvest my own yeast with a mason jar in my herb garden", through normal hobby brewer then formal chemical engineering and eventually to the guy with the fully automated brewery in his basement where he "engineers his own water" starting with reverse osmosis and then adds components to get water that tastes like it came from a stream in England.

 

When I saw the picture of his basement I asked him "Is that a custom touch panel control application I see there?" He said yes. Turns out there were four people (counting myself and my wife) at that event that knew what LabVIEW was.

 

I bring this up because they spoke of some trivia and cuniform (sp?) writing on clay tablets. They claimed that the earliest example of examples of the clay tablets was actually a recipe to make beer. I asked "How do we tell if writing was invented because they needed a way to save their beer recipes?" Neccessity is after all the mother of invention.

 

Ben

Retired Senior Automation Systems Architect with Data Science Automation LabVIEW Champion Knight of NI and Prepper LinkedIn Profile YouTube Channel
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Message 263 of 294
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@Jacobson-ni wrote:

@Ben wrote:

I have not had to resort to any artificial means to deal with bugs getting at my gardens. Now if I could only find a praying mantis large enough to keep ground hogs and Bambi under control. 


I've seen enough bad movies to know that this won't end well. In fact...

 


Yup, That files right under the heading

"Things you may not know"

 

Creepy! 


"Should be" isn't "Is" -Jay
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Message 264 of 294
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Bit in a register

Computer memory

Disk drive

Tape drive

Paper

Papyrus

Stone

 

I read somewhere that tape drives still the most reliable long term storage method. What is next? DNA storage?

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Message 265 of 294
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@LV_Pro wrote:

@Henrik_Volkers wrote:

Last time I run mine

lamp small.jpg

I used denaturated alcohol...


Well, there is your problem!  "denatured" is spelled like that!
Capture1.PNG


"Should be" isn't "Is" -Jay
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Message 266 of 294
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@Ben wrote:

@LV_Pro wrote:

See, now we must explain that in later days,...

 

Now ask me about when we chisled the holes in the rock tablets for the earlier computers.... Actually, molding the counter pieces in clay for the abacus was fun! 😉


I used to explain data storage in terms of how long the data would be preserved. It went;

 

Bit in a register

Computer memory

Disk drive

Tape drive

Paper

Papyrus

Stone

 

So my better-half and I attended a seminar by the local beer brewing groups. They ran to gambit from nut case "I harvest my own yeast with a mason jar in my herb garden", through normal hobby brewer then formal chemical engineering and eventually to the guy with the fully automated brewery in his basement where he "engineers his own water" starting with reverse osmosis and then adds components to get water that tastes like it came from a stream in England.

 

When I saw the picture of his basement I asked him "Is that a custom touch panel control application I see there?" He said yes. Turns out there were four people (counting myself and my wife) at that event that knew what LabVIEW was.

 

I bring this up because they spoke of some trivia and cuniform (sp?) writing on clay tablets. They claimed that the earliest example of examples of the clay tablets was actually a recipe to make beer. I asked "How do we tell if writing was invented because they needed a way to save their beer recipes?" Neccessity is after all the mother of invention.

 

Ben


You actually know Russian proverbs too?

 

I did fail 4th Q Russian  Dropped my HS GPA a lot.  Yet, I learned how to type in that class!  (Smiley Surprised


"Should be" isn't "Is" -Jay
Message 267 of 294
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Spoiler
Garter snake. Good for rodent control and entertaining g-daughters. His name is Greg.

 

 

 

 

Spoiler

Pile of top-quality garden soil. I grow radishes the size of baseballs in this stuff. Loosely piled and covered with a trap...

 

Spoiler

 

 

it makes for a great place to play King of the Hill.

 

 

 

 

 

It is now gardening season! Yeah!!!!

 

Ben

Retired Senior Automation Systems Architect with Data Science Automation LabVIEW Champion Knight of NI and Prepper LinkedIn Profile YouTube Channel
Message 268 of 294
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When i was a kid, I loved to play with limbless lizards, they are very cute, since they can blink unlike snakes 🙂 We have a lot in the mountains in Hungary (under protection).

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anguis_fragilis

 

We also have vipers, but these viper variations are not aggressive at all, so accidents are rare. Also the poison is not that strong (actually the antivenom is more dangerous than the poison itself, and usually not required).

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vipera_berus

Message 269 of 294
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Just shot these photos a few minutes ago, in a house party, in an older building in the city center. Not googled for the model name yet... The machine looks like function as an indoor design element 🙂

 

DSC_0720-1920x1080.JPG

 

DSC_0719-1920x1080.JPG

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