Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Some More

Hi, It's me again...
I have been through so many computers lately that I can hardly remember how to find my blog on the Internet. I have one AT tablet at home that runs Windows Seven, and one at work that is just like it, only it is set up differently. It gets confusing. Then I have a Samsung smart phone that runs Android. The smart phone is where I go to check on the blogs. As you might guess, the phone is not really a great forum to use in publishing on a blog. The Android system is not compatible with the programs the Generation "Y" uses now. They seem to like any system that is different from that status-quo. It somehow makes them feel smarter if they can leave others behind... that would be me. But I never give up, no whippersnapper is going to leave me in a snowbank for long. I also still have my old Dell that is quite comfortable for me to use, but, alas... it is being abused as a store cash register. My revenge is that if they ever turn it off they have to unplug it, disconnect all of the wires and peripherals, remove the memory batteries, then wait 5 minutes. Then they have to put the batteries back in, plug it back in, push the start button and reconnect all the wires and peripherals, then set all the dates and times so it knows what day it is. I get some joy out of knowing that there is thirteen computers on the system, and mine is number thirteen. I bet that they worry about the bad luck thing.

We have discussed what is wrong with my computer a thousand times, but we never seem to get around to fixing it. Being from the old school, I had assumed that it was a weak power supply. My theory was that the computer has a lot of bells and whistles built in to it, so is uses a lot of power. It keeps my office quite toasty in the winter time. My office is an old produce walk-in refrigerator, which seems somehow fitting for a refrigeration contractor. It's easy to heat, so the computer is all that I need for heat.

The monitor that I use was a 32 inch High-Definition 1080i television. It was a television that was returned to the store as "defective". In actuality it was hit by lightning. The verdict was to send it to the dump. Being an old school repairman, I assumed that it was just a bad power supply. I took it apart and tested the power supply with a tester. Sure enough, it had power into the supply but none out. After discussing it with the crew a thousand times they said that the TV would be no good that it was not worth fixing. Being one to not take the word of a whippersnapper, I found a power supply on the Internet and paid @200 dollars for it. I installed it, and the TV worked perfectly. I put the TV back on the floor and told the crew to sell it as used, get what ever they could, but not to lie to anybody, to tell them it was repaired, and give a 1-year money-back guarantee. The crew said that they would not sell it under any circumstance because they didn't want to risk THEIR reputations on a repaired TV.  So, I took it into my office, secretly being somewhat insulted, but strangly proud of our crew, even if they were wrong, and I have been using it as my computer monitor ever since. I get a lot of complements on my fine monitor. It sits about four feet away and I don't even need my glasses to see it quite sharply.

Anyway, I discoverd a long time ago that the problem with most failed electronics is... DUH... a bad power supply. Around 90% of all failures is a bad power supply, so if all you did was change power supplies you could fix 90% of the things that you work on. My computer use a lot of power, so by unpluging everything then turning it on, only the computer starts on low power. After it is running the rest can be added without tripping out the power supply. The whippersnappers save time thinking about the "whys" and just say "Yep, a bad power supply". I know the theory is all wrong, but hell, 90% of the time I am right by accident.

So much for my computer. My blog works best in Internet Explorer, so I switch to IE ( I hate abreviations because I think that it is just plain lazy to do all that writing, then leave your readers behind, stuned and confused by using abreviations that they might not pick up on. So, when I say IE I mean Iternet Explorer. Now you know why I just spell everything out... it's easier) The problem that I'm starting to experience is that hackers and spammers have found all the chinks in IE's armor. To much span gets through and some of my most beloved commenters don't. Dang!

I'm Hoping that Santa Claus will bring the store some new computers and I can have my old stand-by Dell back. Then maybe I can do some Blogging. If you have problems my email is
ernie @ branscombcenter.com. Tighten up around the "@" to email me. I had to leave the space so that the dang spammers don't pick up on it as a link.






11 comments:

  1. If you're power supply can't handle all the peripherals, get a stronger power supply.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Most of that,went right over my head!
    Happy Thanksgiving to all !!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Ross, I think Ernie is just talking about blogging with a compressed load.

    Oregon

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi from my Samsung Android cellphone. We ordered some new computers today. With all of the Christmas load in the freight system they probably won't get here until after Christmas. woe is me...

    ReplyDelete
  5. Ernie,I understand about you being sluggish on your blog. But where are all your Loyal Fans that used to jump in here???

    ReplyDelete
  6. Ross
    Most of them are on "Facebook", which is a whole ' nother story. Maybe I should do a blog post about that.

    ReplyDelete
  7. For Christmas,Im getting one of these for my three year old Grandson.

    http://www.husqvarna.com/us/forest/accessories/other-accessories/practical-items/toy-chain-saw/

    ReplyDelete
  8. Guess I can't "copy&paste" here,sorry!!!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Ernie, you probably know that a power supply is the opposite of an oscillator. So, if something goes wrong and you can't find a power supply, simply find an oscillator and hook it up backwards.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Unk
    I beat you to it. I have the oscillator connected in reverse to a capacitor, It was putting out too much current so I had to run it through a reluctor. Then I used a tunable filter to tweak the oscillations. The computer now works fine. The only problem is that my wife is still using it for a point of sale computer. She is using a P.O.S. for a P.O.S.

    This is so much fun that I'm going to throw care to the wind and try this without the code script to comment. I wonder how many seconds that will last.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Good job, Ernie. So your clock pulses are ticking away and your or gates are not anding.

    Be careful with them reluctors and their reluctance, they can get kinda coiled up. And when you combine them with them capacitor things, they can get a bit picky about that frequency thingy.

    ReplyDelete