Get a projector. Almost none of the serious front projectors are "smart."
I'm running a Panasonic projector to a 90-inch screen for good stuff, and backing it with an older 50-inch Panasonic plasma monitor for everyday stuff. None of the displays have any smarts. Not even a receiver.
I feed them with TiVo for off-the-air TV, plus Roku and an Oppo BD player for streaming. The Oppo gets me 3D movies from discs or Vudu.
No cable feed either.
In the late '90s I met Jane Houston, who assisted John in his telescope making classes at the California Academy of Sciences. Her garage was full of mirror blanks, grit sorted into particle sizes, and pine-tar pitch for making pitch laps. I married her in 2000. (Yesterday John passed away on our 14th wedding anniversay.)
Over the next few years, we would often get a call from John at his home in San Francisco, and he would say "It's clear out! Should I finish my dinner?" That was our cue to load the van, pick up John, and take him to either 9th & Geary, or 24th & Noe, and spend the evening doing sidewalk astronomy. We would often have three or four hundred "accidental astronomers" participate in what we call "urban guerrilla astronomy."
During the summers, we took at least three excursions with John to the Grand Canyon Star Party. There's not much in life to compare with spending eight or ten hours on the road with John. He would make the most interesting observations of the landscape around him, or sometimes just launch into a new puzzle for us. You could always count on something interesting from John when he would say, "Okay now I have to tell you a story..."
His views of cosmology were certainly unorthodox, but they were based on a solid foundation and understanding of the physics, chemistry, and math involved. I didn't always agree with his views, but he never failed to give me a fresh perspective on physics and cosmology. He was a fan of Fred Hoyle and Halton Arp, a champion of the steady-state universe. You would often see him in a sweat-shirt that says "The Big Bang is a Thing of the Past," or a button saying "Nothing Doesn't Exist."
One of my favorite John quotes: "Anything that happens is natural. A battleship is just as natural as a pine tree."
And one last John story: We were on our way to the Bryce Canyon Star Party, and passed one of Utah's famous rock shops. He glanced out the window and said, "Oh look! Pieces of planet!" Yes, we spent an hour or so shopping there.
Here at Disney Interactive's Grand Central Creative Campus they built the new building with all of the HVAC and cabling running under the floors. It makes for a very clean look; no downposts carrying cables from above a false ceiling. The floor has several junction boxes with power and network that blend into the carpet scheme nicely.
It's a little strange having forced air coming up from the floor rather than down from the ceiling.:)
One has to wonder how commercially viable an autonomously driven car will be that doesn't violate speed limits. Who's liable if the supervising operator selects "five mph over limit?"
That's the top (unsponsored) Google link for the query "how to upgrade windows xp to windows 7."
Note the bullet items under "what you need:"
An external hard disk
The original installation discs or setup files for the programs that you want to use
Sorry, they want me to pay for the privilege and blow a whole weekend to update my four XP machines at home? What do I get out of this? My XP machines do what they need to do just fine.
I'm sure they put on some great shows, but these modern "overhead projectors" often lack the dynamic range of the best discrete planetarium projectors out there.
Even among dedicated planetarium projectors, only the best are able to replicate the differences in brightness between mag 1 and mag 6 stars with any convincing accuracy. Many of them project such a "flat" sky in terms of brightness that it's difficult to recognize even familiar constellations. The old Morrison Planetarium projector had dedicated lamps for particular bright guide stars, and the projector at Chabot Science Center is very good at that.
It's discouraging to see a run-of-the-mill college planetarium with "bright" stars that are just smears of bigger dots.
So they aren't pixelating, but I bet their Spica is nearly the same brightness as their Porrima.
When we photograph meteors for genuine data collection, we don't use a mount at all. We set up a ring of cameras with each covering several degrees of sky, and let them all take five or ten minute exposures. It's your best hope of catching a bright one and several faint ones. If you're using a decently short lens (50mm, 35mm), (a) you'll catch more meteors and (b) the star trails are less notable, or you won't care about them.
Remember, with meteors being an atmospheric phenomenon, you'll catch more closer to the horizon than looking up. (You're looking through more air.)
And it makes no difference if you're looking toward or away from the radiant for meteor count.
One thing that worked well for me is taking classes at UCLA Extension, even working for a certificate. Admittedly the classes are usually pretty lame, and you'll find yourself cruising through them for the most part. It's not the classes themselves that you get most of the skill from, it's just doing organized work in the language, and all periphery skill you acquire along the way. I do much better with scheduled in-person classes that have real homework than with online stuff.
Not looking at the keyboard is essential. You need to be able to read and correct your typing as you go. Aside from that, I agree with the others that getting another 10wpm matters not.
If you only ever used one keyboard, switching to Dvorak would make sense. These days that's just impossible, even if you're not a computer tech professional.
What I've done is make a small TrueCrypt drive, and redirect Firefox to use that for its local data. It will store the cache and my passwords on that drive, thus keeping my passwords hidden without first entering the TrueCrypt password.
Find Firefox's profiles.ini file in your local application data directory.
Downside: you have to give TrueCrypt a password whenever you startup, and Firefox won't boot at all if the TrueCrypt drive isn't mounted. The error message is misleading too, "Firefox is already running..." (fail!)
Bonus: the pr0n downloads in your cache are encrypted too.
Yes there is value to visiting old equipment left behind. Remember Apollo 12 visited one of the Surveyor landing craft to return a sample from it, for long-term exposure analysis. Even checking out the erosion of the footprints by micrometeorites would be kind of interesting.
People born in cities these days don't realize that the Milky Way is something real that they can see with their own eyes. The words "Milky Way" themselves are losing their meaning. For a lot of people, the words "Milky Way" just mean something vaguely spacey.
When faced with the Milky Way for the first time from a dark location, they'll easily think "oh there's a line of clouds moving in." In the city, the clouds glow. From a truly dark location, the only way you can tell there are clouds is by the big patch of dark where there should be stars.
And likewise, many people will never have the experience of having their vision fully dark adapted. It's amazing how milky gray the sky looks when you actually are dark adapted.
I'm one of those seasoned programmers, who has explicitly avoided moving into management. I know where my strengths are and are not.
My approach is that my managers work for me. They take care of all the things that would normally get in my way: schedules, resources, setting priorities, communicating across departments and coordinating with other managers.
The best managers I've had excelled at those things, and made work very pleasurable. They also tend to see their role much as I do, and appreciate the irony of it.:)
It's true, the heart and soul of Star Trek: The Experience came from the talented actors who played Ferengi, Klingons, Vulcans, Borg, and Star Fleet lieutenants.
I was able to visit four times or so, and took a few pictures of my most recent trip, available here
I worked in Java for a year while only skimming the surface. It wasn't until I started interviewing for Java jobs that I realized how little I knew about Java.
Most recently I transitioned to working in Ruby on Rails. After seven months, I really feel that I'm only 60% into Rails.
It's not just Java. Having a reasonably complete knowledge of architecture and technologies related to multi-tier web applications takes time. There are complexities that are in common with all of them.
For me the biggest benefit came from signing up for extension courses at the local college. It let me get some depth and formality, and bypass the "old" Java tech that's not really relevant to modern Java. (Can you say "EJBs?")
They usually have two goals: Get high-resolution spectra, and count meteors.
Getting spectra of meteors is exceedingly difficult, because a spectroscope on a camera or telescope has a narrow field of view. By flying the instruments at high altitude, during a high-rate meteor shower, the odds are good that they'll catch some good spectra.
The other factor of interest is the particle flux. By studying the timing and orbit of the particles, it helps to refine the models for predicting such showers. It also provides insight into the dynamics going on in the parent comet, and helps assess the risk to exposed assets that are in orbit, above the protection of the atmosphere.
And at 47,000 feet (9 miles high or so), they are well below the 100 miles or so where the meteor particles are ablating.
My wife and I had the privilege of flying on some of Dr. Jennisken's multi-instrument aircraft campaign missions, and I wrote some software for collecting and reporting meteor rates from the flux measurement team during the mission.
A few years ago when I proudly announced to my mom that my wife and I had an asteroid named in our honor, she countered with, "oh! I have a friend with a star named for her!"
First, don't worry about pictures, just enjoy learning the night sky.
Pick up Sky & Telescope and Astronomy magazines. Get a pair of 7x50 binoculars, and an 8-inch Dobsonian. You'll still have budget for eyepieces, but you'll only need a couple and maybe a barlow. 100x is my most versatile magnification.
Get a copy of Turn Left at Orion by Consolmagno and Davis.
The first year in astronomy is magical. Learn the sky and constellations as they go by, then be amazed when they reappear in the east later in that year.
Get a projector. Almost none of the serious front projectors are "smart." I'm running a Panasonic projector to a 90-inch screen for good stuff, and backing it with an older 50-inch Panasonic plasma monitor for everyday stuff. None of the displays have any smarts. Not even a receiver. I feed them with TiVo for off-the-air TV, plus Roku and an Oppo BD player for streaming. The Oppo gets me 3D movies from discs or Vudu. No cable feed either.
I'd LOVE to pay for content. I'd love to pay NBC some money to see the Olympic events streamed online. But they won't take my money.
What I won't do is pay for 200 channels that I have no interest in so I can get the one or two that I want.
In fact, "channels" are obsolete. I don't want all the other crap that comes with a channel, I just want the particular shows or content I want.
But I would stoop to paying for the whole Olympics, even if I can't buy individual events.
PLEASE let me pay for the content I want!
In the late '90s I met Jane Houston, who assisted John in his telescope making classes at the California Academy of Sciences. Her garage was full of mirror blanks, grit sorted into particle sizes, and pine-tar pitch for making pitch laps. I married her in 2000. (Yesterday John passed away on our 14th wedding anniversay.)
Over the next few years, we would often get a call from John at his home in San Francisco, and he would say "It's clear out! Should I finish my dinner?" That was our cue to load the van, pick up John, and take him to either 9th & Geary, or 24th & Noe, and spend the evening doing sidewalk astronomy. We would often have three or four hundred "accidental astronomers" participate in what we call "urban guerrilla astronomy."
During the summers, we took at least three excursions with John to the Grand Canyon Star Party. There's not much in life to compare with spending eight or ten hours on the road with John. He would make the most interesting observations of the landscape around him, or sometimes just launch into a new puzzle for us. You could always count on something interesting from John when he would say, "Okay now I have to tell you a story ..."
His views of cosmology were certainly unorthodox, but they were based on a solid foundation and understanding of the physics, chemistry, and math involved. I didn't always agree with his views, but he never failed to give me a fresh perspective on physics and cosmology. He was a fan of Fred Hoyle and Halton Arp, a champion of the steady-state universe. You would often see him in a sweat-shirt that says "The Big Bang is a Thing of the Past," or a button saying "Nothing Doesn't Exist."
One of my favorite John quotes: "Anything that happens is natural. A battleship is just as natural as a pine tree."
And one last John story: We were on our way to the Bryce Canyon Star Party, and passed one of Utah's famous rock shops. He glanced out the window and said, "Oh look! Pieces of planet!" Yes, we spent an hour or so shopping there.
Here at Disney Interactive's Grand Central Creative Campus they built the new building with all of the HVAC and cabling running under the floors. It makes for a very clean look; no downposts carrying cables from above a false ceiling. The floor has several junction boxes with power and network that blend into the carpet scheme nicely. It's a little strange having forced air coming up from the floor rather than down from the ceiling. :)
One has to wonder how commercially viable an autonomously driven car will be that doesn't violate speed limits. Who's liable if the supervising operator selects "five mph over limit?"
(Still, I WANT ONE!)
Here's what's keeping me from upgrading my XP machines to Windows 7: Upgrading from Windows XP to Windows 7
That's the top (unsponsored) Google link for the query "how to upgrade windows xp to windows 7."
Note the bullet items under "what you need:"
Sorry, they want me to pay for the privilege and blow a whole weekend to update my four XP machines at home? What do I get out of this? My XP machines do what they need to do just fine.
Mojo
I'm sure they put on some great shows, but these modern "overhead projectors" often lack the dynamic range of the best discrete planetarium projectors out there.
Even among dedicated planetarium projectors, only the best are able to replicate the differences in brightness between mag 1 and mag 6 stars with any convincing accuracy. Many of them project such a "flat" sky in terms of brightness that it's difficult to recognize even familiar constellations. The old Morrison Planetarium projector had dedicated lamps for particular bright guide stars, and the projector at Chabot Science Center is very good at that.
It's discouraging to see a run-of-the-mill college planetarium with "bright" stars that are just smears of bigger dots.
So they aren't pixelating, but I bet their Spica is nearly the same brightness as their Porrima.
When we photograph meteors for genuine data collection, we don't use a mount at all. We set up a ring of cameras with each covering several degrees of sky, and let them all take five or ten minute exposures. It's your best hope of catching a bright one and several faint ones. If you're using a decently short lens (50mm, 35mm), (a) you'll catch more meteors and (b) the star trails are less notable, or you won't care about them.
Remember, with meteors being an atmospheric phenomenon, you'll catch more closer to the horizon than looking up. (You're looking through more air.)
And it makes no difference if you're looking toward or away from the radiant for meteor count.
One thing that worked well for me is taking classes at UCLA Extension, even working for a certificate. Admittedly the classes are usually pretty lame, and you'll find yourself cruising through them for the most part. It's not the classes themselves that you get most of the skill from, it's just doing organized work in the language, and all periphery skill you acquire along the way. I do much better with scheduled in-person classes that have real homework than with online stuff.
Not looking at the keyboard is essential. You need to be able to read and correct your typing as you go. Aside from that, I agree with the others that getting another 10wpm matters not.
If you only ever used one keyboard, switching to Dvorak would make sense. These days that's just impossible, even if you're not a computer tech professional.
I have a 70 ft. conduit run from my equipment to the projector in the back of my room. HDMI max run length is, what? 15 ft.?
What I've done is make a small TrueCrypt drive, and redirect Firefox to use that for its local data. It will store the cache and my passwords on that drive, thus keeping my passwords hidden without first entering the TrueCrypt password.
Find Firefox's profiles.ini file in your local application data directory.
Downside: you have to give TrueCrypt a password whenever you startup, and Firefox won't boot at all if the TrueCrypt drive isn't mounted. The error message is misleading too, "Firefox is already running ..." (fail!)
Bonus: the pr0n downloads in your cache are encrypted too.
Tried to buy it for my Kindle and couldn't. :(
Yes there is value to visiting old equipment left behind. Remember Apollo 12 visited one of the Surveyor landing craft to return a sample from it, for long-term exposure analysis. Even checking out the erosion of the footprints by micrometeorites would be kind of interesting.
People born in cities these days don't realize that the Milky Way is something real that they can see with their own eyes. The words "Milky Way" themselves are losing their meaning. For a lot of people, the words "Milky Way" just mean something vaguely spacey.
When faced with the Milky Way for the first time from a dark location, they'll easily think "oh there's a line of clouds moving in." In the city, the clouds glow. From a truly dark location, the only way you can tell there are clouds is by the big patch of dark where there should be stars.
And likewise, many people will never have the experience of having their vision fully dark adapted. It's amazing how milky gray the sky looks when you actually are dark adapted.
I'm one of those seasoned programmers, who has explicitly avoided moving into management. I know where my strengths are and are not.
My approach is that my managers work for me. They take care of all the things that would normally get in my way: schedules, resources, setting priorities, communicating across departments and coordinating with other managers.
The best managers I've had excelled at those things, and made work very pleasurable. They also tend to see their role much as I do, and appreciate the irony of it. :)
And more ... there's no greater treat than getting to sit in the captain's chair on that fabulous bridge set for a picture.
It's true, the heart and soul of Star Trek: The Experience came from the talented actors who played Ferengi, Klingons, Vulcans, Borg, and Star Fleet lieutenants.
I was able to visit four times or so, and took a few pictures of my most recent trip, available here
I worked in Java for a year while only skimming the surface. It wasn't until I started interviewing for Java jobs that I realized how little I knew about Java.
Most recently I transitioned to working in Ruby on Rails. After seven months, I really feel that I'm only 60% into Rails.
It's not just Java. Having a reasonably complete knowledge of architecture and technologies related to multi-tier web applications takes time. There are complexities that are in common with all of them.
For me the biggest benefit came from signing up for extension courses at the local college. It let me get some depth and formality, and bypass the "old" Java tech that's not really relevant to modern Java. (Can you say "EJBs?")
They usually have two goals: Get high-resolution spectra, and count meteors.
Getting spectra of meteors is exceedingly difficult, because a spectroscope on a camera or telescope has a narrow field of view. By flying the instruments at high altitude, during a high-rate meteor shower, the odds are good that they'll catch some good spectra.
The other factor of interest is the particle flux. By studying the timing and orbit of the particles, it helps to refine the models for predicting such showers. It also provides insight into the dynamics going on in the parent comet, and helps assess the risk to exposed assets that are in orbit, above the protection of the atmosphere.
And at 47,000 feet (9 miles high or so), they are well below the 100 miles or so where the meteor particles are ablating.
My wife and I had the privilege of flying on some of Dr. Jennisken's multi-instrument aircraft campaign missions, and I wrote some software for collecting and reporting meteor rates from the flux measurement team during the mission.
Photo album from the 2002 missionSigh!
And whatever telescope you get, add a Telrad or other "reflex" finder. It makes using your telescope a real pleasure. Mojo
$1,000 is a fine budget for intro astronomy!
First, don't worry about pictures, just enjoy learning the night sky.
Pick up Sky & Telescope and Astronomy magazines. Get a pair of 7x50 binoculars, and an 8-inch Dobsonian. You'll still have budget for eyepieces, but you'll only need a couple and maybe a barlow. 100x is my most versatile magnification.
Get a copy of Turn Left at Orion by Consolmagno and Davis.
The first year in astronomy is magical. Learn the sky and constellations as they go by, then be amazed when they reappear in the east later in that year.
Take small bites and enjoy every one.
Mojo -- Old Town Sidewalk AstronomersMaybe it'd help if I emptied my greylist database and let it start over.
Mojo
ATM Machine.
PIN number.
oh never mind. :)