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User: radionerd

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  1. Re:It should be part of the equipment checklist on Know What Time It Is? Your Medical Device Doesn't · · Score: 1

    "because they generally don't have the time and assume they are all accurate." Wow, no wonder they kill folks by accident all the time....... If I took off in an airplane without a preflight check, and something went wrong, I'd expect to loose my license, at least...... and if something bad happened, I'd expect to be personal liable for all damages or deaths I caused. No wonder that malpractice insurance is expensive.

  2. Re:Not so simple on Know What Time It Is? Your Medical Device Doesn't · · Score: 1

    It is so simple. For medical use, a minute or two is close enough for most diagnostic use. Any idiot can compare their watch to the life saving equipment. If they disagree by more than a few minutes, check the watch, then mark the equipment as unusable and send it to be repaired...... and by the way, the cosmonaut and pencil story is plain bullshit, pencils are a terrible idea in zero G. Graphite dust and pencil shavings would be a menace to safety. The "Zero Gravity Pen" was developed by Paul Fisher using his own money, he offered them to NASA for their normal commercial price http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisher_pen I carry a Fisher pen with me at all times to show my pride for being American.

  3. It should be part of the equipment checklist on Know What Time It Is? Your Medical Device Doesn't · · Score: 1

    Don't they have checklists to make sure their equipment is working as expected? Even brain dead pilots like me check every instrument on the panel, every time I fly. If I'm betting somebody else's life on it, I check twice. I'm living proof that an idiot can set a clock within a few seconds. Every nurse I've ever met keeps a watch with a sweep second hand (for observing pulse rate easily). How hard can it be to compare it to a GPS receiver,, networked computer or short wave receiver from time to time? I keep my watch within a second or two of UTC by looking at my computer, listening to WWV on the short wave radio, or looking at a GPS receiver, it's good enough for celestial navigation, it's surely good enough for medicine ..... how hard can it be to check life supporting equipment from time to time?

  4. Re:WAY over the ... limit on Journalist Gets Blasted By the Pentagon's Pain Ray — Twice · · Score: 1

    73 DE WB7RSG :-)

  5. Re:WAY over the ... limit on Journalist Gets Blasted By the Pentagon's Pain Ray — Twice · · Score: 1

    Wow, outstanding! Honest to god back of the envelope microwave engineering! Well done. You must do this for a living.

  6. Re:A few points on Journalist Gets Blasted By the Pentagon's Pain Ray — Twice · · Score: 1

    3. A parabolic reflector made of aluminum,.... No, a parabola focuses to a point, to redirect the beam, you need a very flat metal reflector, like a passive microwave repeater http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_repeater but smaller to work at millimeter wave. 4. Standing behind a large piece of sheet metal... Aluminum foil should be plenty, skin depth in aluminum would be close to zero, and the energy would be effectively reflected, not dissipated, it wouldn't get hot.

  7. Tin Foil Hat probably effective on Journalist Gets Blasted By the Pentagon's Pain Ray — Twice · · Score: 1

    Explain to me why common aluminum foil would not reflect this "heat ray" away. A protest sign covered in foil would make an efficient shield, and a foil hat with a fine copper mesh veil would let you look at them and laugh. This is hardly a high tech countermeasure. The engineers that work on this can't be stupid enough to have not considered this. There's a lot of money involved, so facts can be suppressed in favor of profits. If you could make a very flat reflector, to keep the reflected beam width narrow, you could redirect the beam at any other target you choose. It should be pretty obvious where the beam is coming from, your reflector is essentially a mirror. Think about how a signaling mirror works, it's easy to aim the reflected sun at a rescue airplane, it might be just as easy to cook the officer standing next to the emitter.

  8. Re:It's called a "fence" because it's bistatic rad on Prototype Space Fence Now Tracking Actual Orbital Debris · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually, it's the current, working system. Space Weather has a nice link to a receiver that lets you listen to the echos from stuff flying through the fence http://spaceweatherradio.com/ Or you can do it your self....If you're within several hundred miles of Lake Kickapoo, Texas, and have a receiver that can hear 216.98 MHz, you can hear the echos of things flying through the fence... Big fun if you're a radio nerd :-)

  9. Re:Time to smoke out the watchers on Do You Like Online Privacy? You May Be a Terrorist · · Score: 1

    OK, I'll be the fat old white guy that keeps getting beaten for flipping off the screws.... save me a few crumbs.

  10. Re:Time to smoke out the watchers on Do You Like Online Privacy? You May Be a Terrorist · · Score: 1

    I think you misunderstand my method a bit..... No real spook would make a scene, they would try to escape at the first hint of trouble. I plan to call almost no attention to myself. My intent is to sit quietly in the corner (back to the wall), drink my purchased coffee and work with the laptop. Most of my internet traffic will be via VPN, with a few encrypted attachments sent through GMail from time to time. If approached, I will immediately power off the computer, collect up my cell phones and prepare to leave, while having as little contact with who ever approaches me as possible. If they demand to see my computer, I will eject the SD chip, surrender the computer to them, and depart without any argument or explanation, if they demand the SD chip I will attempt to destroy it. If they try to detain me, I will ask if they are sworn law enforcement officers, if they are not, I will leave. If they are sworn officers I will repeatedly ask if I am free to go, if I am arrested I will instantly demand a lawyer and answer no questions at all..... Yes, I intend to waste as much of their time as possible. I've used similar tactics before, and I've been arrested for it, several times. I will never post any bail, I have plenty of time for them to waste. I've been held for as long as 4 days for passing out pamphlets in front of our county courthouse, I'm not allowed to discuss the terms of the settlement. When I troll for pigs, I'm very careful to give them no excuse for their behavior, at all. I have the time to mess with them, so I will. My behavior protects honest working people by keeping these idiots busy. Most of the idiots in the field are far too stupid to catch real terrorists, messing with me is far safer for them, a real terrorist might hurt them..... And I do have a Geiger counter too, but that's a different hobby..... My digital camera hobby is more fun, cops hate to have their picture taken. The whole key to getting away with this tactic is having a perfectly clean criminal record, cash in the bank, and lawyers on retainer.... most cop intimidation tactics don't work on me..... in my 50 years, they have never been able to stick anything on me, I'll rot in jail before I take any plea deal, or pay any bail.

  11. Re:Time to smoke out the watchers on Do You Like Online Privacy? You May Be a Terrorist · · Score: 1

    I actually intend to do this with a "squeaky clean" Dell netbook with a fresh install of Ubuntu in it...... My SD chip will be full of encrypted pictures of trees and flowers and birds and mountains..... I've been to jail before for doing this sort of thing, it ain't that bad...... I'm just a nobody, even if they torture me, there isn't much I could tell them....... again, will one of you please come bail me out?

  12. Time to smoke out the watchers on Do You Like Online Privacy? You May Be a Terrorist · · Score: 1

    This is a nice list of things to use as bait to find out if you're being watched. I think it's time to get out my netbook, and head for the local coffee shops. If I'm approached, I'll immediately turn off the netbook, eject the SD chip, and break it with my pocket multi tool...... will one of you please come bail me out?

  13. Simple example of possible interference on Personal Electronics May Indeed Disrupt Avionics · · Score: 1

    OK, let’s try a simple example. A passenger has a cheap FM broadcast receiver. This receiver’s intermediate frequency is 10.7 MHz. The receiver utilizes “high side” injection so its local oscillator frequency is 10.7 MHz higher than the operating frequency. The FM broadcast band is from 88 to 108 MHz, this puts the LO in the 98.7 to 118.7 MHz range. The aircraft navigation band is from 108 to 118 MHz with ILS signals at the bottom of the band and VOR signals all over the band. The broadcast receiver radiates a portion of its local oscillator energy, this is very hard to avoid. The LO appears to the navigation receiver as an interfering carrier. The broadcast receiver is very close to the navigation receiver, the navigation beacon is many miles away, the inverse square law of radio propagation is not your friend, the shielding will not help you, there is an antenna on the navigation receiver, and the LO signal will escape to get into the navigation receiver. This example is very simple, and uses dirt common equipment. There are an untold number of consumer devices that could radiate unintentional, unexpected, signals in navigation and communication bands. When I’m flying, I can see all my passengers, and I can insist that they do as I say or get the hell out of my airplane , a commercial pilot can’t keep track of a whole bus load of people.

  14. Re:Preparation is in the mind on Ask Slashdot: How Prepared Are You For a Major Emergency? · · Score: 1

    Exactly. Thinking about disasters is the first step in dealing with them. What's important? How do you establish contact with the rest of your family? How do you get home? Will you have food? Will you have water?Do you need electricity? Will you freeze in the cold? Do you need medication to stay alive? In our case, in Northwestern Oregon, we have a plan for all of this, we are expecting the "big one" anytime after right now. You will not be able to depend on any public infrastructure, don't bet on any telephone working for a few days, and plan on it being dark at night. Our family has a plan to contact each other using ham radio, and our home has backup power with enough diesel to last at least a week. With power, we can run our well, water is good! If I'm at work, I'll drive toward home as far as I can, and then walk, it's only 16 miles from work to home. We are armed, competent and willing to kill to defend our selves...... Better living through ham radio, "Radio" was the first merit badge I got. Knowing about radio, and industrial equipment in general has served me well all my life. The things you know will save you..... learn about radio, learn to weld, learn to work on engines, learn to fly, learn to scuba dive, build model rockets, learn about shooting, learn about horses, learn to run a chainsaw, learn every thing you can..... every geek skill you can get will help you to learn to think in a disaster.

  15. Re:Management takes advantage of this on Heroism Is Part of a Nuclear Worker's Job · · Score: 1

    Actually, you're right...... claiming that I'd abandon my post after the "Big One" was mostly to make management think about how much they really needed to "bank away" for disasters, that's what drills are for. In truth, my wife and child are as capable of caring for themselves as I am. We are capable of establishing communications after the disaster without any need for any equipment that we don't control ourselves...... Better living through ham radio! In Oregon, if you haven't got a plan, in the back of your head, for when the big one hits, I have no sympathy or use for you. I'm working for a semiconductor manufacturer now..... when I feel the first jiggle, I'm sprinting for the door, when I worked for the government, I'd have stayed...... and complained about it later.

  16. Management takes advantage of this on Heroism Is Part of a Nuclear Worker's Job · · Score: 1

    Believing that they can depend on the loyalty of their underlings, allows management to get away with reducing staff and spending less on emergency preparedness. This is also true in other fields like ambulance crews, fire fighters, cops, and even down to the technical support staff. I worked for a city government agency that supported radio communications for public safety. When we did drills for the "Big One" it was just assumed that the support staff would work 24 hours a day until they dropped dead. They were not amused when I pointed out that when the big quake comes, I will care far less about a point to point microwave links than I will care about my family. At the beginning of the "drill" I explained that I'd be back after I checked on my wife and kid..... see you tomorrow.

  17. Re:It's from News Corp? Save yourself some money on iPad Newspaper From News Corp Rumored in January · · Score: 2

    I think this is a great idea, I get to pay for my Fascist propaganda right up front!. My parakeet thinks it's a stupid idea, we still have to pay for it, and he ends up with no place to crap.

  18. Charge it in the microwave oven on Nokia Developed Wireless Power-Harvesting Phones · · Score: 4, Funny

    10 seconds on high should be plenty

  19. If I find the bug, can I keep it? on Court Rules GPS Tracking Legal For Law Officers · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the police abandon their equipment by attaching it to my property does it become part of my property? Any good geek would want a nice new GPS reciever with a magnet on it to play with, wouldn't they? I've had run ins with the cops in the past, I inspect my vehicles from time to time. So far I haven't found anything new, but who knows?

  20. Re:Give me a break on Suing Google Over Pagerank · · Score: 1

    I suspect that he meant private to mean not government. Google is a publicly held company, but it isn't the government, it is privately owned.

  21. Re:um what? on Study Says Cell Phones Can Interfere With Planes · · Score: 1

    It may be true that a cell phone doesn't interfere with your GPS receiver, most of the time. If it only interferes 1 time in a thousand observations, you would never notice it with a hand held receiver. If it caused confusion in 1 of a thousand landings, eventually it will be the last factor that caused an already screwed up approach to turn disastrous. Try using a GSM phone near your computer speakers. What do you hear?... Buzz, Buzz, Buzz.... Pulsed transmitters in cell phones, are about the best navigation signal jammers, available to consumers, I can think of. The problem is not that they radiate on the navigation system's frequency, it's that the RF from the phone is picked up in the airplane's internal wiring. The RF usually finds a way to get rectified, and makes small pulsed currents in the wires. Instrument landing systems measure pulse timing. VOR receivers measure pulse timing. GPS receivers measure pulse timing. Confusion about your position on the glide slope or localizer, at decision height, can be lethal. GSM phones also do a good job of interfering with hearing aids and pace makers. Phones with constant transmitter power, like CDMA and analog are less likely to cause this problem, most flight attendants can't tell one from another by looking, and most consumers are just too stupid to care. Electronic gadgets used in commercial aircraft are carefully tested to prove they won't interfere with each other. Their antennas are on the outside of the nice metal airframe, and are much better shielded from the inside wiring than a transmitter on the inside. Even after spending piles of money, and years of engineer's time, they still find unexpected interference problems from time to time. How do you test and control thousands of "pile-O-crap" consumer gadgets, and only allow the "approved" ones to be used? By the way, The company I work for makes cell phone RF power amplifiers, I've been in "the radio business" for 25 years, I have a commercial pilot's license with an instrument rating and about 2000 flight hours. In this single narrow area, I know what I'm talking about. In short, it's a stupid idea to allow any unknown transmitter in any commercial aircraft, anytime it's close to the ground. Now days, it's very hard to tell by looking, if a laptop has a data radio in it. God only knows what they're going to put in a portable game gadget. Why take a chance?

  22. Re:It's not possible on VOIP Tappings Under Scrutiny · · Score: 1

    "Maybe in the same way as Amateur Radioers have a blip at the start/end of speech."

    What blip would that be? Amateur Radio rules forbid encryption. Some Amateur radio repeater systems insert "beeps" to signal the end of transmissions, but generally serve no real purpose other than entertaining the system users. I've only been an active ham radio opperator for about 28 years, so as a newbie, I may simply have never have heard of these blips. Maybe you were thinking of that other service, Childrens Band, they like lots of beeps and sundry noises, but that entire service has no purpose at all, except to entertain the children.... er, users

    73 DE WB7RSG

  23. Better productivity on MIT Unveils Prototype for $100 Linux Laptop · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sure, anybody works faster running on Crank!

  24. Polish it on iPod nano Owners In Screen Scratch Trauma · · Score: 1

    When the display window gets scrathed up, polish it with a commercial plastic polish like this http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/cspages/megu airs10.php Plastic aircraft windshields get scratched all the time, this is what I use on mine. If I can do the whole airplane windshield in 30 minutes, how long should it take to do a tiny little display window?

  25. How could this work? on U.S. Deploys Orbital Communications Jammer · · Score: 2, Informative

    Most jammers radiate lots of RF, how could a satellite have the power budget to make a strong enough signal to be a credible jammer? If they're trying to jam uplinks, geostationary satellites typically use directional antennas, pointed at the service area on the ground, the jammer would need to be in the beam to make it's signal louder than the bad guy at the satellite's receiver input. You can't hold position between the earth and a geostationary satellite. Ground based stations can make lots of power into very large antennas it would be difficult to generate a louder jamming signal at the satellite. If they're jamming the downlink, the same large antenna used at the ground station for uplink is also used for down link. Large antennas have narrow beam width, if the jammer isn't "in the beam" the jamming signal would be greatly attenuated. If the "bad guys" use spread spectrum modulation systems, the jammer has to spread it's energy over wide bandwidth it will eventually be weaker than background noise.

    If they want to jam ground to ground communication systems, the satellite is a hell of a lot farther away than the next microwave station on the horizon. The inverse square law of radio propagation is a powerful foe for jammers.

    It might work in a few special situations, but good luck jamming systems that are intended to be "jam resistant" from thousands of miles away. Even if the jammers were in low earth orbit, they'd go whizzing buy and only be effective for short periods, and you still have the power budget problem.

      I'd bet they are up to something else, this is a cover story.