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#151
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On or about Wed, 31 Mar 2004 02:00:45 GMT, Richard Lamb
made the sensational claim that: LooseChanj wrote: On or about Mon, 29 Mar 2004 22:08:37 -0500, Peter Stickney made the sensational claim that: And MS_Word 2204 will require a semitrailer full of terabyte SVHDDVDs. run like a Sloth on your MeraHertz Anthill processor, and provide no more useful functionality than Word 6. But by then that semitrailer of storage will be smaller than a shoebox. It already is... Smaller than a semitrailer full of whatever sort of "DVD"s Mr. Stickney was predicting? Assuming he meant a disk roughly the size of a CD or DVD holding a terabyte's worth of data, I don't think so. I'm not even sure exabytes would cover that much data. Or even whatever's the next step, petabytes? For that much friggin' data it better come with a holographic guy to do your work for you, and a holographic supermodel to spend your time on the beach with. SuperVeryHighDensityDVD? -- This is a siggy | To E-mail, do note | Just because something It's properly formatted | who you mean to reply-to | is possible, doesn't No person, none, care | and it will reach me | mean it can happen |
#152
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![]() Derek Lyons wrote: Early inertial systems weren't considered particularly stable. It was not uncommon to have *both* systems installed. Civilian navigators were also helped out the door by the increasing availability and reliability of LORAN/DECCA/OMEGA etc... In the case of Hound Dog, the missile originally had purely inertial guidance; but later a star tracker was located on each of the B-52's twin launch pylons that would update the missile's INS right up to the moment of launch- since twin sensors were used, I imagine that not only did you have system redundancy, but could split the difference in what both the star trackers were giving as bearing and location, and give the missiles a very accurate set of data; I suspect the bomber's nav system used them also, particularly in areas where a radar check of the ground would be an invitation to a SAM arriving pronto. Our star sensors were far more compact than the first generation Soviet equivalents; the transparent housing for the star sensor on the Buran missile was the size of a fighter plane's canopy! Here's a shot of the Hound Dog's star tracker under test- I assume that the top assembly is the star tracker and the pylon-mounted electronics system; and the large pod it's sitting on top of, the missile's INS gear: http://www.ammsalumni.com/PlatforAst...r2_340x240.jpg They seem to be testing it in a room with no ceiling, so that the star tracker can see the sky. Pat |
#153
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In article ,
LooseChanj wrote: ...Anyone who thinks unix should be held up as a shining example of operating systems should be forced (preferably at gunpoint) to read the Unix Hater's Handbook. That's about the only way that most of the UHH is readable... -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
#154
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![]() "LooseChanj" wrote in message om... and a holographic supermodel to spend your time on the beach with. Does the name Six of One ring any bells? ![]() |
#155
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![]() "Paul Blay" wrote in message ... ... for sufficiently large values of 'shoe'. Yeah, probably Ian Thorpe's ![]() |
#156
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![]() "Derek Lyons" wrote in message ... Kevin Willoughby wrote: On the other hand, if you have a bit of margin in cpu-speed, real-time requirements, and memory, it is valid engineering to consider not forcing the programmers to be careful with memory allocations. Let the machine keep track of memory usage (keyword: "garbage collection"). Of course to use that margin, you have to ensure not only that the garbage collector is called, but that it actually functions as intended and is itself bug free. Of course, you also need to trust your compiler's deallocation routine. I remember that at one time Turbo Pascal essentially ignored deallocation. Course, you could then explicitly manage all your allocations in your own code. (Which is much more efficient for things like OS code.) |
#157
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Herb Schaltegger wrote:
In article , (Derek Lyons) wrote: Hmm... My Windows box hasn't crashed outright in over a week, hasn't had a program freeze in two or three days, and only needs rebooting when one particular memory picky game is run.[1] The only people to whom that is not acceptable are those with a pathological hatred of Redmond, or an unrealistic standard of performance. Come on, Derek, you're setting your standards too low. My OS X laptop hasn't crashed outright three times in 14 months, hasn't had a program freeze in several weeks and only needs rebooting when I update system software. So what? I mean what does that level of reliability really gain you for home or office usage? D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. |
#158
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Dave Michelson wrote:
Derek Lyons wrote: Dave Michelson wrote: Perhaps you should preface your remark, "In my uninformed opinion, people hold it to an unrealistic standard...." If my opinion was uninformed, you'd have a point. But I'll give you a free clue: "uninformed" != "disagrees with yours". If the standard is "unrealistic", it couldn't be met by people developing other desktop operating systems (Linux, Solaris, BSD, etc.) under similar constraints. I never said it was an unrealistic standard to design to. I *said* it was an unrealistic standard to hold Windows to. There is a difference. Since they do so handily, one can only conclude that the standard *is* realistic. QED. (To myself: Hmmm. I wonder how Derek is going to twist this one around!) Haven't twisted anything yet. It's twits like yourself who are doing the twisting to avoid actually adressing the issue. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. |
#159
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#160
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Pat Flannery wrote:
Here's a shot of the Hound Dog's star tracker under test- I assume that the top assembly is the star tracker and the pylon-mounted electronics system; and the large pod it's sitting on top of, the missile's INS gear: http://www.ammsalumni.com/PlatforAst...r2_340x240.jpg Your assumption would be correct based on the systems I've seen/studied/worked with. For obvious reasons you want your star tracker rigidly (and if possible physically) aligned with your intertial platform. D. -- Touch-twice life. Eat. Drink. Laugh. |
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