nuxx.net
Making, baking, and (un-)breaking things in Southeast Michigan.

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9090


9090 PCBs

If everything goes according to plan, I’ll have the 9090 PCBs done sometime around the end of the week. I ended up having to place two Mouser orders today (doh!), but all I’m waiting on is a few resistors, a few tantalum capacitors, and some spacers for stacking the PCBs. After that I’ll put it aside for a while, mostly until I feel like designing the enclosure, coming up with front panel artwork, and putting it all together.

After placing that last order I’m finishing up my final can of Old Speckled Hen, then I’m going to… probably watch more of The Mayfair Set one of the films by Adam Curtis, the same guy who did The Power of Nightmares. Both of these, thus far, are excellent political documentaries and very worth watching. The Power of Nightmares is a bit more applicable to the present, as it is about the rise of neoconservatism and radical Islam and how they play off of each other to ends a ways away from what each intends.

beerelectronicsmoved from livejournalpolitics

Gas! Gas! Gas!


Woman with an overflowing vehicle at the 7-11 at Hamlin and Dequinder.
(Click for more moblog photos…)

So, this morning I was running a bit low on gas, so I decided to take the 22 Mile to Ryan to Hamlin route to work and stop at the 7-11 at Hamlin and Dequinder and purchase fuel. Right after I pulled into a pump I noticed that right next to where I’d stopped was a driverless SUV (not even anyone standing around it) with a fuel nozzle hanging out the side, pouring gas all over the ground.

As the SUV also appeared to be running, I let my desire not to be in a gas station fire override my desire to purchase fuel and pulled away, but not before taking a photo. Right as I was pulling my phone out the woman who owned the SUV ran out of the 7-11 and shut off the fuel flow, before running back inside.

My understanding is that there is a state law prohibiting one from leaving the fuel pump unattended while it is operating, but I’m having a really difficult time finding it. Can anyone help? www.legislature.mi.gov just isn’t being very helpful today.

automotivemoved from livejournal

Beer / Cider Brewing Equipment

[Crossposted to and …]

So, there’s a very distinct possibility that I will need to rid myself of beer brewing equipment. This includes:

· Gas burner and two large pots. (Turkey fryer, turkey fryer pot, and other very large pot. Only ever used for beer.)
· Two 5 gallon carboys and one 6 gallon carboy.
· Two buckets, one with spout for bottling.
· Lever-style Bottle Capper.
· Various tubing, airlocks, siphon, bottling wand.
· A good number of clean, empty, label-less, matching bottles.
· A few various ingredients (corn sugar, rice hulls, irish moss, etc).
· Bottle tree large enough to hold enough bottles for five-gallon batch.

Are any of you interested? It’s available in Southeast Michigan, and I’d probably want about $200 for it all, although I’m willing to entertain other offers…

beerfinancesmoved from livejournal

Glossy Laptop Screens

Do any of you have an opinion regarding glossy screens on laptops? My dad’s Dell has a glossy screen, while mine has the normal matte screen. I may be purchasing a laptop soon, and I’m still torn as to which I like more.

What about you? Which do you like? Why? What do you primarily use it for? (eg: Desktop Usage, Coding, Photo Work, Games, etc.)

acquired thingscomputersmoved from livejournal

Full Kilt Pub & Resturant in Mt. Clemens, MI


Menu from Full Kilt Pub & Restaurant in Mt. Clemens, MI
(Click for the rest of the Full Kilt menu (photo gallery retired).)

For my Dad’s birthday tonight my mom wanted us (my mom, dad, sister, brother-in-law, and I) to go to a new resturant in Mt. Clemens, MI called Full Kilt. (As of this writing that is a parked page, but it appears to be registered to one of the owners.) The restaurant is located in what was previously another bar and grill at 143 N. Main St..

I feel a bit bad about saying this, but I’m not sure how well the place is actually going to do. While I understand that the place has only been open for a week and a half or so, both the menu and seating seem to leave a bit to be desired. As mentioned previously, we had five adults (average size) eating, but the largest table available in a mostly empty non-smoking area was a semi-circle-ish booth (think bracket shaped: ] ) which could only comfortably seat four of us. We were able to fit five, but I ended up sitting awkwardly in a corner with no reasonable seat back to lean against.

Feeling more and more like its original design as a sports bar, all the tables prominently face four large projected HDTVs, each of which was displaying something different. One CNN, One Fox News (no, I didn’t like watching The O’Reilly Factor while eating dinner), and two other stations showing dramas. I may be a bit different from the average person, but I tend not to have a television on unless I’m actively watching it, so if there is a television operating in a room where I’m attempting to have a conversation I’ll regularly find myself staring at it, having drifted off mid-conversation.

The music selection was interesting, with various bagpipe tunes playing prominently both outside the building and in the bathrooms, and in the background behind generic satellite radio alterna-rock. This wouldn’t be too bad, except it was just faint enough while sitting at the table that it constantly sounded as if someone’s cell phone was ringing in the distance. And how much bagpipes can one stand, anyway?

Now, the food… To start, I’ve posted scans of the entire Full Kilt menu (photo gallery retired) in my gallery, if you’d like to see them. While there are a few token dishes like lamb chops, shepherd’s pie, and fish & chips, most of the menu is filled with items such as the Patty O’Quesadilla, Erin Go Bragh (corned beef and sauerkraut on rye), and Shamrock Grilled Chicken which appear to be British / Celtic / whatever in name only.

I had the Emerald Isle Olde English Fish & Chips ($10.99), which had a nice, light, flaky batter coating, but was served with very dry, typically American steak fries. Before the meal we each opted for the Potato and Leek soup (also available ‘loaded’, or topped optional cheese and bacon on top) which, while decent, wasn’t anything special. Fairly decent garlic bread was brought in nice quantities, but it was served with a rather poorly matched blend of cinnamon and butter (it may have been margarine, I couldn’t quite tell).

Both my Mom and Dad had steaks which appeared decent and had steamed vegetables (carrot, broccoli, and asparagus blend) with mashed Yukon Gold potatoes on the side. They found the steaks decent, but nothing amazing.

One interesting bit to add, when my Mom didn’t finish her whole dinner, she asked for a box for it. The waitress took her plate to package it up, and while doing that someone else grabbed the plate from the counter and cleaned it off before it could be wholly packaged up. Because of that the waitress removed the charge for her dinner from the bill — a very nice gesture. I have no complaints with the friendliness and attentiveness of the staff.

My brother-in-law Craig also had the fish and chips, which he seemed to like well enough. He also ordered a beer listed as simply Under The Kilt which, based on the description, seems to be Dragonmead‘s Under The Kilt Wee Heavy. Unfortunately, the bar had already run the keg dry (and was saying that the brewer has run out as well) and hadn’t replaced it with anything else. Instead he ordered a Tennent’s which was served straight from the bottle.

All in all, I’d say the food is decent if one likes typical Chili’s / Applebee’s / TGI Friday’s type food, but nothing worth making a special trip for. I personally think that a order of greasy cod and chips from Chicken Shack and a can of Batchelors Mushy Peas taste much more like any food I’ve had in the UK. Full Kilt seems to be Celtic (or whatever — it seems confused) in the same way that a 40-something biker who goes home to a McMansion, SUV, and big-screen TV seems edgy. It probably really wants to be. Really. Seriously.

Sure, some of the problems (out of beer, occasional forgetfulness) are just normal issues with a recently opened resturant, but some of the problems (tables, menu, etc) seem a bit deeper rooted and less likely to be worked out.

Links To Note:

· Emerald Isle Olde English Fish & Chips. My meal. Not bad, but not great. The chips (fries, really) were especially dry.
· Full Kilt Menu Scans (photo gallery retired)

familyfoodmoved from livejournal

Simplifying the network…


Cable Modem and Airport Express behind / beneath a couch.

So, tonight I took a big step and drastically simplified my network here at home. After moving the cable modem to the living room (photo gallery retired) and hanging it off of an Airport Express I’ve been able to turn off the entire rack of equipment in my basement. It’s really, really quiet down there. As part of this I’ve moved my entire house to wireless, with the exception of the TiVo and PlayStation 2, which hang off of a switch connected to the basement Airport Express. (I originally had one in each of these locations so they can play music through both stereos.)

Everything is bridged together nicely with WDS, which Apple makes exceedingly easy to do. (Set up the master AP, turn on the client / repeater ones, and it’ll script the setup on all of them.)

My >3 year old G5 (photo gallery retired) is happily using the connection and both my work laptop and the DS (photo gallery retired) see it just fine. I’ve also moved all backup receiving to an external disk hanging off of the G5. A few more external disks are likely to find there way here soon, just so I can back everything up to some sort of removable / different media.

It’s now strangely quiet in the basement, and I need to figure out what I’ll do with the rack down there. I might trash some of the machines, as they aren’t especially useful anymore. Maybe I’ll use it to store some of the project stuff I’ve been working on. Maybe photography and music equipment, or something like that…

I find it a bit weird to be cutting my home network down so far, but I really think that it’s the smartest thing from a power consumption and simplicity perspective. Also, fewer machines to support means fewer things to go wrong, and that’s a good thing.

around the housecomputersmoved from livejournal

Honda Music Link (and me) in the NYT

Well, the iPod article which I was quoted for in the New York Times seems to have been published.

To quote from page 2:

Honda’s Music Link also offers voice commands, but some owners have had problems with the system. Steve Vigneau of Shelby Township, Mich., said he had Music Link in his Civic and found the system hard to use and slow to operate. The software uses Honda’s text-to-speech technology and needs to be installed on a home computer so it can link with iTunes.

Chris Naughton, a Honda spokesman, said that text-to-speech “has not been as trouble-free as we expected, but many Music Link users are still quite pleased that with a single connection they can get a high-quality audio connection, head unit control and constant charging.”

Not great, but I’m happy enough with it.

And, of course, here’s the obligatory link to my Honda Music Link iPod Adapter Review. (It may be changed slightly in the future… the date-by-date updates at the bottom are becoming a bit tedious.)

automotivecomputersmoved from livejournal

Friday Night Bordom


Sequentix P3 controlling two MIDIbox SID-NUXXs chained into an x0xb0x.

I arrived home from work a bit early today with nothing to do. I’m not exactly sure why I did it, but for some reason I got out my Sequentix P3, MOS SID 6581 and 8580-based MIDIbox SID-NUXXs, and x0xb0x. I chained the MIDIbox SID-NUXXs into each other, ran those through the x0xb0x, hooked it all up to the P3, then got to playing. I spent a good bit of time going back through the P3’s manual, stopping somewhere in the Step section. (Yes, I have yet to learn about using accumulators… I know…)

Anyway, I mostly just screwed around with three patterns, one for each instrument, stacking them on top of each other. The end result is this:

6581_8580_x0xb0x_p3.mp3

It’s nothing great, just my screwing around. But I can say that all the sound and sequencing comes from gear I put together myself.

Now, to find something to do tonight. I’m sort of in the mood to do something social, but I’m not sure what. A club / bar is kind of out, as it’s a bit dull going by one’s self uncertain if there will be anyone familiar there. Hmm.

I think I’ll at least play some Missile Command. :D

electronicsmoved from livejournalmusic

Peleng Info


MS PELENG 3.5/8A (8mm f/3.5 fisheye) with M42 to EOS Adapter
(Click for more photos…)

Hmm, it looks like there is actually a version of the Peleng lens which comes with a dedicated EOS mount, not the M42 to EOS like ours have. I think this is both a good and bad thing. Good because then these lenses can easily be used on any other camera for which an M42 adapter is available. Bad because it’s not as dedicated and perfect as it could be.

If you are curious, this auction has one of the dedicated EOS mount Peleng 8mm lenses for sale. The price is also quite a bit more than we paid, though. Looking at the English side of the Peleng 8mm box one can see that there are two variants available. It appears ours are the Variant 1.

I might try and acquire some of the proper EOS mounts, although I’m not sure how possible that will be. I also don’t know if there really is a reason to, as the M42 adapter (barring the set screw issue) works just fine.

UPDATE: I emailed an eBay seller asking if they have the dedicated EOS mounts for Peleng lenses available. Hopefully they do, and they aren’t too expensive. I think at $15/each I’d probably snag one. Not for any particular reason, more just to be a completest.

acquired thingsmoved from livejournal