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Wow. A refund check from Comcast. After the billing failure and terrible experience with Comcast customer service I was surprised to actually see this.
Leave a CommentMaking, baking, and (un-)breaking things in Southeast Michigan.
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Wow. A refund check from Comcast. After the billing failure and terrible experience with Comcast customer service I was surprised to actually see this.
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Well, that’s that. Last night right before bed I sent off the order for 10 of the SDrive NUXX v1.0 PCBs. With any luck they’ll be here around the end of the month. If these work well I’ll begin taking orders
As mentioned last night I had to make the PCB 3mm larger to best use the case but no adjustment to the buttons was needed. Now it’s time to spend my evenings working on things like the documentation site, figuring out how to handle payments (PayPal? Google Checkout?), and doing non-electronicy things like actually keeping my house clean.
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Today I received the enclosures for the SDrive NUXXes and found that I forgot to take into account the 1.5mm thick plastic bezels. This meant that I had to make the PCB 3mm longer, so that it’s now 123mm x 100mm. Now I just have to finish tweaking how far back from the edge of the PCB the tactile switches sit and it should be time to call this v1.0 and order a prototype run.
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Today’s lunch is these enchiladas, which are leftover from those that Danielle made last night. They are fresh corn tortillas, steamed, filled with refried beans, cheese, and fried onion. The refried beans were made fresh, with nitrite-free bacon renderings and onion, and the onions in the enchiladas themselves were fried up in the pan the bacon was rendered in. Mmm. This is really, really good.
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Tonight I’m having a bottle of Lagunitas Brewing Company‘s Brown Shugga Ale. It’s a really brown sugar-tasting, moderately hopped brown ale. It’s also 9.5%.
This is definitely a nice beer at the end of a nice, but productive, day. Danielle made an absolutely wonderful dinner of bean, cheese, and onion enchiladas, complete with freshly made refried beans. She also made the kitchen nicely clean, as I spent lots of time doing laundry almost to completion and beginning to straighten up the basement.
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These receipts printed on thermal paper darkened when they were exposed to vapors from ProLink Chain Lube. The receipts are from a few days ago, and after lubricating my chain yesterday I tossed the paper towels wetted with ProLink into the same trash can which held these receipts. Today when taking out the trash I noticed that these receipts had darkened markedly, in interesting patterns. It surprises me that no region containing text was darkened.
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One of the most frustrating parts of acquiring a new CadSoft EAGLE license is waiting for the license to actually arrive. CadSoft insists on sending them via UPS, along with a full new set of manuals and paperwork. This incurs a $15 shipping charge, plus a 3-5 day wait for it all to arrive. Also, if one is following some upgrade path one ends up with quite a few redundant manuals.
I’ll be taking the 4.1 manuals out for recycling today.
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Today was such a nice day (~46°F) that I was able to get out for a really nice ride with Nick, Erick, Marty, and Kristy. (I hope I spelled their names right…) We through neighborhoods from downtown Mt. Clemens, over to 16 Mile, out to the Dodge Park area, to the spillway, then back. Total was just over 20 miles, and except for the occasional patches of 4″ deep slush or standing water it was a very nice ride.
After the ride we ended up gorging ourselves at Chicken Shack, then heading over to Dragonmead for some really nice beers. Now I’m home, relaxing, and putzing with some electronics stuff but not really accomplishing anything.
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I’ve been using a camera app called SnapPhoto since switching to using a TMobile G1 / HTC Dream / Google Phone. It’s a rather nice camera app, as it does stability detection before taking the photo, manual white balance setting, JPEG quality settings, etc.
But, what I like most about it is that it uses the built-in geolocation stuff (GPS and/or cellular) to add the GPS EXIF headers which Gallery can parse and make a Google Map from. Therefore, if you visit my Moblog and click the View Album on a Map link, you’ll be presented with a map showing where I’ve taken Moblog photos.
As an exercise, find my house and you can get a link to the photo above of my breakfast from today (coffee and a Mexican pastry). Now I just need to wait for there to be a good Gallery upload app for Android and these can be taken, captioned, and posted all directly from the phone. (There’s one which kinda works, but not with my httpd and in a few other odd situations…)
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This is a JAE D03 connector used for Atari SIO, pulled from the Okidata printer controller mentioned earlier. I used this to draw a part footprint for SIO connectors and so far this has worked out well. A couple minor adjustments have been made, but the original drawing is still accurate.
Today I received a few connectors I had ordered from B & C ComputerVisions and while they ended up being a slightly different type (side by side photos here) the footprint will work for these as well. Additionally, I pulled open all of the Atari hardware I have here and found that all the SIO connectors seemed to be one of these two types.
The Japanese-made hardware (1010 and 1027) had the thick-based JAE D03 connectors and the other stuff (1050 from Singapore and 800XL from Hong Kong) had some clone of the thin-based part. I had to adjust the outline slightly because the thin based parts have a somewhat larger footprint, but this wasn’t a big deal as the pads all matched.
I was a bit disappointed to find out that the parts from B & C ComputerVisions are pulls, complete with slightly bent / solder-y pins and dirt on them but they washed up nicely and should be fine to use.
For reference, here’s the four different (two types) of SIO connectors I’d found, taken from this post that I made at AtariAge asking if anyone knows of any different part styles:
Leave a CommentJAE D03: In all the Japanese-made Atari hardware I have. Thick base, well made. Held down with self-tapping screws or riveted in place. (Photo)
MX 7514-4-13: Received from B & C ComputerVisions when I ordered two connectors. I expected them to be new, but they are very obviously pulls (dirty parts / slightly bent pins / solder on pins). (Photo)
CO12995 5-82-4 MEC-5: Inside a Hong Kong-made 800XL. Appears identical to the MX 7514-4-13. Riveted in place. (Photo)
UNKNOWN: Connector similar to the previous two, in a Singapore-made 1050. I could read TAIWAN on the back, but while I could ensure it’s not the same as the part in the 800XL I couldn’t make out the rest of the part numbers. Held down to the PCB only by the 15 pins and nothing in the larger holes. (Photo)