nuxx.net
Making, baking, and (un-)breaking things in Southeast Michigan.
found things January 22, 2003

Ah hah!

Ahh… So I finally found information on the weird fenced in hazardous waste area that borders Riverbends Park and Waldon Lakes (or Waldon Ponds or whatnot) Park in Shelby Township: http://www.epa.gov/R5Super/npl/michigan/MID067340711.htm

There were oil lagoons!!!

UPDATE: Scratch that. This is the place I’m thinking of: http://www.epa.gov/R5Super/npl/michigan/MID980410823.htm. Note the water treatment plant… That’s right in the back of the Waldon Lakes park. Unfortunately the park is all fenced in, so I can’t get to the rest of the recreation area.

computers January 20, 2003

Hurray!

Yay! I *FINALLY* have a functioning laser printer at home. See, in 1995 my parents got me a LaserJet 5L for Christmas. The thing always worked fine. It prints great, everything, but after a while it developed the typical LaserJet 5L/6L feed problem, much like they all did. It turns out that there is a place called fixyourownprinter.com which sells kits and instructions for fixing common printer problems. So, $30 and about half an hour’s worth of work later, my printer works fine. Woo! I also threw in a spare toner cartridge I’d had since 1996/1997 and physically cleaned the printer up a bit, and now it’s like new.

electronics January 19, 2003

HDD for PS2

Okay, so I did it. I put a hard drive in my PS2. And guess what? Nothing happened. The disk spun up and there would be occasional activity on the IDE bus, but nothing beyond that. I was hoping there’d at least be a new menu option or something that showed up. Oh well…

Just FYI in case anyone feels like playing with it, a Quantum 840MB disk fit in there perfectly. I would have tried something bigger, but that is all I had to play with. See the previous post for information on the Maxtor disk.

computers January 19, 2003

PS2 HDD

Hrm… So I got a Playstation 2 network adapter. The curious thing is, it seems that there are connectors for an IDE hard drive as part of the adapter. It doesn’t fit a Western Digital hard drive that I have, but maybe another? Possibly Quantum… They seem to make a lot of disks for OEM applications like Tivos, etc.

UPDATE: This picture make it look like a Maxtor disk along with a bit of hardware to mount the drive more securely. I just need to see if I have a Maxtor disk around anywhere…

UPDATE PART DEUX: Okay, I should do a little more digging next time. The PS2 Linux dmesg output from this page indicates the following:

PlayStation 2 IDE DMA driver
hda: Maxtor 4D040H2, ATA DISK drive
ide0 at 0xb4000040-0xb4000047,0xb400005c on irq 41
hda: Maxtor 4D040H2, 38146MB w/2048kB Cache, CHS=4863/255/63, (U)DMA

So… Yeah. It is a Maxtor. And since the PS2 Linux kit ships with the same network adapter, all I need to do is find one of these drives. Or any old Maxtor. I wonder what the machine will look like then… Or how the disk needs to be formatted for games to support it… It’d be nice to have the QCast Tuner also support playing from a local disk. It’d be nice to be able to play off of both the network and the local disk. Or imagine if there was support to rip audio right into the local disk… Mmm… I wonder how fast the PS2 would actually be at doing audio compression?

electronics January 8, 2003

Nixie Tube Clock

Well, I just pretty much let the auction evaporate at $125 for the clock. I think what I’m going to end up doing is building this clock right here. There’s a couple of reasons for this… A) I’d really like to actually build my own clock, I just hope I do a good job soldering and such. I’ll probably have to practice beforehand on some old motherboards or kits or something. B) I’d like a clock where you can see at least some of the circuitry. C) This clock listed here is built to sync off of the WWVB transmissions, much like a few of the other clocks in my house. This is a GREAT feature. D) This clock uses huge Z5680M 100mm high tubes (50mm numbers) which will be nice from reading across the bedroom. I’d also be able to finish the base in a color which would better match my bedroom, where the clock will live.

So… Yeah. No clock for me tonight. It’s probably better for my pocketbook, anyway. Oh, I just checked and the auction jumped to $154.25 at the last minute. So, it’s good that I didn’t bid. Oh well, I’ll build one eventually. Maybe after this current computer job that I’m working on for my dentist. That job is paying about $500 and is for upgrading three computers. That extra $500 should pay off my CC. Maybe with whatever is left over I’ll get the necessary stuff for the nixie clock. While I want to work on the bed, I need to wait for it to get a little warmer out. This would be a good winter project.

electronics January 8, 2003

Nixie

So I want a Nixie tube clock… Here’s the problem. There are some really nice clocks up on eBay, likely to go for the same price as it would cost me to build a clock. The question is, how soon would I be able to build a clock? I’d love the warmth of a nixie clock in my bedroom, but should I wait and build one and hope I do it right, or spend the same amount for a nice looking, finished, functional clock?

computers October 17, 2002

Local News Sucks

Gee. WDIV / Channel 4 just had an aweful story about war driving. What a load of garbage. Hey, guess what? You just learned more about war driving from this post. Yep, that’s how detailed it was. I’ve captured it and I’ll upload it somewhere later. I screwed up and made PCM audio, so I have to rip that out, redo it as MP3 and readd it. Aww, screw it. I’ll just up it now. It’ll be at http://www.nuxx.net/files/wardrive.zip once it’s done uploading. Feel free to take it. It’s ~58MB, though.

computers October 16, 2002

It’s @713

This probably should have been handled as a continuation of this thread, but, oh well. Does anyone here remeber Swatch’s Internet Time. It came to be around 1996 if I recall correctly. I’ve always thought something like this would be a great idea, but we could all do it with GMT. If everyone always worked on GMT, things would be a lot easier. Of course, this would be easy for geeks to get a grasp on, but imagine trying to tell ‘normal people’ that Friends comes on at 0100 and that they get up for work at 1130. Oh well. Just another point where tradition takes the lead over techonological innovation. Like Imperal and Standard measurement over Metric.

computers October 15, 2002

XXX-XXX-XXXX

I think the whole world needs to use 10-digit dialing. The 248 area code almost got it right, as you need full the full 10 digits for local calls, but you still need to dial a 1 for inter-lata and interstate long distance. Why can’t the phone companies just tell people to suck it up and use full 10-digit dialing (without a +1, ever) for all calls everywhere? Just like cell phones, it’d work great. The only reason I can think of is that then people won’t know precisely if a call is long distance or not, but I’m sure an automated “Enter the number you want to call and we’ll tell you the rate” service could be set up.