Posted on 08/17/2007 7:53:02 AM PDT by Lucky9teen
Computer Problem Report Form
1. Describe your problem: ____________________________________________________________________________________
2. Now, describe the problem accurately: ________________________________________________________________________
3. Speculate wildly about the cause of the problem: ________________________________________________________________
4. Problem Severity: A. Minor__ B. Minor__ C. Minor__ D. Trivial__
5. Nature of the problem: A. Locked Up__ B. Frozen__ C. Hung__ D. Strange Smell__
6. Is your computer plugged in? Yes__ No__
7. Is it turned on? Yes__ No__
8. Have you tried to fix it yourself? Yes__ No__
9. Have you made it worse? Yes__
10. Have you had "a friend" who "Knows all about computers" try to fix it for you? Yes__ No__
11. Did they make it even worse? Yes__
12. Have you read the manual? Yes__ No__
13. Are you sure you've read the manual? Maybe__ No__
14. Are you absolutely certain you've read the manual? No__
15. If you read the manual, do you think you understood it? Yes__ No__
16. If 'Yes' then explain why you can't fix the problem yourself. __________________________________________________________
17. What were you doing with your computer at the time the problem occurred? ____________________________________________
l8. If you answered 'nothing' then explain why you were logged in? _______________________________________________________
l9. Are you sure you aren't imagining the problem? Yes__ No__
20. Does the clock on your home VCR blink 12:00? Yes__ What's a VCR?__
21. Do you have a copy of 'PCs for Dummies'? Yes__ No__
22. Do you have any independent witnesses to the problem? Yes__ No__
23. Do you have any electronics products that DO work? Yes__ No__
24. Is there anyone else you could blame this problem on? Yes__ No__
25. Have you given the machine a good whack on the top? Yes__ No__
26. Is the machine on fire? Yes__ Not Yet__
27. Can you do something else instead of bothering me? Yes__
"What do people mean when they say the computer went down on them?"
~ Marilyn Pittman
I say “ok”.
Not that there’s anything wrong with that.
Does this help?
Tomkow I don’t know if you were on Tuesday Canteen thread but this past Tuesday was my birthday I learning that motto as I mature so true at my age LOL!
Microsoft DOES make watches.
http://www.windowsfordevices.com/articles/AT6914689493.html
A SPOT of Background
Microsoft has described its Smart Personal Objects Technology (SPOT) initiative as being “aimed at improving the function of everyday objects through the injection of software.” Smart wristwatches are the first SPOT-based application, and Bill Gates unveiled early SPOT watch prototypes during his keynote address at the January, 2003 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.
SPOT watches offer advanced features such as automatic time adjustment based on location, customizable watch faces, and access to continually updated content such as news, traffic alerts, weather reports, stock quotes, and sports scores, instant messaging, etc. — plus, of course, all the capabilities expected of a modern wristwatch such as chronometer, calendar, alarm, and timer functions.
At a sneak preview of the watches given by Microsoft at COMDEX 2003, Microsoft began referring to the SPOT watches as “Smart Watches with MSN Direct.” The purpose of MSN Direct, a new Microsoft service to be offered through a monthly or annual subscription, is to use FM radio subcarriers to feed data to the watches, such as weather, traffic, and other information.
Bill Gates showed off the first consumer SPOT watches to achieve retail availability — made by watchmakers Fossil and Suunto — at the January, 2004 CES in Las Vegas. At the same time, Gates announced the launch of Microsoft’s MSN Direct broadcasting service to transmit content to the watches.
What makes SPOT tick?
SPOT devices are built on a unique hardware/software platform developed by Microsoft Research (MSR) group for “DirectBand devices.” A range of new technologies including a “low-distraction user interface, a new operating system platform, and new communications capabilities” have been developed in MSR’s labs over the past several years, Microsoft said.
“Microsoft has invested heavily in this initiative to introduce software and hardware that will make everyday devices smarter and more useful for consumers,” noted Bill Mitchell, general manager of Microsoft’s SPOT Group.
SPOT chipset
In November 2002, Microsoft and National Semiconductor announced a SPOT chipset that resulted from a several-year collaboration between the two companies to define and develop embedded technology for DirectBand devices that would address the challenging power, cost, and physical size constraints of the initial SPOT watches. The two-chip set consists of “Stan,” a radio chip that contains a tiny, sensitive 100MHz RF receiver, and “Ollie,” a system-on-chip (SoC) processor based on a RISC CPU with on-chip SRAM and ROM, timers, interrupt controllers, and other core system functions.
The tiny (2.8 x 2.8 x .86 mm) radio chip draws just 90 milliwatts during operation, and a mere 30 microwatts in standby mode. Ollie, the SPOT SoC, contains a 32-bit ARM7 TDMI-S processor core which zooms along at 27.6 MHz, drawing roughly 50 mW (1.8 mW/MHz) at that blinding speed. The processor also contains 512KB of on-chip ROM and 384KB of on-chip SRAM memory.
SPOT’s embedded software stack
Given Ollie’s constrained hardware resources, it’s not surprising that SPOT devices don’t run Windows CE, which typically uses 10 to 20 times that much memory. Instead, SPOT runs an embedded software stack dubbed “.NET Embedded,” which includes the three blocks shaded blue in the architecture diagram below: bootstrap code, to initialize the system on powerup; a Tiny HAL (hardware abstraction layer) plus device drivers, to control the underlying system hardware; and a Tiny CLR (common language routine), through which the device is programmed.
“.NET Embedded” (shaded blue) includes Tiny CLR, Tiny HAL, drivers, bootloader
The Tiny CLR implements a subset of the .NET Common Language Runtime (CLR), enabling SPOT devices to run high-level code written using a subset of the .NET Framework, a Java-like runtime environment (the .NET Framework subset for Windows CE is known as .NET Compact Framework).
The Tiny CLR, which occupies under 132KB of memory, contains enough functionality to be suitable for embedded device applications and is programmable and debugable using Visual Studio.NET (C#), according to Donald Thompson, software architect and former development manager for SPOT.
“We support a subset of the .NET Framework,” Thompson said. “We provide hundreds of different objects and thousands of functions. We support all of the things one would expect, like threads, strings, numeric types, datetime, fonts, bitmaps, etc. We have several domain-specific object libraries for the watch and .netcpu [CPU Module] (VTU, PWM, LCD, I/O, IRQs), among others.”
.NET Embedded also provides a Tiny HAL that implements system-level functions, which interface with the system’s underlying hardware, and a bootloader. The Tiny HAL takes up less than 40KB of memory.
“SPOT doesn’t have an OS, just enough ASM/C/C++ to support the TinyCLR,” Thompson said.
MSN Direct content delivery service
MSN Direct is described by Microsoft as “a specialized new wireless service that combines technology with fashion to deliver customized information to a new category of watches.” The service enables users to “conveniently and discreetly receive the information that matters most to them, at a glance and for an affordable price,” Microsoft said.
The MSN Direct broadcasting service transmits selected content directly to the devices through an FM subcarrier that transmits weather, traffic, and other information over low-power FM frequencies. Watch owners must subscribe to the transmission service on a monthly or annual basis. According to Microsoft, as of September 2004, the areas covered by MSN Direct’s FM Subcarrier network include the top 100 U.S. and Canadian Metropolitan Transit Areas (MTAs).
Third-party SPOT development kit
Early in SPOT’s lifecycle, Microsoft hinted at a board-level implementation of SPOT suitable for use by hobbyists, educators, and researchers. Such a product is now available from .netcpu Corp. The kit consists of a tiny computer module in the format of a 32-pin “DIP” (dual inline package) chip, allowing the module to conveniently plug into a standard 32-pin DIP socket. In addition to the Ollie SoC, the “.netcpu CPU Module” integrates 4MB of nonvolatile Flash memory, and a number of I/O ports.
The CPU module is sold in a kit that includes a Microsoft .NET Embedded SDK, a Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 Installer CD, and user documentation. An optional carrier board is also offered, to simplify projects based on the CPU module. The carrier board provides a 32-pin DIP socket for the CPU module, and routes signals from the CPU module’s 32-pin interface to various dual-row connectors.
Read more about the CPU module and associated kits here.
See SPOT run!
A short promotional video introduction to Microsoft’s SPOT watch technology and what the watches can do is available here (3.5 minute Windows Media file).
Further details regarding Microsoft SPOT watches and other SPOT details are available on Microsoft’s SPOT page.
It would explain the smell... but in reality... I just forgot to post the picture with the text.
LOL... I’m gonna send that to all my employees Monday.
The well equipped smoking techie has one of these:
Thermaltake calls it a "drink holder." Damned PC ba****ds! It's a retractable ash tray! It fits in a 5 1/4" half height drive bay. I bought one for a friend... Yes, that cig lighter works, it connects to the 12V lead.
Mark
Hey Tom!
Thanks for the funny pings!
((hugs))
What is that, the Democrats’ motto? LOL
Happy Belated Birthday.
Korean food is hot, spicy and very yummy!
There's a little cafe on the first floor of the building where I work. It's run by a Korean lady, and one day she brought in some bulgogi (Korean marinated beef, sort of like teriaki, but spicier) and gave out free samples. It's now on the menu twice a week!
Mark
If you eat enough of it, she might put it on the menu every day! : )
I like the new acronym: PICNIC: Problem in chair, not in computer. It certainly defines me.
Legs... just watchin’ the weather... you and the short ones okay down there?
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