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2024lctgmeetingchats

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This page last changed 2024.02.14 08:58 visits: 1 time today, 8 times yesterday, and 660 total times

Chat Messages during LCTG Meetings

These are a record of the chats that were passed during meetings in 2024. They have been edited to a small extent.
To find chats for a given day, for example January 10, 2024, search for datecode 20240110 (2024, month 01, day 10).

20240214

Phone Apps and Neat Websites

10:04:36 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	I often ask (repeatedly, if necessary), “Who’ calling, please.”
10:04:59 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	I expect a real name and a company name and a location.
10:11:38 From Alice  Meade to Everyone:
	Has anyone figured out how to watch Napoleon for free?
10:12:17 From Bob Primak to Everyone:
	I get very little Spam on both Comcast Voice and my US Mobile Cell Phone plan. My phone is almost never active. This may affect the willingness of spammers to call me.
10:18:54 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	If you’ve already paid for something once, reviewing later it shouldn’t be an issue.  But viewing fresh content might be problematic with respect to Intellectual Property Rights.
10:21:14 From Bob Primak to Everyone:
	There are arrangements about this already.
10:22:58 From Grace Poon to Everyone:
	I use the Minuteman library, you can request movies and I just watched Oppenheimer again at home with subtitles, plus the special feature with the PBS documentary, which I always find it interesting.
10:23:24 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	ChatGPT says:  «The top-level domain (TLD) ".ph" is the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for the Philippines. TLDs are the last segment of a domain name, which follows the "dot" in an internet address. Each TLD is assigned to a specific country or territory, and ".ph" specifically denotes websites associated with the Philippines. It is commonly used by individuals, businesses, and organizations based in or affiliated with the Philippines.»
10:23:40 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	Bard concurs.
10:33:33 From Bob Primak to Everyone:
	One problem with ReelGood -- it offers VPN suggestions for getting around regional blocks. This also has ethical issues.
10:34:50 From Bob Primak to Everyone:
	Public Libraries also may rent out equipment for viewing DVDs and BluRay Discs.
10:40:24 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	TLD .tv is actually owned by the country of Tuvalu.
10:47:23 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	RPN is Reverse Polish Notation.  (Push-Down Stack)
10:47:50 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	Operations apply to the topmost numbers on the stack.
10:49:24 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	RPN has no parenthesis keys.  If your calculator has parens keys, then it’s not RPN.
10:50:29 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	LOL means Lots of Love.
10:51:56 From Judy & Mike Alexander to Everyone:
	Wikipedia will also give you acronyms
10:55:16 From Grace Poon to Everyone:
	inaturalist is good for birds, plants ID etc
	‘seek’ for plants is a simpler ID version, 
	Merlin is great for birds
10:55:43 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	Are the plugins available for the free version of ChatGPT, or only the premium version?
10:56:10 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	Peter says, “Only the paid premium version.”
11:00:45 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	FYI, Acronym finder is a web site acronymfinder.com and an app as I demo’d, and it’s free and extensive.
11:01:49 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	Unless they’ve changed it, any given chat can have at most 3 plugins enabled.
11:04:05 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	The hp 15c calculator app that I demo’d is free for iOS, search for “Retro 15c”.
11:05:29 From Adam Broun to Everyone:
	You might enjoy suno.ai (built by some former colleagues of mine).    Generative ai to compose music and songs from a prompt.
11:10:01 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	There is a plugin for asking questions of a PDF document.
11:14:26 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	There are Browser Plugins and ChatGPT plugins, and it’s sometimes hard to remember which is which.
11:15:15 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	Send your topics ideas to: info@lctg.toku.us (Or to Bob, John, Peter, or Steve and we’ll forward)
11:15:49 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	I played with a PDF-Questioning Plugin for a friend’s Master’s Thesis.
11:20:44 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	Google Image Search can recognize and translate text in an image.
11:32:34 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	There’s only a modest number of routes, not an astronomical number of possible itineraries.

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20240207

Space Update

10:07:50 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	"InSight" stands for "Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy, and Heat Transport."
10:11:07 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	When he says that it reaches Mach 1, is that relative to Mars speed of sound?
10:13:46 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	«The speed of sound on Mars is significantly lower than on Earth. On average, the speed of sound on Mars is around 240 meters per second (about 784 feet per second), compared to about 343 meters per second (around 1125 feet per second) on Earth at sea level.»  [From ChatGPT]
10:15:05 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	I’m guessing that you don’t want the rotors to break the sound barrier, as that would waste energy.
10:20:27 From Judy & Mike Alexander to Everyone:
	The tips of some of the earthbound helicopters' blades evidently do exceed Mach 1.  In those cases, the helicopter sounds like it's generating a rapid series of explosions -- very annoying.
10:21:25 From Bob Primak to Everyone:
	I don't think the Martians will mind, much. : )
10:22:04 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	i suppose on earth, we can afford to waste energy by emitting sonic booms. But on Mars that would not be a sensible use of limited power.
10:23:09 From Bob Primak to Everyone:
	Maybe the very low density of the Martian atmosphere might cause much less of an issue.
10:24:38 From Larry W to Everyone:
	The US doesn't use counter rotating blades because they're too loud. but Russia does have some.  They are however more efficient.
10:28:49 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	You don’t need the tail rotor with a pair of counter-rotating lift blades.
10:37:20 From Carl Lazarus to Everyone:
	How do we know the size of Mercury's core without any seismic measurements?
10:43:02 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	I think it’s based on measurements of the strength of Mercury’s magnetic field.
11:00:04 From Larry W to Everyone:
	The Chinook helicopter which has two sets of rotors on the opposite ends of of the aircraft do rotate in opposite direction also not requiring a "tail rotor". This seems to be much more efficient. I wonder why there aren't more such designs. Also I assume the  Osprey blades rotae in opposite directions.
11:04:48 From Chuck Kaufman to Everyone:
	are the Webb photos real color?
11:05:51 From Judy & Mike Alexander to Everyone:
	No.  Webb detects infrared radiation.  So the colors must have been added by NASA to make things clearer.
11:16:26 From Carl Lazarus to Everyone:
	I hope Boeing installs all the bolts.
11:25:53 From Judy & Mike Alexander to Everyone:
	"A billion here and a billion there.  Pretty soon it becomes real money."
11:30:29 From Barry Kort to Everyone:
	It really sucks to have an open gash in the side of the passenger compartment.

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20240110

LIDAR Mapping

10:08:12 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	Do you take into account difference in speed of light through air and water (non-cloud moisture in air)?
10:17:14 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	Can the mapping collect real time events, such as seeing people walking or vehicles as they move?
10:18:54 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	What is the price range of the cameras BAE sells?
10:22:23 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	As plane is moving as it’s doing the mapping, and sending laser beans to a given spot on the ground, can the laser angles see under objects?
10:24:02 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	(You just answered the angles question!)
10:27:41 From John Rudy to Everyone:
	can you in any way measure what is under the ground?  like bombs or tunnels
10:30:05 From Larry Wittig to Everyone:
	Can you damage the eyes of observers on the ground?
10:30:09 From Judy & Mike Alexander to Everyone:
	Please comment on eye safety on the ground (where/what you're measuring)
10:32:21 From Dick to Everyone:
	How do you get the "tilt" data? What does it tell you?
10:38:07 From Dick to Everyone:
	What wavelengths do you use?
10:39:57 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	Do you use different laser wavelengths for different conditions?
10:40:32 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	Or maybe do you use multiple wavelengths at the same time (would this improve mapping)?
11:00:35 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	Is the laser/lasers you use be weaponized?  (Ie, see bad guy running through forest and disable him/her)
11:05:46 From John Rudy to Everyone:
	could you find lost hikers in the mountains
11:07:28 From John Rudy to Everyone:
	but they are moving
11:07:51 From Steve Isenberg to Everyone:
	Can the heat of an object be measured, so that maybe a lost hiker on a colder ground could be detected using their body heat

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20240103

Using files across Windows, Apple, Linux, etc platforms

10:31:24	Barry Kort:	WiFi speeds vary.  2.4 GHz WiFi is slower than 5 GHz WiFi, and both are typically slower than hard-wired Ethernet.
10:32:34	Bob Primak:	From th AX standard onward, MIMO uses multiple channels simultaneaously to increase network throughput. WiFi-6 is even faster.
10:34:30	Barry Kort:	Synology makes a nice local network storage device for your LAN.
10:54:12	Bob Primak:	Actually, nearly all fiber-optic ISPs have symmetrical upstream/downstream bandwidth. Verizon is by no means unique in this regard, for businesses.

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2024lctgmeetingchats.1707929898.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024.02.14 11:58 by Steve Isenberg