RC

"Rick Cox"

09/01/2004 3:53 AM

computer in the shop

I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann "A 'puter
in the shop" got me thinking.

In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to help with
some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me into
getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be nice to
have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I purchased a
contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could not
believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how to use.

About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first computer. I
am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at work at
the time.
So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to save money.
I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to get the
Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks extra
to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor. Final
price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at a
whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....


Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still thoroughly
enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill right
now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
Funny what we are willing to spend money on.



This topic has 63 replies

RC

"Rick Cox"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 3:21 PM

Autocad....sigh.....
Speaking of money down the toilet....we have till the 15 to upgrade some of
our 2000 seats or they will no longer be updateable....to me that is
extorsion.
I use Land Development Desktop and Civil packages which cost about $8000 for
a new seat...sigh...

"Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann "A
> 'puter
> > in the shop" got me thinking.
> >
> > In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to help
with
> > some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me into
> > getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be
nice
> to
> > have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I purchased
a
> > contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could not
> > believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how to
> use.
> >
> > About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first
computer.
> I
> > am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at work
at
> > the time.
> > So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to save
> money.
> > I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to get
> the
> > Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks
extra
> > to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor. Final
> > price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at a
> > whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
> >
> >
> > Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
> thoroughly
> > enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill
> right
> > now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> > Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
>
> Just this past week I finally kicked <sniff> my first 2 computers to the
> curb to free up some real estate in the garage.
> A Commodore VIC20 bought in 1984 and a clone 286/12 bought in 1988.
> Paid $80 for the VIC at Toys R Us and had a loan for 3 years on the 286,
it
> cost $3300.
> My present machine (I use AutoCAD daily for my livelihood) cost 1/3 of the
> 286.
>
>

Ba

B a r r y B u r k e J r .

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 12:22 PM

On Thu, 08 Jan 2004 23:18:32 -0500, Tom Watson <[email protected]>
wrote:

>On Fri, 09 Jan 2004 04:00:03 GMT, "Frank Ketchum"
><[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>>I have thought of this often. Spend a grand on a computer and it will be
>>worth exactly nothing in 10 years whereas a grand invested in a jointer,
>>tablesaw, or any blurfl will not only still be useful, but it will retain
>>resale value.
>
>
>And a grand's worth of time invested in going to see furniture that is
>worth emulating will pay off in greater measure than either investment
>in hardware. Too much of this newsgroups's time is taken up with the
>investigation of the "How' in preference to the "What" or the "Why".

Excellent advice.

I consider myself lucky to live 2 hrs from NYC and Boston, 1 hr from
both Old Sturbridge Village and Hancock Shaker Village, and have some
excellent art galleries that can be visited on a long lunch break.

Only recently did I realize the true value of visiting these places in
the pursuit of this craft.

Barry

KB

"Kevin B"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 5:15 AM

Yeah, I feel your pain. I just sold a bunch of old computers that I had
laying around, a Sun Ultra 5 and a old DEC Alpha among them, that I had
purchased used from clients over the years to mess around with at home. I
figure about $1800.00 worth of stuff when I bought it. Got about $175.00 for
it. At least I'll be able to get that nice Lie-Nielsen block plane I've had
my eye on.

Kevin


"Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann "A
'puter
> in the shop" got me thinking.
>
> In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to help with
> some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me into
> getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be nice
to
> have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I purchased a
> contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could not
> believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how to
use.
>
> About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first computer.
I
> am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at work at
> the time.
> So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to save
money.
> I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to get
the
> Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks extra
> to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor. Final
> price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at a
> whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
>
>
> Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
thoroughly
> enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill
right
> now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
>
>
>

gG

in reply to "Kevin B" on 09/01/2004 5:15 AM

09/01/2004 5:23 AM

I always stay off the bleeding edge of computer technology. It saves me a
fortune.

Do

"Don"

in reply to "Kevin B" on 09/01/2004 5:15 AM

10/01/2004 1:27 AM


"Jon Endres, PE" <[email protected]> wrote in
message news:[email protected]...
> "Greg" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > I always stay off the bleeding edge of computer technology. It saves me
a
> > fortune.
>
> I sorta have to stay somewhat near the bleeding edge, as I run Autocad on
> three workstations in my office. One finally died, so it gave me the
> justification (to myself, I guess) to buy new parts for two of them. So
> now, what was a Pentium 700 (the dead one) and an old Celeron 350 are now
> Athlon 2600+ with 1 GB memory, 80 Gb drives, and new CD-Rw's. Not leading
> edge by any means, but they are ssssssmokin' fast compared to the old
ones.

Funny isn't it, the more you have the more you need.
I have 768mb of RAM and a 120gb HD but I want more, More, MORE!

> Now I just need to scrape together my pennies for better monitors.

Just bought a Planar 19" LCD and have a 2nd one on order, and moved my (2)
old Hitachi 20" CRTs to another room.
I like the additional real estate on my desk. I had to keep my desk a foot
away from the wall.
Those Hitachi's were almost 28" deep and made my office hot! The Planar runs
cool.

gG

in reply to "Don" on 10/01/2004 1:27 AM

10/01/2004 4:50 AM

>Funny isn't it, the more you have the more you need.

I am on a P166 as we speak. I do have a faster machine but this is my internet
cruiser.

JE

"Jon Endres, PE"

in reply to "Kevin B" on 09/01/2004 5:15 AM

10/01/2004 12:22 AM

"Greg" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I always stay off the bleeding edge of computer technology. It saves me a
> fortune.

I sorta have to stay somewhat near the bleeding edge, as I run Autocad on
three workstations in my office. One finally died, so it gave me the
justification (to myself, I guess) to buy new parts for two of them. So
now, what was a Pentium 700 (the dead one) and an old Celeron 350 are now
Athlon 2600+ with 1 GB memory, 80 Gb drives, and new CD-Rw's. Not leading
edge by any means, but they are ssssssmokin' fast compared to the old ones.

Now I just need to scrape together my pennies for better monitors.

OBWW. Nada. Zip. Nothing. Oh well.

Jon E

BG

"Bob G"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

18/01/2004 6:30 PM


]
> > so sometimes old outdated "things" do hold their value
> >
> > Bob Griffiths
> Showed this to LOML to prove that other folks don't think I'm worthless.
> Now she thinks you're a moron too. Sorry.
> j4
> ==============
No need to be sorry I actually do not give a damn (honest I do not ) what
others think of me... lol

Bob Griffiths

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

11/01/2004 1:25 AM

Greg G. wrote:

> One of the hazards of being a smart-ass, I suppose... <g>

Quite. It's my nature though.

> Just got in from replacing the sheetrock on the ceiling in the garage.
> God, I hate fiberglass insulation! And damned termites!

Bleah. Reminds me, I need to do the rounds and make sure I don't have any
termites in the house. I definitely *had* termites. One exterior door
frame was nothing but paint. *Sneaky* little bastards.

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/

Do

"Don"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 1:22 AM

NOW ya tell me !!!!!
Thats my life story, I hang onto stuff for decades and its just junk. But
the minute I get rid of it, it becomes valuable......sheesh.....


"Jerry Gilreath" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:u0DLb.8051$nt4.13021@attbi_s51...
> Damn, have you seen the prices of the Vic20's and Commodore 64's at flea
> markets and things??? Collectors are paying a pretty penny for them.
There's
> one or the other, I can't remember which, in the Smithsonian. I'm hanging
on
> to both my Vic 20 and Commodore.
>
> --
> "Cartoons don't have any deep meaning.
> They're just stupid drawings that give you a cheap laugh."
> Homer Simpson
> Jerry© The Phoneman®
> "Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >
> > "Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> > > I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann "A
> > 'puter
> > > in the shop" got me thinking.
> > >
> > > In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to help
> with
> > > some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me
into
> > > getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be
> nice
> > to
> > > have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I
purchased
> a
> > > contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could
not
> > > believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how to
> > use.
> > >
> > > About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first
> computer.
> > I
> > > am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at
work
> at
> > > the time.
> > > So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to save
> > money.
> > > I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to
get
> > the
> > > Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks
> extra
> > > to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor.
Final
> > > price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at a
> > > whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
> > >
> > >
> > > Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
> > thoroughly
> > > enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill
> > right
> > > now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> > > Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
> >
> > Just this past week I finally kicked <sniff> my first 2 computers to the
> > curb to free up some real estate in the garage.
> > A Commodore VIC20 bought in 1984 and a clone 286/12 bought in 1988.
> > Paid $80 for the VIC at Toys R Us and had a loan for 3 years on the 286,
> it
> > cost $3300.
> > My present machine (I use AutoCAD daily for my livelihood) cost 1/3 of
the
> > 286.
> >
> >
>
>

xD

[email protected] (Dave Mundt)

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

13/01/2004 2:17 AM

Greetings and Salutations.

On Fri, 09 Jan 2004 16:20:25 GMT, "Mark Jerde"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Mike in Mystic wrote:
>
>> Reinstalling stuff IS a bummer, but it really
>> isn't that big a deal. I've done it many times, and it usually takes
>> maybe 2-3 hours max. Not that big a deal, IMO.
>
>To amplify... <g> installing the OS isn't bad. I've done it probably 200
>times since Win3.x. It's everything else I use as a software developer that
>takes the install/config time. Starting with FDISK it's about a 1.75 day
>process. Office XP Developer, Visual Studio.NET, SQL Server 2000, ... This
>time around I didn't install Delphi, Visual Studio 6 or IBM's DB2 database.
>Hope I don't need 'em anymore.
>
>> In all the years I've been using computers, I've only had one hard
>> drive fail. Maybe I'm just lucky, but I think that the mfgs have
>> gotten pretty good at quality control.
>
>I'd had good luck for years too then :-( two failures in a few months.
>
My experiences have been mixed. I just lost a hard drive in
one of my systems, a Seagate, that just would not load any more, or
recognize. I had a Western Digital drive (20 gig) that went for
about 4 weeks in a web server before going toes up. Of course, that
was after I had run a burn in on it for a week.... Apparently WD
has had some quality issues with the 20 gig drives, as my supplier
said they had gotten a LOT of the 20 gig units back. The bigger
drives seem reliable...but that 20 gig mech just was a bit flaky.

>> The other big issue is that the RAID 1 arrays suffer pretty
>> significantly in performance compared to the RAID 0 arrays. What's
>> the point of having all the processor, memory and video performance
>> if you handcuff it with a slow data storage/retrieval architecture?
>
>IIRC RAID 5 has performance and fault tolerance. More info here.
>http://www.acnc.com/raid.html
>
You REALLY should not see a performance hit if you use a RAID
controller (either separate or built into the motherboard). The
controller takes care of all that, and, at a fast enough speed
that there should not really be a hit. Now...if you are trying to
do it with sofware emulation...good luck...even if you ARE using
Linux.

><brain fart>
>You could leave your transient data on RAID 0 for max speed and have the OS
>and programs on mirrored (if you were concerned about fault tolerance).
>Especially on separate controllers that would be very fast. I've read of
>systems setup this way.
></brain fart>
>
> -- Mark
>
>
Depends on what is important to save. Any data that is not
backed up on at least ONE separate media is subject to loss. I would
go with having everything on the most fault tolerant media possible.
After all, it can really darken one's day to finish up an 8-10 hour
editing session and have a drive crash and lose everything.
Regards
Dave Mundt

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 8:44 PM

Greg G. wrote:

> Or when sme smartass <sic> makes his own spelling mistakes... <g>
> Blame it on the stupid spell checker...

Dammit. I proof read that three times just to avoid that vry problem.

Oh well.

I don't use spell checkers, incidentally.

(Yes, I said "vry" on purpose.)

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/

Mi

"Mike in Mystic"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

15/01/2004 3:37 PM

Hey greg,

Could you send me an email, I tried to reply directly to you, but it didn't
work.

Mike

<Greg G.> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Mike in Mystic said:
>
> >That was my point, now I can just pipe my cable signal into my computer
and
> >use that to record my shows. I don't know how much TiVO runs, but the
> >set-up I'm using can be had for about $50 (TV tuner card) and included
> >software. Electronic programming guides can be found online for free
> >(www.titantv.com). Plus, there's no monthly fees (something I'm assuming
> >TiVO has, but I'm not sure). I can then burn the shows onto CDs or DVDs
(if
> >I want particularly high quality) and watch them on my TV via the DVD
> >player. Or, just watch them on the computer. I think it kicks butt.
>
> I've been doing that very thing since 1996, when a decent video
> capture card cost $800. Guess what that card is worth now...
> I DO have the complete NYW on disk, however... <g>
>
>
> Greg G.

MJ

"Mark Jerde"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 10:41 PM

Silvan wrote:

> The days of
> spending $2300 on a computer are over unless you're a gamer.

Software development machines can be expensive too. Multiple monitors, dual
CPUs & max memory for running virtual machines, RAID for speed & fault
tolerance, ...

-- Mark

MB

Michael Baglio @nc.rr.com>

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 4:23 AM

On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 00:16:51 GMT, "Jon Endres, PE"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Agreed. I recently visited my town's local museum, a place that I have only
>been once before. Always thought it was for the tourists. They have quite
>an impressive early american furniture collection that I spent not nearly
>enough time looking at. Unfortunately, they don't let you touch it.

They don't let "the public" touch it. Try a different approach:

Write-- (write, don't just show up)-- and explain that you'd like to
take some measurements during a quiet / slow / closed time that is
convenient for the curator. Explain that you'll wear cotton gloves
and use only a cloth tape measure to do your measuring. Assure them
that you won't let a ball point pen anywhere near the furniture--
you'll do all your recording with a pencil.

A museum's purpose is not only to archive knowledge, but to
disseminate it. If you show you have a real interest, I bet you'll be
suprised at the positive response a respectful request brings you.

Michael

Mi

"Mike in Mystic"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 3:47 PM

That was my point, now I can just pipe my cable signal into my computer and
use that to record my shows. I don't know how much TiVO runs, but the
set-up I'm using can be had for about $50 (TV tuner card) and included
software. Electronic programming guides can be found online for free
(www.titantv.com). Plus, there's no monthly fees (something I'm assuming
TiVO has, but I'm not sure). I can then burn the shows onto CDs or DVDs (if
I want particularly high quality) and watch them on my TV via the DVD
player. Or, just watch them on the computer. I think it kicks butt.

Mike

"Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:yJzLb.23603$P%[email protected]...
> "Who needs TiVo"
> That is one thing I dont mind spending money on...
> TiVo and the New Yankee workshop.....Or.....Nahmie on my time......
> Try it you will like it
> have a good day
> Rick
>
>

FK

"Frank Ketchum"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 4:00 AM


"Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
thoroughly
> enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill
right
> now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
>

I have thought of this often. Spend a grand on a computer and it will be
worth exactly nothing in 10 years whereas a grand invested in a jointer,
tablesaw, or any blurfl will not only still be useful, but it will retain
resale value.

Frank

sS

[email protected] (Sumner Sargent)

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 6:30 AM

The first home computer that I saw was a Altair. It had toggle switches
instead of a keyboard and programmed in binary , all for circa a
thousand or so. I passed it up and hand built one that programmed in
machine language. Next the CPM operating system came out and I rebuilt
to accommodate it. Over the years parts and circuit boards were
replaced. Today there is nothing left of the original machine. My
upgrades were a learning curve and less expensive than trashing a
machine every two years.

From my learned skills, I got a job as a field service engineer working
on Bridgeport and Pratt and Whitney computer controlled milling
machines. After fifteen years of getting on a airplane every sunday, I
got a R&D job with Douglas Aircraft. They paid all expenses and put me
through college where earned a AS degree in computer maintenance and a
BS degree in computer science.

I retired about ten years ago and have a horse ranch on forty acres in
Colorado with a nice barn and a forty two by fifty modern, shop. I'm
busy learning C++ programming language and autocad. I have a couple of
patentable ideas on the drawing board and am busier retired than when I
worked.

Computers have enriched my life and haven't cost me very much.

Regards: Sumner Sargent

sS

[email protected] (Sumner Sargent)

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 9:32 PM

I built my first computer years ago. At that time, I had to program my
operatg system inmachine language. Over the years, I have rplaced parts
until today, none of the original parts are left.

The experience and learning led me into being a field service engineer
for machine tool builders. After fifteenyears of getting on a airplane
every Sunday, I took a job in R&D at McDonald Douglas. I acquired
severl patents with machine tool modeling software programs. The sent
me to colleg where I earned a BS degree in Computer Science. I retired
after 10 years there.

MJ

"Mark Jerde"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

13/01/2004 2:46 AM

Dave Mundt wrote:

> Depends on what is important to save. Any data that is not
> backed up on at least ONE separate media is subject to loss. I would
> go with having everything on the most fault tolerant media possible.
> After all, it can really darken one's day to finish up an 8-10 hour
> editing session and have a drive crash and lose everything.

My practice is to constantly write to three hard drives:
- Work on either the desktop or laptop's C:
- Check the work into the version control system
running on the desktop's E:
- "Get latest version" to the C: of the other computer.

At the end of the day I often zip everything and send it to an email account
that I access only by webmail so if the office burned down overnight the
latest & greatest is safely offsite.

-- Mark

Ba

B a r r y B u r k e J r .

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 12:21 PM

On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 04:09:10 GMT, [email protected] (Jeff
Thunder) wrote:


>Anyone who has spent a modicum of time on the wreck will notice that
>a lot of people just plane "get off" on the tools.

Just like the computer guys. <G>

Barry

GG

Greg G.

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 12:03 AM

Sumner Sargent said:

>I built my first computer years ago. At that time, I had to program my
>operatg system inmachine language. Over the years, I have rplaced parts
>until today, none of the original parts are left.
>
>The experience and learning led me into being a field service engineer
>for machine tool builders. After fifteenyears of getting on a airplane
>every Sunday, I took a job in R&D at McDonald Douglas. I acquired
>severl patents with machine tool modeling software programs. The sent
>me to colleg where I earned a BS degree in Computer Science. I retired
>after 10 years there.

Spelling apparently wasn't a criteria for employment... <g>
Nah... I didn't just say that...


Greg G.

RD

Reyd Dorakeen

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 4:00 AM

weird, I have an old Imac(1998), and i've beaten the hell out of the drive,
many force restarts(removing the power cord) and moved huge numbers of files
through it(I have several games which I install, and delete when I get bored
of them, along with zbrush and all my random drawings, so it has a lot of
erasing and writing, and it never died(it died once, but a little
reformatting fixed that)
> Mike in Mystic wrote:
>
>> 500 Gb RAID 0 hard drive set up
>
> My laptop & desktop each lost a hard drive in the past 12 months. Bummer
> reinstalling everything, and there were some things I didn't have backed
> up... <sigh>
>
> RAID 0 is "Striped Disk Array without Fault Tolerance." IMO this is too
> risky. My next desktop will be mirrored hard drives at a minimum.
>
> My $0.02
>
> -- Mark
>
>

Do

"Don"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

11/01/2004 2:40 AM


"Jon Endres, PE" <[email protected]> wrote in
message news:[email protected]...
>
> "Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
> > 2000 seats? Holy cow!
>
> I think he meant "Release 2000, seats". I can't imagine any company in
the
> world having 2000 seats of Autocad. Talk about bankruptcy.

I'd hope they received a volume discount!

Do

"Don"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 1:20 AM

I wonder if AutoDesk is in cohoots with Microsoft?
I was using AutoCAD R12 on Windows 3.11 and then Windows 95, then I upgraded
to Windows 98 and my R12 wouldn't work.
So I bought AutoCAD LT 98, to run with my Windows 98, then I upgraded to
LT2000 which I am still using.
Then I upgraded to Windows XP, 3 months later I find out the upgrade will
expire on my LT2000.
Between Microsoft and AutoDesk, I feel like a ping pong ball, with a
perpetually empty wallet.

"Jon Endres, PE" <[email protected]> wrote in
message news:[email protected]...
> Sucks, don't it? I have LDDT 2i, and they've given me until June to
upgrade
> mine. I can't afford the damn extortion, but it's better than buying
three
> new ones, I guess.
>
> Jon E
>
> "Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:0GzLb.23599$P%[email protected]...
> > Autocad....sigh.....
> > Speaking of money down the toilet....we have till the 15 to upgrade some
> of
> > our 2000 seats or they will no longer be updateable....to me that is
> > extorsion.
> > I use Land Development Desktop and Civil packages which cost about $8000
> for
> > a new seat...sigh...
> >
> > "Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> > >
> > > "Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > > news:[email protected]...
> > > > I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann
"A
> > > 'puter
> > > > in the shop" got me thinking.
> > > >
> > > > In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to
help
> > with
> > > > some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me
> into
> > > > getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be
> > nice
> > > to
> > > > have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I
> purchased
> > a
> > > > contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could
> not
> > > > believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how
to
> > > use.
> > > >
> > > > About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first
> > computer.
> > > I
> > > > am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at
> work
> > at
> > > > the time.
> > > > So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to
save
> > > money.
> > > > I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to
> get
> > > the
> > > > Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks
> > extra
> > > > to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor.
> Final
> > > > price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at
a
> > > > whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
> > > thoroughly
> > > > enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land
fill
> > > right
> > > > now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> > > > Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
> > >
> > > Just this past week I finally kicked <sniff> my first 2 computers to
the
> > > curb to free up some real estate in the garage.
> > > A Commodore VIC20 bought in 1984 and a clone 286/12 bought in 1988.
> > > Paid $80 for the VIC at Toys R Us and had a loan for 3 years on the
286,
> > it
> > > cost $3300.
> > > My present machine (I use AutoCAD daily for my livelihood) cost 1/3 of
> the
> > > 286.
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
>
>

jJ

[email protected] (Jeff Thunder)

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 4:09 AM

In article <[email protected]>,
Tom Watson <[email protected]> writes:
> And a grand's worth of time invested in going to see furniture that is
> worth emulating will pay off in greater measure than either investment
> in hardware. Too much of this newsgroups's time is taken up with the
> investigation of the "How' in preference to the "What" or the "Why".

Careful, Tom. If that high horse you're on bucks, it's a long way
to the ground. :)

Anyone who has spent a modicum of time on the wreck will notice that
a lot of people just plane "get off" on the tools. Just try to
wipe that shit-eating grin off my face when I'm blasting away with
a pneumatic nailer. And how many of us will admit to getting a plane
tuned to within a gnat's ass and reducing a board to a huge pile of
curlies? I could go on with other examples, but I think you get my
drift. Sometimes (sometimes, mind you) I don't ask for or desire
anything deeper.

--
Jeff Thunder
The From: header above is wrong on porpoise
To reply, use jeffthunder (at) comcast (dot) net

Mi

"Mike in Mystic"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 3:18 PM

Interesting thread. I've been posting in that other one, too, but what the
heck. It seems lately I've been indulging in both the computer AND
woodworking purchasing arenas. I went from having a crapsman table saw and
a few benchtop tools about 2 years ago, to having a Unisaw with 50" Bies, 3
routers, full-size drill press, bandsaw, 6" jointer, 12.5" planer, mortiser,
scroll saw, OSS, etc. etc. etc. I don't think I'll be ALLOWED to buy any
more tools for a LONG time. Good thing to know I won't need to hehe.

As for the PC department. I remember how excited my dad was when he brought
home the Commodore 64 - I can't remember what year that was, I was just a
kid. But, I do remember starting about age 12 or so (probably when we got
that thing), being the ONLY kid to turn in typed reports at school and I'm
sure getting browny points for it. My friends would spend hours at my house
playing games on our BLAZING 286. I remember playing games on 5.25"
floppies, where you had to change discs about every 15 minutes (they came
with like 15 or something). So, what do I do now? Just before Christmas I
got the go ahead and bought a $3300 computer. P4 3.2 Ghz HT processor, 2 Gb
of DDR400 memory, 500 Gb RAID 0 hard drive set up, 8x DVD R/RW drive, 48x
CD-RW drive, 256 Mb Radeon 9800 XT video card, 6.1 THX capable sound card,
surround sound speakers (for my PC!!), TV tuner card & software (who needs
TiVO??), and a 20" LCD flatscreen monitor. The thing is, I still get
impatient when I start the computer hehe. It only takes 8 seconds from the
power button to the desktop. Oh how times have changed.

Mike

"Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann "A
'puter
> in the shop" got me thinking.
>
> In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to help with
> some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me into
> getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be nice
to
> have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I purchased a
> contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could not
> believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how to
use.
>
> About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first computer.
I
> am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at work at
> the time.
> So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to save
money.
> I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to get
the
> Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks extra
> to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor. Final
> price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at a
> whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
>
>
> Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
thoroughly
> enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill
right
> now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
>
>
>

JE

"Jon Endres, PE"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 12:16 AM


"Tom Watson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Fri, 09 Jan 2004 04:00:03 GMT, "Frank Ketchum"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> >I have thought of this often. Spend a grand on a computer and it will be
> >worth exactly nothing in 10 years whereas a grand invested in a jointer,
> >tablesaw, or any blurfl will not only still be useful, but it will retain
> >resale value.
>
>
> And a grand's worth of time invested in going to see furniture that is
> worth emulating will pay off in greater measure than either investment
> in hardware. Too much of this newsgroups's time is taken up with the
> investigation of the "How' in preference to the "What" or the "Why".
>
> Pay for a plane ticket and sit in front of a Goddard-Townsend Chest
> for a couple of hours. Go to your local museum and visit the best
> examples of furniture to be found there. Pay for a nice lunch and a
> good glass of wine and think about the why and the what of the pieces
> that you best like.
>
> Take your money and buy a good piece of furniture - take it into your
> house and your mind and think on what makes it good.
>
>
> Thomas J. Watson - Cabinetmaker (ret.)
> (Real Email is tjwatson1ATcomcastDOTnet)
> http://home.comcast.net/~tjwatson1/

Agreed. I recently visited my town's local museum, a place that I have only
been once before. Always thought it was for the tourists. They have quite
an impressive early american furniture collection that I spent not nearly
enough time looking at. Unfortunately, they don't let you touch it.

Jon E

Do

"Don"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 2:41 PM


"Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann "A
'puter
> in the shop" got me thinking.
>
> In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to help with
> some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me into
> getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be nice
to
> have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I purchased a
> contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could not
> believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how to
use.
>
> About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first computer.
I
> am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at work at
> the time.
> So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to save
money.
> I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to get
the
> Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks extra
> to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor. Final
> price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at a
> whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
>
>
> Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
thoroughly
> enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill
right
> now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> Funny what we are willing to spend money on.

Just this past week I finally kicked <sniff> my first 2 computers to the
curb to free up some real estate in the garage.
A Commodore VIC20 bought in 1984 and a clone 286/12 bought in 1988.
Paid $80 for the VIC at Toys R Us and had a loan for 3 years on the 286, it
cost $3300.
My present machine (I use AutoCAD daily for my livelihood) cost 1/3 of the
286.

MJ

"Mark Jerde"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 3:28 PM

Mike in Mystic wrote:

> 500 Gb RAID 0 hard drive set up

My laptop & desktop each lost a hard drive in the past 12 months. Bummer
reinstalling everything, and there were some things I didn't have backed
up... <sigh>

RAID 0 is "Striped Disk Array without Fault Tolerance." IMO this is too
risky. My next desktop will be mirrored hard drives at a minimum.

My $0.02

-- Mark

Mi

"Mike in Mystic"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 3:58 PM

I thought about that, but at the moment my storage needs are pretty high.
I've only had this system for about a month and have used a full 200 Gb of
storage space. I turn over a lot of space with multimedia work - I've
gotten pretty involved in making home movies with my DV camcorder.
Reinstalling stuff IS a bummer, but it really isn't that big a deal. I've
done it many times, and it usually takes maybe 2-3 hours max. Not that big
a deal, IMO. I routinely backup data to CD's, and now that I have the DVD
writer, I've been using some DVD-RW discs (basically extra 4.3 Gb hard
drives). I would bet I only have about 10-20 Gb of "critical" data that I
need to make sure I don't lose. Plus I have access to network storage space
(about 100 Gb for my personal use) that I can access from home, too.

In all the years I've been using computers, I've only had one hard drive
fail. Maybe I'm just lucky, but I think that the mfgs have gotten pretty
good at quality control.

The other big issue is that the RAID 1 arrays suffer pretty significantly in
performance compared to the RAID 0 arrays. What's the point of having all
the processor, memory and video performance if you handcuff it with a slow
data storage/retrieval architecture?

If this were business intensive and I couldn't handle a day of downtime,
worst case, then I probably would do the same as you and go for the RAID 1,
but then I'd probably go with a terabyte of total storage (500 Gb usable).

Mike

"Mark Jerde" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Mike in Mystic wrote:
>
> > 500 Gb RAID 0 hard drive set up
>
> My laptop & desktop each lost a hard drive in the past 12 months. Bummer
> reinstalling everything, and there were some things I didn't have backed
> up... <sigh>
>
> RAID 0 is "Striped Disk Array without Fault Tolerance." IMO this is too
> risky. My next desktop will be mirrored hard drives at a minimum.
>
> My $0.02
>
> -- Mark
>
>

JE

"Jon Endres, PE"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 12:33 AM

"jo4hn" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

> Having made a living as a computer jockey since nineteen and aught
> sixty-two, and having bought a RAS in 1965, here are some drips of
> wisdom (?) from jo4hn's john. If WW tools had changed as much as
> computers in the past 40 years, one would walk into the shop, say
> good-day to the RAS, tell it cherry end-table, and go watch tv. The saw
> would quickly order and accept delivery of the wood, oversee jointing
> and planing, joinery, dry fit, glue-up, sanding and painting within a
> few hours.

The creation thereof is the basic permise behind the latest in CNC
machinery. The problem is keeping the cost down. I would love to have a
machine in the shop, that cost less than a grand, that you could basically
program to create a ball-and-claw cabriole leg, and then walk away. Even
When I was a kid, sometime in elementary school, the Stanley plant in town
let us tour the shop floor. There we saw workers loading boxes full of wood
chunks, essentially cubes or rounds, into a hopper, and removing totes full
of completed tool handles from the other end. Inside, the machine spun
several cutters and removed everything that wasn't programmed to be a tool
handle.

Jon E

AD

"Anthony Diodati"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 7:46 AM

That's what I say about my Compaq, pent II, 333 with win.98 1st edition in
it.
Work's just fine for me.
Tony D.

"Greg O" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> I have been upgrading every 3-4 years. What I am running now is a Compaq
> with a 667 Celeron. I may keep this one a bit longer! I don't do any
gaming
> so I don't need blistering speed. This crate surf's the net and groups
just
> fine. I figure when software makes its next jump and everything isn't
> compatable anymore then it will be time.
> Greg
>

LB

Larry Blanchard

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 9:25 AM

In article <u0DLb.8051$nt4.13021@attbi_s51>, [email protected]
says...
> Damn, have you seen the prices of the Vic20's and Commodore 64's at flea
> markets and things??? Collectors are paying a pretty penny for them. There's
> one or the other, I can't remember which, in the Smithsonian. I'm hanging on
> to both my Vic 20 and Commodore.
>
The Univac I worked on (or one of its siblings) is in there too. I saw
it there 20 years ago. Made me feel old then :-). Hmmmm - maybe this
post belongs in the "getting old" thread.

--
Where ARE those Iraqi WMDs?

gG

in reply to Larry Blanchard on 10/01/2004 9:25 AM

10/01/2004 5:43 PM

> I can't remember which, in the Smithsonian. I'm hanging on
>> to both my Vic 20 and Commodore.
>>
>The Univac I worked on (or one of its siblings) is in there too. I saw
>it there 20 years ago. Made me feel old then :-). Hmmmm - maybe this
>post belongs in the "getting old" thread.
>

The knobs on the 360/50 in the Smithsonian are mine. I was up there a few years
ago and noticed the ones they had were broken and a few were the wrong style. I
talked to the guy who ran the exhibit and arranged to get him some authentic
ones from my junk box.

MJ

"Mark Jerde"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 4:20 PM

Mike in Mystic wrote:

> Reinstalling stuff IS a bummer, but it really
> isn't that big a deal. I've done it many times, and it usually takes
> maybe 2-3 hours max. Not that big a deal, IMO.

To amplify... <g> installing the OS isn't bad. I've done it probably 200
times since Win3.x. It's everything else I use as a software developer that
takes the install/config time. Starting with FDISK it's about a 1.75 day
process. Office XP Developer, Visual Studio.NET, SQL Server 2000, ... This
time around I didn't install Delphi, Visual Studio 6 or IBM's DB2 database.
Hope I don't need 'em anymore.

> In all the years I've been using computers, I've only had one hard
> drive fail. Maybe I'm just lucky, but I think that the mfgs have
> gotten pretty good at quality control.

I'd had good luck for years too then :-( two failures in a few months.

> The other big issue is that the RAID 1 arrays suffer pretty
> significantly in performance compared to the RAID 0 arrays. What's
> the point of having all the processor, memory and video performance
> if you handcuff it with a slow data storage/retrieval architecture?

IIRC RAID 5 has performance and fault tolerance. More info here.
http://www.acnc.com/raid.html

<brain fart>
You could leave your transient data on RAID 0 for max speed and have the OS
and programs on mirrored (if you were concerned about fault tolerance).
Especially on separate controllers that would be very fast. I've read of
systems setup this way.
</brain fart>

-- Mark


gG

in reply to "Mark Jerde" on 09/01/2004 4:20 PM

09/01/2004 7:19 PM

>IIRC RAID 5 has performance and fault tolerance.

RAID 5 is what the big boys use. It has some overhead but if you spread the
stripes across a lot of drives it isn't bad.
This was crucial in AS/400s where the loss of one drive usually meant you lost
all of them.

JB

Jeremy Brown

in reply to "Mark Jerde" on 09/01/2004 4:20 PM

09/01/2004 12:18 PM

I'm lucky enough at work to have a RAID-5 setup with hot swap on my
desktop machine (along with two 3+ghz P4 Xeons and 2GB ram). It just
showed up on my desk a couple months ago because I guess we needed more
machines for our simulations and I had the oldest computer. It's a 6
drive array, several hundred GB of SCSI drives. I don't even know what
to do with it all. It's a little more than I think I'd do for a shop
computer. My 5 year old HP is fine for that.


Greg wrote:
>>IIRC RAID 5 has performance and fault tolerance.
>
>
> RAID 5 is what the big boys use. It has some overhead but if you spread the
> stripes across a lot of drives it isn't bad.
> This was crucial in AS/400s where the loss of one drive usually meant you lost
> all of them.

TW

Tom Watson

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 7:00 AM

On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 04:09:10 GMT, [email protected] (Jeff
Thunder) wrote:


>Anyone who has spent a modicum of time on the wreck will notice that
>a lot of people just plane "get off" on the tools.

perverts!


> Just try to
>wipe that shit-eating grin off my face when I'm blasting away with
>a pneumatic nailer.

oh, shame, shame!

> And how many of us will admit to getting a plane
>tuned to within a gnat's ass and reducing a board to a huge pile of
>curlies?

and all this time i've thought of you as res cogitan...sigh.

seriously though, we don't have enough design discussion around here
and the idea of hanging out with good examples of furniture and
absorbing via osmosis is worthwhile.


Thomas J. Watson-Cabinetmaker (ret)
Real Email is: tjwatson1ATcomcastDOTnet
Website: http://home.comcast.net/~tjwatson1

Do

"Don"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 1:15 AM

I just got my upgrade in the mail yesterday, haven't installed it yet, cause
I'm in the middle of a big project.
I used full blown AutoCAD until 1998 then I converted to LT, as I couldn't
justify the cost of the full blown version.
LT does fine for me, I design homes.
I don't like the way AutoDesk cuts you off at the knees regarding the
support and upgrades.
2000 seats? Holy cow!
Are you a drafter there at Sands Decker?



"Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:0GzLb.23599$P%[email protected]...
> Autocad....sigh.....
> Speaking of money down the toilet....we have till the 15 to upgrade some
of
> our 2000 seats or they will no longer be updateable....to me that is
> extorsion.
> I use Land Development Desktop and Civil packages which cost about $8000
for
> a new seat...sigh...
>
> "Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >
> > "Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> > > I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann "A
> > 'puter
> > > in the shop" got me thinking.
> > >
> > > In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to help
> with
> > > some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me
into
> > > getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be
> nice
> > to
> > > have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I
purchased
> a
> > > contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could
not
> > > believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how to
> > use.
> > >
> > > About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first
> computer.
> > I
> > > am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at
work
> at
> > > the time.
> > > So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to save
> > money.
> > > I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to
get
> > the
> > > Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks
> extra
> > > to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor.
Final
> > > price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at a
> > > whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
> > >
> > >
> > > Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
> > thoroughly
> > > enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill
> > right
> > > now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> > > Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
> >
> > Just this past week I finally kicked <sniff> my first 2 computers to the
> > curb to free up some real estate in the garage.
> > A Commodore VIC20 bought in 1984 and a clone 286/12 bought in 1988.
> > Paid $80 for the VIC at Toys R Us and had a loan for 3 years on the 286,
> it
> > cost $3300.
> > My present machine (I use AutoCAD daily for my livelihood) cost 1/3 of
the
> > 286.
> >
> >
>
>

JE

"Jon Endres, PE"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 5:05 PM


"Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...

> 2000 seats? Holy cow!

I think he meant "Release 2000, seats". I can't imagine any company in the
world having 2000 seats of Autocad. Talk about bankruptcy.

Jon

TW

Tom Watson

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

08/01/2004 11:18 PM

On Fri, 09 Jan 2004 04:00:03 GMT, "Frank Ketchum"
<[email protected]> wrote:


>I have thought of this often. Spend a grand on a computer and it will be
>worth exactly nothing in 10 years whereas a grand invested in a jointer,
>tablesaw, or any blurfl will not only still be useful, but it will retain
>resale value.


And a grand's worth of time invested in going to see furniture that is
worth emulating will pay off in greater measure than either investment
in hardware. Too much of this newsgroups's time is taken up with the
investigation of the "How' in preference to the "What" or the "Why".

Pay for a plane ticket and sit in front of a Goddard-Townsend Chest
for a couple of hours. Go to your local museum and visit the best
examples of furniture to be found there. Pay for a nice lunch and a
good glass of wine and think about the why and the what of the pieces
that you best like.

Take your money and buy a good piece of furniture - take it into your
house and your mind and think on what makes it good.


Thomas J. Watson - Cabinetmaker (ret.)
(Real Email is tjwatson1ATcomcastDOTnet)
http://home.comcast.net/~tjwatson1/

BG

"Bob G"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

12/01/2004 6:15 PM

Gosh Rick.... I can relate... lol

I am retired and if I added up all the money I have spent on computers
..starting with a TI 49'er I guess I would also be sick.. BUT I used and
abused every computer I have ever owned..so I got my money worth...
no regrets... I would imagine my Cabinet Saw (purchased in the mid 80's
would be completely worthless today if
Saws were improved even 1/1000th as much or as fast
as Computers.... On the other Hand I restore and tinker with old cars
(another hobby) and my 64 high horserpower (365) solid lifter Corvette is
worth 15 times what I paid for it in 1965 and and is still worth 80 to 90
percent of the cost of a new Z06 Corvetteand it is NOT depreciating a cent
..BUT IT IS NOT.. 10 percent as GOOD A CAR as the new .ones... Hell of a
lot more fun to drive BUT honestly nowhere as good a car
as even a new FORD (did I say that 4 letter word??)
so sometimes old outdated "things" do hold their value

Bob Griffiths

Bob Griffiths


GG

Greg G.

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 12:52 PM

Mike in Mystic said:

>That was my point, now I can just pipe my cable signal into my computer and
>use that to record my shows. I don't know how much TiVO runs, but the
>set-up I'm using can be had for about $50 (TV tuner card) and included
>software. Electronic programming guides can be found online for free
>(www.titantv.com). Plus, there's no monthly fees (something I'm assuming
>TiVO has, but I'm not sure). I can then burn the shows onto CDs or DVDs (if
>I want particularly high quality) and watch them on my TV via the DVD
>player. Or, just watch them on the computer. I think it kicks butt.

I've been doing that very thing since 1996, when a decent video
capture card cost $800. Guess what that card is worth now...
I DO have the complete NYW on disk, however... <g>


Greg G.

RC

"Rick Cox"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

11/01/2004 4:15 AM

yeah i am a drafter and designer, i am pretty good at site grading and
earthworks, we are doing alot of schools all over ohio.

"Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I just got my upgrade in the mail yesterday, haven't installed it yet,
cause
> I'm in the middle of a big project.
> I used full blown AutoCAD until 1998 then I converted to LT, as I couldn't
> justify the cost of the full blown version.
> LT does fine for me, I design homes.
> I don't like the way AutoDesk cuts you off at the knees regarding the
> support and upgrades.
> 2000 seats? Holy cow!
> Are you a drafter there at Sands Decker?
>
>
>
> "Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:0GzLb.23599$P%[email protected]...
> > Autocad....sigh.....
> > Speaking of money down the toilet....we have till the 15 to upgrade some
> of
> > our 2000 seats or they will no longer be updateable....to me that is
> > extorsion.
> > I use Land Development Desktop and Civil packages which cost about $8000
> for
> > a new seat...sigh...
> >
> > "Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> > >
> > > "Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > > news:[email protected]...
> > > > I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann
"A
> > > 'puter
> > > > in the shop" got me thinking.
> > > >
> > > > In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to
help
> > with
> > > > some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me
> into
> > > > getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be
> > nice
> > > to
> > > > have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I
> purchased
> > a
> > > > contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could
> not
> > > > believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how
to
> > > use.
> > > >
> > > > About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first
> > computer.
> > > I
> > > > am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at
> work
> > at
> > > > the time.
> > > > So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to
save
> > > money.
> > > > I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to
> get
> > > the
> > > > Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks
> > extra
> > > > to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor.
> Final
> > > > price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at
a
> > > > whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
> > > thoroughly
> > > > enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land
fill
> > > right
> > > > now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> > > > Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
> > >
> > > Just this past week I finally kicked <sniff> my first 2 computers to
the
> > > curb to free up some real estate in the garage.
> > > A Commodore VIC20 bought in 1984 and a clone 286/12 bought in 1988.
> > > Paid $80 for the VIC at Toys R Us and had a loan for 3 years on the
286,
> > it
> > > cost $3300.
> > > My present machine (I use AutoCAD daily for my livelihood) cost 1/3 of
> the
> > > 286.
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
>
>

GG

Greg G.

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 2:50 PM

Silvan said:

>Greg G. wrote:
>
>> Spelling apparently wasn't a criteria for employment... <g>
>> Nah... I didn't just say that...
>
>Don't you hate it when you dig at someone for a spelling mistake, and then
>sme smartass comes along to point out your own spelling mistake?
>
>The word "criteria" is plural. You can't have "a criteria." You have "a
>criterion."
>
>Damn Greek words.

Or when sme smartass <sic> makes his own spelling mistakes... <g>
Blame it on the stupid spell checker...


Greg G.

jj

jo4hn

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

12/01/2004 8:30 PM

[snip]
> so sometimes old outdated "things" do hold their value
>
> Bob Griffiths
Showed this to LOML to prove that other folks don't think I'm worthless.
Now she thinks you're a moron too. Sorry.
j4

JE

"Jon Endres, PE"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 5:02 PM

"Michael Baglio @nc.rr.com>" <mbaglio<NOSPAM> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 00:16:51 GMT, "Jon Endres, PE"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >Agreed. I recently visited my town's local museum, a place that I have
only
> >been once before. Always thought it was for the tourists. They have
quite
> >an impressive early american furniture collection that I spent not nearly
> >enough time looking at. Unfortunately, they don't let you touch it.
>
> They don't let "the public" touch it. Try a different approach:
>
> Write-- (write, don't just show up)-- and explain that you'd like to
> take some measurements during a quiet / slow / closed time that is
> convenient for the curator. Explain that you'll wear cotton gloves
> and use only a cloth tape measure to do your measuring. Assure them
> that you won't let a ball point pen anywhere near the furniture--
> you'll do all your recording with a pencil.
>
> A museum's purpose is not only to archive knowledge, but to
> disseminate it. If you show you have a real interest, I bet you'll be
> suprised at the positive response a respectful request brings you.
>
> Michael

Umm. Hadn't thought of that. Since I am well acquainted with both the
director and curator, I guess I'll just ask. I like the dollar bill trick
that Barry gave.

Thanks.

Jon

JE

"Jon Endres, PE"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 12:23 AM

Sucks, don't it? I have LDDT 2i, and they've given me until June to upgrade
mine. I can't afford the damn extortion, but it's better than buying three
new ones, I guess.

Jon E

"Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:0GzLb.23599$P%[email protected]...
> Autocad....sigh.....
> Speaking of money down the toilet....we have till the 15 to upgrade some
of
> our 2000 seats or they will no longer be updateable....to me that is
> extorsion.
> I use Land Development Desktop and Civil packages which cost about $8000
for
> a new seat...sigh...
>
> "Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >
> > "Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> > > I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann "A
> > 'puter
> > > in the shop" got me thinking.
> > >
> > > In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to help
> with
> > > some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me
into
> > > getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be
> nice
> > to
> > > have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I
purchased
> a
> > > contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could
not
> > > believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how to
> > use.
> > >
> > > About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first
> computer.
> > I
> > > am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at
work
> at
> > > the time.
> > > So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to save
> > money.
> > > I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to
get
> > the
> > > Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks
> extra
> > > to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor.
Final
> > > price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at a
> > > whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
> > >
> > >
> > > Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
> > thoroughly
> > > enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill
> > right
> > > now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> > > Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
> >
> > Just this past week I finally kicked <sniff> my first 2 computers to the
> > curb to free up some real estate in the garage.
> > A Commodore VIC20 bought in 1984 and a clone 286/12 bought in 1988.
> > Paid $80 for the VIC at Toys R Us and had a loan for 3 years on the 286,
> it
> > cost $3300.
> > My present machine (I use AutoCAD daily for my livelihood) cost 1/3 of
the
> > 286.
> >
> >
>
>

GG

Greg G.

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

11/01/2004 2:09 AM

Silvan said:

>Bleah. Reminds me, I need to do the rounds and make sure I don't have any
>termites in the house. I definitely *had* termites. One exterior door
>frame was nothing but paint. *Sneaky* little bastards.

Yea they are! They ate a portion of one garage (shop) wall and the
roof framing, and after replacing all of that, I pulled sheetrock down
15 feet away and found they had tunneled under the sheetrock/stud
junction to it as well. I treated the soil around the entry point,
replacement sill plates, and framing with Bifenthrin. Fortunately, I
saw no evidence of current activity - just a lot of abandoned mud
trails. Industrious little fu#%ers...


Greg G.

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 10:27 PM

Mark Jerde wrote:

>> The days of
>> spending $2300 on a computer are over unless you're a gamer.
>
> Software development machines can be expensive too. Multiple monitors,
> dual CPUs & max memory for running virtual machines, RAID for speed &
> fault tolerance, ...

Well, yeah, that too. It takes me 50 minutes to do a complete build of
Rosegarden. One of the guys just bought a new toy that can do it in 2.3
minutes. Ouch.

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 11:40 AM

Rick Cox wrote:

> land fill right now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools
> now, Funny what we are willing to spend money on.

The bright side is that the $448 Wal-Mart POS Xmas special computer is three
times faster than the one I use every day. The days of spending $2300 on a
computer are over unless you're a gamer.

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/

Ba

B a r r y B u r k e J r .

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 12:20 PM

On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 04:23:45 GMT, Michael Baglio
<mbaglio<NOSPAM>@nc.rr.com> wrote:

>On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 00:16:51 GMT, "Jon Endres, PE"
><[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Agreed. I recently visited my town's local museum, a place that I have only
>>been once before. Always thought it was for the tourists. They have quite
>>an impressive early american furniture collection that I spent not nearly
>>enough time looking at. Unfortunately, they don't let you touch it.
>
>They don't let "the public" touch it. Try a different approach:
>
>Write-- (write, don't just show up)-- and explain that you'd like to
>take some measurements during a quiet / slow / closed time that is
>convenient for the curator.

Failing that, try to take digital pictures with a known sized object
in the photo. I've been known to drop a crisp dollar bill into a
photo for scale purposes. <G>

Digital cameras are also useful in "No Photo" areas, as they can be
set to video mode, and held at your side. You can then pull the
frame(s) you want later.

Barry

GG

Greg G.

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

11/01/2004 12:09 AM

Silvan said:

>Greg G. wrote:
>
>> Or when sme smartass <sic> makes his own spelling mistakes... <g>
>> Blame it on the stupid spell checker...
>
>Dammit. I proof read that three times just to avoid that vry problem.
>
>Oh well.
>
>I don't use spell checkers, incidentally.
>
>(Yes, I said "vry" on purpose.)

One of the hazards of being a smart-ass, I suppose... <g>

Just got in from replacing the sheetrock on the ceiling in the garage.
God, I hate fiberglass insulation! And damned termites!


Greg G.

JG

"Jerry Gilreath"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 7:10 PM

Damn, have you seen the prices of the Vic20's and Commodore 64's at flea
markets and things??? Collectors are paying a pretty penny for them. There's
one or the other, I can't remember which, in the Smithsonian. I'm hanging on
to both my Vic 20 and Commodore.

--
"Cartoons don't have any deep meaning.
They're just stupid drawings that give you a cheap laugh."
Homer Simpson
Jerry© The Phoneman®
"Don" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Rick Cox" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > I am a long time wreck lurker. and a recent post by Jim Laumann "A
> 'puter
> > in the shop" got me thinking.
> >
> > In 1994 when I purchased my first house I wanted to buy a RAS to help
with
> > some of the fix ups needed. My father who lived close by talked me into
> > getting a tablesaw because he already had a ras and said it would be
nice
> to
> > have both between us. So it was off to the local sears and I purchased
a
> > contractors table saw. I purchased the saw for $449.00 and I could not
> > believe that I spent that much on something I didn't event know how to
> use.
> >
> > About a year later, my wife and I decided to purchase our first
computer.
> I
> > am a CAD tech and I did not want anything less than I was using at work
at
> > the time.
> > So I went to the local computer shop and had one built to try to save
> money.
> > I had to have that new HOTTT Pentium chip. I was really excited to get
> the
> > Pentium 90 that ran so hot it needed its own fan. I paid $150 bucks
extra
> > to double the RAM to 16 megs, and I got a huge 15" svga monitor. Final
> > price for that computer was $2300 but man was I styling......AOL at a
> > whopping 14.bps ...... life doesn't get any better....
> >
> >
> > Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still
> thoroughly
> > enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill
> right
> > now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> > Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
>
> Just this past week I finally kicked <sniff> my first 2 computers to the
> curb to free up some real estate in the garage.
> A Commodore VIC20 bought in 1984 and a clone 286/12 bought in 1988.
> Paid $80 for the VIC at Toys R Us and had a loan for 3 years on the 286,
it
> cost $3300.
> My present machine (I use AutoCAD daily for my livelihood) cost 1/3 of the
> 286.
>
>

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 2:23 AM

Greg G. wrote:

> Spelling apparently wasn't a criteria for employment... <g>
> Nah... I didn't just say that...

Don't you hate it when you dig at someone for a spelling mistake, and then
sme smartass comes along to point out your own spelling mistake?

The word "criteria" is plural. You can't have "a criteria." You have "a
criterion."

Damn Greek words.

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/

jj

jo4hn

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 4:11 PM

Rick Cox wrote:
[snip]
> Now 2004, I have a used $449.00 craftsman table saw that I still thoroughly
> enjoy, and that $2300 computer is darkening some corner in a land fill right
> now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools now,
> Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
>
Having made a living as a computer jockey since nineteen and aught
sixty-two, and having bought a RAS in 1965, here are some drips of
wisdom (?) from jo4hn's john. If WW tools had changed as much as
computers in the past 40 years, one would walk into the shop, say
good-day to the RAS, tell it cherry end-table, and go watch tv. The saw
would quickly order and accept delivery of the wood, oversee jointing
and planing, joinery, dry fit, glue-up, sanding and painting within a
few hours.

The same could be said of toasters and sewing machines. Somebody
already did it with cars. The computer is a different tool in the
infancy of its development. The TS (and toaster and...) are fairly
mature tools and will not change much unless the addition of a computer
chip will create a more saleable item. Dream away folks.
mahalo,
jo4hn

GO

"Greg O"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 12:01 AM


"Kevin B" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:2OqLb.3368$5V2.8651@attbi_s53...
> Yeah, I feel your pain. I just sold a bunch of old computers that I had
> laying around, a Sun Ultra 5 and a old DEC Alpha among them, that I had
> purchased used from clients over the years to mess around with at home. I
> figure about $1800.00 worth of stuff when I bought it. Got about $175.00
for
> it. At least I'll be able to get that nice Lie-Nielsen block plane I've
had
> my eye on.
>
> Kevin


I have been upgrading every 3-4 years. What I am running now is a Compaq
with a 667 Celeron. I may keep this one a bit longer! I don't do any gaming
so I don't need blistering speed. This crate surf's the net and groups just
fine. I figure when software makes its next jump and everything isn't
compatable anymore then it will be time.
Greg

JT

in reply to "Greg O" on 09/01/2004 12:01 AM

09/01/2004 6:48 PM

Fri, Jan 9, 2004, 12:01am (EST-1) [email protected] (Greg=A0O) says:
<snip> This crate surf's the net and groups just fine. <snip>

Yep, that's basicaly why I haven't upgraded from WebTV. It works,
it's paid for.

But, with so much stuff on PDF now, and translators not showing
graphics with WebTV, I will probably upgrade to a el-cheapo computer,
when, and if, my WebTV dies.


JOAT
Don't e-mail me while I'm breathing.

Life just ain't life without good music. - JOAT
Web Page Update 9 Jan 2004.
Some tunes I like.
http://community-2.webtv.net/Jakofalltrades/SOMETUNESILIKE/

TP

"The Pistoleer"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 11:43 PM

The price of a well equipped fault tolerant and secure web server makes
gaming machines look cheap. I'm setting one up now. It sits in my office
so I need to design an attractice--and sound deadening--hardwood cabinet for
it, getting back to the subject of this group.

Pete
http://www.Pistoleer.com - Retail & Wholesale (PH/FX 618-288-4588)
__________________________________________________________________
A-Zoom snap-caps, Bore-Stores cases, Kleen-Bore gun care products
Pachmayr grips & pads, Targets, HKS speedloaders, FREE classifieds


> > land fill right now..... what I wouldn't give to has that $2300 in tools
> > now, Funny what we are willing to spend money on.
>
> The bright side is that the $448 Wal-Mart POS Xmas special computer is
three
> times faster than the one I use every day. The days of spending $2300 on
a
> computer are over unless you're a gamer.

JH

Juergen Hannappel

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 6:10 PM

"Jon Endres, PE" <[email protected]> writes:

[...]

>> They don't let "the public" touch it. Try a different approach:
>>
>> Write-- (write, don't just show up)-- and explain that you'd like to
>> take some measurements during a quiet / slow / closed time that is

[...]

>
> Umm. Hadn't thought of that. Since I am well acquainted with both the
> director and curator, I guess I'll just ask. I like the dollar bill trick
> that Barry gave.

Maybe as an added incentive you should offer them a cpoy of each
drawing of the furniture, an item that would very probably be welcomed
by the museum people.
--
Dr. Juergen Hannappel http://lisa2.physik.uni-bonn.de/~hannappe
mailto:[email protected] Phone: +49 228 73 2447 FAX ... 7869
Physikalisches Institut der Uni Bonn Nussallee 12, D-53115 Bonn, Germany
CERN: Phone: +412276 76461 Fax: ..77930 Bat. 892-R-A13 CH-1211 Geneve 23

JE

"Jon Endres, PE"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

10/01/2004 10:57 PM

"Juergen Hannappel" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "Jon Endres, PE" <[email protected]>
writes:
>
> [...]
>
> >> They don't let "the public" touch it. Try a different approach:
> >>
> >> Write-- (write, don't just show up)-- and explain that you'd like to
> >> take some measurements during a quiet / slow / closed time that is
>
> [...]
>
> >
> > Umm. Hadn't thought of that. Since I am well acquainted with both the
> > director and curator, I guess I'll just ask. I like the dollar bill
trick
> > that Barry gave.
>
> Maybe as an added incentive you should offer them a cpoy of each
> drawing of the furniture, an item that would very probably be welcomed
> by the museum people.

Interesting concept, but I don't draw anything I'm not paid for. It's bad
enough sitting in front of a CAD workstation all day, I'm sure not about to
do it for fun. What I'd most likely do is simply make a quick rough sketch
with dimensions. I'm not after historical accuracy, just inspiration.

Jon E

RC

"Rick Cox"

in reply to "Rick Cox" on 09/01/2004 3:53 AM

09/01/2004 3:25 PM

"Who needs TiVo"
That is one thing I dont mind spending money on...
TiVo and the New Yankee workshop.....Or.....Nahmie on my time......
Try it you will like it
have a good day
Rick


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