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On 12/17/2013 4:45 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Tue, 17 Dec 2013 07:42:01 -0500, Jerry Stuckle wrote: Actually, if you have the right equipment, you can narrow it down in a very short time. What is the right equipment? A portable spectrum analyzer is not in my budget and my bench test equipment is too heavy for sniffing in the field. I'm fairly well equipped for 2.4GHz wi-fi interference, but not for HF. Most cable-related problems will show up on a certification tester such as the Fluke DTX CableAnalyzer (the one we use). Others can be isolated with a spectrum analyzer in conjunction with a (actually, several) directional antenna(s). Portable spectrum analyzers are pretty easy to carry around. If you're in this as a business, both of the above are a necessity for proper installation. It seldom takes us more than an hour to find RFI problems, and most can be done in 10-15 minutes. It never takes us days, even in large installations. Impressive. I assume those are continuously generating RFI sources, not sources that appear intermittently or drift all over the place as they warm up. I spent about a month chasing down a noise source that turned out to be the 24v battery charger on a diesel generator. Some grid tied solar controllers seem to be problems and take some time to find because they can be miles away. Fortunately, they're usually easily fixed with the manufacturers optional filter kit. It took me about a week to determine that my weather station was the source of some 20 meter trash. The problem was that it only generated noise when running on the internal backup battery, and not on AC power. The ones that disappear when the AC power is temporarily turned off are usually quite easy. The one's that don't take me much longer to find. Not at all impressive. We have the right equipment to locate problems. But then our customers don't expect us to chase down 24v battery chargers on diesel generators. We chase down stuff in our equipment; if it isn't our stuff we will track it down for them - but we charge by the hour (and it's a rather hefty charge). -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry Stuckle JDS Computer Training Corp. ================== |
#42
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On 12/17/2013 10:29 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Tue, 17 Dec 2013 08:28:16 -0600, amdx wrote: I like my Foxnews network, otherwise dropping cable would be easier. When you buy a Roku or similar screaming media player, you get a mess of "channels" with it. All they do is point to sources of streaming media all over the internet. FoxNoise is one of those: http://www.roku.com/channels/#!details/2946/fox-news-channel I did a short search of IPTV and only found Kansas has googlefiber with a managed IPTV service. I'm not sure what that all means, but the little reasearch I did, I don't think I could have Foxnews on IPTV via Netflix, yet. IPTV simply means watching television over something that spits internet protocol packets. For example, I watch TV over a rather slothish 1.5Mbit/sec DSL line. Netflix and some others adjust their compression and speed to match the line speed, so they work just fine. Other's just belch at higher rates resulting in the dreaded "buffering" delays. Still others insist on downloading short clips (about 5 min) into the media player buffer, before playing. IPTV is far from a perfect replacement for cable or satellite TV, but it's getting better. A few more details... If you're into playing recorded videos, look into setting up a Plex media server: http://www.plexapp.com Netflix does not do local programming. So, if you want that, setup an outside TV antenna and watch OTA (over the air) TV. To me, the real benefit of watching Netflix over cable or satellite TV is the lack of commercials. As I've said before, my kids got Netflix and never concerned themselves with cable. Good. The kids can set it up for you. Mikek PS. I'm mulling over the logistics of sending an ice cream cone from Fl. to Ca. :-) A gift certificate from the local dispensary will suffice: http://www.lovemariannes.com I'm partial to (dark) chocolate chip. I was hoping you wouldn't think of a gift certificate! ;-) btw, is Sam a relative? Mikek |
#43
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On Tue, 17 Dec 2013 20:51:07 -0600, amdx wrote:
Mikek PS. I'm mulling over the logistics of sending an ice cream cone from Fl. to Ca. :-) A gift certificate from the local dispensary will suffice: http://www.lovemariannes.com I'm partial to (dark) chocolate chip. I was hoping you wouldn't think of a gift certificate! ;-) No problem. I accept bribes, gratuities, certificates of depost, and letters of credit, for most any form of monetary exchange. Cash is also acceptable, but specie (gold) is much better. Was it you or someone else that wanted an HP8555a plugin? I can't seem to find the relevent posting. btw, is Sam a relative? No, but we shared the same cardiologist and hospitals, which ocassionally mixed our appointments, records, insurance claims, blood tests, etc. We also ended up with each others USPS mail. Marianne's Ice Cream is only about a 5 minute walk from my palatial office, which requires some self control to not over-indulge too often. Unfortunately, Sam Lieberman died last month. He'll be missed: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/food/ci_24656886/samuel-lieberman-iconic-santa-cruz-ice-cream-maker -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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