Nathan
SF VIP
- Location
- High Desert- Calif.
Of course, electronics / technology has been my hobby for decades. Keeps me out of trouble.Do you realize how addicted you are to your electronics?
Of course, electronics / technology has been my hobby for decades. Keeps me out of trouble.Do you realize how addicted you are to your electronics?
Of course not, I 'm not that much of an addict to have a car charger.I have become a tech addict. I have my iPhone, AirPods Pro, Apple Watch, Alexa, 2 lap tops, landline phone, 2 smart TVs.
I have morphed into my grandchildren. Well, Not quite…they text each other while sitting in the same room.
@fuzzybuddy Do you have a cell phone charger for the car?
Hell DiscustedmanWARNING, GOING OFF TRACK HERE WARNING
If you lose power due to an EMP, wait 5 minutes. Then you are gone, along with your worries, family, money, house everything!!!!!
That's what a first strike does. Watch "The Day After" my family watched it. Needless to say we were impressed with the movie as low budget as it was.
It wasn't "Cutesy" in any form. Young boy looking into the blast (eyes fried, brain damaged) four year old child, mother, father all wiped out.
What could happen was spelled out and it was terrifying.
For the most part people are a disappointment. I’ll be thinking about all the things I didn’t have time to create.On the day you die, if you are lucky to have the time, you will remember all the wonderful people that you knew over the years. I doubt if you will remember all the "wonderful" toys you bought?
I, too, got my 'novice' class license in the late 50's (KN9IYE - Kilo-November-Nine-Intelligent-Young-Engineer, and actually did get an advanced engineering degree). Back then you had to copy Morse code at 5 WPM and pass the low-level technical written test. The next year I passed the General written test and the 13 WPM code test & my call sign dropped the 'N' for novice to K9IYE. Then I passed the Advanced written test and got an Advanced license. Then I moved to California and got the 'vanity' call WA6DN.I've held an amateur radio license since 1959. Back then, electronics involved vacuum tubes, wired in resistors and capacitors, and lots of individual switches, meters, dials and knobs. In those days you could get inside the cabinet and see what you were working on.
Now everything is microscopic mounted on a chip or two and for the average person, impossible to work on. To me, electronic gadgets are no longer fun. I don't have a TV, have the bare minimum flip phone, and rarely activate my ham station.
I use my PC mostly for research and for the little bit of on line shopping I am forced into doing. When out and about I seldom carry my phone and never my tablet.
Me too oldaunt: My remote control for the T.V. failed on me the other night. My son said to go and get another one, but I said I don't mind having to get out of the chair to change the channels. He was shocked and said I should come up to date with the times. He was quite willing to buy me another T.V. which I refused.Electronics? I have a laptop, and a TV which is seldom on. Other than that, I have a landline and a sewing machine. Its the last 2 I would actually miss.
Doesn't an EMP (Electro-Magnetic-Pulse) just kill electronics? I think if you wait 5 minutes, electronic devices will be dead but structures and living things should be ok. But you might still have a chance if you're a prepper or high-level government employee or even Amish.WARNING, GOING OFF TRACK HERE WARNING
If you lose power due to an EMP, wait 5 minutes. Then you are gone, along with your worries, family, money, house everything!!!!!
That's what a first strike does. Watch "The Day After" my family watched it. Needless to say we were impressed with the movie as low budget as it was.
It wasn't "Cutesy" in any form. Young boy looking into the blast (eyes fried, brain damaged) four year old child, mother, father all wiped out.
What could happen was spelled out and it was terrifying.
Right on, Jean-Paul! From and old retired EE wishing he was in ParisHell Discustedman
EMP is not a nuclear attack like "The Day After" !
It was tested in 1962, shot Starfish Prime.
Going Nuclear Over the Pacific
A medium sized thermonuclear device is launched to the center of the target area, butDOES NOT reenter. The burst height is 50..200 kM so exoatmospheric. Thus, NO blast, thermal or radiation on the Earth. The effect is purely a very poerful electromagnetic pulse, that penetrate the atmosphere and causs high voltages and currents at the surface in any conductor.
Electrical cables, computers, mobiles, cell towers are damaged or burned out, but no direct casualties.
The untracablility, low cost and lack of guidance and reentry make it a cheap threat.
An EMP event is much more likely than a nuclear strike.
ENJOY AND BE AN OPTIMIST!
Jon


Did EEs ever knuckle under to P=IV or stick it out with P=IE as Ohm intended?Right on, Jean-Paul! From and old retired EE wishing he was in Paris
Yep, it's P=IV. I haven’t encountered the P=IE version (maybe before my time).Did EEs ever knuckle under to P=IV or stick it out with P=IE as Ohm intended?
This is an interesting viewpoint. It seems to me that it wasn't a 'jump' from communities based on religion to those based on the cell phone, but a gradual change. Starting with tiny religious/ritualistic communities hundreds of years ago to castles and kings which brought people together for support and safety. Then on to small towns where people worked and played together, to bigger towns with telephones that brought more people together. Then faster transportation (cars, trains, planes) shrunk the world even more and brought us all physically closer. Then radio, tv and the internet brought people into our homes. And now cell phones which let us carry other people around with us both audibly and visually.You know, I was reading something this morning that really struck a nerve.
Essentially it made the following point: People have, forever, used religion, and their religious belief, to support them through life. It gives a sense of belonging, and comradery with others. This is now being replaced by electronic tools, which we use for the same purpose - essentially, to combat our loneliness and sense of belonging.
I'm not doing the argument justice in one paragraph, but it did make me curious.
...not an "addiction" per se, just the tools we have available in this time period.Do you realize how addicted you are to your electronics?