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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Things i Hate (Or: Rants by an Old Man) Post 303030467 by gull04 on Monday 11th of February 2019 08:11:15 AM
Old 02-11-2019
After 10 years at Sea I decided on a career switch and in 1979 is started work as an Electronic Engineer, I worked for a number of companies like Ferranti, Olivetti, Norsk Data, Motorola, Phillips, DEC and a number of others over the 40 intervening years.

Floppy drives were 8 inches in diameter, memory was made of ferrite and came in wooden boxes and a steel carrier - it weighed about 2 pounds per Kb. You could fix things, for some of the equipment I worked on you had to write your own diagnostics to do this - but you could fix things. Now systems are not repairable, all these things are just throwaway - and sad to say attitudes have followed. We went through the discrete components, to integrated circuits in Ceramic and Plastic encapsulations, then we went through the low power versions of it all. Now we have integrated circuits that have densities that were undreamt of just fifteen years ago.

But essentially all that has happened is that the skill set has been replaced by a courier, who will take a replacement unit to site and plug it in - possibly transferring a hard drive from one chassis to the other.

As to the commercialisation of the experience - in my opinion one of the worst decisions ever made, there was an earlier reference to "Altavista" - it was brilliant but it did cost a significant amount to run. Forgetting to renew the domain was also a problem in this particular case.

I watch the vendors (usually sales or value added resellers) repeatedly mislead customers, I could give you numerous quotes of things I have heard over the years - lead people into a place that they don't want to be. This isn't done maliciously, it's normally through ignorance - the job of a sales person is to sell and few of them undestand the technology.

It's usually left to some techie to make things work, even things that weren't meant to work together. Which is where the good old Google search really comes into it's own, a generic search for an item of equipment will bring you a couple of pages on how to buy one - followed by in most cases nothing of any use!

Arrrrrrgh!!!!!! Many thumps on the keyboard!
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Base(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation						 Base(3pm)

NAME
Convert::Units::Base - base object for performing unit conversions DESCRIPTION
The Units package is a collection of modules for parsing strings with unit measurements (such as "12pt" or "3 meters") and converting them to some other unit (such as "picas" or "inches"). It uses a base package (Units::Base) which does the dirty work. Other modules define what units they handle and how they are related. Why a Separate Module? It is intentionally distinct from the Math::Units module. Why? The Math::Units module implies that unit conversions are exact, with one-to- one relationships. This is fine for scientific work. It's even fine for some general purpose/real-world uses (such as converting Fehren- height to Celcius). Real-world measurement systems are conflicting. For instance, a "point" in typography is equivalent to 1/72 inch, according to PostScript specs and common usage. Other type systems consider it 1/72.27 inch, or 0.01383 inches, or 0.0148 inches. Outside of that context, a point may be 1/120 or 1/144 inch. Common notations and abbreviations also depend on context. Does "12 pt" mean "12 point", "12 parts" or "12 pints"? Even without conflicts in the definition of a particular unit, there's no need to convert point sizes for fonts into miles or light-years. Typesetters, surveyors and astronomers user different scales as well as systems. People do not think like computers Not everyone uses the metric system. And even less people say things like "5.25 feet". Often it's "5 feet, 3 inches" or "5 1/4 feet". Despite having ten fingers and toes, people don't think in tens. They think in twos, threes, fours, twelves, and sixteens. And sometimes they use fractional measurements like quarter-inches, sixteenths-of-an-inch, or half-pints. The purpose of this module is to allow people to use the measurement systems they are familiar with, and that is appropriate to what they are doing. Rationale The Units:: hierarchy is an attempt to keep measurement systems in distinct classes. Thus one can have modules for converting between typography units (points, picas) distinct from common units of length (or area, temperature, etc.), specialized units (for Astronomy, Chem- istry, Physics, Textiles, Winery, Navigation, etc.) or even traditional or regional systems (Japanese, Chinese, Egyptian, archaic systems, etc.) and to keep conflicting measurement systems distinct. Release Notes The current distribution contains the following packages: Convert::Units:: ::Base - a base module that does all of the work ::Length - a module for converting units of length ::Temperature - a module for converting units of temperature ::Type - a module for converting units of type Units::Base by itself does nothing. Another module needs to use it to create definitions of what units of measurement it handles and how they are related to each other (ie, 1 m = 100 cm). The base unit also allows for synonym and abbreviations to be defined. It also allows common "multiples" to be defined, so that it can handle things like "18 half-points" or "6 dozen feet" or even convert mil- limters to "sixteenths of an inch". (It does not yet handle Greek prefixes like centi- or mega- ... those will have to be manually defined.) Known Issues The current release should be considered "beta" until further testing and refinements have been made. Then again, maybe "alpha" is more accurate. The current version does not yet handle fractions such as "1/2 in". It should handle decimals such as "0.5 in". Relationships have been rewritten to be handle A(x+b) as well Ax. They may be redone in the future to handle more complex relationships, if the need arises. Unit names much be defined as all lowercase, since strings are munged with lc() before processing. In other words, if you define a unit name as "F" or "Fahrenheight" you won't be able to use it. Future Enhancements Aside from bug fixes, optimizations, and making the string parsing conform more to the "manifesto" above, obvious additions would be mod- ules for converting between units of area, volume, weight... (although if Math::Units does what you need, use that instead.) An example hierarchy for future modules: Convert::Units:: ::Length - general measures of length ::Area ::Pressure ::Volume Convert::Units::Length ::Chinese - specialized regional/traditional systems ::English Convert::Units::Astronomy ::Length - or Distance...? Modules should share a common unit (preferably metric) to allow for conversions. REQUIRED MODULES
Carp SEE ALSO
Units::Length, Units::Temperature and Units::Type modules, which demonstrate how Units::Base is used. AUTHOR
Robert Rothenberg <wlkngowl@unix.asb.com> LICENSE
Copyright (c) 1999-2000 Robert Rothenberg. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.8.8 2005-11-18 Base(3pm)
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