Dressy Links: | Thanks Ant and Acleacius. |
Play: |
Jack
Lantern. Stunt Crazy. Bazookitty. |
Link: | 5 Insane Things Otherwise Respected Celebrities Believe. |
Science: | Many Antidepressant Studies Found Tainted by Pharma Company Influence. |
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Honestly from Microsoft. 43 Photos That Prove That Everything In Your Life Is A Lie (Slide #1). |
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Saving the world, one quarter at a time. The First Person To Run A Marathon Without Telling Anyone. Purranormal Cativity. |
jdreyer wrote on Oct 24, 2015, 03:13:
"Bae is the Danish word for poop."
Heh, my daughter's friends use this word all the time. It annoys her, so this will go as a tool on her tool belt.
Mr. Tact wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 22:01:
I looked at it after you said it was really useful. I won't say I would have found the problem quickly, but as a network guy I am aware that all cabling is a potential source of wifi interference.
eRe4s3r wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 20:38:Genesys wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 20:02:eRe4s3r wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 19:23:I think you missed the part in your physics education that said that radio waves ARE elctromagnetec fields! :)
I must have skipped the part in my physics education where electromagnetic fields could influence radio waves.... fucking advanced technology.. it really is like voodoo magic.. and if it breaks you really need a Shaman nowadays.. man
USB 3.0's 5 Ghz signal rate, in particular, will interfere with bluetooth and 2.4 Ghz wifi signals: USB 3.0* Radio Frequency Interference on 2.4 GHz Devices Make sure you buy USB hubs with fully-shielded plugs, and see if you can get an external antenna for your NUC.
Wow.. that is one of the most informative replies I could have hoped for. And yeah, I have to admit my physics education was... let's just say, not my favorite thing in school (not that WLAN or USB existed back then...) So that would explain why it fixes itself when the NUC is a distance away from the HUBS/DESK/LCD and not anywhere near a metal frame desk (which I guess would reflect the USB interference back into the case-antenna even if it is.. or maybe exactly because it is not touching the metal frame directly?
As I said, that's some pretty dang informative link you dug up there. Never even made the connection with USB 3.0 frequencies... that could indeed have been the problem I had.
Mr. Tact wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 20:27:eRe4s3r wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 19:23:Okay, this doesn't make it particularly less weird, but you do realize that radio waves are electromagnetic waves, right? From Wiki:
I must have skipped the part in my physics education where electromagnetic fields could influence radio waves..
Radio waves are a type of electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths in the electromagnetic spectrum longer than infrared light. Radio waves have frequencies from 300 GHz to as low as 3 kHz, and corresponding wavelengths ranging from 1 millimeter (0.039 in) to 100 kilometers (62 mi).
Edit: Ha! Walked away for a small task and Genesys beats me to it, oh well.
Genesys wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 20:02:eRe4s3r wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 19:23:I think you missed the part in your physics education that said that radio waves ARE elctromagnetec fields! :)
I must have skipped the part in my physics education where electromagnetic fields could influence radio waves.... fucking advanced technology.. it really is like voodoo magic.. and if it breaks you really need a Shaman nowadays.. man
USB 3.0's 5 Ghz signal rate, in particular, will interfere with bluetooth and 2.4 Ghz wifi signals: USB 3.0* Radio Frequency Interference on 2.4 GHz Devices Make sure you buy USB hubs with fully-shielded plugs, and see if you can get an external antenna for your NUC.
eRe4s3r wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 19:23:Okay, this doesn't make it particularly less weird, but you do realize that radio waves are electromagnetic waves, right? From Wiki:
I must have skipped the part in my physics education where electromagnetic fields could influence radio waves..
eRe4s3r wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 19:23:I think you missed the part in your physics education that said that radio waves ARE elctromagnetec fields! :)
I must have skipped the part in my physics education where electromagnetic fields could influence radio waves.... fucking advanced technology.. it really is like voodoo magic.. and if it breaks you really need a Shaman nowadays.. man
jdreyer wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 17:25:
Saving the world, one quarter at a time.
That dude has some serious suspension of disbelief going on.
Pigeon wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 16:24:Cutter wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 13:49:Almost 80 percent of meta-analyses in the review had some sort of industry tie, either through sponsorship, which the authors defined as direct industry funding of the study, or conflicts of interest, defined as any situation in which one or more authors were either industry employees or independent researchers receiving any type of industry support (including speaking fees and research grants). Especially troubling, the study showed about 7 percent of researchers had undisclosed conflicts of interest.
Yeah, you'd have thunk the influence would be pretty high, but not that high.
Celebs are stupid, racists, and bigots? Shocker!
Its not surprising. Research has to be paid for, and the ones who will pay for it do so because because they have a vested interest in the outcome of the research. I'd say if you wanted more independent research the government needs to hand out far more grants, but seeing as it's legal for corporations to bribe elected officials it's not much better an option.
Cutter wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 13:49:Almost 80 percent of meta-analyses in the review had some sort of industry tie, either through sponsorship, which the authors defined as direct industry funding of the study, or conflicts of interest, defined as any situation in which one or more authors were either industry employees or independent researchers receiving any type of industry support (including speaking fees and research grants). Especially troubling, the study showed about 7 percent of researchers had undisclosed conflicts of interest.
Yeah, you'd have thunk the influence would be pretty high, but not that high.
Celebs are stupid, racists, and bigots? Shocker!
Almost 80 percent of meta-analyses in the review had some sort of industry tie, either through sponsorship, which the authors defined as direct industry funding of the study, or conflicts of interest, defined as any situation in which one or more authors were either industry employees or independent researchers receiving any type of industry support (including speaking fees and research grants). Especially troubling, the study showed about 7 percent of researchers had undisclosed conflicts of interest.
Necrophob wrote on Oct 23, 2015, 11:40:"I am shocked, SHOCKED! To find out there is gambling going on here."
"Many Antidepressant Studies Found Tainted by Pharma Company Influence"
I guess I'd be shocked, if I wasn't so jaded. Maybe there's a pill for that?