- Joined
- Mar 17, 2019
Indeed. Still have respect for those guys who came up in the days when 'computer operator' meant 'guy who could perform mechanical fixes on a room sized dot-matrix printer that lusts to crush your hand at 3am'.I'm not that old, I'm more of the hard drives were the size and weight of a lead brick, the ancient full height 5 1/4" bay occupants, and came with a handwritten label on them for the bad sectors so you could manually enter them. The only thing I miss about that shit is how they sounded like a jet engine revving up.
That was another giveaway, the telltale sound of endless swapping. That could wreck a drive in a few months so was worth keeping on top of. Or something beeping constantly that is supposed to beep only periodically, or something that is usually noisy but is now suspiciously silent.
Bizarrely, I've seen ads lately for some kind of Xiamei overscreen lighting doohickey that is supposed to synchronize to the actual colors being shown on the screen? I'm sure it's not a patent violation because it's exactly the opposite of what anyone would do to enhance contrast. I suppose if you're just showing eye-safe colors on your screen at night, it would automatically show an eye-safe hue... but you could just get a red lamp? Bizarre.Philips probably have the patent and I don't know how long it lasts, I first saw their Ambilight TVs in 2007 so they have been around for roughly 15 years. Pretty decent.
They sell kits with strips to mount behind the screen so any screen or TV could get ambilight.
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