• Re: Why one needs a dVD drive in his laptop after all, haha.

    From Andy Burns@usenet@andyburns.uk to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 17:23:27 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    micky wrote:

    good friends of theirs had given them a telescope. And they are
    complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in the box
    was a DVD.
    Is the software not available to download from the telescope
    manufacturer's website?

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 11:19:25 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Well, I was visiting my brother and sil, and good friends of theirs had
    given them a telescope. They live on the 17th floor of an 18 story
    building, on a corner apt with a balcony.

    And they are complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in
    the box was a DVD. Their computers would not play it but mine could. So
    there.

    It turns out, the telescope is still for sale new, a couple hundred
    dollars iirc, but the file dates on all the DVD files was from 2008.

    It included weblinks to the manufacturer, for warranty registration etc.
    and none of the links still worked, It also included the user manual in
    PDF, which is good because one of their new dogs** ate up part of the
    paper manual. I sent the pdf to each of their email accounts, though
    afaict neither reads his or her email. But if they complain later, I'll
    send another copy. LOL

    **The dogs are maltepoos. Combination of a poodle with a malted milk.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Big Al@alan@invalid.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 12:28:52 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/24/24 11:19 AM, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Well, I was visiting my brother and sil, and good friends of theirs had
    given them a telescope. They live on the 17th floor of an 18 story
    building, on a corner apt with a balcony.

    And they are complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in
    the box was a DVD. Their computers would not play it but mine could. So there.

    It turns out, the telescope is still for sale new, a couple hundred
    dollars iirc, but the file dates on all the DVD files was from 2008.

    It included weblinks to the manufacturer, for warranty registration etc.
    and none of the links still worked, It also included the user manual in
    PDF, which is good because one of their new dogs** ate up part of the
    paper manual. I sent the pdf to each of their email accounts, though
    afaict neither reads his or her email. But if they complain later, I'll
    send another copy. LOL

    **The dogs are maltepoos. Combination of a poodle with a malted milk.
    And a usb plug in drive would also work on all systems including the
    above people you visited.
    You could even make an ISO from it and give them the ISO they could
    mount and run without a DVD.
    --
    Linux Mint 21.2 Cinnamon
    Al

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From scott@scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal) to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 17:32:18 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> writes:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    You can get a brand new USB external CD/DVD drive for less
    than $20 on amazon. And you don't need to discard it
    when upgrading to a new computer.

    Clearly someone is still using them.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Ed Cryer@ed@somewhere.in.the.uk to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 19:01:58 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Well, I was visiting my brother and sil, and good friends of theirs had
    given them a telescope. They live on the 17th floor of an 18 story
    building, on a corner apt with a balcony.

    And they are complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in
    the box was a DVD. Their computers would not play it but mine could. So there.

    It turns out, the telescope is still for sale new, a couple hundred
    dollars iirc, but the file dates on all the DVD files was from 2008.

    It included weblinks to the manufacturer, for warranty registration etc.
    and none of the links still worked, It also included the user manual in
    PDF, which is good because one of their new dogs** ate up part of the
    paper manual. I sent the pdf to each of their email accounts, though
    afaict neither reads his or her email. But if they complain later, I'll
    send another copy. LOL

    **The dogs are maltepoos. Combination of a poodle with a malted milk.

    https://tinyurl.com/2gysx9tj
    "You don't technically need a bootable optical disc to install operating systems, access live CDs, or use bootable rescue tools. You can use a
    bootable flash drive, or any USB storage device to format it as a
    bootable volume. However, it's more complicated than creating a bootable disc".

    Ed

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From knuttle@keith_nuttle@yahoo.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 14:07:00 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 01/24/2024 12:28 PM, Big Al wrote:
    On 1/24/24 11:19 AM, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive.-a No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Well, I was visiting my brother and sil, and good friends of theirs had
    given them a telescope.-a They live on the 17th floor of an 18 story
    building, on a corner apt with a balcony.

    And they are complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in
    the box was a DVD.-a Their computers would not play it but mine could. So
    there.

    It turns out, the telescope is still for sale new, a couple hundred
    dollars iirc, but the file dates on all the DVD files was from 2008.

    It included weblinks to the manufacturer, for warranty registration etc.
    and none of the links still worked, It also included the user manual in
    PDF, which is good because one of their new dogs** ate up part of the
    paper manual.-a-a I sent the pdf to each of their email accounts, though
    afaict neither reads his or her email. But if they complain later, I'll
    send another copy.-a LOL

    **The dogs are maltepoos.-a Combination of a poodle with a malted milk.
    And a usb plug in drive would also work on all systems including the
    above people you visited.
    You could even make an ISO from it and give them the ISO they could
    mount and run without a DVD.
    That is what my daughters keep telling me when I complain about the lack
    of storage in the current computers. On my 1TB drive I have right at
    4GB of data. During the installation updates, the disk uses over a half
    a terabyte to install the update.

    Yes with a current computer I could buy a large external drive, but
    would I have the external drive when I need access to it?
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From knuttle@keith_nuttle@yahoo.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 14:09:17 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 01/24/2024 12:23 PM, Andy Burns wrote:
    micky wrote:

    good friends of theirs had given them a telescope. And they are
    complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in the box
    was a DVD.
    Is the software not available to download from the telescope
    manufacturer's website?

    You have to have access to the internet to do that. If you are in a
    dark place to use the telescope there may be no internet available.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From jason_warren@ieee.org@jason_warren@ieee.org to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 14:22:29 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    In article <CQbsN.253592$Wp_8.47675@fx17.iad>, scott@slp53.sl.home
    says...

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> writes:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    You can get a brand new USB external CD/DVD drive for less
    than $20 on amazon. And you don't need to discard it
    when upgrading to a new computer.

    Clearly someone is still using them.


    The inexpensive drives work well. I have one.
    Still use them?!? I have *hundreds* of disks
    accumulated over dacades and not all of them
    are obsolete - photos, music files, etc etc.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 14:27:20 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/24/2024 11:19 AM, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Since it's a different time line, I bought up all the media,
    and I have the last two remaining blanks. They're going for
    $1000 each. I either sell them to you, or the Smithsonian.

    [Picture]

    https://i.postimg.cc/MK3vTJBz/last-two-pieces-media.jpg

    The computer store I got those at, used to have three cubic meters
    of media on display at one time. Today, they have three cake
    boxes under the counter, and if you buy a box, that's
    "a third of the store stock". Your choices are "Verbatim"
    or "Verbatim". Or perhaps "Verbatim".

    And the Dynex jewel boxes, are now "Verbatim" brand. Small world.
    I was lucky to get jewel boxes.

    The staff even had trouble finding those in the store. Normally,
    their computer has a grid ref inside the store, for where the
    items are located. But not for that stuff. It was actually underneath
    the cash register location. I guess they didn't have a place to
    put it. One clerk seemed to think it was hidden in the back somewhere
    ("in the cage"), but eventually one of the other store staff figured
    it out.

    https://www.moriareviews.com/rongulator/wp-content/uploads/Time-Machine-1960-11.jpg

    Paul
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 14:44:02 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/24/2024 2:07 PM, knuttle wrote:

    That is what my daughters keep telling me when I complain about the lack of storage in the current computers.-a-a On my 1TB drive I have right at 4GB of data.-a During the installation updates, the disk uses over a half a terabyte to install the update.

    Yes with a current computer I could buy a large external drive, but would I have the external drive when I need access to it?

    The drive would be sitting on the table in its enclosure,
    unplugged and waiting for you to plug it in. what
    could be easier ?

    No, it doesn't have to sit on edge like this. Flat is safer.
    This one is missing rubber non-skid feet. This one has a fan.

    https://www.newegg.com/vantec-nst-387s3-bk-enclosure/p/N82E16817392118

    You said you needed storage. You can put one of these in it :-)
    Apparently the industry thinks they're going to get rich off
    impulse-buy of these. That's a Helium drive. Don't forget, you
    can't connect 3.3V to one of those. Use a four wire power cable,
    not a five wire power cable. No damage will result either way,
    but with a five wire power cable, it won't spin. One of the 3.3V
    pins is double-purpose, as Spin Control.

    https://www.newegg.com/gold-wd221kryz-22tb/p/N82E16822234525

    *******

    The Windows LCU (Last Cumulative Update) folder typically has 100,000 files in it,
    and that's a side effect of Patch Tuesday. The OS might only
    have 300,000 files in it, by comparison. It does make the mind boggle.

    What activity like that does, is it bloats out the $MFT (Master File Table). Some of the files fit inside the $MFT and don't need clusters for storage.

    The OS is nothing more than a very large scratch pad, filled with junk.
    How many copies of MSEdge or MSEdgeUpdater does one poor bastard need ??? :-)
    I would like to hear the Twink who designed that, to explain to us
    what each and every copy of that is for.

    Paul
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Big Al@alan@invalid.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 14:45:26 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/24/24 02:27 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 1/24/2024 11:19 AM, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Since it's a different time line, I bought up all the media,
    and I have the last two remaining blanks. They're going for
    $1000 each. I either sell them to you, or the Smithsonian.

    [Picture]

    https://i.postimg.cc/MK3vTJBz/last-two-pieces-media.jpg

    The computer store I got those at, used to have three cubic meters
    of media on display at one time. Today, they have three cake
    boxes under the counter, and if you buy a box, that's
    "a third of the store stock". Your choices are "Verbatim"
    or "Verbatim". Or perhaps "Verbatim".

    And the Dynex jewel boxes, are now "Verbatim" brand. Small world.
    I was lucky to get jewel boxes.

    The staff even had trouble finding those in the store. Normally,
    their computer has a grid ref inside the store, for where the
    items are located. But not for that stuff. It was actually underneath
    the cash register location. I guess they didn't have a place to
    put it. One clerk seemed to think it was hidden in the back somewhere
    ("in the cage"), but eventually one of the other store staff figured
    it out.

    https://www.moriareviews.com/rongulator/wp-content/uploads/Time-Machine-1960-11.jpg

    Paul
    Hey, I gotcha! I have about 5 cake pans. Some DVD+, some DVD-, some printable DVDs, some printable CSs, and some plain CDs.
    And don't get me on jewel cases. I have 10 of the small mini cases.
    And about 100 paper sleeves.

    Yes, they grow dust, but I just hate to toss them. They're under the
    bed. I use one about once a year.
    --
    Linux Mint 21.2 Cinnamon
    Al

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From knuttle@keith_nuttle@yahoo.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 15:35:30 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 01/24/2024 2:44 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 1/24/2024 2:07 PM, knuttle wrote:

    That is what my daughters keep telling me when I complain about the lack of storage in the current computers.-a-a On my 1TB drive I have right at 4GB of data.-a During the installation updates, the disk uses over a half a terabyte to install the update.

    Yes with a current computer I could buy a large external drive, but would I have the external drive when I need access to it?

    The drive would be sitting on the table in its enclosure,
    unplugged and waiting for you to plug it in. what
    could be easier ?
    That assumes that you are sitting in your recliner in front of the TV or equivalent. I have a Portable Laptop that goes places with me, many
    times on the spur of the moment. ie I have to go over to the next
    building, or to the church and need the hard drive that is sitting
    beside my recliner.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 16:42:48 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/24/2024 3:35 PM, knuttle wrote:
    On 01/24/2024 2:44 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 1/24/2024 2:07 PM, knuttle wrote:

    That is what my daughters keep telling me when I complain about the lack of storage in the current computers.-a-a On my 1TB drive I have right at 4GB of data.-a During the installation updates, the disk uses over a half a terabyte to install the update.

    Yes with a current computer I could buy a large external drive, but would I have the external drive when I need access to it?

    The drive would be sitting on the table in its enclosure,
    unplugged and waiting for you to plug it in. what
    could be easier ?
    That assumes that you are sitting in your recliner in front of the TV or equivalent.-a-a I have a Portable Laptop that goes places with me, many times on the spur of the moment.-a ie I have to go over to the next building, or to the church and need the hard drive that is sitting beside my recliner.

    The largest mainstream SSD drives tend to be 8TB.
    That is for laptop storage solutions, whether NVMe
    or SATA.

    On laptops with a DVD drive, sometimes there is
    a kit available, to take out the DVD drive and
    replace it with an SSD. And this gives two drives
    of storage.

    There are workstation laptops, with four or more
    storage devices inside. I have a local computer
    store that sells "battleship" laptops the size of
    airline luggage, with lots of bays for SATA and NVMe
    SSD. And of course those machines have battleship pricing.

    The market is defined by what can people afford,
    versus what can technology build for us. Flash is
    too expensive to really go nuts with the stuff.
    The new Mushkin entry here, at 16TB, looks very
    tasty -- but the price is not tasty. The 3.5" HDD
    below the flash items, was thrown in for fun.

    https://www.newegg.com/p/pl?N=100011693%20601414343 30TB $4100
    https://www.newegg.com/mushkin-enhanced-16tb-source-hc/p/N82E16820226965 16TB TLC $2500
    https://www.newegg.com/samsung-8tb-870-qvo-series/p/N82E16820147784 8TB QLC $ 580

    https://www.newegg.com/gold-wd221kryz-22tb/p/N82E16822234525 22TB HDD $ 580

    The machines in the room, have 4TB SSDs. They were a bit
    cheaper when I got them last year.

    Paul
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Char Jackson@none@none.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 16:41:52 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:27:20 -0500, Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 1/24/2024 11:19 AM, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Since it's a different time line, I bought up all the media,
    and I have the last two remaining blanks. They're going for
    $1000 each. I either sell them to you, or the Smithsonian.

    [Picture]

    https://i.postimg.cc/MK3vTJBz/last-two-pieces-media.jpg

    The computer store I got those at, used to have three cubic meters
    of media on display at one time. Today, they have three cake
    boxes under the counter, and if you buy a box, that's
    "a third of the store stock". Your choices are "Verbatim"
    or "Verbatim". Or perhaps "Verbatim".

    I kind of like these stories of going to a computer store because they're reminiscent of a bygone era when there were computer stores that you could actually go to. When did they generally disappear, in the mid to late 1990s?

    They'd have a couple of mid-tower cases, 3-4 motherboards of unknown origin, a half dozen CPUs, some RAM, 1-2 power supplies, a couple of hard drives, two video cards, one for $35 and one for a whopping $65, and so on. I enjoyed those visits, when you could pick up an item, hold it in your hands, and read the specs and other fluff that was printed on the box. Now it's all Newegg and Amazon.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Char Jackson@none@none.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 16:56:01 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:44:02 -0500, Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 1/24/2024 2:07 PM, knuttle wrote:

    That is what my daughters keep telling me when I complain about the lack of storage in the current computers.aa On my 1TB drive I have right at 4GB of data.a During the installation updates, the disk uses over a half a terabyte to install the update.

    Yes with a current computer I could buy a large external drive, but would I have the external drive when I need access to it?

    The drive would be sitting on the table in its enclosure,
    unplugged and waiting for you to plug it in. what
    could be easier ?

    No, it doesn't have to sit on edge like this. Flat is safer.
    This one is missing rubber non-skid feet. This one has a fan.

    https://www.newegg.com/vantec-nst-387s3-bk-enclosure/p/N82E16817392118

    You said you needed storage. You can put one of these in it :-)
    Apparently the industry thinks they're going to get rich off
    impulse-buy of these. That's a Helium drive. Don't forget, you
    can't connect 3.3V to one of those. Use a four wire power cable,
    not a five wire power cable. No damage will result either way,
    but with a five wire power cable, it won't spin. One of the 3.3V
    pins is double-purpose, as Spin Control.

    https://www.newegg.com/gold-wd221kryz-22tb/p/N82E16822234525

    That one is a bit expensive. Over the Christmas break, I picked up a pair of WD Elements external drives, 18TB, for $225 apiece with free shipping. I haven't shucked them yet, but I will. I avoid using external drives. Too much risk involved.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jim Joyce@none@none.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 16:58:32 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 15:35:30 -0500, knuttle <keith_nuttle@yahoo.com> wrote:

    On 01/24/2024 2:44 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 1/24/2024 2:07 PM, knuttle wrote:

    That is what my daughters keep telling me when I complain about the lack of storage in the current computers.aa On my 1TB drive I have right at 4GB of data.a During the installation updates, the disk uses over a half a terabyte to install the update.

    Yes with a current computer I could buy a large external drive, but would I have the external drive when I need access to it?

    The drive would be sitting on the table in its enclosure,
    unplugged and waiting for you to plug it in. what
    could be easier ?
    That assumes that you are sitting in your recliner in front of the TV or >equivalent. I have a Portable Laptop that goes places with me, many
    times on the spur of the moment. ie I have to go over to the next
    building, or to the church and need the hard drive that is sitting
    beside my recliner.

    Is it your laptop or does it belong to the church? Most laptops within the past decade or more can accept a second (or even third) internal drive, sometimes at the expense of giving up the (mostly obsolete) optical drive.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jim Joyce@none@none.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 17:00:45 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:09:17 -0500, knuttle <keith_nuttle@yahoo.com> wrote:

    On 01/24/2024 12:23 PM, Andy Burns wrote:
    micky wrote:

    good friends of theirs had given them a telescope. And they are
    complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in the box
    was a DVD.
    Is the software not available to download from the telescope
    manufacturer's website?

    You have to have access to the internet to do that. If you are in a
    dark place to use the telescope there may be no internet available.

    Do your software and documentation downloads when it's convenient for you. Don't
    wait until the middle of the night when you're in a place without Internet access.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From knuttle@keith_nuttle@yahoo.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 19:22:56 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 01/24/2024 5:58 PM, Jim Joyce wrote:
    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 15:35:30 -0500, knuttle <keith_nuttle@yahoo.com> wrote:

    On 01/24/2024 2:44 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 1/24/2024 2:07 PM, knuttle wrote:

    That is what my daughters keep telling me when I complain about the lack of storage in the current computers.-a-a On my 1TB drive I have right at 4GB of data.-a During the installation updates, the disk uses over a half a terabyte to install the update.

    Yes with a current computer I could buy a large external drive, but would I have the external drive when I need access to it?

    The drive would be sitting on the table in its enclosure,
    unplugged and waiting for you to plug it in. what
    could be easier ?
    That assumes that you are sitting in your recliner in front of the TV or
    equivalent. I have a Portable Laptop that goes places with me, many
    times on the spur of the moment. ie I have to go over to the next
    building, or to the church and need the hard drive that is sitting
    beside my recliner.

    Is it your laptop or does it belong to the church? Most laptops within the past
    decade or more can accept a second (or even third) internal drive, sometimes at
    the expense of giving up the (mostly obsolete) optical drive.

    I have two one belongs to the church, the other to me. Both have a 1TB
    drive. The church one does not need 1TB, and the laptops with limited
    memory could do the job if they can handle the update overhead. On my personal computer with a 1TB drive has GB's of pictures, which gets
    cataloged while waiting at the doctors, and similar places where you
    have to wait before your appointment.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From VanguardLH@V@nguard.LH to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 18:26:16 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    <trimmed to retain the pertinent content>

    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with
    a DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Well, I was visiting my brother and sil, and good friends of theirs
    had given them a telescope. ... And guess what, included in the box
    was a DVD.

    My up-vote on suggestions by others: get a USB-attached DVD drive, or
    even a USB-attached CD/DVD/BD drive. No need for a built-in one. If
    the attached one breaks, get another USB one. If you break the one in
    the desktop, you'll have to open the case to replace it. Even harder in
    a laptop to replace it.

    You can even get USB-attached:
    - 3.5" diskette drive. I've never bothered to hunt around for a
    USB-attached 5.25" floppy drive.
    - USB-attached Iomege ZIP drive if you still have Zip disks around (but
    you might need to install drivers).
    - USB-attached card reader.

    There's probably other USB-attached storage that I didn't think of.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From rbowman@bowman@montana.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Thu Jan 25 02:43:31 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 17:32:18 GMT, Scott Lurndal wrote:

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> writes:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    You can get a brand new USB external CD/DVD drive for less than $20 on amazon. And you don't need to discard it when upgrading to a new
    computer.

    Clearly someone is still using them.

    I have one. The last time I used it was to copy files from the CD
    accompanying Earl Scrugg's banjo book. I've got other music books that included CDs. They're still old school although some have went to
    downloadable files.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 20:48:31 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 17:00:45 -0600, Jim Joyce <none@none.invalid> wrote:

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:09:17 -0500, knuttle <keith_nuttle@yahoo.com> wrote:

    On 01/24/2024 12:23 PM, Andy Burns wrote:
    micky wrote:

    good friends of theirs had given them a telescope. And they are
    complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in the box
    was a DVD.
    Is the software not available to download from the telescope
    manufacturer's website?

    You have to have access to the internet to do that. If you are in a
    dark place to use the telescope there may be no internet available.

    Do your software and documentation downloads when it's convenient for you. Don't
    wait until the middle of the night when you're in a place without Internet >access.

    There is no software for this telescope, only a PDF owner's manual and
    some links that no longer work. Even the one with the motor drive to
    follow the subject while the earth rotates I'm 95% sure uses no
    software. Just admit that it's good to have a DVD drive when the
    company provides you with a DVD.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From rbowman@bowman@montana.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Thu Jan 25 02:49:22 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 19:01:58 +0000, Ed Cryer wrote:

    "You don't technically need a bootable optical disc to install operating systems, access live CDs, or use bootable rescue tools. You can use a bootable flash drive, or any USB storage device to format it as a
    bootable volume. However, it's more complicated than creating a bootable disc".

    https://rufus.ie/en/

    Not very complicated, even on Windows.

    I haven't used it but UNetbootin may be even easier and it's cross
    platform


    https://unetbootin.github.io/
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 20:51:02 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 12:28:52 -0500, Big Al <alan@invalid.com> wrote:

    On 1/24/24 11:19 AM, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Well, I was visiting my brother and sil, and good friends of theirs had
    given them a telescope. They live on the 17th floor of an 18 story
    building, on a corner apt with a balcony.

    And they are complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in
    the box was a DVD. Their computers would not play it but mine could. So
    there.

    It turns out, the telescope is still for sale new, a couple hundred
    dollars iirc, but the file dates on all the DVD files was from 2008.

    It included weblinks to the manufacturer, for warranty registration etc.
    and none of the links still worked, It also included the user manual in
    PDF, which is good because one of their new dogs** ate up part of the
    paper manual. I sent the pdf to each of their email accounts, though
    afaict neither reads his or her email. But if they complain later, I'll
    send another copy. LOL

    **The dogs are maltepoos. Combination of a poodle with a malted milk.
    And a usb plug in drive would also work on all systems including the
    above people you visited.
    You could even make an ISO from it and give them the ISO they could
    mount and run without a DVD.

    And with either method, how would you read the DVD to make the USB drive
    or the ISO? Just blow on it and wish it?
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 20:53:05 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 17:32:18 GMT,
    scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal) wrote:

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> writes:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    You can get a brand new USB external CD/DVD drive for less
    than $20 on amazon. And you don't need to discard it
    when upgrading to a new computer.

    Clearly someone is still using them.

    Exactly.

    Actually one of those was included when I bought a laptop a few years
    ago second hand. It was buried by stuff in the kitchen, and I hired a
    maid who buried it further, but I'm still happy that I have one,
    somewhere.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From rbowman@bowman@montana.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Thu Jan 25 02:54:52 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 18:26:16 -0600, VanguardLH wrote:


    You can even get USB-attached:
    - 3.5" diskette drive. I've never bothered to hunt around for a
    USB-attached 5.25" floppy drive.
    - USB-attached Iomege ZIP drive if you still have Zip disks around (but
    you might need to install drivers).
    - USB-attached card reader.

    There's probably other USB-attached storage that I didn't think of.

    I've got a USB attached tape cassette. It works for moving music off old
    tapes but it's a painful process. The copying is in real time. The
    software is reasonably good at breaking out songs into separate files but
    you have to label them yourself.

    There are also USB turntables for the vinyl purists although i think that defeats the whole analog is better than digital thing.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 22:26:32 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/24/2024 8:51 PM, micky wrote:
    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 12:28:52 -0500, Big Al <alan@invalid.com> wrote:

    On 1/24/24 11:19 AM, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Well, I was visiting my brother and sil, and good friends of theirs had
    given them a telescope. They live on the 17th floor of an 18 story
    building, on a corner apt with a balcony.

    And they are complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in
    the box was a DVD. Their computers would not play it but mine could. So >>> there.

    It turns out, the telescope is still for sale new, a couple hundred
    dollars iirc, but the file dates on all the DVD files was from 2008.

    It included weblinks to the manufacturer, for warranty registration etc. >>> and none of the links still worked, It also included the user manual in
    PDF, which is good because one of their new dogs** ate up part of the
    paper manual. I sent the pdf to each of their email accounts, though
    afaict neither reads his or her email. But if they complain later, I'll
    send another copy. LOL

    **The dogs are maltepoos. Combination of a poodle with a malted milk.
    And a usb plug in drive would also work on all systems including the
    above people you visited.
    You could even make an ISO from it and give them the ISO they could
    mount and run without a DVD.

    And with either method, how would you read the DVD to make the USB drive
    or the ISO? Just blow on it and wish it?


    Imgburn.

    How can you have a DVD drive and not have Imgburn :-)

    [Picture]

    https://i.postimg.cc/FRQWxQ5S/imgburn.gif

    https://www.majorgeeks.com/files/details/imgburn.html

    On Linux, K3B would be similar to Imgburn.

    The Windows native IMAP2 support for burning discs,
    is lacking, because there is no "erase" for re-writeable
    media. In Imgburn, you can use the upper left icon,
    then go to the menu bar, and somewhere down in the menu
    there is a quick erase or full erase for re-writeable
    media. Since the menus may be context-sensitive (they
    depend on which of the six icons you are using), then
    you have to select the correct one of the six icons,
    before certain functions populate in the menu.

    When you are reading a disc to make an ISO (second down on
    the left), then you would not be expecting to find an
    erase item in the Menu at that time. That would be a
    clash of features -- a user "planning" to read a disc,
    then attempting to erase the disc. So some of the
    context-sensitive behavior is for safety reasons.

    Paul
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 22:31:32 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/24/2024 12:32 PM, Scott Lurndal wrote:
    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> writes:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    You can get a brand new USB external CD/DVD drive for less
    than $20 on amazon. And you don't need to discard it
    when upgrading to a new computer.

    Clearly someone is still using them.

    I do boot media on them, when I don't want to erase
    a USB flash drive instead. I still have rewriteable
    discs, and can erase old install media and reuse
    the disc.

    I don't generally put personal files on optical media.
    I don't do drag and drop burns either.

    Paul


    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 21:39:16 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 16:41:52 -0600, Char Jackson <none@none.invalid> wrote:

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:27:20 -0500, Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 1/24/2024 11:19 AM, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Since it's a different time line, I bought up all the media,
    and I have the last two remaining blanks. They're going for
    $1000 each. I either sell them to you, or the Smithsonian.

    [Picture]

    https://i.postimg.cc/MK3vTJBz/last-two-pieces-media.jpg

    The computer store I got those at, used to have three cubic meters
    of media on display at one time. Today, they have three cake
    boxes under the counter, and if you buy a box, that's
    "a third of the store stock". Your choices are "Verbatim"
    or "Verbatim". Or perhaps "Verbatim".

    I kind of like these stories of going to a computer store because they're >reminiscent of a bygone era when there were computer stores that you could >actually go to. When did they generally disappear, in the mid to late 1990s?

    We lost a couple big such store, maybe when you say, but for 10 or 15
    yeears or more in Baltimore we've had MicroCenter, not too far from me.
    Gets 4.5 stars on 3000 reviews and if I'd reviewed it I'd give it 5
    starts too.

    They have a lottttt of stuff, and a couple things I've bought were on
    sale and 60 or 80% off, my good fortune.

    https://www.google.com/maps/place/Micro+Center/@39.3964107,-76.5503719,15.83z/data=!4m15!1m8!3m7!1s0x89c80f44e03ffdf3:0xaaa66414a5a733f0!2sPerring+Pkwy,+Maryland!3b1!8m2!3d39.374293!4d-76.562038!16s%2Fg%2F1hl3hmbcx!3m5!1s0x89c808d454389181:0xebccbcc854b01057!8m2!3d39.3970154!4d-76.5455186!16s%2Fg%2F12604sg84?hl=en&entry=ttu

    https://www.microcenter.com/site/stores/parkville.aspx?storeid=125

    They'd have a couple of mid-tower cases, 3-4 motherboards of unknown origin, a >half dozen CPUs, some RAM, 1-2 power supplies, a couple of hard drives, two >video cards, one for $35 and one for a whopping $65, and so on. I enjoyed those

    This store has a dozen or more cases and loads of the other stuff you
    list, and I'm not the one keeping them in business. I hope they stay,
    esp. since hamfests are fading away, due to the web. Sure used was
    cheaper, but that was not the deciding factor once online sales came
    out. Having to wait until the next hamfest was an issue, but the store
    is open 7 days a week.

    I hope I didn't make you too jealous.


    visits, when you could pick up an item, hold it in your hands, and read the >specs and other fluff that was printed on the box. Now it's all Newegg and >Amazon.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 21:43:51 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 18:26:16 -0600, VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    <trimmed to retain the pertinent content>

    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with
    a DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Well, I was visiting my brother and sil, and good friends of theirs
    had given them a telescope. ... And guess what, included in the box
    was a DVD.

    My up-vote on suggestions by others: get a USB-attached DVD drive, or
    even a USB-attached CD/DVD/BD drive. No need for a built-in one. If

    Good for home, but I wouldn't have had it with me at my brother's, in
    Florida.

    I feel good when I know I'm packin'.

    the attached one breaks, get another USB one. If you break the one in
    the desktop, you'll have to open the case to replace it.

    I can do that. I already have a spare one. You have to transfer the
    outside cover from the old one to the new one.

    Even harder in
    a laptop to replace it.

    I practially had the DVD drive out when I changed the bad hdd for an SDD
    and added some RAM

    You can even get USB-attached:
    - 3.5" diskette drive. I've never bothered to hunt around for a
    USB-attached 5.25" floppy drive.
    - USB-attached Iomege ZIP drive if you still have Zip disks around (but
    you might need to install drivers).
    - USB-attached card reader.

    There's probably other USB-attached storage that I didn't think of.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Wed Jan 24 22:45:38 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 22:26:32 -0500, Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:

    On 1/24/2024 8:51 PM, micky wrote:
    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 12:28:52 -0500, Big Al
    <alan@invalid.com> wrote:

    On 1/24/24 11:19 AM, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a >>>> DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Well, I was visiting my brother and sil, and good friends of theirs had >>>> given them a telescope. They live on the 17th floor of an 18 story
    building, on a corner apt with a balcony.

    And they are complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in >>>> the box was a DVD. Their computers would not play it but mine could. So >>>> there.

    It turns out, the telescope is still for sale new, a couple hundred
    dollars iirc, but the file dates on all the DVD files was from 2008.

    It included weblinks to the manufacturer, for warranty registration etc. >>>> and none of the links still worked, It also included the user manual in >>>> PDF, which is good because one of their new dogs** ate up part of the
    paper manual. I sent the pdf to each of their email accounts, though >>>> afaict neither reads his or her email. But if they complain later, I'll >>>> send another copy. LOL

    **The dogs are maltepoos. Combination of a poodle with a malted milk.

    And a usb plug in drive would also work on all systems including the
    =========================================================
    above people you visited.
    You could even make an ISO from it and give them the ISO they could
    mount and run without a DVD.

    And with either method, how would you read the DVD to make the USB drive
    or the ISO? Just blow on it and wish it?


    Imgburn.

    How can you have a DVD drive and not have Imgburn :-)

    Big All is trying to provide an alternative to having a DVD drive. What
    good is Imgburn without a dvd drive?



    [Picture]

    https://i.postimg.cc/FRQWxQ5S/imgburn.gif

    https://www.majorgeeks.com/files/details/imgburn.html

    On Linux, K3B would be similar to Imgburn.

    The Windows native IMAP2 support for burning discs,
    is lacking, because there is no "erase" for re-writeable
    media. In Imgburn, you can use the upper left icon,
    then go to the menu bar, and somewhere down in the menu
    there is a quick erase or full erase for re-writeable
    media. Since the menus may be context-sensitive (they
    depend on which of the six icons you are using), then
    you have to select the correct one of the six icons,
    before certain functions populate in the menu.

    When you are reading a disc to make an ISO (second down on
    the left), then you would not be expecting to find an
    erase item in the Menu at that time. That would be a
    clash of features -- a user "planning" to read a disc,
    then attempting to erase the disc. So some of the
    context-sensitive behavior is for safety reasons.

    Paul
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From VanguardLH@V@nguard.LH to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Thu Jan 25 09:59:31 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with
    a DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    My up-vote on suggestions by others: get a USB-attached DVD drive, or
    even a USB-attached CD/DVD/BD drive. No need for a built-in one.

    Good for home, but I wouldn't have had it with me at my brother's, in Florida.

    I feel good when I know I'm packin'.

    That's what carry bags are for: to pack more than the laptop. You
    travel without the A/C adapter to charge your laptop? I also pack a BT
    mouse and keyboard. And even some pens and paper. And sometimes even a USB-attached HDD, SSD, or flash stick for more storage of data, and off
    the drive with the partition for the OS and apps. And a powered USB hub
    since the laptop has a dearth of USB ports. I don't recall seeing
    anyone board an airplane with a nude laptop. They're always in a tote.

    But, in your case, you already had a built-in optical drive. However,
    the arguments were not against that, but that a built-in one is not a
    necessity as you claim. All those folks that laughed at you simply
    chose a different setup: a non-built-in optical drive via USB.

    If the attached one breaks, get another USB one. If you break the
    one in the desktop, you'll have to open the case to replace it.

    I can do that. I already have a spare one. You have to transfer the
    outside cover from the old one to the new one.

    The comparison you split was about the difficulty of replacing an
    optical drive if it breaks versus one inside a desktop.

    You're transferring a cover from old to new WHAT? Between laptops? Disassembling a laptop is a hell of lot more work than of a desktop.
    And moving a USB-attached optical drive is even far more easy than
    opening laptops to swap optical drives. I have an optical drive in my
    laptop. Much easier to plug in a USB one should the internal one break.

    Or does "cover" mean the faceplate on the desktop tower? Again, the
    comparison was showing the greater difficulty of replacing a broken
    optical drive in a laptop versus in a desktop. For my next laptop, I
    would NOT get an internal optical drive. I'd stow a USB-attached one in
    the laptop's tote bag. I wouldn't limit my candidates for purchase to
    only those with internal optical drives. If the price were the same
    between with and without optical drive, yeah, I'd get internal.

    Even harder in a laptop to replace it.

    I practially had the DVD drive out when I changed the bad hdd for an
    SDD and added some RAM

    That's a different scenario. You had the laptop disassembled for
    something ELSE, so you decided to do more. Changing the optical drive
    was coincidental, not intentional.

    You didn't buy the laptop with an optical drive already installed? Or
    are you still focused on what you did with your desktop when the issue
    is about optical drives in a laptop?
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Thu Jan 25 18:23:09 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/24/2024 10:45 PM, micky wrote:
    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 22:26:32 -0500, Paul

    How can you have a DVD drive and not have Imgburn :-)

    Big All is trying to provide an alternative to having a DVD drive. What
    good is Imgburn without a dvd drive?

    For content which does not exist as an Internet ISO9660 file,
    you can convert physical media to ISO format, for distribution
    to others.

    As for "why don't you use USB flash like the cool kids", I
    can give you an example. My most-healthy USB stick blew a tire
    on the Internet and ended up in the ditch. So I couldn't even
    finish a transfer I was doing with it today. I consider it a poor
    investment, when I pay many times the blank media price for
    flash, and the damn things keep croaking. And this is only
    happening because the controllers on those things are
    such shite. SSDs don't fail like that! Different controller.

    Paul

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Thu Jan 25 22:34:35 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 16:58:32 -0600, Jim Joyce <none@none.invalid> wrote:

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 15:35:30 -0500, knuttle <keith_nuttle@yahoo.com> wrote:

    On 01/24/2024 2:44 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 1/24/2024 2:07 PM, knuttle wrote:

    That is what my daughters keep telling me when I complain about the lack of storage in the current computers.aa On my 1TB drive I have right at 4GB of data.a During the installation updates, the disk uses over a half a terabyte to install the update.

    Yes with a current computer I could buy a large external drive, but would I have the external drive when I need access to it?

    The drive would be sitting on the table in its enclosure,
    unplugged and waiting for you to plug it in. what
    could be easier ?
    That assumes that you are sitting in your recliner in front of the TV or >>equivalent. I have a Portable Laptop that goes places with me, many >>times on the spur of the moment. ie I have to go over to the next >>building, or to the church and need the hard drive that is sitting
    beside my recliner.

    Is it your laptop or does it belong to the church? Most laptops within the past
    decade or more can accept a second (or even third) internal drive, sometimes at
    the expense of giving up the (mostly obsolete) optical drive.


    No, no, never. You will have to take my optical drive from my cold dead
    hand. (But I appreciate your saying "mostly". Good man.)

    BTW, this fairly old laptop has a slot for an SD card, so I thought I
    should put one in, for just in case. And it's always unloading and
    loading it. I'm glad I don't need it.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Brian Gregory@void-invalid-dead-dontuse@email.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Fri Jan 26 21:11:03 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 24/01/2024 16:19, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Not me.

    The last PC I built I deliberately looked for a case with positions for optical drives. It was fairly difficult to find one.

    As to whether I really needed one. It is debatable. I could manage with
    an external USB drive but it'd be annoying and an extra expense. (The
    drives I used were out of my old PC)

    On the other hand a USB DVD drive suitable for installing software is
    going to be relatively cheap compared with the blu-ray writer drives I
    like to have.

    **The dogs are maltepoos. Combination of a poodle with a malted milk.

    Ah. A drinkable dog. I hope multi poos isn't what they do when you take
    them for a walk. Or if they do clean it up afterwards. ;-)
    --
    Brian Gregory (in England).

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Fri Jan 26 17:15:33 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/26/2024 4:11 PM, Brian Gregory wrote:
    On 24/01/2024 16:19, micky wrote:
    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with a
    DVD drive.-a No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    Not me.

    The last PC I built I deliberately looked for a case with positions for optical drives. It was fairly difficult to find one.

    As to whether I really needed one. It is debatable. I could manage with an external USB drive but it'd be annoying and an extra expense. (The drives I used were out of my old PC)

    On the other hand a USB DVD drive suitable for installing software is going to be relatively cheap compared with the blu-ray writer drives I like to have.

    **The dogs are maltepoos.-a Combination of a poodle with a malted milk.

    Ah. A drinkable dog. I hope multi poos isn't what they do when you take them for a walk. Or if they do clean it up afterwards. ;-)


    https://www.newegg.com/black-phanteks-enthoo-pro-atx-full-tower/p/N82E16811854069

    3 External 5.25" Drive Bays
    6 Internal 3.5" Drive Bays (trays seem to exit the chassis on the wrong side)

    Motherboard Compatibility E-ATX / ATX / uATX / mITX / SSI EEB

    Max GPU Length 472 mm / 18.5in w/o HDD cages
    347 mm / 13.6in with HDD cages

    Dimensions (H x W x D) 21.10" x 9.25" x 21.70"

    The power supply is in the bottom, which is what I was looking for,
    a way to move the power, so I could fit a fan near VCore.

    It has a few issues, but size isn't one of them. I don't really like
    glass doors for example. Potential for rattling.

    That's a lot bigger than the Corsair cases on display at my
    computer store. Those barely looked big enough to hold sandwich bread.

    *******

    And even if someone gave me a BluRay drive, I would not know
    what to do with it. I've never seen any descriptions of "easy movie playback" with stuff like that. There are a number of Intel processors not
    rated for 4K playback. It's a "Hollywood security problem", something
    only Hollywood could dream up. Even dedicated set top players, are not guaranteed to play a title you own... forever. Titles could magically
    stop playing, any time they want.

    The blanks are pretty big at 25GB, and I don't know how that would fit
    into any activity here. I would hate to pay extra for a BluRay blank,
    and end up using it as a DVD blank. That would suck.

    I guess you could say those drives are a "marketing fail".

    *******

    You know there is serious money about, when you read an article about
    AI, and the comment section is filled with "AI is wonderful" posts :-)
    I tried a few queries now on CoPilot, and I'm completely unimpressed.
    That shit had better write excellent computer code, because as far as
    answering question goes, it's pretty bad. And to think Windows 12 will
    have a 16GB memory requirement, just to host such garbage locally :-/
    Like I need a new key on my keyboard labeled "Garbage".

    You only get one chance to make a good impression, and AI has already
    had its 15 minutes of fame. I'm sure it will make a great missile
    launcher or attack drone, no matter who it shoots.

    Paul
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From AK@scientist77017@gmail.com to rec.autos.tech on Fri Jan 26 15:46:49 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On Wednesday, January 24, 2024 at 4:58:36rC>PM UTC-6, Jim Joyce wrote:
    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 15:35:30 -0500, knuttle <keith_...@yahoo.com> wrote:

    On 01/24/2024 2:44 PM, Paul wrote:
    On 1/24/2024 2:07 PM, knuttle wrote:

    That is what my daughters keep telling me when I complain about the lack of storage in the current computers. On my 1TB drive I have right at 4GB of data. During the installation updates, the disk uses over a half a terabyte to install the update.

    Yes with a current computer I could buy a large external drive, but would I have the external drive when I need access to it?

    The drive would be sitting on the table in its enclosure,
    unplugged and waiting for you to plug it in. what
    could be easier ?
    That assumes that you are sitting in your recliner in front of the TV or >equivalent. I have a Portable Laptop that goes places with me, many
    times on the spur of the moment. ie I have to go over to the next >building, or to the church and need the hard drive that is sitting
    beside my recliner.
    Is it your laptop or does it belong to the church? Most laptops within the past
    decade or more can accept a second (or even third) internal drive, sometimes at
    the expense of giving up the (mostly obsolete) optical drive.
    Optical drives are hardly obselete.
    They can be used for example in playing DVD movies.
    And they can also be used to boot into or install an operating system.
    Andy
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jan 27 16:19:54 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 2024-01-25 16:59, VanguardLH wrote:
    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with
    a DVD drive. No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    My up-vote on suggestions by others: get a USB-attached DVD drive, or
    even a USB-attached CD/DVD/BD drive. No need for a built-in one.

    Good for home, but I wouldn't have had it with me at my brother's, in
    Florida.

    I feel good when I know I'm packin'.

    That's what carry bags are for: to pack more than the laptop. You
    travel without the A/C adapter to charge your laptop? I also pack a BT
    mouse and keyboard. And even some pens and paper. And sometimes even a USB-attached HDD, SSD, or flash stick for more storage of data, and off
    the drive with the partition for the OS and apps. And a powered USB hub since the laptop has a dearth of USB ports. I don't recall seeing
    anyone board an airplane with a nude laptop. They're always in a tote.

    But, in your case, you already had a built-in optical drive. However,
    the arguments were not against that, but that a built-in one is not a necessity as you claim. All those folks that laughed at you simply
    chose a different setup: a non-built-in optical drive via USB.

    A built in drive makes the laptop significantly thicker and heavier, and
    I'd have that weight on my back when moving around. Arguably, the
    external drive would be on another piece of luggage, so not on my back.

    ...
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jan 27 11:52:58 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/27/2024 10:19 AM, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-01-25 16:59, VanguardLH wrote:
    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> wrote:

    micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    People laughed at me when I said I wanted a desktop and a laptop with >>>>> a DVD drive.-a No one uses those anymore, they taunted me.

    My up-vote on suggestions by others: get a USB-attached DVD drive, or
    even a USB-attached CD/DVD/BD drive.-a No need for a built-in one.

    Good for home, but I wouldn't have had it with me at my brother's, in
    Florida.

    I feel good when I know I'm packin'.

    That's what carry bags are for: to pack more than the laptop.-a You
    travel without the A/C adapter to charge your laptop?-a I also pack a BT
    mouse and keyboard.-a And even some pens and paper.-a And sometimes even a >> USB-attached HDD, SSD, or flash stick for more storage of data, and off
    the drive with the partition for the OS and apps.-a And a powered USB hub
    since the laptop has a dearth of USB ports.-a I don't recall seeing
    anyone board an airplane with a nude laptop.-a They're always in a tote.

    But, in your case, you already had a built-in optical drive.-a However,
    the arguments were not against that, but that a built-in one is not a
    necessity as you claim.-a All those folks that laughed at you simply
    chose a different setup: a non-built-in optical drive via USB.

    A built in drive makes the laptop significantly thicker and heavier, and I'd have that weight on my back when moving around. Arguably, the external drive would be on another piece of luggage, so not on my back.

    There is not a lot of wasted mass in the internal optical drive.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=KT2u8wi8bDE

    It needs the thin metal covers, because the rest of it is
    pretty flimsy. That provides some protection while it is
    being handled.

    Thicker laptops also change in other design dimensions, such
    as 200W turbo CPUs, heatpipes, more than one blower, and so on.
    They don't make a laptop thicker just to accommodate an optical
    drive.

    There have been computing devices which are empty inside,
    and they're the subject of derisive laughter. As a designer,
    you can't really win by just making a thicker chassis and putting
    a nice keyboard in it. Because then the comments would be
    "shudda filled it with batteries". The customers will insist
    it be chonky, and then they will later complain it is chonky.

    A thick laptop is like a bag of penny candy. You expect the
    bag to be "full".

    Paul


    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jan 27 20:04:44 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 2024-01-25 02:48, micky wrote:
    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 17:00:45 -0600, Jim Joyce <none@none.invalid> wrote:

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:09:17 -0500, knuttle <keith_nuttle@yahoo.com> wrote: >>
    On 01/24/2024 12:23 PM, Andy Burns wrote:
    micky wrote:

    good friends of theirs had given them a telescope. And they are
    complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in the box
    was a DVD.
    Is the software not available to download from the telescope
    manufacturer's website?

    You have to have access to the internet to do that. If you are in a
    dark place to use the telescope there may be no internet available.

    Do your software and documentation downloads when it's convenient for you. Don't
    wait until the middle of the night when you're in a place without Internet >> access.

    There is no software for this telescope, only a PDF owner's manual and
    some links that no longer work. Even the one with the motor drive to
    follow the subject while the earth rotates I'm 95% sure uses no
    software. Just admit that it's good to have a DVD drive when the
    company provides you with a DVD.

    With reasonably good telescopes, software can be added. Like for
    instance adjusting the speed of the motor to compensate irregularities
    and actually track an object while it moves on the sky (by sampling a
    photo with a camera on the scope). Or having the scope automatically
    locate an object (needs changing the speed of the motor significantly).

    Other software can look at the telescope camera and sync the computer generated sky map to it, so that you can identify objects.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jan 27 22:56:35 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 2024-01-26 22:11, Brian Gregory wrote:

    ...

    The last PC I built I deliberately looked for a case with positions for optical drives. It was fairly difficult to find one.

    I had no problem with that.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jan 27 22:55:21 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 2024-01-25 03:54, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 18:26:16 -0600, VanguardLH wrote:


    You can even get USB-attached:
    - 3.5" diskette drive. I've never bothered to hunt around for a
    USB-attached 5.25" floppy drive.
    - USB-attached Iomege ZIP drive if you still have Zip disks around (but
    you might need to install drivers).
    - USB-attached card reader.

    There's probably other USB-attached storage that I didn't think of.

    I've got a USB attached tape cassette. It works for moving music off old tapes but it's a painful process. The copying is in real time. The
    software is reasonably good at breaking out songs into separate files but
    you have to label them yourself.

    Heh! I have not seen that one.

    There are also USB turntables for the vinyl purists although i think that defeats the whole analog is better than digital thing.

    AFAIK, the intention is to record the existing vinyl collection
    conveniently.


    Heck. I just had a quick look at Amazon, and several compact players I
    see include the speakers in the base, so there is feedback between the
    speaker and the capsule.

    Old briefcase players had the speaker on the lid, which was detachable.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Char Jackson@none@none.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jan 27 17:26:36 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On Sat, 27 Jan 2024 22:56:35 +0100, "Carlos E.R." <robin_listas@es.invalid> wrote:

    On 2024-01-26 22:11, Brian Gregory wrote:

    ...

    The last PC I built I deliberately looked for a case with positions for
    optical drives. It was fairly difficult to find one.

    I had no problem with that.

    It probably depends partly on the form factor you've decided to use. When I build a desktop system, I exclusively look at mid-tower cases, and AFAIK 100% of
    them have multiple 5.25" bays where optical drives can be installed. Brian may be looking only at another (smaller) form factor, right Brian?

    Also, as others previously discussed, I require the PSU mounting position to be at the top of the case, for proper and effective heat management, never at the bottom. It makes no sense to me to place that kind of heat source at the bottom of the case.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From The Real Bev@bashley101@gmail.com to rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jan 27 20:34:56 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/27/24 1:55 PM, Carlos E.R. wrote:
    On 2024-01-25 03:54, rbowman wrote:
    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 18:26:16 -0600, VanguardLH wrote:


    You can even get USB-attached:
    - 3.5" diskette drive. I've never bothered to hunt around for a
    USB-attached 5.25" floppy drive.
    - USB-attached Iomege ZIP drive if you still have Zip disks around (but
    you might need to install drivers).
    - USB-attached card reader.

    There's probably other USB-attached storage that I didn't think of.

    I've got a USB attached tape cassette. It works for moving music off old
    tapes but it's a painful process. The copying is in real time. The
    software is reasonably good at breaking out songs into separate files but
    you have to label them yourself.

    Heh! I have not seen that one.

    There are also USB turntables for the vinyl purists although i think that
    defeats the whole analog is better than digital thing.

    FWIW, hubby who can still hear earthquakes a few seconds before they
    start and who used to hear REALLY high sounds, says the analog/digital
    thing is pure bullshit. I trust him. My ears have always been terrible,
    and now they're a lot worse.

    Who knew that a sudden feedback scream from your phone (no idea how that happened) could take out the higher-frequency (such as it was) hearing
    in that ear permanently? Be warned.

    AFAIK, the intention is to record the existing vinyl collection
    conveniently.

    He did that with our old Pioneer turntable, as well as transferring our 4-track tape collection to MP3 (can't remember the name of the recorder,
    but we still have it), including attaching official names through some
    arcane method.

    Heck. I just had a quick look at Amazon, and several compact players I
    see include the speakers in the base, so there is feedback between the speaker and the capsule.

    Old briefcase players had the speaker on the lid, which was detachable.
    --
    Cheers, Bev
    SAVE GAS, FART IN A JAR
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From micky@NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sun Jan 28 00:18:53 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Sat, 27 Jan 2024 20:04:44 +0100, "Carlos
    E.R." <robin_listas@es.invalid> wrote:

    On 2024-01-25 02:48, micky wrote:
    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 17:00:45 -0600, Jim Joyce
    <none@none.invalid> wrote:

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:09:17 -0500, knuttle <keith_nuttle@yahoo.com> wrote: >>>
    On 01/24/2024 12:23 PM, Andy Burns wrote:
    micky wrote:

    good friends of theirs had given them a telescope. And they are
    complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in the box >>>>>> was a DVD.
    Is the software not available to download from the telescope
    manufacturer's website?

    You have to have access to the internet to do that. If you are in a
    dark place to use the telescope there may be no internet available.

    This telescope was intended to be used on the 17th floor balcony of my brother's apartment. There's plenty of internet.

    Do your software and documentation downloads when it's convenient for you. Don't
    wait until the middle of the night when you're in a place without Internet >>> access.

    There is no software for this telescope, only a PDF owner's manual and
    some links that no longer work. Even the one with the motor drive to
    follow the subject while the earth rotates I'm 95% sure uses no
    software. Just admit that it's good to have a DVD drive when the
    company provides you with a DVD.

    With reasonably good telescopes, software can be added. Like for
    instance adjusting the speed of the motor to compensate irregularities

    This one doesn't have a motor.

    Here it is: https://www.amazon.com/Celestron-31045-AstroMaster-Reflector-Telescope/dp/B000MLL6RS/ref=sr_1_1_sspa

    It has slow motion controls, but they are manual.

    But it's $351, more than enough for a present you're not even sure your
    friends will use.

    Although here is almost the same model number, and it's less ($279,
    still a big present),and it seems to have a motor, (though still no
    software) https://www.amazon.com/Celestron-31051-AstroMaster-130EQ-Telescope/dp/B0013Z42AK/ref=asc_df_B0013Z42AK/
    The pictures look just like the one my brother has, with no motor. I
    dont' know how that little box is supposed to move things when it still
    has the same hand-adjusting knobs. Maybe they used the wrong pictures.

    and actually track an object while it moves on the sky (by sampling a
    photo with a camera on the scope). Or having the scope automatically
    locate an object (needs changing the speed of the motor significantly).

    That's going to be a lot more than $350.

    Other software can look at the telescope camera and sync the computer >generated sky map to it, so that you can identify objects.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sun Jan 28 02:15:49 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 1/28/2024 12:18 AM, micky wrote:
    In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Sat, 27 Jan 2024 20:04:44 +0100, "Carlos
    E.R." <robin_listas@es.invalid> wrote:

    On 2024-01-25 02:48, micky wrote:
    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 17:00:45 -0600, Jim Joyce
    <none@none.invalid> wrote:

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:09:17 -0500, knuttle <keith_nuttle@yahoo.com> wrote:

    On 01/24/2024 12:23 PM, Andy Burns wrote:
    micky wrote:

    good friends of theirs had given them a telescope. And they are
    complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in the box >>>>>>> was a DVD.
    Is the software not available to download from the telescope
    manufacturer's website?

    You have to have access to the internet to do that. If you are in a >>>>> dark place to use the telescope there may be no internet available.

    This telescope was intended to be used on the 17th floor balcony of my brother's apartment. There's plenty of internet.

    Do your software and documentation downloads when it's convenient for you. Don't
    wait until the middle of the night when you're in a place without Internet >>>> access.

    There is no software for this telescope, only a PDF owner's manual and
    some links that no longer work. Even the one with the motor drive to
    follow the subject while the earth rotates I'm 95% sure uses no
    software. Just admit that it's good to have a DVD drive when the
    company provides you with a DVD.

    With reasonably good telescopes, software can be added. Like for
    instance adjusting the speed of the motor to compensate irregularities

    This one doesn't have a motor.

    Here it is: https://www.amazon.com/Celestron-31045-AstroMaster-Reflector-Telescope/dp/B000MLL6RS/ref=sr_1_1_sspa

    It has slow motion controls, but they are manual.

    But it's $351, more than enough for a present you're not even sure your friends will use.

    Although here is almost the same model number, and it's less ($279,
    still a big present),and it seems to have a motor, (though still no
    software) https://www.amazon.com/Celestron-31051-AstroMaster-130EQ-Telescope/dp/B0013Z42AK/ref=asc_df_B0013Z42AK/
    The pictures look just like the one my brother has, with no motor. I
    dont' know how that little box is supposed to move things when it still
    has the same hand-adjusting knobs. Maybe they used the wrong pictures.

    and actually track an object while it moves on the sky (by sampling a
    photo with a camera on the scope). Or having the scope automatically
    locate an object (needs changing the speed of the motor significantly).

    That's going to be a lot more than $350.

    Other software can look at the telescope camera and sync the computer
    generated sky map to it, so that you can identify objects.

    They mention using a stepper motor here, as it has a wider speed range
    than a VFD could achieve with a synchronous motor.

    https://www.cloudynights.com/topic/879952-possible-to-use-an-industrial-vfd-to-control-an-ac-synchronous-drive-motor/

    Paul
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sun Jan 28 12:56:21 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 2024-01-28 06:18, micky wrote:
    In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Sat, 27 Jan 2024 20:04:44 +0100, "Carlos
    E.R." <robin_listas@es.invalid> wrote:

    On 2024-01-25 02:48, micky wrote:
    In alt.home.repair, on Wed, 24 Jan 2024 17:00:45 -0600, Jim Joyce
    <none@none.invalid> wrote:

    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:09:17 -0500, knuttle <keith_nuttle@yahoo.com> wrote:

    On 01/24/2024 12:23 PM, Andy Burns wrote:
    micky wrote:

    good friends of theirs had given them a telescope. And they are
    complicated. Setup especially. And guess what, included in the box >>>>>>> was a DVD.
    Is the software not available to download from the telescope
    manufacturer's website?

    You have to have access to the internet to do that. If you are in a >>>>> dark place to use the telescope there may be no internet available.

    This telescope was intended to be used on the 17th floor balcony of my brother's apartment. There's plenty of internet.

    Do your software and documentation downloads when it's convenient for you. Don't
    wait until the middle of the night when you're in a place without Internet >>>> access.

    There is no software for this telescope, only a PDF owner's manual and
    some links that no longer work. Even the one with the motor drive to
    follow the subject while the earth rotates I'm 95% sure uses no
    software. Just admit that it's good to have a DVD drive when the
    company provides you with a DVD.

    With reasonably good telescopes, software can be added. Like for
    instance adjusting the speed of the motor to compensate irregularities

    This one doesn't have a motor.

    Here it is: https://www.amazon.com/Celestron-31045-AstroMaster-Reflector-Telescope/dp/B000MLL6RS/ref=sr_1_1_sspa

    It has slow motion controls, but they are manual.

    You can see at the Amazon site that they have a variant with motors. It
    is quite possible they can be bought separately as addons.


    But it's $351, more than enough for a present you're not even sure your friends will use.

    Oh, absolutely.


    Although here is almost the same model number, and it's less ($279,
    still a big present),and it seems to have a motor, (though still no
    software) https://www.amazon.com/Celestron-31051-AstroMaster-130EQ-Telescope/dp/B0013Z42AK/ref=asc_df_B0013Z42AK/
    The pictures look just like the one my brother has, with no motor. I
    dont' know how that little box is supposed to move things when it still
    has the same hand-adjusting knobs. Maybe they used the wrong pictures.

    and actually track an object while it moves on the sky (by sampling a
    photo with a camera on the scope). Or having the scope automatically
    locate an object (needs changing the speed of the motor significantly).

    That's going to be a lot more than $350.

    :-)

    If one gets attracted to this hobby, you start adding things to it. My
    late cousin was, his setup was amazing (to me).


    Other software can look at the telescope camera and sync the computer
    generated sky map to it, so that you can identify objects.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Carlos E.R.@robin_listas@es.invalid to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.comp.os.windows-10,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sun Jan 28 13:32:25 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    On 2024-01-28 00:26, Char Jackson wrote:
    On Sat, 27 Jan 2024 22:56:35 +0100, "Carlos E.R." <robin_listas@es.invalid> wrote:

    On 2024-01-26 22:11, Brian Gregory wrote:

    ...

    The last PC I built I deliberately looked for a case with positions for
    optical drives. It was fairly difficult to find one.

    I had no problem with that.

    It probably depends partly on the form factor you've decided to use.

    True.

    When I
    build a desktop system, I exclusively look at mid-tower cases, and AFAIK 100% of
    them have multiple 5.25" bays where optical drives can be installed. Brian may
    be looking only at another (smaller) form factor, right Brian?

    Also, as others previously discussed, I require the PSU mounting position to be
    at the top of the case, for proper and effective heat management, never at the
    bottom. It makes no sense to me to place that kind of heat source at the bottom
    of the case.

    Weight and stability of the case, possibly.

    The heat should not be a problem, because it has a fan. Any heat
    generated inside the PSU is vented out soon enough. Unless the PSU case becomes hot, and that should not happen.

    But then the case needs an independent fan at the top, to exhaust heat
    from other sources that concentrates there.

    Anyway, at least my last two boxes have the PSU in the top position, but because it is opposite to the 5.25" bays, I guess.
    --
    Cheers, Carlos.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Woozy Song@suzyw0ng@outlook.com to alt.home.repair,rec.autos.tech on Fri Feb 2 17:21:28 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.tech

    Paul wrote:

    The computer store I got those at, used to have three cubic meters
    of media on display at one time. Today, they have three cake
    boxes under the counter, and if you buy a box, that's
    "a third of the store stock". Your choices are "Verbatim"
    or "Verbatim". Or perhaps "Verbatim".

    And the Dynex jewel boxes, are now "Verbatim" brand. Small world.
    I was lucky to get jewel boxes.

    The staff even had trouble finding those in the store. Normally,
    their computer has a grid ref inside the store, for where the
    items are located. But not for that stuff. It was actually underneath
    the cash register location. I guess they didn't have a place to
    put it. One clerk seemed to think it was hidden in the back somewhere
    ("in the cage"), but eventually one of the other store staff figured
    it out.


    Yeah shits me that every shop in town sells Verbatim only. The 10-CD
    stacker in my 1990s limo won't read them. So have to buy printable
    discs on eBay that claim to be Kodak or some known brand, and hope they
    work.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2