Re: OT: Why welfare doesn't work!




bill.sloman@xxxxxxxx wrote:

If you and Jim think that reporting peple to the FBI is a joke, you do
need to have your "sense of humour" adjusted.


I have never reported anyone to the FBI, bill. Are you off your
meds, again?


Your search skills aren't up to much, and you do seem to share Jim's
enthusiasm for ignoring reality whenever he finds that the real world
isn't behaving the way he'd like it to


Then post links to all those messages you claim exist. OTOH, why
aren't all these people jumping in and sticking up for you, right now?


US employers can't be all that smart - if we are to believe your
claims about your employability, they hired you repeatedly, and your
own intenet persona is not wildly attractive.


What you see is a reflection of what you dish out, and I have not
been able to work since I ended up on this group. Also, I didn't have an
internet connection when i was hired at my last job. Once again, keep
your lies s straight.


He's mentioned his designs for Motorola several times on this user
group, and it struck me at the time that they were the only Motorola
parts that I'd ended up detesting - many years before I learned about
the common factor behind these rare exceptions to the general rule.


He mentioned things from the 'Model T' era of IC design. His recent
designs are all NDA. That means you haven't done anything in so long
that you had no marketable skills.


The solution to our problem turned out to be a proper coaxial
connector on the high voltage connection to the cathode. It took a
long while before production engineering could be persuaded to swallow
the extra expense of a 30kV rated coaxial plug and socket, and it
ended up being justified on the grounds that it simplified assembly
and maintenance. The elimination of the catastrophic currents in the
ground connections was a (not unexpected) bonus but not one that
engineering could have guaranteed in advance.


You should try working with 10A 30 KV shielded HV cables, and the
connectors at a transmitter site.


Meanwhile we'd had to engineer the computer control system to survive
on the electron microscopes that producdtion engieering has stuck us
with - which is easy enough, if not all that cheap. Process control
and local area network hardware has to be enginered that way to
survive the ground surges from nearby lightning strikes.


A lot easier than protecting a transmitter under a 1749 foot tower.


The multi-phase stroboscopic electron beam tester took longer to
develop than it should have done, for reasons that were entirely due
to management decisons, and was eventually canned, but only after the
first prototype was doing pretty much exactly what we'd claimed that
it would. The problem was that the idiot manager who had written the
original reqirement specification - the one that I'd thought that I
was sending up by writing a practicable but impractical design
specification based on Gigabit Logic's hideously expensive GaAs logic
- had been lying abut the potential market, and when he finally bailed
out and the real marketing guys got to talk to his claimed potential
customers, there weren't quite enough potential buyers left to carry
us into full production.

Very frustrating.


Shit happens. Turn the fans off, first.


So you want to emphasise that you haven't got a clue? For a start, it
did both heating and cooling (as I've already pointed out dimbo).


Gee, Bill that's what the Peltier devices were developed to do. You
act like it was the hardest design job since the beginning of time to
adjust the temperature. No matter what someone else designs it's crap,
but you built a career on simple jobs.


If you wanted to see the specifications you could have checked out
Measurement Science and Technology, volume 7 pages 1653-64 (1996).


If I cared about a simple concept as yours, I would have looked.


I've posted the reference here often enough, and it is my most-cited
paper, as you could see on scholar.google.com if you had those kinds
of skills.


Yawn.


BTW, Bill I see that another of those well run European companies
left thousands stranded at airports around the world. OIA is crawling
with them. They blew all their money on the rip and trinkets, so they
can't afford hotel rooms. That left them crying and bitching in the
seats, scattered around the airport. Good deal, that! Now, their
governments have to pay to get them home.


--
http://improve-usenet.org/index.html

aioe.org, Goggle Groups, and Web TV users must request to be white
listed, or I will not see your messages.

If you have broadband, your ISP may have a NNTP news server included in
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There are two kinds of people on this earth:
The crazy, and the insane.
The first sign of insanity is denying that you're crazy.
.



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