Re: Windows XP startup question
- From: krw <krw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 27 Dec 2009 16:02:19 -0600
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 13:05:46 -0800, Joerg <invalid@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Jim Thompson wrote:
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 12:18:04 -0800, Joerg <invalid@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Jim Thompson wrote:
On Sun, 27 Dec 2009 10:52:30 -0800, Joerg <invalid@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>I don't need the full version because I have a virtual PDF printer so
wrote:
Jim Thompson wrote:I stopped at Acrobat v7... primarily used for reading, creating from
On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 12:50:16 -0800, Joerg <invalid@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>Reader, 8 and 9. They get worse the younger they are, just like a lot of
wrote:
Jim Thompson wrote:[snip]
On Fri, 25 Dec 2009 12:16:32 -0800, Joerg <invalid@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Full Acrobat or the Reader? What version?I don't, but others do. Mine sometimes crashes on Acrobat but this isPersonally, the most I'd invest in a case like this would be a telephoneI haven't crashed a computer in so long I've forgotten how ;-)
DTMF interface. Call the cabin, push star-something, wait for
confirmation tone, hang up, pack skis, head up there.
WHERE is it that you surf that you keep getting crashes?
not very surprising, it was IMHO never a particularly robust software.
other sofware does.
scanner. I use v4 for "printing to", and PDF's that need links and/or
forms (I like to make "hierarchical" PDF schematics for design
reviews... works better than PowerPoint).
Come to think of it, I've _never_ had Reader on any of my machines.
can get PDF output from any program. Plus the scanner already produces
PDF (if you set it to PDF format).
That entirely depends on the code quality :-)Can't you crash a uP without a brown-out/power-drop-out?It can be a uC though. While it took that industry seemingly forever toAnyhow, I would not want to trust a Windows-based PC with any kind of[snip]
home automation. Just like I won't trust X10 with that.
Yep. I'd use your DTMF interface... battery powered, with a
charger... discrete chips and components... latchable relays... beep,
beep, beep reporting that mission was accomplished... NO uP ;-)
figure out how a good BOR works now there are some that are reliable
enough. Some, not all. Texas has a nice app note on how to do that, with
the code and all.
I know. You're perfect ;-) ...
Nope, only one guy was and was killed at age 33.
... I like digital solutions simple enough
that even I, an old Analog guy, can understand, and proof every
possible combination.
Even if you don't, what's the big deal of generating a regular pulse
that resets the watchdog? uC code hangs -> watchdog triggers -> big
master reset happens.
What happens with flaky power? You need something to wake up the dog
reliably.
I can't even count the apps anymore where I found that the watchdog had
been disabled. Maybe because it was "inconvenient".
A separate circuit and NMI.
I recently designed a robust BOR (with an additional power monitor toI built my first reliable BOR circuit when I was 18 or 19, out of
cover another chip)... only took ~90 active devices ;-)
salvaged transistors. Because it was needed in a high voltage design
where uncontrolled brown-out could cause tube grid voltages to become
suboptimal and lead to a serious *KABLOUIE*. That's why I never
understood why large swaths of the electronics industry could not get
that licked for decades.
Part of my chip design procedure includes testing for VERY soft power
supply rise and fall times... looking for any possibility of latching
before every thing reaches normal quiescent bias. Particularly
critical with split supply chips.... but those I usually design so
that minus supply must pass P/BOR before stuff powered from the plus
supply is allowed to bias up (avoids crazy substrate behaviors).
I do the same with board level stuff. "Oh, it's going to be fine." ...
"Should we quickly test it anyhow? Only takes a minute." ... "Sure." ...
crank, crank, crank ... *PHUT*
[...]
Or quickly cycle power to confuse the POR timing.
.
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