> I'm getting too old to sleep in an unheated tent when its below freezing, 
> since the dog is a fool and won't climb up on the cot with me.

Wow, that is a foolish dog!  Most dogs would love to climb up to share body 
heat.

>  But (back to electronics) at least at those temperatures, LEDs can still put 
> out useful light, even in a cheap solar garden light.  Many of which still 
> use NiCad cells.

Those things beat up theiir NiCads pretty hard, but LEDs are hardy and will 
glow with pretty much anything.

> The program to simulate the reaction sounds interesting, most of my 
> programming has been either data reduction and massaging into graphs, or 
> school exercises to simulate molecular dynamics, which was really just 
> solving Newton's equations of motions in a loop (and no math required on my 
> part, ha-ha).

The coding I do for a paycheck mostly consists of web backends, high 
performance graphics stuff, hardware control (device drivers), or data 
conversion.

>  Any particular language or were you using one of the mathematics packages?

Banged the whole thing out in C.  It modeled diffusion-limited aggregation to 
simulate crystal growth, showing the results on screen as the "crystal" built 
up from a seed particle.

- John

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