Also the Airport Express has optical audio out, and you can then
setup your itunes app to beam music to the airport, then onwards to
your A/V system.
Thus I've a gigabyte hub, airport express lurking in the A/V
cabinet so I can get internet access downstairs, but also beam music
to the
Though I'm starting to think twice about that. I may redesign it for E/W with
the drain end a bit lower
Luther
On Sat, 25 Aug 2007 21:12:30 -0500, Luther [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Negative. It will be sloped N/S. Only gravity flow to allow any vapor to
travel up away from clean
I checked the Applestore.com and couldn't find the $18 refurbished Airport
Express'. Maybe they're out of them.
Gerry
--
- Original Message -
From: John M McIntosh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Also the Airport Express has optical audio out, and you can then
setup
Barbados is amazing. If you've never been its hard to explain and if you have
been I don't need to.
-Curt
Date: Sat, 25 Aug 2007 15:10:58 -0400
From: LarryT [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MBZ] ditching stuff (was Re: OT:PODS)
To: Mercedes Discussion List mercedes@okiebenz.com
Message-ID:
If she's really interested in the idea lay a CAT6 cable across the space.
Copper is good for 300' (might be 300m I don't remember).
Surely be cheaper than noodling around with wireless. If you really want
wireless in the house at that point get a wireless router.
When I lived in the apartment
GigaBIT, 1/8th a gigabyte. And if you're really getting Gigabit it'd better be
a switch. Hubs are unmanaged devices and give pitiful performance.
-Curt
Date: Sat, 25 Aug 2007 23:05:56 -0700
From: John M McIntosh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [MBZ] Airport Express
To: Mercedes Discussion List
Here's the skinny from my buddy with the wireless dish
stuff:
Got some pictures below. First the dish is exactly the
same as the Dish network dish except for the feed
horn. I first took the feed horn apart and removed all
the electronics and then drilled a good size hole down
through the shaft
I use an AirPort Express to stream music to my AV
system via the optical output. Using iTunes, I can
connect any of my Macs to the AP Express and stream
music from them to the Bose system in my living room,
which feeds speakers there and on my lanai (pool
deck.)
I have also used it along with my
I turned down a couple of 2 year contracts in
Micronesia years ago. The thing that concerned me the
most was the inability to leave... you sign on for
these things and you're there for the duration. You
might get one or two rotations out to a place of your
choice, but...
That being said, if
i got wires plugged into a chinese power amp :(
On 8/26/07, LWB250 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I use an AirPort Express to stream music to my AV
system via the optical output. Using iTunes, I can
connect any of my Macs to the AP Express and stream
music from them to the Bose system in my
Ed Booher [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On 8/25/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
That's all. Plug your printer into it plus the cable from the cable modem. No
configuring at all unless you want to make your network secure.
and you do want to make your network secure.
Why? The
I have my cable modem in one room hooked up to my desktop and using a
wireless router I can hook in with my laptop from the rest of the house.
Speed was pretty slow though, so I ran a ethernet cable thru the closet and
bought a 50' ethernet cable - now the speeds are pretty high at 100mbps.
If you live in an urban or suburban area, your access
point could easily be hijacked, for one. Allow that
to happen and watch your bandwidth drop as the
hijacker is an online gamer or is hosting bootleg pron
sites.
Also, if I can get into your access point, I can get
into your computer. That
Better yet, lay fiber. It's goshawful cheap any more,
and you can buy pre-terminated cables so it's easy to
connect things up.
Next house I build or remodel is going to have fiber
and CAT5/6 throughout. it's cheap as wine anymore.
Dan
--- Curt Raymond [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If she's
Anything illegal that happens in your unsecured internet connection is your
responsibility. They can charge you for anything that happens, and I didn't
know isn't a defense.
Luther
On Sun, 26 Aug 2007 10:36:32 -0500, LWB250 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If you live in an urban or suburban area,
You wrote:if I can get into your access point, I can get
into your computer
Another reason I didn;t want to stay wireless. The minor convienence it
provides is not worth the secrity issues and slower speeds -
You mentioned fiber optic cable - is it easy to work with?
Does it loose efficiency
Depends on how much of it you drink while you are doingthe install - or how
much beer
BillR
Next house I build or remodel is going to have fiber
and CAT5/6 throughout. it's cheap as wine anymore.
Dan
___
http://www.okiebenz.com
For new parts see
Dan - I use a 64 bit encryption and assume I am safe...True or not? Many of my
neighbors are not secured and often are stronger signals than my internal
system. Neverr tried to hijack one, though.
BillR
If you live in an urban or suburban area, your access
point could easily be hijacked, for
not at radio shack. i made the mistake of telling my ex wife to pick up 100
feet of cat5e at radio shack while she was a blockbuster next door. it was
75 bucks!
On 8/26/07, LWB250 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Better yet, lay fiber. It's goshawful cheap any more,
and you can buy pre-terminated
Luther [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Anything illegal that happens in your unsecured internet connection is
your responsibility. They can charge you for anything that happens,
and I didn't know isn't a defense.
It is for the ISPs, though. Doubt that argument would hold water.
--
1983 300D
This looks like about everything one could need to know in order to hook up
one these.
Thanks,
Gerry
---
- Original Message -
From: LWB250 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Here's the skinny from my buddy with the wireless dish
stuff:
Got some pictures below.
I would love to run a cable to her house or put a dish on her house, but she
is a very impatient person. She was my wifes best friend so I've helped for
about ten years with various problems. As long as something can be fixed in
one day she's okay, but let it disrupt her daily routine or
I've been using the CD service manuals for some time now on Mac OSX,
and they work pretty well. (After running the script to make file
links to deal with the badly-named PC-centric files and locations.
Script [fixlinks] included here:)
#!/bin/sh
# Because the Flash garbage on the Mac butchers
WEP or WPA? It makes a difference, as WEP is a lot
easier to crack for someone who wants in.
That being said, I prefer WPA personal, not
broadcasting my SSID, and MAC addressing for the ACL.
It's not bulletproof, but it will be a lot less
attractive to the teenage hacker that might try to
crack
No loss of efficiency over very long runs. At the
school that I work at, we have a number of
intermediate data frames in each building, and the
fiber runs between these and the main data frame are
easily 100+ feet or more.
If you have the hardware that can use fiber, you can
pick up
One should add that illegal activities between one state and another
falls under Interstate Commerce which gets the FBI involved in the
issue. Keep in mind, the FBI is after terrorisms and this issue means
little to them. You are not alone in this issue.We live in the 21th
Century under
Mine is WEP - not sure what WPA is - and come to think of it it is 128 bit, not
64, and uses a key of about 18 characters. My router just died and the on-line
tech had me change it to 64 bit and part of my phone number. I'll go back to
the heavier stuff when the new router arrives.
Thanks -
Hello all.
I suspect this has been discussed before, but I don't
know.
Does anyone know if the current ultra low sulfur diesel
has any bad effect on old Bosch injection pumps. like
on a 1981 VW Rabbit?
Yes, I have one of those. Its a curious, loud, shaky
little car, but fun in its own
On Sun, 26 Aug 2007 14:45:31 -0700 (PDT) LWB250 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No loss of efficiency over very long runs. At the school that I work
at, we have a number of intermediate data frames in each building, and
the fiber runs between these and the main data frame are easily 100+
feet or
http://motors.search.ebay.com/_W0QQfrppZ50QQfsooZ1QQfsopZ1QQrdZ0QQsassZokieQ2dbenz
--
Kaleb C. Striplin/Claremore, OK
94 E420, 92 300D, 92 250D Turbo, 92 300E 4Matic, 91 300D,
90 420SEL, 89 560SEL, 89 260E, 87 300SDL, 87 300TD, 85 380SE 5.0 Euro,
81 240D, 81 380SLC, 80 240D, 76 240D, 76
On Sun, 26 Aug 2007 18:05:49 -0400 (GMT-04:00) billr
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mine is WEP - not sure what WPA is - and come to think of it it is 128
bit, not 64, and uses a key of about 18 characters. My router just died
and the on-line tech had me change it to 64 bit and part of my phone
You will have to add sulfur replacement additive for that rotary IP. I
will have to due the same on my Volvo, it also uses the rotary
distributor type pump. Available at all truck stops, I think. Look
for diesel additive with lubrication supplements.
Sounds like something from BALCO, eh?
Thats the original soundtrack, not what I am looking for. Its another
version that I want.
Rick Knoble wrote:
OK, this it out there. I have heard this on the oldies radio before but
have never been able to figure out who did it. I believe its the theme
from the good, the bad, and the
So I went to a movie this weekend (The Invasion). Anyway, there was a
preview of this movie, I think called Real life Dan or something, no,
that was not it but here is the movie http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0480242/
Anyway, the only thing about this that interested me was the previews
anyone who wants to use my internet is welcome. as long as it doesn't get
slow for me, i encourage anyone to use it. many i day has there been a
freak in a car with a laptop parked in front of my house.
are you saying they have access to my data?
On 8/26/07, LWB250 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Actually, you can watch the trailer on that page there. Looks like a
chick flik though.
Kaleb C. Striplin wrote:
So I went to a movie this weekend (The Invasion). Anyway, there was a
preview of this movie, I think called Real life Dan or something, no,
that was not it but here is the
Hursty said.
not at radio shack. i made the mistake of telling my ex wife to pick up 100
feet of cat5e at radio shack while she was a blockbuster next door. it was
75 bucks!
On 8/26/07, LWB250 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Better yet, lay fiber. It's goshawful cheap any more,
and you can
Howes lubricator is some great stuff for pumps ( and it does a nice job
of cleaning ), but the lubrication isn't the big problem, With changing
the fuels, older pumps ( all kinds ) are sprouting seal leaks, it's not
that the new stuff will eat up new pump seals, its just that old seal
The last genset place I worked for was a Stanadyne
rep, and they (Stanadyne) sold a fuel additive similar
to RedLine that was for use in engines with their
rotary pumps when using low-sulphur fuels.
I don't recall which additive it was, but they have
some good information on their Web site about
Original Message
Subject: Re: Service manuals vs OSX
Date: Sun, 26 Aug 2007 17:22:17 -0700
From: Joe Knight [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Why reinvent the wheel?
http://web.mac.com/dakota/Mercedes/Mercedes_Pages.html
Go to the Service Library Indexes. The Library
Seal leaks are more of a problem with biodiesel than with ultra-low
sulfur, but those rotary pumps do NOT like ultra-low diesel at all.
I've heard that from several sources, including the guys who rebuild
them.
Peter
___
http://www.okiebenz.com
For new
Interesting. If I didn't have several Linksys hubs already, I'd try it.
$18 is pretty cheap for anything from Apple. They must be changing their
pricing policies. The high price of their stuff has been what's always
deterred me from trying it.
Eighteen bucks must be resold stolen goods. I paid
Rotary pumps use the fuel as a lubricant I can see where there would be a
problem if ultra-low sulfur diesel has less lubricating properties than the
old stuff. But if memory serves me right, it's the paraffin in the diesel
that is a lubricant, not the sulfur.
Also, rotary pumps rarely last more
Uh, I'm not sure where that number came from, but
you're not going to get one from the Apple refurb
store for $18. Current refurb price is $79.
MacDan
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Interesting. If I didn't have several Linksys
hubs already, I'd try it.
$18 is pretty cheap for anything from
Roasting green chiles. I bought a 30 pound bag of mild Hatch green chiles
at our local supermarket and had the fellow out front roast them in his
roaster. We've spent the evening peeling and cleaning them. They're quite
good! If we make it to the RustyQ in Iowa, I'll bring some along.
Craig
What do the chile roasters use for fuel?
On 8/26/07, Craig McCluskey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Roasting green chiles. I bought a 30 pound bag of mild Hatch green chiles
at our local supermarket and had the fellow out front roast them in his
roaster. We've spent the evening peeling and cleaning
Why reinvent the wheel?
Wheel invention is my specialty!
with IE as I haven't been able to make his indexes reliably open pdf's
in a separate Acrobat window under Firefox.
That's why my script called out Mozilla: for whatever reason
Firefox insists on Acrobat 6 or nothing, won't use Preview
On Sun, 26 Aug 2007 23:09:04 -0400 andrew strasfogel
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What do the chile roasters use for fuel?
A 500 gallon tank of propane.
On 8/26/07, Craig McCluskey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Roasting green chiles. I bought a 30 pound bag of mild Hatch green
chiles at our
No loss of efficiency over very long runs. At the
school that I work at, we have a number of
intermediate data frames in each building, and the
fiber runs between these and the main data frame are
easily 100+ feet or more.
At work we have miles of fiber on spools for testing.
Works great,
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