> This is actually pretty interesting to me.  The questions of how to choose
> an RTOS and how to handle power management seem to be relevant engineering
> topics when discussing the 5370 processor boards.  It's not an academic
> question in the professional world, where certain instruments I won't name

Hi John,

It's very interesting to me too! And, yes, threads like this belong on 
time-nuts -- as long as the postings are constructive, educational, and 
friendly.

What happened in this case is that thread degraded to the point where people 
were arguing about batteries and sync'ing file systems. Then I start sending 
emails in private, and when that doesn't work I suggest the thread stays 
on-topic or ends, and when that doesn't work we turn on full moderation until 
the list quiets down.

This case is especially awkward when a hero (John Seamons) freely shares an 
incredibly cool project with the list and then instead of a gradual, 
constructive series of confirming measurements or accolades from group members, 
his design is quickly peppered with accusations about a minor potential problem 
by people that probably don't even own a 5370 or haven't ordered his kit yet. 
It's at this point I jump in an play referee or group nanny.

Our time-nuts list works really well when the postings are few and each one 
conveys either an on-topic question or a really interesting, well-researched, 
informative set of answers from people who share their hard-earned experience 
with the rest of us.

The list starts to fail, and actually repel good members, when people make 
cheap postings that don't reflect any research or lab experiments or 
measurement or life experiences. I would rather read one belated posting by 
someone who describes how they actually faced and solved a problem than dozens 
of live postings about what might be problems that someone else should have 
solved. The goal is to keep the group as practical, numerical, experimentation, 
and communal as possible.

The S/N ratio degrades when there are too many postings from the couch instead 
of the bench.

Anyway, if you or anyone else on the list has serious experience with modern 
embedded OS's for T&F instrumentation, please start a thread and share it with 
the group, or pass along white papers, product manuals, requirements, etc.

Thanks,
/tvb

p.s. My TSC 5110A has worked fine for a decade using freeBSD running off a CF 
card. It's the 5120A that always seems to have issues. On my bucket list is to 
capture all IDE traffic to/from the CF card on these units and see first-hand 
were the problem is.


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