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Great Battery Book on Usenet
From time to time the heated discussions on this newsgroup about those
mysterious chemical boxes under the settee that keep the lights on arises. Well, over on alt.binaries.e-book.technical someone has posted: Electric Vehicle Battery Systems - S. Dhameja (Newnes, 2001) WW.pdf which my robot dutifully downloaded this morning with its big load of books/manuals/etc., I'll probably never have time to read. This one caught my eye so I opened it (Adobe Acrobat Reader for the pdf file). Aimed at the electric vehicle market, it discusses a wide variety of lead-acid, Ni-Cd, Ni-MH and more exotic new battery technologies up to its 2001 publishing date. It's a fantastic read for those interested in why we can't recharge the house batteries in 30 seconds with a 5000A alternator, or why the batteries wear out. It goes into great detail, without going into page- after-page of advanced mathmatics, on how the beasts operate, what their inherent limitations and drawbacks are and how to maximize their utility. For those not all uptight about downloading copyrighted materials from Usenet (where everything is illegal to download, not just pictures of naked little girls), it's worth the effort to retrieve it. alt.binaries.e-book.technical is a VAST, continuing library of books on all kinds of topics. You wood polishers will be impressed at the array of woodworking books and magazines that constantly appear. A couple of naval museums are posting a vast array of seamanship, knot tying, and other nautical books over 100 years old someone took the time to scan into pdf or chm (Micro$oft has a free reader) formats. Books in RAR file sets, like the new Janes Fighting Ships posted a couple days ago, require WinRAR to decode and assemble the resulting set of rar files. This is a proprietary, and very popular, file splitting and compression program from www.rarlabs.com and well worth the pittance price if you intend to download a lot. To download and decode binaries like these, I recommend freeware Xnews from: http://xnews.newsguy.com/ Xnews, once you spend a little time reading and learning the documentation also on the website, will assemble all the message parts into a single line on the file list, in order....tell you which parts have missing pieces...que up (the Q column means Que) what you want and download them in the order you marked them...decoding whatever usenet binary encoding the posted used, automatically, storing the results where you tell it to on your hard drive. Once you've que'd the list, started the download...you simply walk away until it's finished. Once you're addicted, as I am, you'll never "finish" one newsgroup before starting another...(c; Those without good binary completion news servers, I recommend Usenetserver.com, a very professional system in Atlanta used by customers across the planet. It's $15/month or 3 months for $39...a real bargain. Completion is 98-99%, easily recoverable when you learn how to use the PAR (parity correction) files on large groups, and retain the files for over a month in massive disk drive arrays in Atlanta. www.usenetserver.com for details. Many ISPs, such as Comcast Cable, try to keep customers from actually USING the bandwidth promised by limiting their downloading, in Comcast's case, to 2GB/month, a pittance only good for text newsgroups. They block port 119, the NNTP port Usenet servers listen on, so UNS allows you to bypass that nonsense by having many different ports available to get around it. Comcast comes with 2GB/month of Giganews, a different company. They want to SELL you more...(sigh). Well, great battery book. It's only 1.2MB or so of PDF file. Those on text only news server...go buy a better system, cheapskates! -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
Maybe once you've read it you could post the concise edition ;)
"Larry" wrote This one caught my eye so I opened it (Adobe Acrobat Reader for the pdf file). Aimed at the electric vehicle market, it discusses a wide variety of lead-acid, Ni-Cd, Ni-MH and more exotic new battery technologies up to its 2001 publishing date. It's a fantastic read for those interested in why we can't recharge the house batteries in 30 seconds with a 5000A alternator, or why the batteries wear out. Well, great battery book. It's only 1.2MB or so of PDF file. Those on text only news server...go buy a better system, cheapskates! |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
Larry wrote:
From time to time the heated discussions on this newsgroup about those mysterious chemical boxes under the settee that keep the lights on arises. Well, over on alt.binaries.e-book.technical someone has posted: Electric Vehicle Battery Systems - S. Dhameja (Newnes, 2001) WW.pdf which my robot dutifully downloaded this morning with its big load of books/manuals/etc., I'll probably never have time to read. OK, I spent a couple hours monkeying around with various freeware, downloads, configuring, blah blah blah... not my idea of fun but I know you geeks love that kind of diversion. I eventually downloaded 'Electric Vehicle Battery Systems' and about a hundred other books (left it running all night) that looked interesting. Thanks. This may turn out to be a useful reference. I would recommend this only for serious geeks though. DSK |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
DSK wrote in news:z2uGg.32000$Nx4.13950
@bignews8.bellsouth.net: Thanks. This may turn out to be a useful reference. I would recommend this only for serious geeks though. You're welcome. Now that you know how, don't expect to just walk away. Once trapped in the "Binary Downloading Addiction", it's very hard to NOT download "just a little more because I'd really like to (read/hear/see) that." Don't fight it. Hard drives and DVD burners are just so cheap....(c; I see you're on DSL on Bell$not. You're well on your way to bending that bandwidth....(c; Welcome to the 21st Century! It's a helluva ride! -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
Larry wrote:
You're welcome. Now that you know how, don't expect to just walk away. Once trapped in the "Binary Downloading Addiction", it's very hard to NOT download "just a little more because I'd really like to (read/hear/see) that." Yeah well, I seem to be able to resist the "more is better" philosophy. Most people... very especialy most Americans (steeped a culture of excess)... will quickly overload on anything free. In this particular case, the usenet binary groups a great reference resource *if* you have the tools to sort through 2,000 posts a day (don't these people have a life?!?). X-news seems better than any of the dinosaur-ware I am familiar with, but I just plain don't want to spend the time. Don't fight it. Hard drives and DVD burners are just so cheap....(c; I don't like farting around with the computer that much, not my idea of fun. There's a REAL world out there! It can be scary but it's a helluva ride! Thanks again Doug King |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
DSK wrote:
Larry wrote: You're welcome. Now that you know how, don't expect to just walk away. Once trapped in the "Binary Downloading Addiction", it's very hard to NOT download "just a little more because I'd really like to (read/hear/see) that." Yeah well, I seem to be able to resist the "more is better" philosophy. Most people... very especialy most Americans (steeped a culture of excess)... will quickly overload on anything free. In this particular case, the usenet binary groups a great reference resource *if* you have the tools to sort through 2,000 posts a day (don't these people have a life?!?). X-news seems better than any of the dinosaur-ware I am familiar with, but I just plain don't want to spend the time. Don't fight it. Hard drives and DVD burners are just so cheap....(c; I don't like farting around with the computer that much, not my idea of fun. There's a REAL world out there! It can be scary but it's a helluva ride! The main value of "the real world" is human beings, not their arms or their hair or even their faces, it's their ideas. The amazing thing about computers and the internet is that computers actually concentrate and organize human ideas in such a way as to make them phenomenally more available and accessible than they've ever been. This is a good thing. Stephen |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
Stephen Trapani wrote in news:iHKGg.24$Zt7.10
@newsfe04.lga: The amazing thing about computers and the internet is that computers actually concentrate and organize human ideas in such a way as to make them phenomenally more available and accessible than they've ever been. This is a good thing. The Illuminati disagree. It makes humans far less "controllable", this internet.... -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
DSK wrote in news:4aDGg.695$T8.50
@bignews3.bellsouth.net: I don't like farting around with the computer that much, not my idea of fun. There's a REAL world out there! It can be scary but it's a helluva ride! Thanks again Doug King Over on alt.binaries.ebook.technical, today, there is a series of books whos subject begins with OSPREY-Elite sailors will find fascinating. For the last couple of hours, I've had my monster widescreen monitor in portrait mode vertically so Acrobat makes the big 21" screen a full page of the documents. "Elizabethan Sea Dogs 1560-1605" and "Queen Victoria's Commanders" are most fascinating. WW1 and WW2 are also very well covered, mostly from a British perspective. -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
Stephen Trapani wrote:
The main value of "the real world" is human beings To some extent, yeah. But the seas & rivers & forests & mountains & animals & sky are pretty cool too. .... not their arms or their hair or even their faces, it's their ideas. "Trouble not the scholar in his dusty attic, for to you the great empires of this age are mighty but to him they are to be overturned with the flick of a finger." - quote from a Renaissance philosopher whose name I can't recall.... ... The amazing thing about computers and the internet is that computers actually concentrate and organize human ideas in such a way as to make them phenomenally more available and accessible than they've ever been. This is a good thing. I agree totally... shucks, that's why I'm here! OTOH a trend that must be fought tooth and nail is the tendency to sit around and Think Big Thinks, make yak-yak, and fiddle with the computer as if it is important in itself. My company has hired six engineers in the past decade, and every last one of them thinks "work" consists of sitting on their butt in front of a computer. Only one or two have a vague idea of how to get on their feet and get things doen in the real world... otoh I shouldn't complain about this since it is my greatest job security. To be a bit more on-topic, a lesson to be drawn from many in this newsgroup is that buying a boat, fixing up a boat, talking about boats & sailing & cruising, are all fine things... but they're not the same as GOING CRUISING!! Larry wrote: Over on alt.binaries.ebook.technical, today, there is a series of books whos subject begins with OSPREY-Elite sailors will find fascinating..... "Elizabethan Sea Dogs 1560-1605" and "Queen Victoria's Commanders" are most fascinating. WW1 and WW2 are also very well covered, mostly from a British perspective. Oh yes, I noticed those, but I'm still busy downloading 150 engineering texts. In fact really useful stuff on composite structures keeps showing up faster than I can download it. As yet another example of what I'm trying to point out above, if I had found out about this last year I'd still be studying how to build my dinghy instead of 90% done building it... which reminds me, I gotta get off my butt and go to work! Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
Larry wrote:
Stephen Trapani wrote in news:iHKGg.24$Zt7.10 @newsfe04.lga: The amazing thing about computers and the internet is that computers actually concentrate and organize human ideas in such a way as to make them phenomenally more available and accessible than they've ever been. This is a good thing. The Illuminati disagree. It makes humans far less "controllable", this internet.... What makes you think they can't control this medium also. They could insert their own agents spreading dis-information while tracking down and eliminating non-conforming posters. I'd be very careful. |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
Don White wrote in news:17YGg.60$9u.2475@ursa-
nb00s0.nbnet.nb.ca: What makes you think they can't control this medium also. They could insert their own agents spreading dis-information while tracking down and eliminating non-conforming posters. I'd be very careful. Too many bloggers....regular folks. It's the old "they can't arrest us all" scenario... Case in point is Mahmood in rigidly-controlled Bahrain. It's a great read from a really nice Arab the Illuminati would really rather you didn't get to know: http://mahmood.tv He's in the video business in Bahrain and there are lots of vlogs from his website. After you read it the third time, you'd swear you were part of Mahmood's family. His regular jabs and reporting unpleasant aspects of Bahraini government bureaucrats, politicians and the royal family is very revealing about Arab society. Right now there's a big row amoungst Bahraini bloggers because the Bahraini elite, who control the telephone company internet, have cut off access to Google Earth. Google Earth recently switched from low res to very high resolution pictures of the whole island. Bahrainis could now peer OVER the compound walls of the filthy rich and look around their palaces to see where all the money has gone. It made them nervous...(c; I'm amazed these bloggers aren't all in a concentration camp. Disinformation posters are real easy to spot. The blogger community soon expose them and they are forced to back out and restart. Start reading alt.cellular.verizon and see if you can spot the company shills, who always support the company, no matter how stupid or wrong they are...in the face of consumers reporting on poor performance and service.... -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
DSK wrote in news:ARXGg.313$C6.176
@bignews1.bellsouth.net: Oh yes, I noticed those, but I'm still busy downloading 150 engineering texts. In fact really useful stuff on composite structures keeps showing up faster than I can download it. The size of the boat library you can take on a long, mostly boring voyage, on a single DVD would sink a 70' motor yacht. I loved the quotation. I forget which English economics professor said it, but back in the late 1700's he said something like: A democracy can only exist until the electorate discovers that they can vote themselves an income from the public treasury.....something to that effect. America's gone past that line many year ago.... |
Great Battery Book on Usenet
Larry wrote:
The size of the boat library you can take on a long, mostly boring voyage, on a single DVD would sink a 70' motor yacht. True. But there's something really really nice about having a book, so far no computer or little electronic gizmo has replaced it. Another nice thing is the book exchange shelf at marinas & sailing clubs. I have often found very interesting things that I would not normally have sat down to read. I loved the quotation. I forget which English economics professor said it, but back in the late 1700's he said something like: A democracy can only exist until the electorate discovers that they can vote themselves an income from the public treasury.....something to that effect. America's gone past that line many year ago.... There weren't very many English economists in the 1700s, so it's a rather small field ;) Anyway, a Roman named Seneca made an oft-quoted similar statement, employing the key phrase "bread and circuses." Rome was a republic for several hundred years and retained elements of democracy under the early & middle empire... the senators had a lot of power and universally manipulated the gov't and the military to make more money for themselves. Sort of like Halliburton only without the faudulent billing ;) Seneca: "Democracy is the greatest form of government, but destined to be short-lived because the masses will always vote for bread & circuses for themselves." Of course he said it in Latin so this phrased many different ways in English. DSK |
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