c_hegge wrote:Cool. Did the cable fix the problem?
Not yet, as I'm pretty sure what's happening now is a PC edition of the "earth loop" problem infamous in the professional audio world for mains-induced hum. Only, in this case the signals flowing through the loop (in this case
within the PC involved) are caused by the current draw of the PC's own internal components, which produce a combination of whining (from HDD spindle motors as mentioned) and harsh buzzes (from the solid-state energy users). I will have to actually tie the return wire and shield together to get results from here, so for the interim I'll just have to use an extension cable.
Anyway, it's ultimately much more efficient to
not have to consciously pick between "choices" that have the same actual meaning, like English (for starters) demands. The traditional languages in general are basically too fragile to make it in the information age: I'm tired of the arms-race and of having to apologise (over and over
and over) for the mishearing and confusion, along with getting interrupted off-guard by their dependence on arbitrary wait delays; with the conclusion being that I'm seriously considering embracing Esperanto (even if it's not the absolute design winner in its own category).
Honestly: Screw "eloquence" (I've practically quit it already). I will only continue actively using the English language as a "stop-gap" measure, and one that will be terminated in due course (after a 10-year transition span?); I have already stopped
thinking in it, despite the time taken (usually exceeding the patience of English-thinkers during vocal conversation, no less) to accurately "translate" it back and forth in my mind. My ability to make good decisions under low stress will ultimately take precedence over short-term communication, and even
completely bailing out of vocal conversation in English may prove worth the sacrifice. This works on basically the same underlying philosophical principle that applies to CISC (the stop-gap measure, which is still used by PC CPUs
ages past its time, undoubtedly wasting a substantial amount of electricity) vs. RISC (the eventual leader), only with the added "extra" of the traditional method outright having
lost the smaller details — which hasn't exactly worked out, has it?
If all else fails to get software to operate as I want it to, I
will resort to searching for hacks to correct it; the means of achieving the end aren't the ultimate issue, provided the
results in the end are correct, logical and fair. The superstition towards the term "hack" is about as logical as the "reasoning" behind RoHS — which itself was basically the same "treatment" that was applied earlier on to swear words, by the way. For the comic relief we all practically need to make up for all the boringly and frustratingly illogical realities of society's current state, let's look back and admire that double-layer joke from
episode 4 of Red Dwarf I:
Rimmer (saying the punctuation out loud): After intensive investigation, of the markings of the alien pod, it has become clear, to me, that we are dealing, with a species of awesome intellect:
Holly: Good. Perhaps they might be able to give you a hand with your punctuation…
Rimmer: Shut up!
Amusement to both camps.
Oh, and on a critical note: The ultimate philosophy of the PC as a platform, the one that makes it so empowering, is its status as a device that you can use however you want, without it ever deliberately disabling itself for reasons beyond your control. So if the "Trusted" Computing Group indeed gets their much-speculated way of strictly controlling how it's used, we will lose one of the few available means to true freedom — which would ultimately be a complete disaster, never worth risking under any circumstances. If that did become the case, I would
literally never buy another new PC.
And you're aware of the distinction between "consumer"- and "professional"-grade versions of devices, right? Swap "consumer" for "casual" and you'll have the more realistic version, as to imply that this type of hardware is "consumable" is ultimately ridiculous as much as anything else.
I've seen tin-plated connectors that should be gold-plated (this basically covers most types of sensitive signal transmission), gold-plated connectors where the standard is tin anyway so you get no actual benefit (e.g. PSU power connections)…so I'm quite familiar with a vast array of things that aren't done right.
Information is far more fragile than the HDDs it's stored on. Being an afterthought is no excuse for a bad product.
My PC: Core i3 4130 on GA‑H87M‑D3H with GT640 OC 2GiB and 2 * 8GiB Kingston HyperX 1600MHz, Kingston SA400S37120G and WD3003FZEX‑00Z4SA0, Pioneer BDR‑209DBKS and Optiarc AD‑7200S, Seasonic G‑360, Chenbro PC31031, Linux Mint Cinnamon 20.3.