10-29-2018 10:59 AM
@Intaris wrote:
I really shouldn't be butting in.....
...
Spoiler
My son just read a book for school "The man who refused to hate" about a concentration camp survivor (Schlomo Graber). One paragraph in the book has the author questioning the humanity of his captors. He wonders, given exposure to the same environment and culture, if he wouldn't also be capable of such crimes. He doesn't have compassion for his captors, but he refuses to boil it all down to "evil". He analyses. And this analysis is a major part in how he managed to resist the urge to hate, which must have been so huge.
I heard a quote from one of the als to those that were counted as Righteous Amung the Nations whow as asked what made her different?
Paraphrasing her reply she said;
"The righteous did not suddenly become righteous but refused to go over the cliff with everyone else."
Ben
10-29-2018 11:01 AM
@jcarmody wrote:
...History repeats iteslf, regardless of whether we study it or not.
I heard a variation on that quote that goes;
"History does not repeat itself but it does rhyme."
Ben
10-30-2018 06:28 AM
Another great Pittsburgher I like, Salena Zito posted this on Twitter Sunday.
11-05-2018 07:54 AM - edited 11-05-2018 07:55 AM
@PaulG. wrote:
Another great Pittsburgher I like, Salena Zito posted this on Twitter Sunday.
We attended a show on Saturday where all of the proceeds went to the local Jewish Community and the Pittsburgh Police. One thought that was shared to help reduce the amount of outrage that is present in the social media.
THINK before you post as in;
T - Truthful
H - Helpful
I - Inspiring
N - Necessary
K - Kind
I thought is was worth sharing,
Ben
11-28-2018 11:34 AM
I was checking out a company that does shielding and such. RF as I expected but then they offer Faraday cages and...
So we do not have to make our own tin-foil hats anymore!
Ben
12-03-2018 06:56 AM
@Ben wrote:
I was checking out a company that does shielding and such. RF as I expected but then they offer Faraday cages and...
First person I thought of was Chuck McGill.
12-03-2018 11:30 AM
@Ben wrote:
I was checking out a company that does shielding and such. RF as I expected but then they offer Faraday cages and...
I wonder what happens if you get hit by lighting .... 😮
(One one hand, you are probably a magnet for it, but on the other had, it might protect you...)
12-03-2018 11:38 AM
@altenbach wrote:
@Ben wrote:
I was checking out a company that does shielding and such. RF as I expected but then they offer Faraday cages and...
I wonder what happens if you get hit by lighting .... 😮
(One one hand, you are probably a magnet for it, but on the other had, it might protect you...)
The current will pass around you but, you'll likely be burned by the heat
12-03-2018 01:52 PM
@JÞB wrote:
@altenbach wrote:
@Ben wrote:
I was checking out a company that does shielding and such. RF as I expected but then they offer Faraday cages and...
I wonder what happens if you get hit by lighting .... 😮
(One one hand, you are probably a magnet for it, but on the other had, it might protect you...)
The current will pass around you but, you'll likely be burned by the heat
The good news is regardless if you die from the lightning, the cell phone in your pocket should survive.
Ben
12-16-2018 01:25 PM
Hello Everyone! 🙂
I am a bit absent from the forum in the last months, since I do not work with LV anymore. I was doing some beginner courses in C# in the last couple of months, and it is really enjoyable! 🙂 However, there are things which feel really awkward to digest/learn after working with LV for years. Like my brain still cannot really see through the text code as good as a block diagram!! Also, fighting to understand the different ways how to program thread safe (GUI vs background processes and access control), parallel, async, etc. In such areas, I can really see now the power of LabVIEW...
On the upside, I think I just started to really grasp the idea of Object Oriented Programming, which I was never able to do through LV. But I guess it has to do with that we have a very good C# teacher. OOP started to make sense finally to me, haha 🙂
Beside these new challenges and courses in C#, and of course learning semiconductor physics/metrology as my main role at my new work place, I really hope I will have the chance in the future to learn and use LV on, to further levels... 🙂 The things I learn in OOP via C#, might help me later in LV to "jump the barrier"...
Since I do not visit these forum boards that often any more, I would like to wish a Merry Christmas, and a Happy New Year to all of you! 🙂