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Post by Robocop on Aug 29, 2007 18:44:14 GMT -5
I am NOT climbing in ANYONE's Dumpster!
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Post by Kei-Lin on Aug 29, 2007 18:51:16 GMT -5
Then we're never going to know.
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Post by Robocop on Aug 30, 2007 11:41:51 GMT -5
Why don't we make Jeff do it? No one likes Jeff anyway.
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Post by Kei-Lin on Aug 30, 2007 12:14:23 GMT -5
Indeed... Jeff is a wuss. Let's make him go sit in the radioactive slime.
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Post by Robocop on Aug 30, 2007 12:22:25 GMT -5
LOL
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Post by Sweet Eet on Aug 30, 2007 19:29:44 GMT -5
The Terminators are part of Skynet and cannot think for themselves, unless they are reprogrammed. Once they are reprogrammed they must follow the dictates of their programming.
They have Neural Net CPUs and can learn new stuff - but they remain limited by their programming...
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Post by Robocop on Aug 30, 2007 21:01:14 GMT -5
I know about how programming works. It's a bunch of electrical patterns, right? Which are interpreted by the motherboard as signals.
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Post by Kei-Lin on Sept 2, 2007 19:31:04 GMT -5
Robocop?? You can do programming? How's about programming the robot we're building?
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Post by Robocop on Sept 3, 2007 15:16:23 GMT -5
I can't do programming, I only know how it works
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Post by Sweet Eet on Sept 3, 2007 20:13:10 GMT -5
"I know about how programming works. It's a bunch of electrical patterns, right? Which are interpreted by the motherboard as signals."
The programming, in this case hardwired electrical pathways, is fixed on a chip and the chip is part of the motherboard. They come in two types: ROM or Read Only Memory (which cannot be altered), or RAM or Random Access Memory which can be altered). "Programming" are the instruction sets.
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Post by Robocop on Sept 3, 2007 21:39:14 GMT -5
Like CD-ROM, which is carved in and read as a softare disc and cannot be altered without being destroyed.
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Post by Sweet Eet on Sept 4, 2007 17:43:16 GMT -5
Exactly.
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Post by Robocop on Sept 4, 2007 21:23:26 GMT -5
See, I know how it works. I beat Terminator with trivia questions similar to this. I would beat him every time, but he always gets me with his knowledge of hydraulics and pneumatics...
I mean, come on! What the heck is a servo valve? And what is the typical operating pressure of a pneumatic system?
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Post by Sweet Eet on Sept 4, 2007 22:54:12 GMT -5
I mean, come on! What the heck is a servo valve? <<<< A valve which is electrically regulated
And what is the typical operating pressure of a pneumatic system? <<<<6 bar or 90 PSI
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Post by Kei-Lin on Sept 5, 2007 0:36:05 GMT -5
A servo valve is a valve that stops at exactly a certain point. Memorize it, both of you. Servo = stops at exactly a certain point.
The typical operating pressure of a pneumatic system is 10 bar, or 145 psi. And the typical operating pressure of a hydraulic system is 100 bar or 1450 psi.
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