the simulator creates and switching of the IRQ line. Makes you wonder what
a little processor could possibly be doing for a whole tenth of a second.
Tom Bales
Message: 3
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2013 00:34:49 +0100
From: Alan Melia alan.me...@btinternet.com
To: Discussion of precise time and frequency
to hear if anyone has any ideas
for getting a low-latency TTL output from this detector.
Tom Bales
Date: Mon, 09 Sep 2013 13:45:07 -0700
From: Jim Lux jim...@earthlink.net
To: time-nuts@febo.com
Subject: Re: [time-nuts] Lightning Strike Site
Message-ID: 522e3353.4020...@earthlink.net
it with
commercially-available database servers.
I figured there might be a timenut out there who happens to know the ins and
outs of SQL (there's an odd combination of skills for you), who could help
out. Any ideas are appreciated.
Tom Bales
KE4SYS, oscillating between Miami and Cape Cod
some 1455 boxes:
http://symbiosis-foundation.org/symbiosisfoundation.html.
Tom Bales
KE4SYS
On Tue, Dec 21, 2010 at 4:32 AM, time-nuts-requ...@febo.com wrote:
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Lots of snow here in Massachusetts, and some time away from work to
concentrate on cosmic rays, the PICTIC designed by Richard McCorkle,
and the family.
Tom Bales
KE4SYS
At 07:00 AM 12/25/2009, you wrote:
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time-nuts@febo.com
To subscribe
of the timestamp, and a software
means of concatenating the data for date, hour, minute, and second to
the high-resolution data from the PICTIC. Can anyone offer suggestions?
Tom Bales
Coral Gables, FL
Richard H McCorkle wrote:
Ho Ho Ho
Merry Christmas from the far north to all the
Time-Nuts
software that looks at the RS-422 output? I can see
there's data there, and it decodes to gobbledygook rather than ASCII
characters, so I suppose there's a magic decoder ring that's
needed. Sure would be nice to know what's going on inside.
Thanks,
Tom Bales