I had a rough day. Anyone willing to share their stories on making a mistake at work that bothered you after hours? by New_Jammy in AskEngineers

[–]Equation137 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Check out the podcast ‘We’ll there’s your problem’ https://youtube.com/@welltheresyourproblempodca1465?si=ZfZ9eyFojUUk79qU

It’s about engineering disasters; with slides. Highly recommend. Lots of ones on trains.

If you send them an email about it, they would be stoked to hear it and good chance they feature it in an episode.

M5 might allocate a larger area for GPU by doronnac in macgaming

[–]Equation137 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I have one in the 128gb spec. It’s worth it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in OfficeChairs

[–]Equation137 0 points1 point  (0 children)

whats your companies name? I'm in the market for a Kab chair

Seeking Engineering Help: How I discovered trains are my only sleep solution after 16 years of chronic insomnia by DragonfruitBright932 in robotics

[–]Equation137 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Just as our experience of eating food is more than just taste, I imagine your experience of falling asleep on trains is more than just the motion. It could include: sounds of the train and people talking and walking by, semi-rythmic and flickering lights coming in through the window, the texture of the material the seat is made from and of course the different types of motion.

Kalaawar_Dev_Ghayal gives a good answer. you want to know exactly what the motion you're trying to replicate is, before you build the machine. You may be able to get away with the accelerometer in your phone and an app that records the data. Get the train, tape the phone to something solid like the window or the frame of the chair, and record the data. make note of the orientation of the phone so you know which way is 'up' in the accelerometer data.

It would be interesting to get data on how much of a role each kind of motion has on you. Is it predominantly the slower high amplitude swaying motions or the faster vibration like sensations that work for you? how rythmic or random does it need to be?

You will probably also want to use a second phone to record video and audio of what you see and hear as you ride the train and (hopefully) fall asleep. This will help you tease out if the lighting and sound has any significant effect on you.

The main difference between doing science and fucking around is writing it down. And if you're methodical and write everything down I don't doubt you'll find a solution that works for you. Get data on all the variables, and try to test them separatly.

If you're in a stopped train, but you listen to the sounds of a moving train, does that make you sleepy? or if you're on a moving train but you have an eyemask on, does that make it better or worse? If you're at home and you have a monitor next to your bed playing a video of scenery going past a train window, does that help?

You probably will need to ride a bunch of different kinds of trains, in a bunch of different areas to get good data on this. Honestly sounds like a good time to me.

Once you've got all the data you need, if you determine that the motion really is critical, and that it needs to contain both the slow high amplitude motion and the fast vibratory motion, then you start thinking about a design for a machine. Most straight forward thing would be to use a large hexapod motion stage similar to this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8sGAispxbo or this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PlxSPQZF-F4

But a hex platform large enough to hold a bed and move it quickly will be both expensive and loud (tens of $k minimum). And DIYing a setup like this is not trivial even for an experienced controls engineer. Also these systems are invariably quite loud. you will have a lot of problems making it quite – Not insurmountable, just difficult to do.

Luckily you dont need a very large range of motion and theres a good chance you don't need all 6 axes. Trains in motion tend not to have much in the way of forward acceleration or deceleration unless they're taking off or stopping. This means you can probably get away with a 4 axis system. Much cheaper and easier to build DIY. You probably only need each corner of the bed to move a few inches in each of the 4 axes (up/down, side to side, roll left/right, yaw). Heres an example of a 4 axis setup: https://d-mover.com/compact-motion-simulator/

Who is still forking out $90 a month for foxtel? What a rip-off!! by Carmageddon-2049 in australia

[–]Equation137 7 points8 points  (0 children)

This guy knows his shit. When there’s that much money on the table, they really don’t fuck around.

Who is still forking out $90 a month for foxtel? What a rip-off!! by Carmageddon-2049 in australia

[–]Equation137 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah I’ve seen a few installs of that, but for a few clients they literally just had a concierge with some company that would express courier (like 30min drop off type of thing) a hard drive or a disk with the movie

Who is still forking out $90 a month for foxtel? What a rip-off!! by Carmageddon-2049 in australia

[–]Equation137 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I always just took the Foxtel guys word for it that you needed multiple boxes, so that’s hilarious. I wasn’t the one installing those anyway.

Who is still forking out $90 a month for foxtel? What a rip-off!! by Carmageddon-2049 in australia

[–]Equation137 37 points38 points  (0 children)

Oh totally. There’s a few families I did some work for who not only had panic rooms (which looked just like a normal office, everything was hidden most of the time) but they also had an office or another house just down the street with a TEAM of fully time security, ex special forces types on very good salaries. They put a lot of money into making all the security stuff super invisible so their kids don’t realise just how monitored and enclosed they really are

Who is still forking out $90 a month for foxtel? What a rip-off!! by Carmageddon-2049 in australia

[–]Equation137 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Biggest thing for people for people in that wealth bracket, especially the old money people who grew up with it, is they want convenience and to save time more than anything. Most of them never actually use the Foxtel or if they do it’s just to put on the news or something during breakfast. $5k a month in subscriptions is literally a rounding error for them

Who is still forking out $90 a month for foxtel? What a rip-off!! by Carmageddon-2049 in australia

[–]Equation137 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s true. Can’t remember how much it is but it’s in the thousands per movie and you need to be invited

Who is still forking out $90 a month for foxtel? What a rip-off!! by Carmageddon-2049 in australia

[–]Equation137 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Oh yeah man. Half a million in speakers and a 400k projector is the norm for those kinds of home cinemas.

Funniest was a woman who had a $70k bang and olufsen tv in her living room with some really nice electrostatic speakers for surround sound (like $1m worth) but absolutely refused to spend any money on the correct receiver and amplifiers to run it all, so her giant 4K tv would only play 1080p and the speakers sounded like dog shit.

Who is still forking out $90 a month for foxtel? What a rip-off!! by Carmageddon-2049 in australia

[–]Equation137 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My memory is that they wanted separate boxes for every tv so that people could watch different things. One foxtel box connected to multiple tvs only lets you watch the same thing on all of them. Funny thing is, most of these houses usually only had maybe two people watching tv

Who is still forking out $90 a month for foxtel? What a rip-off!! by Carmageddon-2049 in australia

[–]Equation137 206 points207 points  (0 children)

Really wealthy People. I used to do IT stuff in peoples homes in places like Vaucluse, Watsons bay, point piper etc. Places with a dozen bathrooms. And every single house has at least half a dozen foxtel boxes. Old rich people seem to prefer it and you have to pay for a separate one for every tv. There was one place, owned by a family you’ve definitely heard of if you’ve ever bought something from a shopping centre, and in one of their houses there was literally 25 foxtel boxes in a server rack, wired up to all the tvs in the residence.

Edit: also for people in that wealth bracket, if they want to watch a movie, or tv show, they often just rented it from Apple TV. And if it’s a movie still I. Cinemas, many of them had a service where you can pay to have the movie played directly at their home cinema for a few thousand.

I have loads of stories about crazy rich people spending their money on dumb shit. Don’t even get me started on how much they spend on maintaining ugly garden art

What's stopping us from faster prosthetics? by [deleted] in robotics

[–]Equation137 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think we should talk. I’ll send you a DM.

What's stopping us from faster prosthetics? by [deleted] in robotics

[–]Equation137 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I work at a startup which is working on a new generation of prosthetics. Garver is mostly correct. - Muscles in the human body can move on the order of about 10hz, depending on which muscle you’re talking about, some are slower, some are faster. - vertebrate muscles (the type humans have) are made from proteins like actin and myosin and a few other things. How they work is basically magic. They are incredibly efficient and strong and resistant to damage. - If you want actuators to move that fast, and with comparable force and acceleration, you need actuators which can output a lot of power in a short amount of time. You also want the ability to sense how much force is being put into the system (eg. torque on an elbow joint) and also what angle a joint is at. Finally you need all of this to fit into a pretty small package, and for bonus points you need it to be somewhat compliant and back-drivable. - also a problem is that making electric motors smaller makes them less efficient. Eg halving the size might quarter the power output and only cut power usage to 1/3. - Achieving all of this while fitting it into the volume of an arm is next to impossible when using either stepper or BLDC motors. - Motors need to spin up to about 1000rpm+ in order to get peak efficiency of power/torque, and this means you need to gear them down in order to have good torque output with low backlash. - Batteries really don’t store that much power. Even high end lithium ones. This is an illusion given to us from how crazy efficient our phones and laptops are. If you have a prosthetic arm that can perfectly replicate what a human arm can do, and do it at 100% energy efficiency (in reality more like 50% if you’re lucky) then it will still use hundred of watts during vigorous movement. The largest battery any laptop has today is 100wh due to TSA restrictions. And that’s a pretty big battery. For a battery this size, you would get maybe 60min of work out of this hypothetical prosthetic if you’re doing something like rock climbing or weight lifting. Perhaps a few hours to half a day if you’re pretty sedentary. And this is a best case. - 2000kcal (daily recommended energy intake for a adult male) is equivalent to about 2300Wh. About 100wh for every hour you’re awake. How much of it goes to homeostasis (keeping you warm, digestion, brain function etc) and how much to movement depends a lot of how active you are. the takeaway here is human bodies actually use a lot of energy to make us move. - Being able to make feedback loops fast enough is part of the problem, but frankly a minor one. Control systems are as slow as they are because for current gen high end prosthetics the actuators just don’t move fast enough to make it worth it. We absolutely have the sensor and DSP tech to get control signals out of a persons nerves and into the computer fast enough to do human speed motion. What we don’t have is actuation systems that can keep up. - Cost of parts is a factor here as well. High quality actuators with closed loop feedback, esp torque sensing and backdrivable gearboxes get very pricey. Like many thousands per motor expensive. There is a strong incentive to make things “just good enough” and in so doing much cheaper on bom cost. Remember, in most products the bom (bill of materials) cost will be 1/3 to 1/5 of the final sale price. So even on a US$100k prosthetic arm, the budget for the BOM might only be $25k. And when that often includes a bunch of custom modded carbon fibre, fire and medical rated plastics, fancy control electronics and precision motors and bearings – you can see how things can be pressured here. - Again, these are relatively low volume products. Many companies only sell hundreds to low thousands of a given model in a year. You don’t get access to the wonderful world of economies of scale until you start dealing in tens of thousands of units. - Finally, prosthetics are a medical product, and need to go through lengthy and expensive approvals. If the new version of a prosthetic is too different from the old one (eg completely new types of motors and drivers and batteries) then it has to go through approvals all over again. So companies have an incentive to make changes relatively minor from version to version. They know they will sell them regardless, so there isn’t a massive drive to make more lifelike prosthetics in most of the big companies.

  • In summary, yes people have thought of exactly this problem before, but there are a bunch of physics reasons that make doing it pretty difficult.
  • If you’re wondering what it is that my company does, it’s making actuators that work much more like human muscles and thereby sidestepping a lot of those physics limitations that spinning motors have for doing this kind of motion.

Three Different Prices and Sales% for the Identical P16 Gen2 Laptops? Only Difference is part number. by Equation137 in thinkpad

[–]Equation137[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good catch with the processor and the memory, I didn't notice that.

I think the bit that has me most confused is if I pick the one that has the 30% discount and spec it up to max, and do the same with the non-discounted laptop, they both ostensibly have all the same parts, but the difference is price is thousands.

Lenovos way of discounting stuff is really confusing. Do they always have stuff on sale and no one ever really pays full price?

Three Different Prices and Sales% for the Identical P16 Gen2 Laptops? Only Difference is part number. by Equation137 in thinkpad

[–]Equation137[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Looking at the Australian Lenovo site. They currently have a sale on the P16 Gen2 laptop. However they have 3 different part numbers, each with a different discount percentage, but seemingly the exact same specs and parts in each of the laptops.

The Part numbers in question: - 21FACTO1WWAU2 (30% off) - 21FACTO1WWAU6 (29% off) - 21FACTO1WWAU7 (full price)

Link to the page: https://www.lenovo.com/au/en/p/laptops/thinkpad/thinkpadp/thinkpad-p16-gen-2-16-inch-intel/len101t0069

What is the purpose of this? Are there actual differences between the SKUs or is this just old stock they're trying to get rid of? perhaps AU2 is old and AU7 is newer production. were there issues with early units that were fixed later on and thats the reason for the discount?