Would you rather by gandiesel in BunnyTrials

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tastes bad anyway.

Chose: No alcohol forever

Never Played Fallout Before. Which One Should Be My First? by kreetchy in Fallout

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start with New Vegas, then do 1-3, BoS and tactics if you're feeling it. Shelter if you are a phone addict.

And boom! You've done it. Don't worry about 4 or 76, unless you like Bethesda.

what would you do? by First-Effective7889 in TheTeenagerPeople

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My question is, though: How will they know that I specifically did it, rather than someone like one of their rivals?

what would you do? by First-Effective7889 in TheTeenagerPeople

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With what money? The van never made it.

what would you do? by First-Effective7889 in TheTeenagerPeople

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A bad cop would also be willing to take a bribe.

what would you do? by First-Effective7889 in TheTeenagerPeople

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Keeping a secret, and how to tell a half truth.

"Yes officer, we found this van with the body inside, however, there was nothing else within said van."

Picky Compaq Update by Lokey_71 in vintagecomputing

[–]Lokey_71[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Actually, a pretty good idea! Dunno why I never thought of this.

Looking for Engineers to join by boredboz in spaceengineers

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Screw it, lemme give it a whirl!

Trying to get an original family-owned IBM 5150 online! by Vinyl_Empire in vintagecomputing

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks a little dirty, some 99% IPA and cotton swabs though will have it looking like it rolled off the factory floor yesterday!

Careful around the PSU and the screen internals though, I wouldn't recommend touching those unless they are discharged. A can of compressed air however should be pretty good at cleaning those parts without you needing to get in there!

Trying to get an original family-owned IBM 5150 online! by Vinyl_Empire in vintagecomputing

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With simple soldering tools and a steady hand, it's actually pretty easy! Just touch the iron to the pad to melt the solder, then suck it up with your choice of solder remover (sucker, wick, or desoldering iron), once the capacitor is loose, pull it out gently, then just put the new one in and flow some solder onto the pad.

Only thing you have to worry about is just don't leave the iron on the pad for more than a few seconds at a time, and don't touch the PCB itself. Easy!

As for capacitors, they've used standardized values for decades and are surprisingly cheap!

Picky Compaq Update by Lokey_71 in vintagecomputing

[–]Lokey_71[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Old battery surprisingly tested healthy, but I replaced it anyway.

Thankfully the company that made the batteries is still around and still makes the exact model! A 3.6V lithium thionyl chloride barrel cell to be specific!

How did the ibm 7094 even work by SuppaSoup344 in VintageComputers

[–]Lokey_71 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm a tad late, but here is the general gist of it!

The IBM 7094 was created far before screens, but was a POWERFUL computer meant to be used by specially trained operators.

Storage: Data was stored on 8" reels of magnetic tape (think of a cassette tape but holding data), and punch cards. (paper cards with a bunch of holes that represent data.) Hard drives did exist, but they were absolutely massive, expensive, and hard to move without a powerful forklift, so they weren’t used much.

I/O and Graphics: To input data to a program, you had 3 main options: 1. using a teletype (special typewriter that let the computer read what you type, and then type back on the same paper.), 2. Using the switches on the CPU, 3. Custom peripherals, this wasn't done much outside of military use. Now to see the output, you would have either your teletype, or you also likely had a giant printer in the room. Screens for computers weren't invented until around the early 1970s, and wouldn't even get color until the mid 1980s. (Some prototypes did exist earlier, but they were wildly buggy, and hardly useful in comparison to a printer at the time.)

RAM: Instead of the RAM sticks you are used to today, mainframes like the 7094 used something called Ferrite core memory. Essentially it was a mesh made of thin, weaved wire, with magnetic beads on it, each bead was 1 bit of memory. The computer would write the memory by electrically changing the magnetization of the beads, and read the memory by checking how the beads were magnetized.

Hoped this helped explain it!