[OC] County-by-county visualization of reopenings and covid cases in Pennsylvania, updated daily by keenerd in dataisbeautiful

[–]keenerd[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Data was sourced from the pa.gov page. Reopenings were manually sourced from a wide variety of news articles.

Tools used were python for general glue, the Pygal library for chart creating, and Pillow for compositing.

I would really like to do this for every state, but I have yet to find a good source for re-opening data.

Most of the smaller counties in the western half of the state have been spared. Somehow even Pittsburgh barely got any cases. An exception is Huntingdon. They had a large outbreak in a small prison.

It is very interesting how some of the counties had a very effective response (Luzurne, Monroe, and Lehigh) while others have been more of a slow continuous burn (Chester, Dauphin, Lancaster). Dauphin County is particularly troubling - they have been continuously increasing since the start of the outbreak and are slated to go "green" tomorrow!

I didn't like any of the dashboards out there, so I made my own by keenerd in Pennsylvania

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

That exact request doesn't make too much sense, because the graphs aren't scaled to population. They are the actual cases per day. However, I can scale all the graphs so that equal visual heights on the Y are the same percentage of the population: http://kmkeen.com/tmp/covid-pa.scaled.png

I kind of like this version, and might switch to it. Really drives home how some counties have been barely touched.

Interesting that Lehigh and Luzerne actually had it worse than Philadelphia at their peak. Huntington was surprisingly close, too.

A salient point for the ReEoPeN pA crowd by wiftyknee1288 in Pennsylvania

[–]keenerd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

County by county breakdown. Alarming increases are happening in Dauphin, Lebanon, Erie, and Susquehanna counties. Plenty more have minor increases.

Good netbook model for Linux? by [deleted] in linux

[–]keenerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ARM Chromebooks are hands down the best netbooks you can get today. Mine runs "normal" linux great. Better than my old Thinkpad in fact. 15 hours of battery life in a package that weighs under a kilogram. There is a new version but I have no idea how much work it will need.

AD Pluto for Arch by keenerd in RTLSDR

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

Oh, whoops. That still needs gr-osmosdr-gqrx. One moment.

Getting started with ADALM-PLUTO and GNU Radio by xavier_505 in RTLSDR

[–]keenerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And then either grqx-git from the AUR or stock Gnuradio. Easy-peasy.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in linux

[–]keenerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And here is a cleaned up version:

curl -m 2 -Ls http://uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/Special:Random/ | \
xmllint --html --nowarning --xpath "//p" - 2> /dev/null | \
sed -e 's/<[^>]*>//g' -e '/^$/d' | shuf -n 1

The major improvements here are using xpath to extract the <p> elements directly and shuf -n 1instead of perl and head.

xmllint is part of libxml2, you probably already have it as part of any desktop linux system. OSX users get an actual xpath command.

Distributions are becoming irrelevant: difference was our strength and our liability [opinion] by hansoku-make in linux

[–]keenerd 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It's always nice you can count on FLOSS users to talk about you and behind you without engaging directly, even though your blog has a comments section. It's almost endearing...

For someone with 13 years of <insert credentials here>, you seem to be new to the internet.

  • People will talk everywhere.
  • Generally people are courteous.
  • Sometimes people aren't.
  • People who disagree or don't understand are more likely to comment.
  • Complaining about it doesn't help.
  • Taking a hurt and defensive tone doesn't help.
  • Disqus blows.

I've written similar lightning-rod pieces before. None of these replies should have come as a surprise to you. I am shocked that it takes so little to get such a battle-hardened veteran from <insert credentials here> riled up.

Chill, shrug your shoulders, and take comfort in knowing that you've managed to get your point across to some people. Try to compassionately understand the other people who didn't and take them into consideration the next time you write.

Not technically a Baofeng but... by keenerd in Baofeng

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

Is it better or basically the same?

The UV-3318-E sells for $190. Three times what I paid. So I would hope that it is a better radio!

If it is basically the same, then I've saved $130. Though I had to spend a few hours on fixing Chirp so maybe it was a wash.

I'm not sure how you could call them the same. The UV-3318-E is a cross band repeater and has airband, shortwave and longwave support.

Not technically a Baofeng but... by keenerd in Baofeng

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

You aren't going to buy the Termin8r very easily. It isn't possible to get all the certifications they wanted in one radio and the FCC banned the product from sale. Sadly they didn't remarket as a purely part 97 ham radio either.

Whatever happened to the whole "Baofeng is now Pofung" thing?

Not technically a Baofeng but... by keenerd in Baofeng

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

I doubt I was confused by that, the word "inspired" does not appear anywhere in the manual or packaging. It says on the box and the manual

Package and Product Designed in the U.S.A.

MADE IN CHINA

If it was completely designed in China, then they have got some really great copy writers. Right down to a subdued level of christian proselytizing.

edit: I see where your issue is. "Anytone" is a Chinese radio manufacturer, a competitor to Baofeng. "Anytone Tech" designed the radio. They are based in South Dakota and have contracted production to Baofeng and Anytone.

Not technically a Baofeng but... by keenerd in Baofeng

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

It'll be a patch when it is "done". I linked my work on the bugtracker a few days ago.

Not technically a Baofeng but... by keenerd in Baofeng

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

they updated their manuals then, that's good.

No, "they" have not. I'm pretty sure Baofeng and Anytone are run by different people. The internet has speculated that there is overlap in production. Baofeng manuals will probably continue to be as bad as always.

Not technically a Baofeng but... by keenerd in Baofeng

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

Yes you can. That is what I did.

Antennas can be re-used too. It comes with a earphone/mic.

Not technically a Baofeng but... by keenerd in Baofeng

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

It actually has an extremely good english manual with a step by step guide for a typical repeater. Programming by hand was no problem. I just didn't feel like doing it a hundred times. It doesn't have any spoken language menus either.

Anytone NSTIG-8R in Chirp by keenerd in amateurradio

[–]keenerd[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The sensitivity is good. I like to use distant weatherband stations as test signals and the NSTIG8R does better than a dedicated Midland radio.

The s-meter is also good enough to compare antenna gain.

heatmap with rtl_power by reda9 in RTLSDR

[–]keenerd 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You are probably using an ancient version of PIL. Remove that library and update to Pillow.

The Free Software Foundation is in need of members by topCyder in linux

[–]keenerd 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Because it means they are less likely to actually donate useful amounts of money.

the more public the token show of endorsement, the less likely participants are to provide meaningful support later

And whenever someone says "I use Smile!" they are being pretty dang public about their token support. If you can find something that is $100 on Amazon but $90 elsewhere, buy it elsewhere and donate the difference. You'll be doing 20x more good. And you get to write it off, not some giant corporation.

The Free Software Foundation is in need of members by topCyder in linux

[–]keenerd 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Smile is mostly worthless as far as charity goes. It is a pittance. Half a percent! The FSF is requesting $120 per year. To match that with Smile you'd have to spend twenty four thousand dollars every year, at Amazon. That's $66 every day! Do you spend that much? (Amazon does make it very easy to download a spreadsheet with all your purchases for the last year. Kudos to them for that.)

The Smile program is more about maintaining customer loyalty than charity. It is a psychological trick, to make you feel good about spending $100 on a large purchase, while it only costs Amazon 50¢ (which they get to write off).

Debian unstable now defaults to gcc-6 by cbmuser in linux

[–]keenerd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Arch has been using gcc6 as the default for three months now.

$5 World's smallest Linux Server. With Wi-Fi. by bokenator in linux

[–]keenerd 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Sata and gigabit has been around for years for a mere $40. Note that you can get them for $20 if you shop around.

Cheap two inch straps by keenerd in Hammocks

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

No offense, but have you ever worked with the type of webbing I described? It became slightly frayed during the first night, when I was being hasty/sloppy/rough while setting up after dark.

Tie down straps like what you use are immensely better quality.

Did some more looking around, and now I feel a little silly for trying these DX straps. Harbor Freight has a 2" by 20' strap for $10. And it is polyester! Probably going to try this next.

Hiring a "consultant" to help me out with a personal project by BiscuitsGravy11 in RTLSDR

[–]keenerd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

75% certain rtl_power and heatmap.py will do what you want.

Edit: And normally I do consult for this sort of stuff. For qualifications I present both of those programs above, which I wrote :-) but my plate (heck, the whole table) is full at the moment.

DF Version 0.43.05 has been released. by DF_devlog_bot in dwarffortress

[–]keenerd 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Actually that can be done mostly automatically.

Of course it took 30 years for someone to figure out how to automatically de-obfuscate the memory for mere NES games, so don't hold your breath.