miriam_e: from my drawing MoonGirl (Default)
[personal profile] miriam_e
I was just reading about a cool computer, the new OpenRISC System-on-Chip FPGA development board that uses an Altera FPGA (Field-Programmable Gate Array).

An FPGA is a chip that contains vast numbers of logic switches (gates) that can be configured by special instructions so that it can be internally "wired up" to become almost anything you want, within the limits of the chip. Many people have begun doing amazing things like getting FPGAs to become special high-speed processors (as in the board above), or emulating whole computers (Jeri Ellsworth built an entire Commodore64 inside an FPGA).

Anyway, this OpenRISC computer, about the size of a playing card, looked very interesting to me, but being made in Sweden the price is given in Euros as €149, and I had no idea how that converted to Australian dollars, so I went to the currency converter site I usually check price conversions at: http://www.oanda.com/currency/converter/

After about half an hour the page finally loaded. The damn page contains about 2 megabytes of data. To put this in perspective, that is equivalent to all the combined text in the first 3 Harry Potter books plus half of the 4th book! That's insane! It is a case of incredibly sloppy programming. It never used to be this bad. Looks like I'll have to find a more accessible currency conversion site.

The speed of my net connection is terrible at the moment. Since my satellite modem was killed a while back by a sudden lightning storm, I've been using dial-up, and of course Telstra refuse to fix the land-lines out here, so the fastest speeds I can get are about 2kbytes per second, but usually much less, around 1kbytes per second. If you'd been wondering why I hardly update my blog these days, that's one of the reasons.

It is a good thing that I have so much data on my computers that I hardly need to venture out onto the net these days.

Date: 2013-03-02 06:03 am (UTC)
greylock: (Default)
From: [personal profile] greylock
You know Google now has a currency converter built in?
I only found out yesterday. It's the same syntax as its other converters: Convert UKP to $A.

and of course Telstra refuse to fix the land-lines out here, so the fastest speeds I can get are about 2kbytes per second, but usually much less, around 1kbytes per second.

What happened to the USO? Don't they need to offer dial-up speeds of at least 14.4 kbps? It may be higher, I can't recall.

Back when we were in dial-up hell (thanks to Telstra not wanting to support our inner city area) the internet crawled along, and that was a few years ago.

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