Today's Message Index:
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1. 10:45 AM - Re: Poor Man's Battery tester (user9253)
2. 12:16 PM - Re: Open Source software license options (D L Josephson)
3. 12:16 PM - Re: Open Source software license options (D L Josephson)
4. 03:30 PM - Fw: Fw: THE LAST DAY... THIS IS SO BEAUTIFUL (David)
Message 1
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Subject: | Re: Poor Man's Battery tester |
Ray said,
> "Does anyone have any suggestions what I have done wrong is do I need to change
the resistor size between the load (bulbs)?"
No resistors go between the bulbs. The electronic circuit and the lamp circuit
are connected in parallel and thus are completely separate and independent circuits,
sharing only the battery and relay contacts and connecting wires.
Maybe I misinterpreted what you meant by "between the load (bulbs)". In that
case, the problem might be the battery. Is it small or old and weak? Are the
voltage measurements taken at the instant that the relay opens or later after
the battery has had a chance to recover? Perhaps the battery can recover easier
from a short term heavy load compared to a long term light load. I suspect
that the circuit opens at the same voltage regardless of the load. But the
battery will recover to different voltages depending upon the rate of discharge
during the test.
Joe
--------
Joe Gores
Read this topic online here:
http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=371804#371804
Message 2
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Subject: | Re: Open Source software license options |
There is an interesting discussion of why not "public domain" (which
apparently doesn't even really exist -- anything you publish is
automatically copyright no matter what, in most countries.) See
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/219742/open-source-why-not-release-into-public-domain
You might want to consider the Creative Commons zero (CC0) license which
gives good notice of your intentions:
http://creativecommons.org/choose/zero/
You can't keep the lawyers out, but you can give notice that their
services are not needed.
Message 3
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Subject: | Re: Open Source software license options |
There is an interesting discussion of why not "public domain" (which
apparently doesn't even really exist -- anything you publish is
automatically copyright no matter what, in most countries.) See
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/219742/open-source-why-not-release-into-public-domain
You might want to consider the Creative Commons zero (CC0) license which
gives good notice of your intentions:
http://creativecommons.org/choose/zero/
You can't keep the lawyers out, but you can give notice that their
services are not needed.
Message 4
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Subject: | Fwd: Fw: THE LAST DAY... THIS IS SO BEAUTIFUL |
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