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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#81
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On 24 Apr 2005 07:12:22 -0700, the renowned "Tim Shoppa"
wrote: https://www.logsa.army.mil/etms/online.htm I can't even access that website. The military is screening IP addresses, trying to match them to geographic locations, and blocking access from outside the US. The screening isn't perfect, BTW. Sometimes real USAians cannot get to it, sometimes foreigners can... Tim. Try using a proxy. Best regards, Spehro Pefhany -- "it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward" Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com |
#82
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On Sun, 24 Apr 2005 00:54:41 GMT, **THE-RFI-EMI-GUY**
wrote: Unfortunately the restriction of documentation for obsolete equipment is a profit motive by Agilent as it promotes the planned obsolescence of older equipment which competes with new equipment on the market. --- And that's a fact because...? -- John Fields Professional Circuit Designer |
#83
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On 24 Apr 2005 07:12:22 -0700, "Tim Shoppa"
wrote: https://www.logsa.army.mil/etms/online.htm I can't even access that website. The military is screening IP addresses, trying to match them to geographic locations, and blocking access from outside the US. I can get to it from Canada (!!!). Nice screening - NOT! No wonder we had Sept 11 happen. Oh the shame.... Stepan |
#84
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Exactly my point!
John Fields wrote: On Sun, 24 Apr 2005 00:54:41 GMT, **THE-RFI-EMI-GUY** wrote: Unfortunately the restriction of documentation for obsolete equipment is a profit motive by Agilent as it promotes the planned obsolescence of older equipment which competes with new equipment on the market. --- And that's a fact because...? -- Joe Leikhim K4SAT "The RFI-EMI-GUY" The Lost Deep Thoughts By: Jack Handey Before a mad scientist goes mad, there's probably a time when he's only partially mad. And this is the time when he's going to throw his best parties. |
#85
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![]() "**THE-RFI-EMI-GUY**" wrote in message . .. And that's a fact because...? Sonny Bono got the law changed before he ate a tree. -- GW |
#86
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Tim wrote:
The military is screening IP addresses, trying to match them to geographic locations, and blocking access from outside the US. Stepan wrote: I can get to it from Canada (!!!). Nice screening - NOT! No wonder we had Sept 11 happen. Oh the shame.... What? It happened because of Canadians using the internet? |
#87
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Chris wrote...
I still think a lot of this discussion comes down to whether electronics designers (who, after all, are being paid to create intellectual property) are just trying to skate around the necessity of paying for somebody else's intellectual property, which has admitted value. Otherwise, why would we be having this discussion at all? I disagree, we're not talking about manuals that can still be purchased from HP / Agilent. (And by this I mean real manuals, not microfiche dups that can't be used at the workbench.) We're talking about the real shortage of manuals for old instruments, where more manuals than instruments have been thrown away or lost. -- Thanks, - Win |
#88
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I read in sci.electronics.design that Winfield Hill
-edu wrote (in ) about 'Copyright on HP service manuals', on Mon, 25 Apr 2005: We're talking about the real shortage of manuals for old instruments, where more manuals than instruments have been thrown away or lost. If HP/Agilent still have these manuals but withhold all access to them, then I think a good lawyer would find ample grounds for dissuading them from that practice. It might be difficult to challenge them if they offered them for USD200 each, but perhaps not impossible. -- Regards, John Woodgate, OOO - Own Opinions Only. There are two sides to every question, except 'What is a Moebius strip?' http://www.jmwa.demon.co.uk Also see http://www.isce.org.uk |
#89
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![]() wrote in message ... Gimme a stinkin' break! It's all that crap - music and movies - that's taking up all your space. Get rid of them! Or put them on CDs or DVDs. What about convenience Watson? I really *like* having everything online and centrally accessible, instead of having to dig for it. Hey I can even pull my stuff up at work and at other peoples homes. That's really nice one-stop shopping! Plus if my house burns down or I get robbed, then I can just restore a backup. I'm actually serious. It's not that I'm just trying to get a rise out of you.... Stepan Hey, life's a compromise. If you want the convenience, then you have to pay for it. So pay for a couple more 250GB HDDs, and quit complaining. |
#90
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"Winfield Hill" -edu wrote in
message ... Chris wrote... I still think a lot of this discussion comes down to whether electronics designers (who, after all, are being paid to create intellectual property) are just trying to skate around the necessity of paying for somebody else's intellectual property, which has admitted value. Otherwise, why would we be having this discussion at all? I disagree, we're not talking about manuals that can still be purchased from HP / Agilent. (And by this I mean real manuals, not microfiche dups that can't be used at the workbench.) We're talking about the real shortage of manuals for old instruments, where more manuals than instruments have been thrown away or lost. Right. That's how I understood it. The issue is NOT how to get things free (or cheap) that are for sale by their rightful copyright owner. The issue is how to deal with things that the actual owner no longer bothers to sell. And in that kind of situation, copyright law is quite lenient when copies are made for "private study or research" rather than resale. It is perfectly legal for you to copy, for your own use, any HP manual you can get your hands on. Paying other people to do the copying is a gray area. But the underlying principle is that if HP wanted to make money off these things, HP would offer them for sale, and HP doesn't, so HP isn't losing anything. |
#91
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![]() Winfield Hill wrote: Chris wrote... I disagree, we're not talking about manuals that can still be purchased from HP / Agilent. (And by this I mean real manuals, not microfiche dups that can't be used at the workbench.) We're talking about the real shortage of manuals for old instruments, where more manuals than instruments have been thrown away or lost. -- Thanks, - Win I think I've already taken up too much of your time here. If someone told me I could have several minutes of Mr. Hill's time to talk about electronics, I'd be absolutely delighted. But instrument manuals would be just about the last thing in the world I'd like to talk about. If you would indulge me anyway, I might add a few personal observations: * Just for my own curiosity, I looked at the Yahoo hp_instrument user group mentioned near the beginning of this thread, and read every post for this month. It was kind of interesting how many posts this month involved manual .pdfs and obtaining other non-legitimate copies of HP manuals. So I read all the posts for the HP model numbers for every HP instrument, scope, and add-on card where there would have been a manual. And you know what? Every HP product mentioned in this month's posts (a few dozen items) has the _real_ OP/SV manuals available from the same single manual reseller recommended by HP on their website -- ManualsPlus. I didn't even have to look around. But they were selling for a price, of course. * Over the years, I've been in several jobs where I've been the only one who cared about instrument manual document control, and ended up maintaining the system myself in one case. Engineers would draw and quarter (on your side) or tar and feather (on our side) someone from another department who treated other company- or University-owned engineering IP like prints or purchased software with the same disdain almost all engineers have for instrument manuals. At best, they will squirrel them away in their own desk or lab bench so they don't have to go to the bother of signing them out or returning them. Usually they'll ignore and lose them or throw them out as clutter. I guess my personal opinion on this subject is kind of rare. * Older instruments are generally a better value, as well as usually being easier to use and less expensive to maintain. I try to specify used/reconditioned instruments wherever possible, because I feel they're generally a good deal for my employer or customer. I always buy used for myself, because that way I can afford a better instrument. I've specified several "orphan" (manufacturer no longer provides service or parts, including the manuals) HP instruments, and bought one myself for my own use. Years back, I got burned by buying a tricky instrument from another manufacturer, then blowing a project deadline partly because I couldn't buy, beg, borrow or steal the manual, didn't use the instrument properly and was getting bad data. Since then, I make sure not to buy a used instrument without the manual. And while manual availability has affected which used instrument I chose, I've never had to buy a new instrument because I couldn't find a used one that would do the job and that had a manual available from somewhere. * Let's say that I walked into a job where I was required to use a piece of existing equipment for which I had to have the manual. Let's also say I made a good faith effort to find the manual, and couldn't get a legal one. Would I start scrounging around for a .pdf or other non-legitimate copy? Sure, I would. I'm not a zealot about this. Just like everyone else, I've got to do the job, get it done on time, and if there's no other way, I guess I'd have to clip the coin. But there's almost always a legal way to do it as things are set up now, especially for orphan HP instruments. But it _does_ cost money. * I would also concede it's likely there are many more orphaned HP instruments out there than there are manuals. What would happen if more engineers took the copyright law seriously as it relates to instrument manuals? Well, first off, I suppose existing inventory on manuals would go down and prices might go up a bit. Not as much as you might think, because as prices go up, new instruments and other used instruments with manuals become more attractive options. As demand increased, suppliers would institute waiting lists, and since they would be guaranteed fast turnaround, they would loosen their restrictions on purchasing individual manuals, and pay more for them (currently most of these manual resellers are miserly, and will only buy manuals by the bale and "pay" by the ton ;-). Possibly owners of manuals without instruments would register their copies with resellers in case someone wanted them. More manuals would crawl out of the woodwork as useless paper turns into potential cash. Manuals might be rented, or offered on consignment. Engineers might even form a co-op to rent or to minimize brokers' fees (the markup on these manuals is extravagant). And eventually a new balance would be achieved. The new price of the manuals would more accurately reflect their real value. I don't think the price would be that much more than it is now, though. And at that point, if manuals were still printed on unobtainium, we would all have a legitimate beef against Agilent and the other manufacturers, and I think they might then be more inclined to offer either "book-on-demand" or high-quality Xeroxed copies of their old manuals for a price a little higher than the asking price for used manuals. And engineers would start getting more serious about spending the time and effort to maintain document control on these newly valuable books. Sorry to bend your ear, but it's kind of a "hot button" issue for me. I've not found it hard to comply with the law as it now stands. I just pay for my pleasures, which is my perogative and one of the joys of the business world. Original manuals for nearly all orphaned HP equipment do exist out there, and paying for them is a legitimate cost. Of course the copyright law is messed up, especially in the States. 75 to 95 years is too long for a corporation to own a copyright on anything. But out of direct respect for the law, and indirectly out of respect for the creator of the book, I'll try to buy the manual if it's legally available. Thanks again for your time. TAANSTAAFL Chris |
#92
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![]() A few observations: 1. Copyright is supposed to help an author receive just compensation for his/her/its work. 2. Although much work obviously went into the manuals for non-supported equipment, Agilent is no longer receiving significant compensation for them - as far as I know. 3. So Agilent is correct as far as the letter of the law, but may not really be correct as far as the intention of the law. But the letter is the ruling rule. 4. Tektronix has publically released all copyrights on all their manuals for equipment which they no longer support. (ONLY the equipment they no longer support.) This has been a great boon for hobbists, students, and probably some academic institutions. Maybe even some of the many small start-up companies that find 25-30 year old Tek scopes still are useful. 5. Both Agilent and Tektronix are completely within their legal rights. But Tektronix has opted to be generous to the user community of their older machines. This is a community of hobbyists, students, academic institutions, and so on. The same community that Apple found it cost effective to donate large numbers of computers to. Release of copyright may cost Tek a few sales of newer machines, but gains them a lot of respect. The value of the public relations almost certainly is many times the small loss of potential sales. I'm sorry to read that Agilent is not so forward thinking. Sounds like they took their cue from Disney suing day-care centers for using "Donald Duck" (r) (c) (tm) (etc.) in wall murals. Ahh, well, the modern corporate mind. -Howard |
#93
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Howard - HedgeWarden wrote...
A few observations: 1. Copyright is supposed to help an author receive just compensation for his/her/its work. 2. Although much work obviously went into the manuals for non-supported equipment, Agilent is no longer receiving significant compensation for them - as far as I know. 3. So Agilent is correct as far as the letter of the law, but may not really be correct as far as the intention of the law. But the letter is the ruling rule. 4. Tektronix has publically released all copyrights on all their manuals for equipment which they no longer support. (ONLY the equipment they no longer support.) This has been a great boon for hobbists, students, and probably some academic institutions. Maybe even some of the many small start-up companies that find 25-30 year old Tek scopes still are useful. 5. Both Agilent and Tektronix are completely within their legal rights. But Tektronix has opted to be generous to the user community of their older machines. This is a community of hobbyists, students, academic institutions, and so on. The same community that Apple found it cost effective to donate large numbers of computers to. Release of copyright may cost Tek a few sales of newer machines, but gains them a lot of respect. The value of the public relations almost certainly is many times the small loss of potential sales. I'm sorry to read that Agilent is not so forward thinking. Sounds like they took their cue from Disney suing day-care centers for using "Donald Duck" (r) (c) (tm) (etc.) in wall murals. Hear, Hear! Ahh, well, the modern corporate mind. Indeed. -- Thanks, - Win |
#94
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The man who apparently convinced Tektronix to release their manuals to
the public domain, David Hopkins, has left a message on yahoo groups offering the help of his experience... http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hp_agi...t/message/1129 Note also, that for HP to release these manuals to the public domain, would be an act of charity towards third-world and developing nations, where used test equipment can be of great service. I hope that someone with inside knowledge of Agilent management can take this forward... Stepan |
#95
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Dave wrote:
I don't have any HP user or service manuals, but I suspect they are copyrighted. Has anyone ever asked Agilent for permission to copy an HP manual and put it on the web. I asked Agilent as was refused permission to put copies on the web. BUT they said they can grant me permission to distribute (charging if I wish) copies of manuals for obsolete equipment on CD or paper - but not the web. I was sent a short half-page letter, asked to fill it in, sign it, send it back and are awaiting confirmation of permission by email. So it is not as bad as it seems. So anyone selling CDs on eBay can do it legally if they ask permission first - I doubt many do. |
#96
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Dave wrote:
Dave wrote: I don't have any HP user or service manuals, but I suspect they are copyrighted. Has anyone ever asked Agilent for permission to copy an HP manual and put it on the web. I asked Agilent as was refused permission to put copies on the web. BUT they said they can grant me permission to distribute (charging if I wish) copies of manuals for obsolete equipment on CD or paper - but not the web. I was sent a short half-page letter, asked to fill it in, sign it, send it back and are awaiting confirmation of permission by email. So it is not as bad as it seems. So anyone selling CDs on eBay can do it legally if they ask permission first - I doubt many do. Did they say if you could list the files you have on a website so you can sell or trade CDROMs? -- Former professional electron wrangler. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#97
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I don't think you'd have a problem with HP allowing you to have the manual
for your equipment maintenance. Publishing it on the web is rather a stretch though. b. |
#98
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On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 22:08:49 -0500, Leonard Martin
wrote: Well, how nice for you that you function in a world where $75 for a manual is small change! There are lots of us hobbyists out here who like to experiment with electronics but who might find that to be their "mad" money for a month. Somehow, as one of them, I'm not convinced by your "all us well-off businessmen should be good t each other" argument. The last "new" price for a 5370B was over $30K, hardly hobbyist turf. A decent used one can cost from a few hundred dollars (ebay, as-is) to a couple of thousand (guaranteed, calibrated from a broker.) $75 ain't bad in this context. This kind of stuff is part of a trend that's been going on, to my amazement, for a couple of decades now. It might be summed up as "Business is more important than anything. The market is God. Whatever's good for either is great, and the devil take the rest!" Under this regime each new enormity perpetrated by some business, like this one by Aligent (or the copyright extension that business got away with a while ago) first causes a bit of squirming on the part of the victims, but then other virtuous souls remind them of the three divine maxims set out above, and everyone then naturally knuckles under. How did a once-free, and in fact instinctively rebellious, people come to this? Leonard Once free? What you are complaining about is precisely freedom. If you don't like Agilent equipment, or their policies towards their intellectual property, buy something else, or build your own. If you don't like paying somebody for their book or their music, write your own. John |
#99
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I read in sci.electronics.design that Leonard Martin
wrote (in ) about 'Copyright on HP service manuals', on Wed, 27 Apr 2005: How did a once-free, and in fact instinctively rebellious, people come to this? You didn't eat up all your broccoli when Mom told you to. -- Regards, John Woodgate, OOO - Own Opinions Only. There are two sides to every question, except 'What is a Moebius strip?' http://www.jmwa.demon.co.uk Also see http://www.isce.org.uk |
#100
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On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 07:31:07 +0100, John Woodgate
wrote: I read in sci.electronics.design that Leonard Martin wrote (in ) about 'Copyright on HP service manuals', on Wed, 27 Apr 2005: How did a once-free, and in fact instinctively rebellious, people come to this? You didn't eat up all your broccoli when Mom told you to. My favorite US Presidential quote is from George Bush I: "I am the President of the United States of America, and I will not eat broccoli." John |
#101
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#102
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I read in sci.electronics.design that John Larkin
wrote (in ) about 'Copyright on HP service manuals', on Thu, 28 Apr 2005: "I am the President of the United States of America, and I will not eat broccoli." Unlike Emperor Franz Ferdinand, 'I am the Emperor and I want DUMPLINGS!'. GB probably remembers his childhood aversion. To me, it taste quite different now, 60 years later. And the costly 'purple sprouting' version is even (much) better, whereas I couldn't stand it at 8 years of age. Mind you, I steam it for 8 minutes or microwave with water for 2 - 3 minutes, whereas my mother used to boil it for 15 minutes, and that makes quite a lot of difference. -- Regards, John Woodgate, OOO - Own Opinions Only. There are two sides to every question, except 'What is a Moebius strip?' http://www.jmwa.demon.co.uk Also see http://www.isce.org.uk |
#103
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On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 22:08:49 -0500, Leonard Martin wrote:
This kind of stuff is part of a trend that's been going on, to my amazement, for a couple of decades now. It might be summed up as "Business is more important than anything. The market is God. Whatever's good for either is great, and the devil take the rest!" Under this regime each new enormity perpetrated by some business, like this one by Aligent (or the copyright extension that business got away with a while ago) first causes a bit of squirming on the part of the victims, but then other virtuous souls remind them of the three divine maxims set out above, and everyone then naturally knuckles under. How did a once-free, and in fact instinctively rebellious, people come to this? "The shadow of Love is Power. Love first gave much of his Power to Lucifer. And then over time he denied the rest of his Power, handing it to Ahriman. "Love, real Love feels much better than Power... yet most humans have chosen to worship the god of Power, not the God of Love. Praised from the pulpits and beseeched in the deepest prayers for relief from pain and oppression, the god of Power has been very popular. "Power has constantly affirmed that he and only he is God. And he has been very successful at this... many beings have never even known that the God of Love exists." - Heart: http://www.godchannel.com/lovepower.html But I have it on Good Authority that this is changing, even as we speak. -- Love, Rich for further information, please visit http://www.godchannel.com |
#104
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On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 15:35:44 GMT, Rich The Philosophizer
wrote: On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 22:08:49 -0500, Leonard Martin wrote: This kind of stuff is part of a trend that's been going on, to my amazement, for a couple of decades now. It might be summed up as "Business is more important than anything. The market is God. Whatever's good for either is great, and the devil take the rest!" Under this regime each new enormity perpetrated by some business, like this one by Aligent (or the copyright extension that business got away with a while ago) first causes a bit of squirming on the part of the victims, but then other virtuous souls remind them of the three divine maxims set out above, and everyone then naturally knuckles under. How did a once-free, and in fact instinctively rebellious, people come to this? "The shadow of Love is Power. Love first gave much of his Power to Lucifer. And then over time he denied the rest of his Power, handing it to Ahriman. "Love, real Love feels much better than Power... yet most humans have chosen to worship the god of Power, not the God of Love. Praised from the pulpits and beseeched in the deepest prayers for relief from pain and oppression, the god of Power has been very popular. "Power has constantly affirmed that he and only he is God. And he has been very successful at this... many beings have never even known that the God of Love exists." - Heart: http://www.godchannel.com/lovepower.html But I have it on Good Authority that this is changing, even as we speak. You really mean "even as we cut and paste." John |
#105
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On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 16:24:17 +0100, the renowned John Woodgate
wrote: I read in sci.electronics.design that John Larkin wrote (in ) about 'Copyright on HP service manuals', on Thu, 28 Apr 2005: "I am the President of the United States of America, and I will not eat broccoli." Unlike Emperor Franz Ferdinand, 'I am the Emperor and I want DUMPLINGS!'. GB probably remembers his childhood aversion. To me, it taste quite different now, 60 years later. And the costly 'purple sprouting' version is even (much) better, whereas I couldn't stand it at 8 years of age. Mind you, I steam it for 8 minutes or microwave with water for 2 - 3 minutes, whereas my mother used to boil it for 15 minutes, and that makes quite a lot of difference. Yes, it does! Best regards, Spehro Pefhany -- "it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward" Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com |
#106
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On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 16:24:17 +0100, John Woodgate
wrote: I read in sci.electronics.design that John Larkin wrote (in ) about 'Copyright on HP service manuals', on Thu, 28 Apr 2005: "I am the President of the United States of America, and I will not eat broccoli." Unlike Emperor Franz Ferdinand, 'I am the Emperor and I want DUMPLINGS!'. GB probably remembers his childhood aversion. To me, it taste quite different now, 60 years later. And the costly 'purple sprouting' version is even (much) better, whereas I couldn't stand it at 8 years of age. Mind you, I steam it for 8 minutes or microwave with water for 2 - 3 minutes, whereas my mother used to boil it for 15 minutes, and that makes quite a lot of difference. Sometimes we get (at restaurants) the Italian broccolinni stuff or whatever; it's small, bitter, and awful. I thing there's been a lot of selective breeding going on lately [1]. The last batch we had at home was *sweet*. John [1] riffs are obvious. Go for it. |
#107
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In article ,
John Woodgate wrote: GB probably remembers his childhood aversion. To me, it taste quite different now, 60 years later. And the costly 'purple sprouting' version is even (much) better, whereas I couldn't stand it at 8 years of age. Mind you, I steam it for 8 minutes or microwave with water for 2 - 3 minutes, whereas my mother used to boil it for 15 minutes, and that makes quite a lot of difference. Bingo! I learned to hate most vegetables, early on, due to the way they were cooked... boiled until limp and tasteless, reduced to a nondescript shade of greenish-brown. I still hate 'em when they're prepared in that fashion. Don't even get me started on one of the greatest culinary crimes ever invented: canned green peas. On the other hand, the very same vegetables, prepared as John suggests, or briefly stir-fried with a drop of good oil and a smidge of garlic, are one of nature's perfect foods... yummy! Some of us learn the benefits of new approaches as we grow older. It sounds as if GHB didn't. His loss. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#108
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![]() Leonard Martin wrote: Well, how nice for you that you function in a world where $75 for a manual is small change! There are lots of us hobbyists out here who like to experiment with electronics but who might find that to be their "mad" money for a month. Somehow, as one of them, I'm not convinced by your "all us well-off businessmen should be good t each other" argument. This kind of stuff is part of a trend that's been going on, to my amazement, for a couple of decades now. It might be summed up as "Business is more important than anything. The market is God. Whatever's good for either is great, and the devil take the rest!" Under this regime each new enormity perpetrated by some business, like this one by Aligent (or the copyright extension that business got away with a while ago) first causes a bit of squirming on the part of the victims, but then other virtuous souls remind them of the three divine maxims set out above, and everyone then naturally knuckles under. How did a once-free, and in fact instinctively rebellious, people come to this? Leonard -- "Everything that rises must converge" --Flannery O'Connor As to your ad hominem argument about well-off businessmen all watching each others' backs, I showed that to the War Department, and she got a good laugh out of that one. A slightly bitter laugh, but a good one. I expect to be called "The Well-Off Businessman" or "Bourgeoise Capitalist" or "Moneybags Industrialist" for at least several days. But as a matter of fact, most of the manuals I've purchased over the years have been for employers or customers. If you compare the cost of a new lab instrument to a used/reconditioned one, $25 to $75 is small change. They're still way ahead. As to my own few lab quality instruments, if I can't afford the manual I need, I can't afford the instrument. It's not an issue of being an acolyte of the neo-liberal economic church of Milton Friedman and his divine maxims. It's an issue of fairness, which usually comes from the other side of the political/economic aisle, as do I. And it's an issue of encouraging creativity and rewarding the creators of intellectual property for their work. Copyright is a very American idea. Before the formation of the United States, the King of England had the right to award monopolies on the publication of books. This monopoly was sometimes used to reward cronies or punish the creators of the IP by burying the book. Look at any American History survey course textbook, and Article I, Section 8 of our constitution, as well as the original Copyright Act of 1790. It's kind of funny, really. Here's a newsgroup for electronics design. Contributors include researchers, authors, teachers and professors, chip designers, and many really good electronic engineers who make original contributions to the field and write for everyone's benefit in this newsgroup, trade journals and their websites. (I don't belong in their league. For the most part, I just try to stay out of their way and answer simple, obvious questions so they won't have to, along with a suggestion to post to s.e.b. next time.) I'm just happy to read their conversations and learn from them. But one thing they all have in common is creating intellectual property for a living. One would think they would be willing to go to the wall for IP rights in general. Or possibly they're just being a little short-sighted. These are not good times for U.S. engineers in general, particularly in manufacturing. There seems to be a disconnect in our country between the value of a thing which is made and the value of the intelligence behind it. Managers of manufacturing companies feel they can do it with fewer engineers, and then are surprised when their product line gets stale, customers complain they can't get support with their product and will buy something else next time, disastrous manufacturing glitches happen on the floor -- things don't work right and nobody knows why. In my career, I've seen good engineers creating IP and increasing the value of the companies they worked for, far in excess of whatever they're paid (sometimes the equivalent of years salary on one project), then being thrown away like used coffee grounds. The current crop of tender, green MBAs could have a notion to shoot the company in the foot by reducing "indirect labor and overhead costs". Management may decide they can hire a fresh fish out of school or a foreign visa applicant for a lot less money. They might even just let an engineer go if he gets sick. In short, they really don't value IP because they don't value the creators of IP. TAANSTAAFL means There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch (Robert A. Heinlein, "The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress", one of the icons of my misspent youth). That's been used as a motto of the Scaife, Coors and Murdoch neoliberals at the Heritage Foundation, American Enterprise Institute and Fox as they try to march the United States back to the Gilded Age of the 1890s. I'm afraid Heinlein even used it himself that way. But before the politics and the macroeconomics comes the basic issue of paying for value received and doing what's fair. If you don't pay an engineer for the value received from his IP he's trying to sell, he'll stop making IP and do something profitable to support his family. If you don't pay for the value of IP received from a coprporation, the people whose job is making the IP will not be profitable to employ, and will be let go. Fewer working engineers, less creativity and less IP will mean a declining manufacturing economy. And as things go down the drain and there are no more manufacturing jobs available, people will just console themselves with anti-intellectual, anti-science beliefs, following people like Ron Grossi and staring at Fox. They'll let other countries take the lead, and they'll call it God's just punishment on a sinful society. So much for the big picture. I treat IP as always having value because it does. I do it out of respect to the creators, and to maintain the value of the IP. I also do it in order to keep from devaluing IP in general. Agilent isn't running around with platoons of armed library police, and they definitely aren't buying up old manuals to keep 'em out of your hands. I have never known of anybody who quietly copied a manual for personal use who was busted by the legal department at HP or any instrument manufacturer. I don't believe they really care about manuals for orphaned instruments, except that there are several long-term consequences to not making pro forma efforts to defend their IP from obvious attempts to devalue it (like putting scans on the net). Actually, I'm sure they look on this whole issue as a money and good will loser and a general PITA. They see you acting like since it's their fault they made these great, reliable instruments 25 years ago that still work great today, they should be punished for it. I get the feeling they already are, and I'm personally afraid they might be thinking about learning from their "mistakes". And as for me, I'll "pay for my pleasures", and have my employers and customers pay for theirs, not so much because I can afford to light my cigars with $100 bills as that's just the right way to do it. You know, the right thing to do? Like, ethics and honesty and all that? I know it seems obsolete in these times, but some of us (at least as many Blue as Red) still feel that way. Good luck Chris |
#109
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How does free distribution of *obsolete* manuals work against "encouraging
creativity"? We are not attacking the concept of copyright. Many of us are saying HP would benefit from allowing free redistribution on the Web of old manuals for equipment that they no longer sell. |
#110
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Winfield Hill wrote...
Stepan, wrote... HP is enforcing their copyright over manuals, even for old unsupported equipment. Look at this: http://bama.sbc.edu/images/Letter%204-18-05.pdf I see the BoatAnchor Manual Archive public-service site has complied, http://bama.sbc.edu/hp.htm removing masses of valuable documentation for ancient hp instruments from public availability. There's good news from BAMA News, http://bama.sbc.edu/news.htm "HP Manuals Will Return to BAMA. A license has been granted by Agilent to allow BAMA to carry HP manuals. The HP page will need to be recreated and the files returned to the server. This will take a while, but they will be back! (April 28, 2005)" -- Thanks, - Win |
#111
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Looks like HP has agreed to allow BAMA to publish. A well coined
letter to Agilent counsul was the key to open this door. Thanks to all involved with getting this important job done. We all love surplus HP gear! regards N9NEO http://amfone.net/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=4565 |
#112
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On 29 Apr 2005 11:49:51 -0700, Winfield Hill
-edu wrote: Winfield Hill wrote... Stepan, wrote... HP is enforcing their copyright over manuals, even for old unsupported equipment. Look at this: http://bama.sbc.edu/images/Letter%204-18-05.pdf I see the BoatAnchor Manual Archive public-service site has complied, http://bama.sbc.edu/hp.htm removing masses of valuable documentation for ancient hp instruments from public availability. There's good news from BAMA News, http://bama.sbc.edu/news.htm "HP Manuals Will Return to BAMA. A license has been granted by Agilent to allow BAMA to carry HP manuals. The HP page will need to be recreated and the files returned to the server. This will take a while, but they will be back! (April 28, 2005)" We should download them all and burn CDs before they change their minds! What I really want are the schematics for the HP9100 desktop calculator, ca 1965. I have two, both dead, and it's sad that they won't allow anybody to get the info needed to restore these classics. http://www.classiccmp.org/calcmuseum/HP9100.htm http://www.science.uva.nl/faculteit/...p9100_txt.html http://www.hpmuseum.org/tech9100.htm It's amazing that HP actually reused the 9100 model number for some poorly-reviewed inkjet printer/fax thing. John |
#113
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In sci.electronics.repair Dave wrote:
The manual in question (HP 5370B time interval counter) is dated 1995, part number 05370-90031. The equipment is no longer supported. A few observations: - If the manual is separate from the instrument, it will get separated from the equipment and lost. Doesn't matter if it's on paper, a CD, a website, or whatever. - In these latter days, memory is cheaper than dirt. Especially if it's ROM. - Small flash-memory drives with a USB connector are rather ubitiquous. So... why not store the manuals INSIDE the instruments, and not have this problem again? Have a USB port somewhere on the instrument. Plug in a flash drive, push a button, and get a .txt or .pdf dumped to the flash drive. A fancy instrument could use a menu selection to dump a nice PDF from a big ROM; an inexpensive one could use a little recessed switch on the back panel to bit-bang a text file out the USB port with an 8051 or something. Perhaps even a serial port doing an ASCII (or Kermit or similar) transfer for a really low-dollar solution. Instruments fancy enough to have their own Ethernet / Web server could simply serve documents through that interface. If they just have Ethernet and TCP/IP, maybe a "magic packet" to a well-known port (17?) on a non-routable IP address could trigger a manual dump via FTP. The storage inside the instrument would need to be in ROM, or else it will eventually get erased. If the instrument takes firmware updates, there should be a mechanism for the updates to include addenda pages in the manual dump, but the updates shouldn't be able to overwrite the original manual. This won't do a thing for all those instruments floating around out there now. (Or maybe this has already been thought of and implemented; I don't get to buy much brand multi-kilodollar test equipment at work.) But if the market could agree on some kind of standard, and get the vendors to accept it, the "missing manual" problem could be reduced a great deal. Matt Roberds |
#114
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On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 21:06:45 -0400, mc wrote:
How does free distribution of *obsolete* manuals work against "encouraging creativity"? We are not attacking the concept of copyright. Many of us are saying HP would benefit from allowing free redistribution on the Web of old manuals for equipment that they no longer sell. In fact you are attacking the concept of copyright. Aligent owns the copyright and has the last say. It seems that they _have_ reversed their position, so maybe your whining did help. ;-) -- Keith |
#115
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keith wrote...
On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 21:06:45 -0400, mc wrote: How does free distribution of *obsolete* manuals work against "encouraging creativity"? We are not attacking the concept of copyright. Many of us are saying HP would benefit from allowing free redistribution on the Web of old manuals for equipment that they no longer sell. In fact you are attacking the concept of copyright. Aligent owns the copyright and has the last say. It seems that they _have_ reversed their position, so maybe your whining did help. ;-) I beg to differ, we did not attack Agilent's legal right to restrict the manual information if they chose, we attacked Agilent's apparent choice to do so. It now appears they did no more than (roughly) assert their right to grant permission after it's sought, which we do not question. But we do argue that it would have been unreasonable, counterproductive, mean-minded and unfair to deprive the legitimate owners of their older instruments the right to fully run and maintain those instruments, if they were unfortunate enough not to own one of the rare original manuals. -- Thanks, - Win |
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mc wrote:
How does free distribution of *obsolete* manuals work against "encouraging creativity"? We are not attacking the concept of copyright. Many of us are saying HP would benefit from allowing free redistribution on the Web of old manuals for equipment that they no longer sell. Tektronix has specifically released their copyrights on obsolete manuals. -- Many thanks, Don Lancaster Synergetics 3860 West First Street Box 809 Thatcher, AZ 85552 voice: (928)428-4073 email: Please visit my GURU's LAIR web site at http://www.tinaja.com |
#117
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Winfield Hill wrote...
keith wrote... On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 21:06:45 -0400, mc wrote: How does free distribution of *obsolete* manuals work against "encouraging creativity"? We are not attacking the concept of copyright. Many of us are saying HP would benefit from allowing free redistribution on the Web of old manuals for equipment that they no longer sell. In fact you are attacking the concept of copyright. Aligent owns the copyright and has the last say. It seems that they _have_ reversed their position, so maybe your whining did help. ;-) I beg to differ, we did not attack Agilent's legal right to restrict the manual information if they chose, we attacked Agilent's apparent choice to do so. It now appears they did no more than (roughly) assert their right to grant permission after it's sought, which we do not question. But we do argue that it would have been unreasonable, counterproductive, mean-minded and unfair to deprive the legitimate owners of their older instruments the right to fully run and maintain those instruments, if they were unfortunate enough not to own one of the rare original manuals. I should add, that at this point, after the dust has settled, it does not appear Agilent is in fact overly restricting the copying of their old manuals (despite the language of their lawyer's take-down letter), because they do grant permission when it's sought, including a type of blanket permission, and also even including the right to charge for the service, AFAICT. BTW, I received an email from the (former) co-leader of HP's company-wide committee handling this issue, and this was their economically-derived carefully-thought-out company policy six years ago, and it would still appear to be, unless we learn otherwise. So, it all appears to be a non-issue. Move along, nothing to see here. -- Thanks, - Win |
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![]() "Winfield Hill" -edu wrote in message ... keith wrote... On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 21:06:45 -0400, mc wrote: How does free distribution of *obsolete* manuals work against "encouraging creativity"? We are not attacking the concept of copyright. Many of us are saying HP would benefit from allowing free redistribution on the Web of old manuals for equipment that they no longer sell. In fact you are attacking the concept of copyright. Aligent owns the copyright and has the last say. It seems that they _have_ reversed their position, so maybe your whining did help. ;-) I beg to differ, we did not attack Agilent's legal right to restrict the manual information if they chose, we attacked Agilent's apparent choice to do so. Precisely. They have the legal right to restrict redistribution of this stuff any way they want. However, it does not benefit them to do what they were doing. That was everyone's point except Keith's. |
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![]() "Leonard Martin" wrote in message ... In article .com, "Chris" wrote: [snip] Chris Well, how nice for you that you function in a world where $75 for a manual is small change! There are lots of us hobbyists out here who like to experiment with electronics but who might find that to be their "mad" money for a month. Somehow, as one of them, I'm not convinced by your "all us well-off businessmen should be good t each other" argument. This kind of stuff is part of a trend that's been going on, to my amazement, for a couple of decades now. It might be summed up as "Business is more important than anything. The market is God. Whatever's good for either is great, and the devil take the rest!" Under this regime each new enormity perpetrated by some business, like this one by Aligent (or the copyright extension that business got away with a while ago) first causes a bit of squirming on the part of the victims, but then other virtuous souls remind them of the three divine maxims set out above, and everyone then naturally knuckles under. How did a once-free, and in fact instinctively rebellious, people come to this? It seems that to maintain civility, some loss of freedom seems to be necessary. Like with spam and email. Taking away the ability to spam anonymously brings complaints from those who say that will also take away the freedom to email anonymously. Yeah, it seems so. If you want to remain anonymous by wearing a ski mask, it'd probably make a lot of difference on how you're treated when you walk into a 7-11. Leonard -- |
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On 30 Apr 2005 12:46:00 -0700, Winfield Hill
-edu wrote: I should add, that at this point, after the dust has settled, it does not appear Agilent is in fact overly restricting the copying of their old manuals (despite the language of their lawyer's take-down letter), because they do grant permission when it's sought, including a type of blanket permission, and also even including the right to charge for the service, AFAICT. --- Interesting choice of words, in that there is no "right" being granted, it's a _privilege_, the exercising of which Agilent apparently now allows and can curtail at any time, as it sees fit. -- John Fields Professional Circuit Designer |
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