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This is exactly what I was looking for. High Speed is awesome and was the best investment I ever made.
Is there anyway to take high speed footage with any camera connected High Speed to a computer?
Like a software that will take pictures at a high speed camera rate? I know there is time-laps software.
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December 13th, 2010 at 6:36 pm
no you can not, ADSL runs from your local exchange to your home, you cant have two ADSL service connected at the same port at your exchange . you can always try to get a wireless service
December 14th, 2010 at 6:22 am
Water is incompressible (or close to).If you slowly go into it, you allow it time to pass over you, and so it poses little resistance.If instead, you try to pass through it at high speeds, you aren’t giving it enough time to move out of your way, and so it acts as an incompressible fluid, which is essentially a like a wall.
December 14th, 2010 at 6:20 pm
A USB port is only to transfer signals from/to your computer from/to an external tool such as a HDD or Thumb drive, etc. It doesn’t enhance any of your operating system. If you have a small CPU the only remedy is a better computer that will handle what you want to run.
December 15th, 2010 at 6:09 am
I wondered about that myself, so I looked it up on wikipedia. Basically they are welded in place while hot, and the only problem is cold weather — and then they just stretch.Continuous welded railMost modern railways use continuous welded rail (CWR), sometimes referred to as ribbon rails. In this form of track, the rails are welded together by utilising flash butt welding to form one continuous rail that may be several kilometres long, or thermite welding to repair or splice together existing CWR segments. Because there are few joints, this form of track is very strong, gives a smooth ride, and needs less maintenance. The first welded track was used in Germany in 1924 and the US in 1930 and has become common on main lines since the 1950s.Flash butt welding is the preferred process which involves an automated track laying machine running a strong electrical current through the touching ends of two unjoined pieces of rail. The ends become white hot due to electrical resistance and are then pressed together forming a strong weld. Thermite welding is a manual process requiring a reaction crucible and form to contain the molten iron. Thermite-bonded joints are also seen as less reliable and more prone to fracture or break.Because of the increased strength of welded track, trains can travel on it at higher speeds and with less friction. Welded rails are more expensive to lay than jointed tracks, but have much lower maintenance costs.Rails expand in hot weather and shrink in cold weather. Because welded track has very few expansion joints, if no special measures are taken it could become distorted in hot weather and cause a derailment (a condition known in North America as sun kink, and in Britain as buckling). In North America a rail broken due to cold-related contraction is known as a pull-apart.To avoid this, welded rails are laid on concrete or steel sleepers, which are so heavy they hold the rails firmly in place. Great attention is paid to compacting the ballast effectively, particularly the shoulder over the ends of the sleepers, to prevent them from moving. Even so, in extreme weather, foot patrols monitor sections of track known to be problematic.After new segments of rail are laid, or defective rails replaced (welded in), the rails are artificially stressed. The stressing process involves either heating the rails causing them to expand, or stretching the rails with hydraulic equipment. They are then fastened (clipped) to the sleepers in their expanded form. This process ensures that the rail will not expand much further in subsequent hot weather. In cold weather the rails try to contract, but because they are firmly fastened, cannot do so. In effect, stressed rails are a bit like a piece of stretched elastic firmly fastened down.Engineers try to heat the rail to a temperature roughly midway between the average extremes of hot and cold (this is known as the ‘rail neutral temperature’). If temperatures reach outside normal ranges however, welded rail can buckle in a hotter than usual summer or can actually break in a colder than anticipated winter. In North America, because broken rails are typically detected by the signaling system; they are seen as less of a problem than heat kinks which are not detected. For this reason, and because it is harder to break a rail than displace the trackbed, CWR is usually installed at a temperature of 90 °F (32 °C), to cope with rail temperature extremes of nearly 120 °F (49 °C) in the summer sun.Joints are used in continuously welded rail when necessary; instead of a joint that passes straight across the rail, producing a loud noise and shock when the wheels pass over it, two sections of rail are sometimes cut at a steep angle and put together with a gap between them – a breather switch (referred to in Britain as an expansion joint). This gives a much smoother transition yet still provides some expansion room..
December 15th, 2010 at 6:23 pm
I’m gonna add onto the above answer. Wind turbines operate at a high speed with low torque because it will garner the most efficiency. When the wind turbine operates at a “light breeze”, the blades will meet less friction and can therefore use that towards power generation instead.
December 16th, 2010 at 6:50 am
Look for a jack on the laptop that looks like a phone jack, but larger. That’s the Ethernet jack. Plug that into the one in the wall (that’s probably where it is) and she’s in business. If they don’t supply the cable, and it didn’t come with the laptop, she can get one at Walmart or Best Buy or any store that carries computer supplies (even Staples ought to have them). She just needs a straight Ethernet cable. (If it doesn’t say either “straight”, “standard” or “crossover” it straight. The other kind is crossover – which she doesn’t want. Cat5, Cat6, Cat6E – for the length she’ll be using (5-15 feet, depending on what she needs) it doesn’t make any difference.
December 16th, 2010 at 6:13 pm
Yes, if you had a special computer. For a home PC the answer is no. They just dont have the processing power to do it, especially when running other thing like windows and any other programs running.You might be able to get away with it with some of the very latest is high performance equipment, and I mean like several thousand dollar computers here.
December 17th, 2010 at 7:01 am
A 2:1 RF splitter is probably good enough, but for more than two, an RF distribution amp would be better. Radio Shack sells them for around $30. Make sure you’ve got service for your computer as it has to have an IP address to access the internet. TV isn’t so critical as long as you’re willing to settle for basic service. Once they go all digital, though (not until AFTER 2012 at least), it’s a different story.
December 17th, 2010 at 6:47 pm
All of them do ….
December 18th, 2010 at 6:36 am
Your telephone company can probably provide you with DSL service for less money. (But it’ll probably be lower speed, although it’ll be higher speed than the internet itself, so it won’t make much difference.) Call them and ask them, or watch the millions of ads they’re probably spamming your local TV stations with.The only providers it makes sense to use are those local to you. Otherwise you have one carrier providing internet service and another providing transport (the wires). When you have a problem they each point at the other, and you’re left with no service. If the same company provides both carriage and internet, the different divisions can point at each other all they like, but you’re dealing with a single company that’s not supplying you with service so (if they know what they’re doing) they get you back up quickly.That said, I find that it’s worth the extra money for cable. I’ve had one – count them, one – outage in 7 years. (And it was for only a few minutes.) Compare that to constant outages, slower than paid for speed and customer “service” that doesn’t speak English, from my very large telephone company. (My cable company’s tech support people work around the corner from my office, so they even have the same regional accent that I do. And I can walk in and talk to someone, face to face, or swap bad or outdated equipment.)
December 18th, 2010 at 7:00 pm
speed cameras zoom in on your speed ‘o’ meter through the back window or side window and take your number plate down if you have a tall van or lorry put your number plate at the top corner and the speed camera can’t see it Best camera review http://www.camerareview-blog.com
December 19th, 2010 at 6:44 am
It really depends on where you are. For instance in a lot of areas in Nevada you can find Wireless Internet. So you should probably check with people in your target area and see what they are doing. Cellular is an option but it and Satellite will be more expensive then Wireless if it is available, also Wireless will be faster. Be cafeful if your dealing with a large telco, they may think DSL is available(because they are two states away) and ship you equipment only to find out a month later it’s not available.This happened to me when I tried to help a friend in Nevada. If you can, ask your neighbors what is working for them.
December 19th, 2010 at 6:38 pm
You can try DSL.. but since the location is a farm, you’ll be pretty damm far away from the DSL server.. which means you’ll actually have slower speeds.You can check out verizon’s wireless broadband, which you buy a wireless broadband networking card, shove it up your laptop and bam! you have broadband speed internet. (around 0.8~1 mb i believe)The area where they have service is getting larger and largerso your town might be lucky enough to be in their zone. But they don’t come cheap, $50~$70 depending on whether you already have a cell phone contract with Verizon or not…you can also check out At&t or t-mobile.. I believe one of the two also had a similar wireless broadband.
December 20th, 2010 at 6:07 am
I’m a Charter Highspeed user and a DirecTV subscriber. Just know that Charter will charge you $20 more for internet by itself.