DAVE DRUM wrote to WAYNE CHIRNSIDE <=-
WAYNE CHIRNSIDE wrote to DAVE DRUM <=-
Here are two rather more lengthy and scholarly debates among
actual nuclear physicists and current individuals in
the pressurized light water reactor field.
One runs just under one hour and the other 1 hour 22 minutes
with my preference being the latter 82 minute version.
I've got that local to my hard drive now.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AHs2Ugxo7-8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AZR0UKxNPh8
As I say, these convinced me to reverse my 25 year opposition to
nuclear reactors due to their quite effectively addressing long term
waste issue as well as being far lower in cost as compared to LWR's
Since you seem interested these are more in depth and comprehensive
as well as going into more technical detail that the brief video I previously posted.
I seldom go to You-tube for the videos - I have a lot of things going
on on this wheezing old box and my DSL is only 1.5mbps - mostly because
of (A) my distance from the switch and (B) my abhorrence of $cum-cast.
I get 1.1 MB/sec on the lower tier cable internet but I can also having Linux either get the file to play locally with wget or capture in in another manner for play later.
Do you know if there is a facility to download those videos beyond
letting them buffer into temporary storage and then moving that file to the permanents?
With Linux yes, wget -c
http://the_links_I_sent_you
Doesn't Windows have provisions for snagging files in a similar manner?
Perhaps just copying those URL's I sent into the URL window of your browser will invoke such a transfer?
Should that fail it'll wind up in cache somewhere, in Linux, as a randomly numbered
ever growing in size file so you can identify it and copy.
Firefox must do this in Windows as well as it's cross platform.
I ask because you seem quite familiar with the ins and outs of the service(?) and I, lazy barstid that I am, have not explored the possibilities.
An 82 minute video would take about three hours minimum to buffer into
my temporary storage.
Didn't take me long at all to download it however for BIG files
like the 6+ Gig Linux Slackware-13.0-install-dvd.iso 32 bit - 64 bit file I just
invoke wget -c
http://file_name_as_above from a Slackware mirror site
than to sleep I go waking up to find it.
Any of the "live" Linux bootable CD's like Knoppix and Ubuntu ought to be able to deal with it but I'm unsure aboput saving the file to a Windows formated drive
or partition as the last time I did that I'd both Linux and Windows
installed thus using Linux's mcopy.
If you'd care to try a allegedly easy to use Linux on one of your partitions you might try www.raccomputers link PhoenixOS for desktop or laptop but you'd need
a DVD writer and BIOS capable of booting to it as they stand at 1.4 and 1.2 Gig
respectively.
Another overnight while sleeping job methinks.
I've forgotten everything I ever knew about Windows and necver knew anything from after Win 98 when abandoned for Linux.
Oh yeah and that PhoenixOS Linux linked at Phoenixos at www.raccomputers.com, it's got a built in Windows application easy loader described at that links location as well as the links to download either.
I've zero experience with it but I've seen that shops demo in action and it's rather incredible!
I HAVE to run slackware here due this being a 1998 IBM Aptiva and not
nearly as resource hungry as Phoenix or Ubuntu would be on this box.
Next month, 2.7 GHz AMD dual core 64 Brisbane CPU on a motherboard I
ordered just an hour ago :-)
... MultiMail, the new multi-platform, multi-format offline reader!
--- MultiMail/Linux v0.49
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