cilpolir wrote:Will there also be lectures hardware oriented?
like overclocking, undervolting, increasing someones wireless range?
or even make cool things like this
That depends. Is someone going to request such a lecture?
Moderator: leroux-cifer
cilpolir wrote:Will there also be lectures hardware oriented?
like overclocking, undervolting, increasing someones wireless range?
or even make cool things like this

Goatboy wrote:<br>That depends. Is someone going to request such a lecture?cilpolir wrote:Will there also be lectures hardware oriented? <br>like overclocking, undervolting, increasing someones wireless range?<br>or even make cool things like this


mRmasteRful wrote:What are the limitations of the knowledge base of our lecturers. Surely you can't know all there is on every topic





Bren2010 wrote:Goatboy, I would like to see a couple lectures:
- overclocking
- undervolting
- increasing your wireless range
- Whatever this is
- radio jamming

Tnx for the explanation,I tought it was something like that but I didn't quite get it.Calian wrote:Bren2010 wrote:Goatboy, I would like to see a couple lectures:
- overclocking
- undervolting
- increasing your wireless range
- Whatever this is
- radio jamming
The this bit is this ,they basically work by taking advantage of the way our eye works in its slowness to detect change, like phosphorus on a TV screen that fades slow with each scan. What happens with this one is that you have a strip of LEDs that spin very fast on a motor spindle, at exact points (synchronised probably with a few simple detectors at 180 and 0 degrees) the various LEDs are turned on and turn off producing the clocks "face and hands" - our eyes do the rest. Think about sparklers at Guy Fawkes time, when people spin them around fast and it looks like a light circle, the clock does the same thing but with synchronised LEDS.
Enjoy.
C


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