Ghost Protocol Movie Review
I rate this movie 5 out of 5. It simply is darn near perfect. I love intelligent movies and this one is very good. I will not list all its plus points but to reiterate that it delivers a terrific entertainment package.
I rate this movie 5 out of 5. It simply is darn near perfect. I love intelligent movies and this one is very good. I will not list all its plus points but to reiterate that it delivers a terrific entertainment package.
Rate 2 out of 5. I found this a very disappointing movie. The script, casting, and acting was dreadful. All other technical aspects of the movie seemed to be very good. The action scenes were quite good but the script was uninspiring, the acting unconvincing, and the director was incapable of drawing me into the story. I really found it annoying to see a command officer smoking a pipe in what seemed to be a contrived effort to impart authority.
I am always looking for the truth or as close to it as I can get. I ran across this Internet news web site that tries to achieve balanced and accurate reporting. The name of this organization is The Real News.
The Real News Mission
The Real News Network is a television news and documentary network focused on providing independent and uncompromising journalism.Our staff, in collaboration with courageous journalists around the globe, will investigate report and debate stories on the critical issues of our times.We are viewer supported and do not accept advertising, government or corporate funding.
Web site: http://therealnews.com/
Quite some time ago my wife happened to mention to me that our electric bill seemed to be rather high. This was during summer and I suspected the air conditioner was on too much of the time. Being a technology person, I decided to purchase a meter that would measure power usage for each household device in an effort to more scientifically determine what devices were running up the cost and determine if we could cut back. I learned quite a lot but the most surprising cost item was our outdoor Malibu light system. My next door neighbor had years ago told me that he was very happy that we had our outdoor lights on all night long. He went on to say that more than one drunk driver ran into and up our garage driveway negotiating a street turn. I then added the Malibu system after he told me that news. We had quite an investment in that light system so it seemed practical to switch over to LED lights and get rid of the very inefficient tungsten filament bulbs. But looking over the cost for each LED bulb seemed stupid due to cost. About $25 per bulb was the possible cost and that was Internet prices. There had to be a better, more cheap solution. It was not until I was browsing in my local electronics store that I spotted high intensity LED bulbs. I decided to buy some along with proper wire end pins and try them out. I followed two different solutions. The first was to improve upon already manufactured LED lights for automobiles by soldering gold plated pins to the ends of the LED wires. This worked quite well except that the wires would move in and out of the bulb housing when they were bent straight. I had failed to realize that the automobile bulbs used bent wires which kept them in place. When I straightened them they could slide in and out of the plastic bulb case. I then had to apply glue gun shots to the wires and case so they would no longer slide. The results with this LED rewire was most satisfactory. These bulbs did a fairly decent job of illumination.

The second solution I used was to purchase high intensity LED’s and solder them together to make more powerful lights. The wires from the LED’s were also too thin and I had to solder the same type gold plated pins to the ends of the LED leads so the Malibu sockets would properly take and connect to the new bulbs. The results were that I had made accent lights and not lights that threw out any appreciable illumination.

Parts for this project were purchased from Orvac Electronics
1648 Orangethorpe Ave.
Fullerton, Calif. 92831
Phone: 714.871.1020
Web site: http://www.orvac.com/
UPDATE: Since I wrote this article, a few companies came out with excellent LED lights that can be used for Malibu systems. I DO NOT RECOMMEND that you go to all the work I have described here.
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May 9th we found out what surgery had determined. There is a duct that takes fatty material from the intestines and moves this fluid up to the heart. Some time this duct ruptures and the fluid does not make it successfully to the heart but dumps into the lungs. This is what happened to Whiskers. Some cats are prone to this problem. The surgeons would expect to find one duct but Whiskers had multiple ducts which they cut off and evidently went with one passage way. They took some fatty tissue from the abdomen and moved it up into the duct to help mitigate the fluid reaching the lungs in some way; I was never clear as to what that part of the surgery was. They found out that he cat’s heart had a sack around it that constricted the heart. They cut the sack out. They determined that the cat had heart disease also. When we arrived we were given instructions as to how to administer a shot into the top sholder and multiple medications for the cat. Whiskers had a PEG tube coming out of his stomach where I would send in food and medications.
September 13, 2010 I get a phone message that the control room switcher will not function. In a few hours I appear to check this report out. The switcher will not work but I figure I must rule out the sync generator. At first I can not see any sync signals due to my unfamiliarity to the waveform monitor. I finally find what appears to be good sync going to the switcher. We discover that the sync generator has a password and no one has the code. I start to check out the switcher. I noticed that two LED indicators are out on the main frame electronics. The control head responds to reset and control head function checks but will not switch. When the front panel to the main frame electronics is taken off, I notice that there are nine tiny LED indicators on the front left side of the main circuit board. All LED’s are green except number three is orange. Service documentation fails to tell me what the LED’s mean. The documents only say that the blue LED’s must all be on.
September 14, Grass Valley requests that I obtain a boot up record of the switcher start up by connecting a computer to the switcher serial connector using Hyper Terminal and using 9600, N, 8, 1. I get a good read out and capture it to my Mac laptop using Boot Camp and Windows 98. I send the file to Grass Valley but they can not read it and advise that I zip the file. I do so and they said that the read out appears to be from the control head. I had no idea that the main electronics package has capability and different boot record. I try to get a read out but NOTHING comes out of the computer port. Grass Valley advises that it looks like the internal computer has possibly died.
E:Mail to customer: I checked the sync generator and it seems to be ok but Grass Valley and I think there might be a very slight possibility it might be at the root of the switcher failure. I give that possibility about a ten percent chance. When looking at the switcher, it shows failure. There are five LED indicators on the front panel and they are ALL expected to be lit. Two are NOT! The one that really bothers our technical support guy and me is the one called “Ref”. We both think that might refer to the black burst input signal not being liked by the switcher. GV tech support does not seem to know what the LED lights indicate. Black burst looks almost perfect to me when viewed on the waveform monitor, which is why I think the problem is switcher and not sync generator. Next , inside the switcher unit there are nine very small LED indicators, that can only be seen with the cover off. One shows orange and all the others show green. Grass Valley technician compared their test unit with ours and a different single LED was orange. This too points to the switcher having a problem.
A very wonderful Grass Valley technician, suspects the real problem is the switcher computer module inside the unit and thinks we should send the whole unit back for exchange. The exchange price will be $9,769.00. Once we tell them we will pay for the exchange, they will ship us an exchange unit immediately and we should get it the next day! A second option: Grass Valley will repair our switcher for $6,839.00 but that will take two weeks. We MUST go with the first option, immediate exchange, in my opinion.
Grass Valley wants me to do one more trouble shooting procedure. It is a bit weird. I have to hook up a Windows computer with RS232 connection and use Hyper Terminal to read the switcher boot process. They want me to send the text file that this process generates to see if he spots some item that he is missing and might redirect our efforts. I will come in Wednesday to attempt to complete that procedure. Once we get the exchange switcher in, I suspect it needs to be configured and not sure how much effort that will take.
September 15: Trying to get authorization to get switcher repaired. E-mails are traded back and forth to accomplish this.
September 16: Purchase procedure continuing.
September 17: Purchase procedure continuing with one problem after another cropping up:
Once I had the swap out main electronic package I then placed it on top of the existing unit and one by one removed each video BNC cable from the broken unit into the new unit so as not to make any mistake.
I then switched out the switcher boxes by removing the broken unit and screwing in the new unit into the rack panel.
I could not find any memory stick configuration save for this unit so I had to use the system flow diagrams and figure out the cross point programming for each input. This part of the installation created some white hairs on my head. I later found out that the company that installed the system hired a Grass Valley engineer to do this part of the installation. The payoff for learning how to do this part of the installation is I now have a good feel for making system changes when needed.
Once I had the switcher up and running, I definitely took the time to save the switcher configuration on to a USB finger drive.