Due to the ongoing Coronavirus situation, services which I offer will only be conducted remotely via Team viewer.
Teamviewer is a remote desktop sharing platform that allows desktop sharing.
Services are limited with remote desktop sharing
The following services are offered as long as the computer can connect to a network (wired or wireless)
*Virus/Spyware removal
(As long as the Virus/Trojan allows network connectivity)
*Data backup and resolutions
*Software install and upgrades
*Consultation and Training
Windows hints and how tos, Android latest news, and tech history.
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Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Thursday, March 5, 2020
How Motherboards Are Made
Ever wonder how all the motherboard components of your PC are put together?
How the resistors, capacitors, Mosfet, and processor are placed on the mobo?
Back in the 80's everything was done by hand. Now it's all done by automated SMT lines; Surface Mount Technology machines. It starts by placing the smallest components first, then to the larger components.
Gamers Nexus toured Gigabyte's Taiwan SMT lines and factory to show how motherboards and video cards are made from start to finish.
How the resistors, capacitors, Mosfet, and processor are placed on the mobo?
Back in the 80's everything was done by hand. Now it's all done by automated SMT lines; Surface Mount Technology machines. It starts by placing the smallest components first, then to the larger components.
Gamers Nexus toured Gigabyte's Taiwan SMT lines and factory to show how motherboards and video cards are made from start to finish.
Video Courtesy Of Gamers Nexus
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Tech History: Suzanne Vega, a song, and how MP3 was invented
Back in 1982 Suzanne Vega wrote a song called "Tom's Diner"... yes, the famous one remixed by DNA with the heavy bass line, dance beat, and synth horns, but the original was an a cappella song.
By 1984 it had been released on an obscure folk compilation, and didn't appear on Vega's studio albums until 1987's Solitude Standing.
Yet, the catchy tune has made Vega the "Mother of the MP3".
How's that you wonder? Well... read on.
In 1988, German audio engineer Karl-Heinz Brandenburg and his team were working developing an audio compression scheme.
The compression works on the basis of "masking" - what we hear, what we don't hear — that sometimes when hear something it's masked by other sounds.
Think having a cello and violin side by side with the cello in the foreground.
Those 'other' sounds are removed from the file making the file smaller and thereby compressing it.
It was during a series of compression algorithm tests when Dr. Brandenburg heard "Toms Diner'(Vegas original version) playing on the radio down the hall near his office.
Brandenburg used Vega's a cappella version of "Tom's Diner" to fine tune the compression system, playing the track before and after compression was applied to tell whether the song sounded good enough. He figured Vega's song would be a tough track to compress and would be a good test for whether the compressed version was really listenable.
That was in 1988, and it took Dr. Brandenburg and his team another 5 years of trial and error before they were finally satisfied with the sound quality of the song.
Compression still removed a significant portion of the data, but the difference was undetected by audio experts.
So, in 1993 Dr Brandenburg and his colleagues submitted the compression system to the Motion Picture Experts Group (That's the group that sets the standard for audio and video compression) and MPEG Audio Layer III was born.
By 1984 it had been released on an obscure folk compilation, and didn't appear on Vega's studio albums until 1987's Solitude Standing.
Yet, the catchy tune has made Vega the "Mother of the MP3".
How's that you wonder? Well... read on.
Courtesy of Wikipedia |
The compression works on the basis of "masking" - what we hear, what we don't hear — that sometimes when hear something it's masked by other sounds.
Think having a cello and violin side by side with the cello in the foreground.
Those 'other' sounds are removed from the file making the file smaller and thereby compressing it.
It was during a series of compression algorithm tests when Dr. Brandenburg heard "Toms Diner'(Vegas original version) playing on the radio down the hall near his office.
Brandenburg used Vega's a cappella version of "Tom's Diner" to fine tune the compression system, playing the track before and after compression was applied to tell whether the song sounded good enough. He figured Vega's song would be a tough track to compress and would be a good test for whether the compressed version was really listenable.
That was in 1988, and it took Dr. Brandenburg and his team another 5 years of trial and error before they were finally satisfied with the sound quality of the song.
Compression still removed a significant portion of the data, but the difference was undetected by audio experts.
So, in 1993 Dr Brandenburg and his colleagues submitted the compression system to the Motion Picture Experts Group (That's the group that sets the standard for audio and video compression) and MPEG Audio Layer III was born.
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