The one good thing about being the person who edits/creates forms for the hospital at work is that I get to correct all the grammatical and spelling mistakes I find
> It's known as the Oxford comma because it was traditionally used by printers, readers, and editors at Oxford University Press. Not all writers and publishers use it, but it can clarify the meaning of a sentence when the items in a list are not single words:
if you have the two categories, it should be a liquid (some people even say that glass is liquid, just because definitions for being a liquid are arbitrary)
@Drew when i was a kid, i had a friend with a super religious mom. she wouldnt let her kids watch thunder cats because of the villain Mum-Ra (Ra being an egyptian god)
@Tunaki, thanks for the link. I got what I was looking for ... "The system will automatically delete unlocked, unanswered questions that have negative score after 30 days."
@toskv i never mentioned the gender of the friend, so you didnt miss anything. since you arent a regular, you probably arent aware that i am a woman :p
@toskv (there was this fallacy told us in high school: (1) Uncle Béla doesn't shave --> (2) Uncle Béla is stubbly, (3) toothbrushes are stubbly (well, "hairy" was the word in Hungarian for both) --> (4) Uncle Béla is a toothbrush)
@Tunaki Hmm...one answer there is very good. Just want to comment: To answer a question, only say: *Your problem is here, go to fix it* isn't enough. Please [edit] your answer and add a solution into it.
like once I was building solar cell and battery systems. The initial surge might give desirable results. Then the overall resistence of the system when factoring in the copper runs produced to high of a resistence
There is more resistence in a system than the colors on rings
That circuit was designed assuming the leads were soldered together and a published mA on the PS. What you added as for convenience (re-usability) and did not come @ 0 Ω
The wiring (gauge). The board (backplane). That affected your resistence
@Rizier123 I mean that I'm even less of an electric engineer than a programmer, and I'm not a programmer:) I don't know how an or gate looks like on the inside (if that's an or gate).
so I wanted you to make sure that it's OK:P
but currently I can't even guess what that circuit should be doing, so I'm definitely not your man:D
@AndrasDeak I already googled a lot and the latest thing I found out is that the resistors I bought weren't labeled correctly so I had to check all of them(60 different types). OR gate is pretty simple. You have two transistors where each emitter goes to the output, in my example just an LED to see it, and each transistor has 5V at the collector, which can't go though as long as the transistor isn't enabled,
which you do with 2 buttons and 10k resistors to the base which then with very little current enables the transistor.
@AndrasDeak You see it working here: youtu.be/KM0DdEaY5sY?t=2m23s the only difference is, that I use transistor instead of these switches, but they also basically just contain transistors in them.