I've had very good experiences with USB serial adapters.
We did as-well, until Windows 11. We have a project that uses USB serial adapters extensively. We had two different brands that had both been serving us well for decades. We were particular because sometimes we would use these with an embedded system that we couldn't install additional drivers on, so we need to make sure we had some of those at every site. Neither works with Windows 11! So now we have a third one that mostly does. I say "mostly" because while it functions, it doesn't show up as a serial port in Windows. Want to know what COM Port it is assigned to or other current settings, guess! Fortunately a new control box just came out without a serial port. Unfortunately, the control software on Windows will still only talk to a serial port. Are we having fun yet?
The United States federal government just stopped subsidizing food purchases to the tune of 93 million dollars a month, possibly lowering demand. A potential recession also may put downward pressure on prices. So, there is reason to believe food prices may not be higher in six months.
Good luck to us all.
Q: When the pandemic hit and demand for work-from-home and home entertainment electronics skyrocketed, did this indicate a booming economy?
A: No.
Q: Now that: the pandemic is under control, people already have their gear for at home, and some people are returning to the office, does this indicate an economy in collapse?
A: No, this is one sector going through an entirely predictable correction.
Q: Do the above answers exclude the possibility of a broad-based economic downturn?
A: No, that is still a possibility.
Do me a favor. The next time we have a shortage of something and you are wondering why the producers of those products don't invest in greater production than is normally required to meet demand, remember this moment.
When I entered college in 1997 our C.S. department was graduating twelve people a year. One in the last batch had secured a $70,000 starting salary and the department head couldn't stop talking about it. "If our graduates can demand $70,000 now, just imagine what that number will be in four years!" Fast forward four years and I had graduated, the dot com bubble had already burst, and September 11th was about to make life tougher on just about everyone. After thirteen months of trying to secure a programming position, I finally lowered the bar on what I was applying for and took an IT job (primarily doing what I did my senior year of high school) for $36,500.
So, just where are these young adults getting these expectations from?
All data is transmitted using TLS 3.0 and secured on commercial secure cloud services using class leading security systems.
Does anyone know what TLS 3.0 is? TLS 1.3 I know quite a bit about. This is like living in the future.
the pandemic began to force people to work and learn from home
Other Factors:
It has been a great two years of computer products,if you could get your hands on them. After a decade of just using hand-me-downs from work, I've bought two macs and built a PC.
That and Service Pack 2 was a mixed bag. Some computers worked fine after installation and were much more secure. However others would slow to a craw and it wasn't always obvious why! Many you would drop a bigger RAM kit in and they ran okay again. Some just didn't like something about the motherboard used and that leads me to a story or two.
The most frustrating part was people who had bought a computer with/for Windows XP and then wound up with a nearly incompatible computer as soon as they went to SP2. At the time I had a co-worker that built custom computers on the side. One client insisted he had been coned, and my coworker wound up doing a full motherboard swap and system reinstall for him under warranty (parts and labor). Another insisted he move him back to Windows 98SE, because, "You sold me the wrong thing and you should have known better." That was much harder than it sounded, because Microsoft had doped Windows 98SE two years earlier and my coworker had run out of Windows 98SE copies and license. So he was stuck, with his reputation on the line.
I just happened to have a full retail boxed copy of Windows 98SE, but I didn't want to part with it. Conversely my coworker was strapped for cash from having so many warranty "repairs" coming out of his pocket. So when he tried to buy it off me his best offer was way less than both what I paid for it and what the current market demanded. I wanted to help the guy, but I knew if I felt taken advantage of that would sour a solid working relationship. Then it dawned on me, this guy is sitting on a pile rejected but nearly new computer parts and I need a basic Linux box. So we struck a deal, I'd supply him with full retail Windows 98SE new in the box tomorrow and once his clients were happy he'd built me a current entry level computer filled with computer parts Windows XP SP2 hated. He even agreed to cram as much reject RAM as he could in it. It took some time, but he followed through with a computer that would have cost me about $600 at the time and I got a lot of use out of it. One man's trash is another man's treasure.
It unfortunately has attracted a lot of me-too
I have noticed recently that often the top voted answer is not the one that works out for me. Often the second or even third highest is what sends me down the best or even correct path (at-least for my situation and based on my judgement).
Weird!
screenshots depicting Macbook schematics
Whatever you do, do not send them to Louis Rossmann (hihi@rossmanngroup.com) that would be morally and ethically wrong.
Don't believe me, hear it from his own mouth.
You have been warned!
It's either Apple or one of the *many* flavors of Linux. Do we want that?
Yes, imagine broad software support for these. I am not seeing the downside.
He's talking about, there is no rank of Colonel in the US Navy.
The confusion stems from the Space Force's outgrowth from the Air Force. Where colonel is very much a rank.
Let me get this straight, Microsoft is going to tell the Open Source Community how to create secure software.
Where's my popcorn?
VMS is like a nightmare about RXS-11M.