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Brief disclaimer: I'm not posting this to the usual LEGO groups because this is largely not made of LEGO bricks - it's a heavily modified clone set.
Time for something a bit outside my wheelhouse! This is my heavily modified version of a Toyota AE86 designed by a LEGO knockoff brand called CADA. I bought it because I liked the idea of having another Speed Champions-style car on my shelf that had additional functionality like the LEGO Ford Mustang does. It has functional steering like the Mustang, and it also has suspension on the rear axle. It\'s also fully geared (and has a differential) for motorization. Plus, unlike many (most?) clone brands, this design wasn\'t stolen from LEGO or a MOC. It\'s original to CADA.
To see what it looked like before my modifications, you can check out some great images by František Hajdekr over here. Basically, I think they missed the mark aesthetically in a few ways. They gave it too round of a roof (because they copied the Mustang), an uneven belt line (because they copied the Mustang), and no C pillars or really any form to the bodywork at all by the rear side windows. I also didn\'t like its reliance on stickers for details like door handles and the radiator grill. It had some small mechanical issues too, like steering that would ratcheted because the 40-tooth gear got caught on some internal supports, and some poorly reinforced elements such as the hood hinges and the rearmost suspension linkage.
I fixed all of that and added some personal touches, too: black wheels and a white hood and lights for a more factory aesthetic, a dark red interior with black floors and proper Toyota seats, a largely redesigned engine with spark plug wires, an air filter, a radiator hose, new headers, and a battery; and various other changes and bugfixes including eliminating illegal techniques and filling small gaps.
This thing is now at least 1/3 official LEGO pieces as a result of my meddling. The cost of my tweaks (about $60) was massively more than I paid for the set (under $20) to begin with!
I\'m not posting this to the usual LEGO groups because this is largely not made of LEGO bricks.
Time for something a bit outside my wheelhouse! This is my heavily modified version of a Toyota AE86 designed by a LEGO knockoff brand called CADA. I bought it because I liked the idea of having another Speed Champions-style car on my shelf that had additional functionality like the LEGO Ford Mustang does. It has functional steering like the Mustang, and it also has suspension on the rear axle. It\'s also fully geared (and has a differential) for motorization. Plus, unlike many (most?) clone brands, this design wasn\'t stolen from LEGO or a MOC. It\'s original to CADA.
To see what it looked like before my modifications, you can check out some great images by František Hajdekr over here. Basically, I think they missed the mark aesthetically in a few ways. They gave it too round of a roof (because they copied the Mustang), an uneven belt line (because they copied the Mustang), and no C pillars or really any form to the bodywork at all by the rear side windows. I also didn\'t like its reliance on stickers for details like door handles and the radiator grill. It had some small mechanical issues too, like steering that would ratcheted because the 40-tooth gear got caught on some internal supports, and some poorly reinforced elements such as the hood hinges and the rearmost suspension linkage.
I fixed all of that and added some personal touches, too: black wheels and a white hood and lights for a more factory aesthetic, a dark red interior with black floors and proper Toyota seats, a largely redesigned engine with spark plug wires, an air filter, a radiator hose, new headers, and a battery; and various other changes and bugfixes including eliminating illegal techniques and filling small gaps.
This thing is now at least 1/3 official LEGO pieces as a result of my meddling. The cost of my tweaks (about $60) was massively more than I paid for the set (under $20) to begin with!
I\'m not posting this to the usual LEGO groups because this is largely not made of LEGO bricks.
Time for something a bit outside my wheelhouse! This is my heavily modified version of a Toyota AE86 designed by a LEGO knockoff brand called CADA. I bought it because I liked the idea of having another Speed Champions-style car on my shelf that had additional functionality like the LEGO Ford Mustang does. It has functional steering like the Mustang, and it also has suspension on the rear axle. It\'s also fully geared (and has a differential) for motorization. Plus, unlike many (most?) clone brands, this design wasn\'t stolen from LEGO or a MOC. It\'s original to CADA.
To see what it looked like before my modifications, you can check out some great images by František Hajdekr over here. Basically, I think they missed the mark aesthetically in a few ways. They gave it too round of a roof (because they copied the Mustang), an uneven belt line (because they copied the Mustang), and no C pillars or really any form to the bodywork at all by the rear side windows. I also didn\'t like its reliance on stickers for details like door handles and the radiator grill. It had some small mechanical issues too, like steering that would ratcheted because the 40-tooth gear got caught on some internal supports, and some poorly reinforced elements such as the hood hinges and the rearmost suspension linkage.
I fixed all of that and added some personal touches, too: black wheels and a white hood and lights for a more factory aesthetic, a dark red interior with black floors and proper Toyota seats, a largely redesigned engine with spark plug wires, an air filter, a radiator hose, new headers, and a battery; and various other changes and bugfixes including eliminating illegal techniques and filling small gaps.
This thing is now at least 1/3 official LEGO pieces as a result of my meddling. The cost of my tweaks (about $60) was massively more than I paid for the set (under $20) to begin with!
I\'m not posting this to the usual LEGO groups because this is largely not made of LEGO bricks.
Time for something a bit outside my wheelhouse! This is my heavily modified version of a Toyota AE86 designed by a LEGO knockoff brand called CADA. I bought it because I liked the idea of having another Speed Champions-style car on my shelf that had additional functionality like the LEGO Ford Mustang does. It has functional steering like the Mustang, and it also has suspension on the rear axle. It\'s also fully geared (and has a differential) for motorization. Plus, unlike many (most?) clone brands, this design wasn\'t stolen from LEGO or a MOC. It\'s original to CADA.
To see what it looked like before my modifications, you can check out some great images by František Hajdekr over here. Basically, I think they missed the mark aesthetically in a few ways. They gave it too round of a roof (because they copied the Mustang), an uneven belt line (because they copied the Mustang), and no C pillars or really any form to the bodywork at all by the rear side windows. I also didn\'t like its reliance on stickers for details like door handles and the radiator grill. It had some small mechanical issues too, like steering that would ratcheted because the 40-tooth gear got caught on some internal supports, and some poorly reinforced elements such as the hood hinges and the rearmost suspension linkage.
I fixed all of that and added some personal touches, too: black wheels and a white hood and lights for a more factory aesthetic, a dark red interior with black floors and proper Toyota seats, a largely redesigned engine with spark plug wires, an air filter, a radiator hose, new headers, and a battery; and various other changes and bugfixes including eliminating illegal techniques and filling small gaps.
This thing is now at least 1/3 official LEGO pieces as a result of my meddling. The cost of my tweaks (about $60) was massively more than I paid for the set (under $20) to begin with!
I\'m not posting this to the usual LEGO groups because this is largely not made of LEGO bricks.
Time for something a bit outside my wheelhouse! This is my heavily modified version of a Toyota AE86 designed by a LEGO knockoff brand called CADA. I bought it because I liked the idea of having another Speed Champions-style car on my shelf that had additional functionality like the LEGO Ford Mustang does. It has functional steering like the Mustang, and it also has suspension on the rear axle. It\'s also fully geared (and has a differential) for motorization. Plus, unlike many (most?) clone brands, this design wasn\'t stolen from LEGO or a MOC. It\'s original to CADA.
To see what it looked like before my modifications, you can check out some great images by František Hajdekr over here. Basically, I think they missed the mark aesthetically in a few ways. They gave it too round of a roof (because they copied the Mustang), an uneven belt line (because they copied the Mustang), and no C pillars or really any form to the bodywork at all by the rear side windows. I also didn\'t like its reliance on stickers for details like door handles and the radiator grill. It had some small mechanical issues too, like steering that would ratcheted because the 40-tooth gear got caught on some internal supports, and some poorly reinforced elements such as the hood hinges and the rearmost suspension linkage.
I fixed all of that and added some personal touches, too: black wheels and a white hood and lights for a more factory aesthetic, a dark red interior with black floors and proper Toyota seats, a largely redesigned engine with spark plug wires, an air filter, a radiator hose, new headers, and a battery; and various other changes and bugfixes including eliminating illegal techniques and filling small gaps.
This thing is now at least 1/3 official LEGO pieces as a result of my meddling. The cost of my tweaks (about $60) was massively more than I paid for the set (under $20) to begin with!
I\'m not posting this to the usual LEGO groups because this is largely not made of LEGO bricks.
Time for something a bit outside my wheelhouse! This is my heavily modified version of a Toyota AE86 designed by a LEGO knockoff brand called CADA. I bought it because I liked the idea of having another Speed Champions-style car on my shelf that had additional functionality like the LEGO Ford Mustang does. It has functional steering like the Mustang, and it also has suspension on the rear axle. It\'s also fully geared (and has a differential) for motorization. Plus, unlike many (most?) clone brands, this design wasn\'t stolen from LEGO or a MOC. It\'s original to CADA.
To see what it looked like before my modifications, you can check out some great images by František Hajdekr over here. Basically, I think they missed the mark aesthetically in a few ways. They gave it too round of a roof (because they copied the Mustang), an uneven belt line (because they copied the Mustang), and no C pillars or really any form to the bodywork at all by the rear side windows. I also didn\'t like its reliance on stickers for details like door handles and the radiator grill. It had some small mechanical issues too, like steering that would ratcheted because the 40-tooth gear got caught on some internal supports, and some poorly reinforced elements such as the hood hinges and the rearmost suspension linkage.
I fixed all of that and added some personal touches, too: black wheels and a white hood and lights for a more factory aesthetic, a dark red interior with black floors and proper Toyota seats, a largely redesigned engine with spark plug wires, an air filter, a radiator hose, new headers, and a battery; and various other changes and bugfixes including eliminating illegal techniques and filling small gaps.
This thing is now at least 1/3 official LEGO pieces as a result of my meddling. The cost of my tweaks (about $60) was massively more than I paid for the set (under $20) to begin with!
I\'m not posting this to the usual LEGO groups because this is largely not made of LEGO bricks.
Time for something a bit outside my wheelhouse! This is my heavily modified version of a Toyota AE86 designed by a LEGO knockoff brand called CADA. I bought it because I liked the idea of having another Speed Champions-style car on my shelf that had additional functionality like the LEGO Ford Mustang does. It has functional steering like the Mustang, and it also has suspension on the rear axle. It\'s also fully geared (and has a differential) for motorization. Plus, unlike many (most?) clone brands, this design wasn\'t stolen from LEGO or a MOC. It\'s original to CADA.
To see what it looked like before my modifications, you can check out some great images by František Hajdekr over here. Basically, I think they missed the mark aesthetically in a few ways. They gave it too round of a roof (because they copied the Mustang), an uneven belt line (because they copied the Mustang), and no C pillars or really any form to the bodywork at all by the rear side windows. I also didn\'t like its reliance on stickers for details like door handles and the radiator grill. It had some small mechanical issues too, like steering that would ratcheted because the 40-tooth gear got caught on some internal supports, and some poorly reinforced elements such as the hood hinges and the rearmost suspension linkage.
I fixed all of that and added some personal touches, too: black wheels and a white hood and lights for a more factory aesthetic, a dark red interior with black floors and proper Toyota seats, a largely redesigned engine with spark plug wires, an air filter, a radiator hose, new headers, and a battery; and various other changes and bugfixes including eliminating illegal techniques and filling small gaps.
This thing is now at least 1/3 official LEGO pieces as a result of my meddling. The cost of my tweaks (about $60) was massively more than I paid for the set (under $20) to begin with!
March 14, 1994
Linux 1.0---A better UNIX than Windows NT
Summary: Linux 1.0 released
Keywords: Linux Kernel 1.0 Academy Awards
X-Moderator-Added-Keywords: universe, end of
Finally, here it is. Almost on time (being just two years late is
peanuts in the OS industry), and better than ever:
Linux kernel release 1.0
This release has no new major features compared to the pl15 kernels, but
contains lots and lots of bugfixes: all the major ones are gone, the
smaller ones are hidden better. Hopefully there are no major new ones.
The Linux kernel can be found as source on most of the Linux ftp-sites
under the names
linux-1.0.tar.gz(full source)
linux-1.0.patch.pl15.gz(patch against linux-0.99pl15)
linux-1.0.patch.alpha.gz(patch from linux-pre-1.0)
it should be available at least at the sites
ftp.funet.fi:
pub/OS/Linux/PEOPLE/Linus(now)
sunsite.unc.ed:
pub/Linux/Incoming(now)
pub/Linux/kernel(soon)
tsx-11.mit.edu:
pub/linux/sources/system(soon)
ftp.cs.helsinki.fi:
pub/Software/Linux/Kernel(now)
This release finally moves Linux out of Beta status and is meant as a
base for distributions to build on. It will neither change Linux'
status as FreeWare under the GPL, nor will it mean the end of
development on Linux. In fact many new features where held back for
later releases so that 1.0 could become a well tested and hopefully
stable release.
The Linux kernel wouldn't be where it is today without the help of lots
of people: the kernel developers, the people who did user-level programs
making linux useful, and the brave and foolhardy people who risked their
harddisks and sanity to test it all out. My thanks to you all.
(Editorial note: if you think this sounds too much like the Academy
Awards ceremony, just skip this: it's not getting any better.)
Thanks to people like Aaron Kushner, Danny ter Haar and the authors of
the AnwenderHandbuch (and others) who have helped me with hardware or
monetary donations (and to the Oxford Beer Trolls and others who took
care of the drinkware). And thanks to Dirk, who helped me write this
announcement despite my lazyness ("hey, it's just another release, who
needs an announcement anyway?").
To make a long and boring story a bit shorter and boring, here is at
least a partial list of people who have been helping make Linux what it
is today. Thanks to you all,
Krishna Balasubramanian
Arindam Banerji
Peter Bauer
Fred Baumgarten
Donald Becker
Stephen R. van den Berg
Hennus Bergman
Ross Biro
Bill Bogstad
John Boyd
Andries Brouwer
Remy Card
Ed Carp
Raymond Chen
Alan Cox
Laurence Culhane
Wayne Davison
Thomas Dunbar
Torsten Duwe
Drew Eckhardt
Bjorn Ekwall
Doug Evans
Rik Faith
Juergen Fischer
Jeremy Fitzhardinge
Ralf Flaxa
Nigel Gamble
Philip Gladstone
Bruno Haible
Andrew Haylett
Dirk Hohndel
Nick Holloway
Ron Holt
Rob W. W. Hooft
Michael K. Johnson
Fred N. van Kempen
Olaf Kirch
Ian Kluft
Rudolf Koenig
Bas Laarhoven
Warner Losh
H.J. Lu
Tuomas J. Lukka
Kai M"akisara
Pat Mackinlay
John A. Martin
Bradley McLean
Craig Metz
William (Bill) Metzenthen
Rick Miller
Corey Minyard
Eberhard Moenkeberg
Ian A. Murdock
Johan Myreen
Stefan Probst
Daniel Quinlan
Florian La Roche
Robert Sanders
Peter De Schrijver
Darren Senn
Chris Smith
Drew Sullivan
Tommy Thorn
Jon Tombs
Theodore Ts'o
Simmule Turner
Stephen Tweedie
Thomas Uhl
Juergen Weigert
Matt Welsh
Marco van Wieringen
Stephen D. Williams
G\"unter Windau
Lars Wirzenius
Roger E. Wolff
Frank Xia
Eric Youngdale
Orest Zborowski
A more detailed list with contact and description information can be
found in the CREDITS file that accompanies the kernel sources.
took this today for a blog post for my work about one of our computer "scientists" finding and fixing a linux kernel bug www.anchor.com.au/blog/2012/03/bugfixing-the-in-kernel-me...
IE8 with the zoom:1 and html5.js applied. Apart from providing fallbacks for rgba colours (or trying one of the rgba js fixes) and opacity, it's almost there!
Experiencing problems with the CSS font-weight attribute. Have to use Helvetica Light for a clientwebsite. Firefox 3 doesn't render font-weight attributes under 500 correctly. In Safari everyting works fine.
Have rendered a Test Case for bugfixing:
Any hints?
VLC media player 2.0.4
This is a major update that fixes a lot of regressions of the 2.0.x branch of VLC.
We are introducing an important number of fixes and improvements for all playback, notably for Blu-Ray, DVD, HLS, Ogg and MKV files; but also for Youtube, Vimeo, Koreus and Soundcloud.
New support for the OPUS audio codec, including multichannel and streams.
Numerous bugfixes, including audio device selection, various issues on the Mac OS X interface and minor security issues.
The view in IE9 is interesting. RGBa, border-radius (on images too!) but it introduces issues that weren't in IE8, like the top right nav and positioning of the cards on the shelf.
Yet Another DIy BEauty DIsh
ah, shooting updates and bugfixes like microsoft...
anyway, i found out that the straight cone is not the best solution because it lets too much light out to the front instead of reflecting it to the sides. that's why i came up with this parabolic reflector.
looks even better now ;o)
print out the parabolic template at 300dpi
additional material:
- 1 CD
this is a series of shots from the building process. hope it is self explaining, i only replaced the cone with that parabolic thing.
awaiting your comments and hints :o)
I just received the first G1 firmware update OTA (over the air). Seems like minor bugfixes, I haven't seen any significant changes yet but also didn't face any problems before.
This is IE7, after applying 2 basic fixes: specifying zoom:1 on divs and lis, and a tiny bit of javascript to help it recognise the new HTML tags.
Still a lot to do!
V0.1 board assembled. It works OK once all the bugfixes have been applied to it.
Left-over PCBs might be found here.
yellow boxes mark places to pay extra attention on how to add the components.
for more on the op amp bugfixes / changes, see www.flickr.com/photos/kubapinkwiner/6073539995
2.0 patch is live today! Adds HW1-style formations, ballistics systems for weapons, and a host of other features, improvements, and bugfixes!
HWR is now available on Steam and GoG!
A glass of champagne for a new release. This was literally right after the 3.1 build went out. I was only around for the last four weeks of what was a very long build, but there was a tiny bit of my code in there (IE bugfixes mostly).
Great photography in his slides, and the colour from the projector was incredibly rich. Gorgeous presentation.
Read Blog Post
Left: Rastin Mehr, rmd Studio Inc. ( www.rmdStudio.com ) Joomla! Development Work Group Member
Right: Ash Sanieyan, Peer Globe Technologies ( www.PeerGlobe.com )
Compression is one of the bigger features that comes with the 2.0 update. There are also a handful of bugfixes and more presets.
I love that, not only did Tellico apparently go Electric Dreams on its developer, but he admitted it. Best bugfix (and bug!) ever award.
the "bitch" on the left is dug out of the dust every now and then for the joyful purpose of making things work on Internet Explorer 6
BECOME THE MONSTER TO FIGHT MONSTERS!
Pacific Rimplay.google.com.pacificrim
Pacific Rim is an all-new action fighting game inspired by the Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures film from acclaimed filmmaker Guillermo del Toro. Piloting weaponized robots known as Jaegers, E...
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