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That's what I had - a razor blade from my dad's old double sided hand razor. Some of my glued joints had a faint reddish tinge to them for some reason.
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did that too.
I still have that old exacto kit.
Those models mostly crashed and broke.
Remember the movie "Flight of the Phoenix" 1965 version.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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When I was at junior school (so 8, 9, 10 years old?) one day our teacher gave us blocks of balsa and Stanley knives, told us to carve something. I ended up with the blade in my thumb, and recall looking into the gash and thinking "oh, that white stuff must be my bone". I was walked home by my teacher (teachers couldn't afford cars those days, and it wasn't a big enough emergency to resort to a telephone call home) who had to very apologetically explain to my mother why my clothes were covered in blood. No stitches, just a bandage.
I still have the scar.
Later yes, dozens of model planes (and other stuff) dangling from the ceiling. Later my son did similar (model kits, not Stanley knives)
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Have few "unfinished" - including old trolley ( Ho scale) I used to ride to school...
Looking for WWII German "kubelwagon" (sic??) - got "Jeep"... or Russian "ZIS5 truck
(see opening scene of "T34" movie --- that one... field kitchen optional...)
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Just bought some models from Amazon.
Revell Spitfire Mk.II Model...
Revell 1:48 P - 40B Tiger S.
Revell Of Germany Fokker Dr.1 PL Triplane
Regressing to childhood.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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I would be suprised if they still sell the glue.
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Yeah, the glue. They changed the formula back in the 60's, I think and it never held as well as the original formula. Apparently, some people bought the glue for sniffing, rather than gluing. I did some planes, a cruise liner, the Enterprise Aircraft Carrier, and a number of model cars. I only attempted painting the cars. Nothing survived past my high school years. My kids were never interested in model building.
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In my twenties I switched to using MekPak, a liquid solvent for polystyrene. You had to be careful, but no "strings" of glue, set faster, and was effectively "welding" the parts together. Applied with a fine paintbrush.
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they do on amazon
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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not surprised. good application if one has the input data
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Serious question. I get the "general" nature of development things, but most of the stuff I've seen in the last few years - meh. It's all fluff.
Looking at my solid oak bookcase, I have about 40 books of various types on the shelves. In general, I have found the bookcase, my desk (lawyer sized solid oak), and credenza to be horizontal collection devices (think about that). About 1/3 of the books are cooking books - yes I'm getting tired of the tech, I'm seriously done with the tech BS. You youngsters are so screwed.
Going to donate them to the local high school...
Meanwhile, I'm just amazed at how us techies have moved on. I have not seen decent documentation since my openVMS days - and I KNEW where to find stuff in the large gray wall. Further, it was actually useful. Unlike the reprocessed garbage from MS. The last good book I read about MS was pure code related, but the name escapes me.
Pretty sure MS has an idiot AI generating "technical" doc for their products.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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charlieg wrote: bother with tech books
IMHO, as experience builds up, we ourselves become the "tech books" for juniors. They don't need to refer to manuals anymore.
For everything else, there's Google, Bing, DuckDuckGo.
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Yes. Yes I do. In fact, I just bought several books on x86 Assembler, AAarch64 Assembler, Rust, and Python. I prefer having paper in front of me as well as online resources.
I also have kept all of my EE books (I specialized in communications systems in the microwave region) and my original notes from college (converted to searchable PDF) which have been more valuable in a lot of cases than online documentation.
That's just me though, I'm pretty old school paper and pencil when it comes to engineering stuff. I learn better that way.
-Sean
----
Fire Nuts
modified 18-Mar-24 23:50pm.
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nope "
That's just me though "
has to do with basic physics. left that long ago and regret it.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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Converting your college notes to pdf is a pretty cool move. I hauled a couple of boxes around for a long time containing my college notes and texts. After the first couple of years, I never referred to them again.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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One of my friend really wanted to read one (fiction) book, and was happy when I told him that I had got a copy that he could borrow. When he realized that I was talking about a physical, printed copy, my offer was turned down: He stopped reading printed books years ago. If I could scan the book for him, so he could read it on his laptop, he was interested, but please: No paper stuff! He would rather continue his search for an electronic copy.
I did not scan my copy for him. And I never later asked if he wanted to borrow any of my books, that be physical or digital.
Religious freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make five.
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What kind of person asks a friend to scan an entire book for him?
And what exactly prevented this friend from scanning the book himself?
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Sometimes. Just sometimes, I have a good idea. I hit them up when I remember I used to know how to do something . Mostly though, the notes I have about how I figured something out are the most useful. Typical engineering notebook stuff.
-Sean
----
Fire Nuts
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Books are for old people.
I used books at the start of my career, about fifteen years ago.
But now I rarely need to know 400 pages of information, so I just google for the particular thing I want to know, or ask ChatGPT.
Much easier than searching through books, which probably don't have that specific answer anyway.
If there's something new I must learn, online tutorials have gotten much better too.
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The problem with this approach is that information online disappears. I'm fighting a battle with Microsoft at the moment, trying to track information down. Since everyone is having orgasms over chat this and that and AI, I think that is where the info is moving. I'll have to suck it up and figure it out.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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I recently had the issue of working on an old Angular 1 application (not even that old, 2016 or something).
Obviously, searching for Angular, even with the addition of "1" or "JS", gets you results for Angular 2+, which is completely different.
I managed, but just barely.
Don't know if I would've found the answers in a book though (but an Angular 1 book might've helped).
Angular seems kind of an odd one out though.
Other than that I'm more often ahead of the online articles
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I prefer textbooks to be dead tree. I find that learning a new subject from them is much easier than doing the same online. OTOH, when I just want to look up something I use the Internet, like everyone else.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Mostly agree. However, I do like online courses as well. I just perform and learn better with 'dead tree'.
-Sean
----
Fire Nuts
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