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Leaky bucket/rewrite

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Leaky bucket/rewrite appears to be a draft but is actually a live article. Subpages are not enabled in articlespace, unlike user and talk spaces. I have moved it to Talk:Leaky bucket/rewrite. ---— Gadget850 (Ed) talk 09:51, 30 June 2010 (UTC)Reply

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Fowler and "-ize"

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Another contributor has identified for me the subject of your query. You were right, and I have fixed it. --Old Moonraker (talk) 18:00, 9 March 2012 (UTC)Reply

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QOS

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Hi Graham,

When you updated the page on UPC and NPC I see you added a link to QOS. I suspect that this wasn't what you intended as QOS is a disambiguation page? I hope that you don't mind that I have had a go at correcting the link to what I suspect was meant to be the page on Quality of service.

Cheers. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 94.192.224.159 (talk) 16:10, 9 April 2012 (UTC)Reply

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MfD nomination of User:Graham.Fountain/Leaky bucket/rewrite

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Merge discussion for Triumph TR7 Sprint

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here

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Explaining

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I patrolled your page. I went through the enormously-backlogged list of newly-created pages and confirmed that your page was okay: not spam, not an attack page, not a copyright violation, not any of the other reasons for which I would delete someone's page without asking. Then I clicked "patrolled" to remove it from the list of "pages that have not yet been patrolled", and moved on to the next entry. That's all. DS (talk) 22:09, 26 June 2013 (UTC)Reply

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Talkback 23:15, 19 October 2013 (UTC)

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burstiness

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hey man. I don't have strong feelings about the word at all, I was just randomly gnoming (certainly not a word) around and assumed that this was a jargon term. I'm wrong as often as I'm right (almost). From one Graeme to another, if you had a tr7 I'm assuming you like working on cars as much or more than actually driving them. Primergrey (talk) 10:37, 4 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

No probs Graeme.
Actually no, I prefer driving the old rust bucket to working on it. Mind you, it's probably not long for this world, as one front wing is comming unglued and there's less boot gutter than really needed - gawd knows how it got an MoTC; though I've been saying that for 3-4 years now. I've swapped to a 1973 Dolomite Sprint, one of the first batch of black and yellow cars, so there's seats for all the kids, but that's not as much fun. But I'll probably re-create one of the 60-62 genuine factory TR7 sprints as soon as I find a suitable bodyshell: pictures on Triumph TR7 Sprint.

Notification of automated file description generation

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I thank you!

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Graham;

A little while ago, you sent me something ('hanging restrictive relative pronouns "that" to descriptive relative pronoun "which"), and I never responded.

Why am I thanking you?

Because - not only where you polite (a seeming rarity these days), but, you also explained to me something about grammar which I did not know.


All couched in an understanding tone.

B4 writing this, I looked @ your 'User:Graham.Fountain' page, and it gave me a pleasant chuckle - specifically the 'this user lives too far from York to be happy' comment (I'm a native NYC'er; born and am still (mostly) here.

So, thanks again - for teaching me something!

All good wishes,

U.N. Owen — Preceding unsigned comment added by UNOwenNYC (talkcontribs) 14:05, 25 April 2014 (UTC)Reply

AmE/BrE spelling

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Thank you so much for that. I will try to comment at more length when (?if) I get a moment, but for now - yes, absolutely! I'm glad we understand each other and I'm sorry that I was unclear about my intentions at first. Best wishes DBaK (talk) 21:09, 5 May 2014 (UTC)Reply


Hello!

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I think I should introduce myself. I have a PhD and 7+ years’ experience working in ICF specifically on the National Ignition Facility. I edit a variety of fusion articles, IEC, fusors, Magnetic mirrors, ICF, Fusion power, ect... Our edits conflict sometimes and I think we should try and find a consensus. — Preceding unsigned comment added by WikiHelper2134 (talkcontribs) 21:13, 3 June 2014 (UTC)Reply

Hi, You prob., saw from my user page that my background is 30 odd years in research in military avionics, mostly real-time systems, data buses, and networks, and writing specifications and standards for same. So, I'm only trying to get the article to read reasonably well, not trying to correct the physics. My interest in the subject is purely as a dilettante. But as such, I do find it fascinating. And, as a result, I’d like to see it as well written as possible. However, unlike things like the leaky bucket or the Triumph TR7 Sprint, I’m not rabid enough about it to get overly stressed.
My feeling about the polywell article is that the lead section could be much, much better. From what it says in Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Lead section, I infer that the lead section of a Wikipedia article on any subject should be suitable for Fred Bloggs to read, or at least start to, and not just be aimed at the cognoscente. So, in my opinion, most readers coming to the article don’t, initially, really want to know about the polywell’s relationship to the magnetic mirror (they’d stick it on their fridge door and comb their hair in it anyway) and the biconic cusp (Jamie Sommers' décolletage?). The majority will want the more useful and interesting stuff first: what it does, or what it is claimed it could do, and what informed opinion/actions says/implies about how likely that is. So that it is a fusion reactor, the possibilities of net power production and aneutronic fusion, and Bussard’s and the USN's relationships with it, are a bit more significant to me, at least in the context of the first paragraph of the lead section. The later paragraphs in the lead (up to 4 in total) can then outline whatever aspects of the physics are relevant, and to what they relate, and the main body can cover these in whatever depth is appropriate.
Contrastingly, I also think that some of the language in the body of the article tends, or at least has tended, to the kids reading book level. I do understand that it may be a tricky balancing act to avoid the “This article may be too technical…” flag, but the language should at least be above reception class level. I did put a comment about the juvenile language on the talk page a while back, but it seems I’m alone in the opinion.
Graham.Fountain | Talk 14:59, 4 June 2014 (UTC)Reply

Formatting in Singular they

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In your recent edit to Singular they you changed the formatting of the title of a 5-page article to italic. Did you consider MOS:NOITALIC and MOS:QUOTETITLE? --Boson (talk) 09:43, 13 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

In reply to your question on my talk page ("No, what are they?"):
MOS:NOITALIC (or Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Text formatting#When not to use italics) states:

Italics are generally used only for titles of longer works. Titles of shorter works should be enclosed in double quotation marks ("text like this"). . . . These include but are not limited to: Articles, essays, papers, chapters, reference work entries, newspaper and magazine sections or departments, episodes of audio-visual series, segments or skits in longer programs, short poems, short stories, story lines and plot arcs; songs, album tracks and other short musical works; leaflets and circulars.

MOS:QUOTETITLE (or Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Titles#Quotation marks) states:

Italics are generally used only for titles of longer works. Titles of shorter works should be enclosed in double quotation marks ("text like this"). It particularly applies to works that exist as a smaller part of a larger work. Examples of titles which are quoted but not italicized:

  • Articles, essays, papers, or conference presentation notes (stand-alone or in a collected larger work): "The Dos and Don'ts of Dating Online" is an article by Phil "Dr. Phil" McGraw on his advice site.
--Boson (talk) 10:02, 13 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

I was going by what Ritter wrote in the Oxford Guide to Style. If WP style conflicts, revert it.

'Sokay, I've done it already.Graham.Fountain | Talk 10:31, 13 August 2014 (UTC)Reply

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Reference errors on 27 September

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Reference errors on 9 December

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User:Graham.Fountain/Triumph TR7 Sprint

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Graham,

I think that your page User:Graham.Fountain/Triumph TR7 Sprint should probably be deleted as it is appearing as a parallel page to Triumph TR7 Sprint, e.g. at Category:Triumph Motor Company vehicles

GTHO (talk) 06:57, 30 May 2017 (UTC)Reply

I'd rather not have the page deleted because I'm using it to work up changes and find the sandbox too ephemeral. A look at the history will show it's still an active page.

Sorry it showed up in the catagory - that was my mistake copying the whole of the TR7 Spint page in there during a synchronization. I have deleted that part from it.

Graham.Fountain | Talk 09:53, 30 May 2017 (UTC)Reply

Thanks. Problem solved. GTHO (talk) 10:06, 30 May 2017 (UTC)Reply

The shape of things to come

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Thought you might enjoy these British car comics: http://www.boicey.com/comic_pics/theshape.gif http://www.boicey.com/comics.html I like the Special Service Tool comic.  Stepho  talk  05:31, 4 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

@Stepho-wrs:Excelent! I may know a few places they'll be apriciated. I like the oil stains one - though I know my neigbours wished mine were that small.Graham.Fountain | Talk 10:10, 4 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

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talk:TTEthenret edits

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Many thanks for contributions, I have few comments. I suggest specifics and limitations in another chapter. I take you comments as valuable contributions.

Concerning:"However, even where the sum of the allocated bandwidths is less than the capacity provided at every point in the network, delivery is still not guaranteed due, e.g., to potential buffer overflows at switch queues, etc., which simple limitation of bandwidths does not guarantee are avoided."

This is correct but I don'T know any configuration not taking network calculus and buffer sizes into account. Better to say the configuration which maintains defined max latency and jitter always has buffer in mind, otherwise it will never get certified in a real application. Typically you do not load configs which will overflow buffers and create potentially catastrophic consequences. I think this is a text for a chapter on "Configuration rules for RC traffic and AFDX". We can expand with mixed criticality topics later.

My suggestion is to move it into a new chapter on the end or link a wiki page which describes those topics in detail.

Furthermore: " However, time triggered transmissions are necessarily cyclically scheduled and thus delays between processes in the application layer can be large, e.g. with plesiochronous processes, as is observed in systems using cyclic MIL-STD-1553B buses, up to twice the transmission interval due to released packets waiting for scheduled transmission at the source and for the receiving process to run at the destination."

1)This is a special case in L-TTA archiecture you mention - i.e. synchronous nateowk and freewheeling applicationapplicat. 2)In TTA architectures and control systems we can get down to 100µs latency andb 10kHz control loops. Therefore I consider a comparison with MIl1553 not the best one - it is a databus, in contrast switched full-duplex networks have different capability to run multiple parallel streams on different links.

If you are interested we can extend into a chapter on event driven vs time-triggered, and TTA vs L-TTA where those differences can be assessed, but this may be so broad that we need a new wiki page.

Mja7014 (talk) 18:43, 11 March 2018 (UTC)Reply

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