In theory I'm coming to you from across my house via light beam communications. [ But I wasn't, I ran into more software configuration gotchas when moving from sending/receiving with one laptop running very old Linux, to transmitting from my 'new' laptop running current Devuan Linux. First was that I forgot that specifying characters as hexidecimal codes with "echo -e" is a Bashism, so didn't work with /bin/sh which is symlinked to /bin/bash on the other laptop. More difficult was working out why the sending would stop after a while. It turns out the kernel serial driver now has a default time-out of 30sec for the serial port buffer to clear before it's forced closed. Since I was using really slow baud rates, it always timed out before the end of the file was transmitted. This isn't the domain of stty, so I needed to install setserial with which the time-out can be bumped up to 20min with: sudo setserial /dev/usb/ttyUSB0 closing_wait 120000 So now on the 6th of Feb, another warm night full of dive-bombing mozzies, I'm having another go at sending this post through my house and out into cyberspace through nothing more than some flashes of light. It did give me a chance to upload some photos of my cobbled-together optical transmitter and receiver though: gopher://aussies.space/1/~freet/photos/optical_comms/ ] [ Hmm, now the receiving laptop has hung, requiring a hard reboot, with is very unusual. I really am better off keeping computers out of my electronics projects. Anyway, third try... ] [ Nope, it hung again. Damn it, computers just don't like to communicate by light! ] Except for the sun room extension, the house opens up straight from one end to the other down the hallway, so I set up at the furthest ends short of removing a table and cupboard, for an 8.5m transmission distance. This isn't terribly impressive, but as far as I can get indoors, and I'm sure not going outside again tonight if I can help it. Today was the date of the hamfest (amature radio swap-meet) I try to get to. Last year it was too hot. This year, too hot again. The beginning of a forecast heatwave, and quite warm even in the early morning. So I missed out on that yet again, having only got to one since the pandemic. Instead I've been working out the design for the cantenna/waveguide for attaching to my satellite dish that I'll use as a 4G mobile broadband antenna. I'm still not sure how to tell which of the 45 degree polarized antennas to connect to which connector on the modem, but otherwise I think I've sorted out everything except a 'can' of the right size and rigidity. This was in the air-conditioned comfort of the lounge room. Later on I tried setting up the opical transmitter and reciever units that I built on the ex-army telescope tripods that I built them to fit. They're both the same model "instrument stand no. 21 Mk. V", but it turns out one's from WWI (made in 1915) and the other's WWII (1943). So the former is about 110 years old! This is quite possibly the first real use it's been put to in all that time because it looks pretty unscathed for its witness of over a century, or maybe it really was used in battle out next to where T. E. Lawrence is in Seven Pillars of Wisdom which I'm still reading, and quite enjoying. Anyway I took some photos of the rig, which I can't be bothered selecting and uploading now, to be tested out when it cooled off and I could open up the parts of the house that the A/C doesn't reach. Before that the weather started getting dark and I heard thunder, so I set up my cloud charge detector again. Soon the needle of its over-sized panel meter was bumping back and forth in a facinating rhythum as the crashes of the heavens grew louder accompanied by much brighter flashes than I had in mind for my optical transmitter that night. But then a sudden jolt to one end of the scale was triggered not by lightning, but by a sudden powerful wave of dust blocking out everything to be seen through the windows of the house and prolonged by a fierce wind that continued as the meter jolted still with each nearer strike of lightning. Suddenly a great downpour of rain came and dampened everything with brown dirty water, giving way to hail and greater deluges overflowing the guttering of the house. I continued to watch the storm through the windows and my cloud charge detector until a sudden swing on the needle to the other extreme revealed a change in the wind had blown the rain over the sensor on the verandah and I rushed out to grab it defore the electronics, or the card base it's built on, got too wet. Since I was naked anyway this was really quite a refreshing shower in the persistently warm weather, only the passing threat of lightning and the brownness of the puddles dissuaded me from having a splash in them too. The storm died down and I cooked a slightly late dinner, after which there was a fire call to a tree burning on top of a hill from a lightning strike. I went along to that and helped with filling up the newer fire trucks spraying the tree with their fancy bumper-mounted monitors. Chatter on the fire radio mentioned downed power lines and torn-off roofs in nearby towns. Someone said the nearby fire tower had measured a wind gust to 150Km/hr. After an hour of this the tree was out and clouds were closing in for another storm. Nobody wanted to be on the side of that hill for a repeat performance of that apocalyptic weather, so fire trucks soon scattered and I got back home just before the rain began again. Not so fiercely as it turned out, but enough that our efforts on wetting tree may have been pointless. At least now it's cooled off, so I can test this optical thing out. The only trouble being that I still need to get my orders prepared tonight to post tomorrow morning before it gets hot (if it ever gets properly cool). I wanted to wait untill the storm passed, which it has now, to keep my computers powered off in case of a power surge. The mozzies are all over me too. So let's see if this works and I'll post some more details later on, or maybe when I finally try it outdoors for ROOPHLOCH, when I'll really be able to find out how far it can go. - The Free Thinkar