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562

Shits infuriating.

Shits infuriating.

(post is archived)

[–] [deleted] 6 pts

Probably an international intellectual property security thing

[–] 6 pts

The funny thing is that most of them use the same codes. They all do have their own caveats however...

[–] [deleted] 3 pts

I find it more funny how much an employer will pay tech support for an hour of work over a I/0 switch/parameter in the wrong position.

[–] 3 pts

I mean there's a lot of idiots finger fucking the NC.

[–] [deleted] 3 pts

My dad was a machinist (pre-computer). He once told me a story of how some company paid him to fly out and look at a machine they just bought and couldn't get running. It took him 15 minutes to get running. Someone forgot to plug it in. He was paid several hundred an hour plus travel and such. He taught me to always check fort the simplest solution first, no matter how unlikely.

[–] 3 pts

Funiac or hass, what you looking for, there a lot if mayerial openly available? Honestly I think a lot of it stems that they dont want you finding out how to rig machines with homebrew items because they lose money.

[–] 0 pt

This specific machine runs off a modified fanuc control.

[–] 1 pt

I remember reading many years ago that (say) video card or sound card manufacturers didn't publish much info because their competitors might try to clone the capabilities.

Following is from https://www.phatcode.net/res/224/files/html/ch64/64-01.html

Years ago, I was working at Video Seven, a now-vanished video adapter manufacturer, helping to develop a VGA clone. The fellow who was designing Video Seven’s VGA chip, Tom Wilson, had worked around the clock for months to make his VGA run as fast as possible, and was confident he had pretty much maxed out its performance. As Tom was putting the finishing touches on his chip design, however, news came fourth-hand that a competitor, Paradise, had juiced up the performance of the clone they were developing by putting in a FIFO.

That was all he knew; there was no information about what sort of FIFO, or how much it helped, or anything else. Nonetheless, Tom, normally an affable, laid-back sort, took on the wide-awake, haunted look of a man with too much caffeine in him and no answers to show for it, as he tried to figure out, from hopelessly thin information, what Paradise had done. Finally, he concluded that Paradise must have put a write FIFO between the system bus and the VGA, so that when the CPU wrote to video memory, the write immediately went into the FIFO, allowing the CPU to keep on processing instead of stalling each time it wrote to display memory.

Tom couldn’t spare the gates or the time to do a full FIFO, but he could implement a one-deep FIFO, allowing the CPU to get one write ahead of the VGA. He wasn’t sure how well it would work, but it was all he could do, so he put it in and taped out the chip.

The one-deep FIFO turned out to work astonishingly well; for a time, Video Seven’s VGAs were the fastest around, a testament to Tom’s ingenuity and creativity under pressure. However, the truly remarkable part of this story is that Paradise’s FIFO design turned out to bear not the slightest resemblance to Tom’s, and didn’t work as well. Paradise had stuck a read FIFO between display memory and the video output stage of the VGA, allowing the video output to read ahead, so that when the CPU wanted to access display memory, pixels could come from the FIFO while the CPU was serviced immediately. That did indeed help performance—but not as much as Tom’s write FIFO.

[–] 2 pts

It's amazing how he was able to take it and run with it and implement a better solution.

[–] 1 pt

Yes. Experienced that. Been trying to get the op manual for a Johnford 850 off the net. Only 1 source and it requires a cc number.

[–] 1 pt

Man talk about a slap in the face with those guys.

http://www.johnford.com.tw/service

After-sales service is indispensable in machine tool industry since even the best quality machine may have some technical issues. Therefore, Johnford considers it to be as important as our promise of the quality of our products to customers. We take every possible problem extremely seriously so that our customers can achieve the best performance with our machines.

Dedicated to our agents, this section provides you with essential information such as videos, photos and explosion drawings so as to give a more comprehensive understanding of dealing with technical issues and maintenance support of our machines. Furthermore, the manuals of all of our machines are uploaded for our agents to look up. Link to the cloud: http://cloud.johnford.tw

[–] 1 pt

Never ever ever ever ever put down the instructions to your work on paper . Ever.

[–] 0 pt

Nah you just have to keep it locked up in your toolbox and throw it out or take it with you when you quit.

[–] 0 pt

if you insist on writting them down, you leave them outside of your place of employement. Everything on their property they can keep, you can whine and take them to court over it ...where they'll have plenty of time to photo copy and duplicate everything until then.

If you leave a detailed manual on "how to take my job from me" you're a fucking retard and deserve to have your life destroyed.

[–] 0 pt

Damn dude what happened to you?

[–] 0 pt

what do you mean programming manuals?

Don't you just write the script and run it based on the part?

[–] 0 pt

Try calling your OEM or going on their websites. Membership may be required.

[–] 0 pt

I'll try it with a burner email if possible.

[–] 0 pt

Gcode be gcode n shit