Thanks Patrick; Just a little note below that does not require a response. On Mon, 2008-07-07 at 08:12 -0430, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: > On Sun, 2008-07-06 at 13:05 -0400, William Case wrote: > > Hi Max and Patrick; > > > > On Sun, 2008-07-06 at 10:40 -0430, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: > > > On Sun, 2008-07-06 at 10:16 -0400, William Case wrote: > > > > Hi; > > > [snip] > > I have been thinking about your suggestions all morning. I have decided > > to develop the following strategy. If you have a better suggestion let > > me know. > > > > 1) Start by using mainly cut and paste from wherever I can find info. > > 2) Using NoteCase in conjunction with FreeMind to begin organizing data > > conceptually and storing the details. > > 3) Begin with hardware (and perhaps the prerequisite drivers even if > > drivers are technically software) so that I can develop a basic > > understanding of the physical limitations and problems that software has > > to overcome for each different type of use. > > 4) As I go through the hardware list, perhaps I will pickup the > > applicability and use of various pieces of software. > > 5) So far I have the following list of hardware, off the top of my head, > > that seems to play a role: > > RJ45; Twisted Pair Cable > > CATV; Coaxial Cable > > USB > > Wireless > > NIC > > RAM (how used for sockets, caches, DMA etc. by media hardware) > > Audio Card/Chip > > Video Card/chip > > CD/DVD Drive > > CD Disk > > DVD Disk > > Digital Still Picture Camera > > Digital Video Camera > > WebCam > > TV Tuners > > > > Any suggestions of additions or deletions gratefully accepted. > > You'll end up writing the Encyclopedia of Computer Hardware. Very much > off the top if my head, I think it would be better first to establish a > frame of reference: start with a quick survey of the basic principles of > digital media, such as the A/D and D/A conversion, compression and > packetizing techniques, streaming, buffering and synchronization, then a > discussion of the various popular wrapper formats (Quicktime, Real, > Flash, DVD etc.). After that, you can get into specifics of how the > multiple architectures that have evolved allow us to deal with all this > (or not). I have popped your suggestions into my outline. I have to find out what A/D and D/A conversion is. (I haven't looked it up yet). Actually, I have managed to read and cut and paste about half the hardware specs and/or data sheets since yesterday. It is not that difficult for me. I have traced already how basic I/O, how CPU and memory work; from wall plug to initd. I now know where to look for tutorials, manuals, data sheets and schematics for most computer hardware and software parts and pieces now. I have taught myself C so I could read source code. I used to make my living analyzing programs, policies and businesses; pulling them apart and putting them back together looking for logic gaps and then documenting my findings. I am retired so I have the time; and I enjoy coming to understand new things; and get extremely frustrated when I don't. If I keep everything focused on my own system, as it currently exists, it shouldn't be that difficult and could be useful to others. My system is no where out of the norm. Bragging a little; and putting things into perspective for me and you. -- Regards Bill; Fedora 9, Gnome 2.22.2 Evo.2.22.2, Emacs 22.2.1 -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list