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Oops. I use 8.1 & very happy with this one.
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Ditto here. My main laptop at home spent a brief week running Win10, but got rolled back to 8.1 the day after MS force fed it an update. They had to turn it on from a full power off, and left if on after they were done. No more Win10 for me except for my experimental laptop.. and they're about to lose that one too.
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Actually this 8.1 came with laptop by default. It's been 4+ years & everything is going on smooth & fine. If something happens, I'll go with Linux. No more plan for Windows. Right now I use 99% FREE & Opensource softwares only in my laptop.
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Just turn WU off Chris unless you want a particular fix, then you can go get the kb update yourself.
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AFAIK, you cannot turn off updates under win10 anymore. Even the registry hack did not turn it off on my machine.
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Just disabling the Windows Update service seems to have done it for me. Have had it off for past year, and only turn it on temporarily to update at my convenience. No problems.
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Yep, it got me this morning as well!...3 VS projects open, half a dozen notepad scratch areas open, at least a dozen web pages open, multiple tabs in SSMS open with work in progress.
With AI being 'the thing' these days it seems to me that Win10 could use a bit of logic to avoid causing unsaved work to be lost by a forced restart.
The forced restarts are really my only gripe with Win10. I've tried many settings (in vain) to keep it from happening with no joy.
One other problem I get is that many times after an update, I have to go and reset registry permissions for some of my customized right-click menus.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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Hi,
I am a pen and paper man when it comes to making electrical or electronic designs. Unfortunately, pen and paper are no longer of use here. All design packages I can find, approach it from a Network Principle, and offer all sorts of checks and simulations. It is also a study in itself to learn how to use each of same.
I am looking for something very simple, one step up of MS Paint, preferably freeware, where I can throw up a diagram as I know it, without al those complications and steep learning curves. The Diagrams I am trying to draw are really simple!
Anyone any Idea,
Regards
Bram van Kampen
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Caveat I hate graphics - huge time consumers. There used to be a package called Designer back in the day (can't remember how long ago) that even a graphics Luddite like me could use with no experience at all. I think it got bought and "upgraded" to be totally unusable.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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Well Mycroft,
it sounds like something like that could suffice for me.
I just want to draw basic diagrams, without all the nonsense of background software of trying to put it all on a PCB.
The Simpler the Better, Just basic drawing without having to study CAD.
I am not trying do design something aided by a computer, I am essentially trying to make a drawing. of a simple circuit, where the computer is my willing and unquestioning drawing board. Very much the same as that my paper does not refuse the ink. when I make a Bad Connection.
now I have plenty of XP computers off line to run stuff like this on
Regards
Bram van Kampen
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Orcad used to be great. I don't know if it still is. There is Eagle also.
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Well,
Orcad is far to complicated for my purpose It logically links elements of the design. I do not want that!
Eagle is even more sophisticated, most certainly do not want That!
The software I am looking for would have Symbols, but would be largely agnostic to their meaning.
I just want to put a few symbols across the screen, and save or print it! As said, a sophisticated version of MS Paint!
No Networking of my design!!
Regards
Bram van Kampen
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Hi,
I've always done all of my diagrams with Visio. It is extremely simple to use and you can easily do diagrams of hardware/software and any generic logic flow.
There are dozens of alternatives to Visio[^] if your looking to go the free route.
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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Well,
I stay clear of anything to do with cloud storage. It is against my data protection religion.
Thanks and Regards,
Bram van Kampen
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Bram van Kampen wrote: would have Symbols, but would be largely agnostic to their meaning. This intrigues me: could you elaborate ?
Do you require typical EE symbols: resistors, capacitors, inductors, IC's, diodes, transformers, etc. ? Do you need "smart connectors" that lock onto shapes and re-route when you drag symbols around ?
cheers, Bill
«... thank the gods that they have made you superior to those events which they have not placed within your own control, rendered you accountable for that only which is within you own control For what, then, have they made you responsible? For that which is alone in your own power—a right use of things as they appear.» Discourses of Epictetus Book I:12
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Well,
First of all, Thanks for your reply.
I require EE like symbols as a Library of all those things, as free to position and rotate pictorial drawing objects, but, without any further logical connection! I do in particular not want 'Smart Connectors'. I want absolutely No re-routing when I drag symbols about! I want to do that Myself, By Hand! I do not want logical analysis of the circuit, I do not plan to export same to a PCB design!
The Wiring between the elements should have no logical implications for the design, but, should just comprise of lines to complete the visual picture, in a Human Readable Form, particularly when printed. I also want to be able to include such picture in a Document by way of illustration. Any picture format would do.
All I want is a sort of MsPaint on Steriods, where I can get a Realistic Print Preview.
Kind Regards,
Bram van Kampen
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Mycroft Holmes wrote: Caveat I hate graphics - huge time consumers. Face it. It's time to retire your Altair and move on to something more modern.
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats.
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I usually draw diagrams in Word.
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Hi,
I have open Office! How do you do it in MsWord?
Regards,
Bram
Bram van Kampen
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This is what I do and you can try it easy and free.
Goto Electrical Engineering Stack Exchange[^]
Click any question
Go to bottom where you can answer question (your not going to save so it is OK)
Click the 7th icon in the "toolbar" of the answer question area. It's a pencil with a resistor looking thing.
Its schematic editor and it is absolutely easy to use. Add your electrical components and they connect very easily.
Works so great and you can even get a subscription to the tool.
Try it and let me know.
I guess that built-in editor is Online circuit simulator & schematic editor - CircuitLab[^]
I was amazed at how intuitive & easy it is to use.
modified 13-Feb-18 22:14pm.
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Wow: that takes me back to boyhood experiments in DIY electronics' projects, etching my own PCB boards, building HeathKits, etc.
In the 1950's ... before transistors, before the brilliant mind [*] of Raddevus even had a body
Bill, the past-use-by-date antique
[*] No irony here: this is said with total sincerity; I'm smart enough to know very smart people when I see them !
«... thank the gods that they have made you superior to those events which they have not placed within your own control, rendered you accountable for that only which is within you own control For what, then, have they made you responsible? For that which is alone in your own power—a right use of things as they appear.» Discourses of Epictetus Book I:12
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Thanks very much. That means a lot to me coming from someone with so much experience.
That schematic tool is really very cool. To me, it is the way software should be -- easy to use and guides you toward more professional use.
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raddevus wrote: lick the 7th icon in the "toolbar" of the answer question area. It's a pencil with a resistor looking thing.
That's pretty cool!
Common sense is admitting there is cause and effect and that you can exert some control over what you understand.
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Dia[^] is a fairly simple diagram editor. You may need to install some additional shapes[^] for electrical diagrams.
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