I remember programming locomotive controls with a 8086 back in 1986. The system had 1kbyte SRAM with an option for a 2nd kByte. So I put the second SRAM into the socket. Powered up, loaded the program. run it. Writing value<>0 to the second RAM resulted in all being 0 or false. Damn. Checking the program. Reading the address contents again and again. Eventually RTFM again. 2nd RAM needs a jumper next to it. Put the jumper. Works.
Clue : If you use beer everything will be false.
2nd Clue : The keyboard will become sticky with a Weizen inside. tried that too.
haha, good one.
I was more or less thinking of the quote:
"A drunk man's words are a sober man's thoughts"
Beer tends to bring out one's "inner truth" as it were..
]]>Clue : If you use beer everything will be false.
2nd Clue : The keyboard will become sticky with a Weizen inside. tried that too.
]]>Interesting video, the yes/no true/false paradigm is an interesting one, especially the maths behind it going back to boolean algebra and the man who invented it, George Boole.
]]>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxXaizglscw
PS: don't use beer, a memory leak is inevitable
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