In various emails I've asked if anybody knew some Linux skills for a project of serious importance and value. 1. Does anybody know how to seriously trim the Linux kernel and configure it for close to real-time driver response?? Apparently, it is agreed here we must all just accept current distros. 2. Does anybody know how to use a simplified XWindow toolkit for close to real-time response?? Apparently, some feel OpenGl or some network add-ons is the GUI of choice. 3. I've suggested car analyzers as an interesting, useful Linux beginning application. And some programming languages that might be helpful. 4. And finally I suggested a technology that is currently mandated in US federal law and advocated by United Nations environmental agreements as recently as this year in Paris. I actually understated the claim of many world leaders who say $trillions must be invested promptly, and instead said $billions. Don't make it sound as if I've annoyed you by trying to create jobs and revenue in the US. Hey, we're broke and at war. Ryan Coleman wrote: > I dont know how/where this got here. > > Can we all just stop? > > >> On Sep 24, 2016, at 8:42 AM, Rick Engebretson <eng at pinenet.com >> <mailto:eng at pinenet.com>> wrote: >> >> I spent a decade as a real Biophysical Chemist after decades >> competing with serious students from around the world for many years. >> Now, every Tom, Dick and Harry is a renewable energy expert. >> >> There is something very special about quantum physics, optics, >> photons from the sun's surface, the structure of cellulose, etc. >> There is a reason fiber optics made a better network. There is a >> reason fire is derived from optical excitation energy. I put >> something on his board I think is important and some might look into. >> Not preempt. > > > > _______________________________________________ > TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota > tclug-list at mn-linux.org > http://mailman.mn-linux.org/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list