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  • Super User
Posted

59 65 61 68 2c 20 49 27 6d 20 67 6f 69 6e 67 20 74 6f 20 6e 65 65 64 20 79 6f 75 20 74 6f 20 63 6f 6d 65 20 69 6e 20 6f 6e 20 53 61 74 75 72 64 61 79 2e

  • Super User
Posted

59 65 61 68 2c 20 49 27 6d 20 67 6f 69 6e 67 20 74 6f 20 6e 65 65 64 20 79 6f 75 20 74 6f 20 63 6f 6d 65 20 69 6e 20 6f 6e 20 53 61 74 75 72 64 61 79 2e

 

 

Bill f*n Lumbergh.......

  • Like 1
Posted

59 65 61 68 2c 20 49 27 6d 20 67 6f 69 6e 67 20 74 6f 20 6e 65 65 64 20 79 6f 75 20 74 6f 20 63 6f 6d 65 20 69 6e 20 6f 6e 20 53 61 74 75 72 64 61 79 2e

So you want to throw out computer programing lingo. I will throw CNC lingo in this topic also.

G20 G17 G40 G80 G90

G90 G54 G00 X-6.5 Y-3.0

S600 M03

G43 H01 ZO.1 M08

G01 Z0. F50.

G01 X-6.5 Y-3.0 F12.

G01 X6.5 Y-3.

G01 X6.5 Y-2.0

G01 X-6.5 Y-2.0

G00 Z0.1 M09

N24 G28 G91 Z0. Y0. M05

M01

G90 G54 G00 X.1.375 Y-.500

S1200 M03

G43 H02 Z1. M08

G81 G99 Z0. R0.1 F4.

M98 PO085

 

Yes that is real CNC programing. That is only two of like 15 steps. To complete a part.

 

  • Super User
Posted

But mine actually said something funny. :P

  • Super User
Posted

Btw, are those coordinates for the cutting head?

Posted

Well you are part right.

 

G90 G54 G00 X.1.375 Y-.500
S1200 M03
G43 H02 Z1. M08
G81 G99 Z0. R0.1 F4.
M98 PO085

 

This little section is speed of the tool, g43 is cutter comp on, g81 is a drilling cycle, the z0 should be z-.85, R is the radius of the tool, F is the feed of the tool going through the part, M98 calls up a subprogram.

 

But mine actually said something funny. :P

It is funny in till you crash. Yep I did that a few weeks ago. I didn't have a decimal in the right place. I had a spot drill that was suppose to go only .140 deep. I had 1.40 deep. I welded the tool in the part.

Posted

Come on man, I'm only 19 and I can read cursive. I probably can't write in cursive very well since I haven't done since the fourth grade. This teachers handwriting is pretty bad considering it's important for people to be able to read it. Still not nearly as bad as my handwriting though.

  • Super User
Posted

Does your teacher know Squirmin Wormin ? ?

:eyebrows:

A-Jay

Hilarious A-jay...lol.

Hootie

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted

Cursive is only one of the things to go by the wayside as the years go by.  So many people can't even sign there names now!  Same goes for using a turn signal on your car, opening the door for your lady, and on and on and on.  Too many things takin for granted.

  • Super User
Posted

Come on man, I'm only 19 and I can read cursive. I probably can't write in cursive very well since I haven't done since the fourth grade. This teachers handwriting is pretty bad considering it's important for people to be able to read it. Still not nearly as bad as my handwriting though.

Don't "come on man" me... It doesn't make you look smart.

I never said I couldnt read cursive, I said I have a hard time reading cursive, especially when its a bunch of jumbled up chicken scratch.

  • Super User
Posted

i only use cursive for signing my name anymore. everything else can go in print...

Same here, and my sig usually looks like a tilde, some times I'll mess around and write mickey mouse. No one even reads them

Posted

I read too with no trouble. The problem is just that, cursive is being phased out. In another generation no one will be able to read old letters from great grandparents etc. not to mention the founding documents. I miss them being little, but I'm glad my kids are out of school. This stuff makes my head want to explode. 

  • Like 1
Posted

I read too with no trouble. The problem is just that, cursive is being phased out. In another generation no one will be able to read old letters from great grandparents etc. not to mention the founding documents.

 

This.  Exactly this.  My kids are under a year and 6 years.  Both will learn cursive.

 

I've been through the founding documents and their printed counterparts.  Know what?  Key things are changed.  Not so you'd notice, but things like "People" and "people" are different.  Capitalization denotes differences and those differences are taken away in the modern translation.

 

They took away the option of learning Latin before I hit high school, and there's a lot of stuff that I cannot now do without it.  Latin is important. 

 

Everyone is so damned obsessed with charging ahead that the lessons of the past are forgotten, and we wonder why we're in the state we're in now.

 

Bubonic plague, here we come!

 

Josh

  • Super User
Posted

 

I've been through the founding documents and their printed counterparts.  Know what?  Key things are changed.  Not so you'd notice, but things like "People" and "people" are different.  Capitalization denotes differences and those differences are taken away in the modern translation.

 

The link I provided above uses the same case, punctuation, etc. as the original, hand signed document.  You're not reading the official version.

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted

Cursive is only one of the things to go by the wayside as the years go by.  So many people can't even sign there names now!  Same goes for using a turn signal on your car, opening the door for your lady, and on and on and on.  Too many things takin for granted.

 

Agreed, along with spelling and proper use of words like there, their and they're.

  • Super User
Posted

Agreed, along with spelling and proper use of words like there, their and they're.

I'm really bad at that when on internet forums, Facebook, etc... I mess up things like you're and your, their and they're, to and too etc..

  • Super User
Posted

It would help IMO, especially with us younger kids that didn't grow up writing essays in full cursive.

Let me throw this out there, since I'm a parent.  How about you 'younger kids' take it upon yourselves to learn to read & write in cursive?

 

I know we all use keyboards 90 percent of the time, but learning isn't something that should ever stop.  My daughter can read mine and my wife's handwriting just fine, but she had to practice it when she was young.

 

Perhaps, in return, some of us 'older folks' can practice talking with our thumbs and improve our texting speeds...

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted

Let me throw this out there, since I'm a parent. How about you 'younger kids' take it upon yourselves to learn to read & write in cursive?

I know we all use keyboards 90 percent of the time, but learning isn't something that should ever stop. My daughter can read mine and my wife's handwriting just fine, but she had to practice it when she was young.

Perhaps, in return, some of us 'older folks' can practice talking with our thumbs and improve our texting speeds...

While I agree with you 100% about never stop learning, I disagree with the rest of your statement.

Why learn cursive when (for better or for worse) it's being phased out. What will you ever do that would be a substantial life changer with cursive?

If you want to learn things then go for a second language, maybe even some trade skills. Hell... Learn how to scrapbook, because sadly, that's more valuable than cursive is today.

  • Like 3
  • Super User
Posted

Let me throw this out there, since I'm a parent.  How about you 'younger kids' take it upon yourselves to learn to read & write in cursive?

 

 

Why would they? Learning is great if there's a purpose, where is the todays purpose in cursive? Writing checks isn't that important, besides that I can't see any reason the need why it has to be a requirement to know.

 

Rubbing two sticks together can create fire but how many learn that to use it over a lighter? Somethings just need to evolve

  • Like 1
  • Super User
Posted

Couldn't agree with the last two post more.

Cursive was used to speed up the writing process and make it so ink didn't get spattered on the page from lifting up and pushing back down on paper back in the day.

We don't write with feathers anymore, cursive is obsolete.

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