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xBox360 power WTF
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03-30-2008 6:06 AM
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Jono345


- Joined on 03-30-2008
- Posts 1
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There could be a problem with that particular power strip causing some kind of interference with the 360 controllers. Just the other day my grandma was having trouble with her phone line (loud hissing could be heard on either end of the phone and the dialup internet could not connect.) After an hour or so I discovered that her printer only had to be plugged in to cause the problem (not even connected to her computer.) I took it out and lent her an old spare and the problem is solved until we get her a new printer. Sometimes there are just the stupidest causes to problems I guess!
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dtech


- Joined on 11-13-2007
- Utrecht, Netherlands
- Posts 426
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Maybe the difference between the two is that the second one is grounded* and the other one is not? That would be the only logical explanation. Because it's the only thing which could be different from the second plug without the xbox not functioning altogether. *I don't know the English word for it, but its a literal translation from my language and mean "connected to the earth/ground" ergo it's 0V and can be used to prevent a metal case from frying you.
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dtech


- Joined on 11-13-2007
- Utrecht, Netherlands
- Posts 426
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That's a valid point. Frequency alterations can even be made deliberate by i.e. powerline networking. But still, a simple capacitor would filter that out, don't you think an Xbox has a few of those? :) Kidding aside, wouldn't a rectifier negate/weaken this effect too? I still think it's very strange, especcialy when you think that 2,4 Ghz devices like the Xbox-controllers must be extremely interference-resistant, because it's a such heavily used band. (WLAN 802.11bgn, Bluetooth, DECT just tot name a few)
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Lingerance


- Joined on 07-24-2007
- Posts 882
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I remember debugging a neighbor's internet issues (internet explorer did not work, everything else did), when I setup my laptop the gateway (switch, router, NAT, wireless AP, firewall combo box) would stay online for all of ten seconds, moving the gateway to it's own outlet fixed it. It's usually the last thing you can think of. As for why IE didn't work their anti-virus was paranoid enough to block that troublesome explorer.exe (and a few others IE needs, can't recall at the moment) process from calling out of the box.
irc://irc.slashnet.org/#TDWTF <Ling> Looks like [lotus] notes was indeed clock sucking and pissing wildly on my disk <Duplication_Prevention_Bot> Wow, that was a disturbing image.
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piptheGeek


- Joined on 12-16-2006
- Posts 36
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Weng:she recently moved the system to another location, and this was the first time she'd turned it on plugged into that strip
Is it the new location rather than the power strip that is the problem?
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El_Heffe


- Joined on 11-08-2007
- Posts 115
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It's usually the last thing you can think of.
Yes, I've noticed that. The last thing I try is always the one that works.
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belgariontheking


- Joined on 08-20-2007
- Cincinnati, OH, USA
- Posts 1,459
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El_Heffe:It's usually the last thing you can think of.
Yes, I've noticed that. The last thing I try is always the one that works.
I've noticed that too. I think it's because once I find something that works, I stop trying things.
SpectateSwamp: I can see you. You don't have to hide anymore. C'mon out and play!
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Lingerance


- Joined on 07-24-2007
- Posts 882
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dtech:OP says it's a plug next to the other one, so I don't think that is the problem
Yes, however it isn't the same one as the other one.
irc://irc.slashnet.org/#TDWTF <Ling> Looks like [lotus] notes was indeed clock sucking and pissing wildly on my disk <Duplication_Prevention_Bot> Wow, that was a disturbing image.
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Obfuscator


- Joined on 11-21-2006
- Stockholm
- Posts 75
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dtech:That's a valid point. Frequency alterations can even be made deliberate by i.e. powerline networking. But still, a simple capacitor would filter that out, don't you think an Xbox has a few of those? :) Kidding aside, wouldn't a rectifier negate/weaken this effect too? I still think it's very strange, especcialy when you think that 2,4 Ghz devices like the Xbox-controllers must be extremely interference-resistant, because it's a such heavily used band. (WLAN 802.11bgn, Bluetooth, DECT just tot name a few) No all capacitors can deal with such high frequencies, especially if you want a cheap capacitor with fairly high capacitance (to compensate for bigger spikes). I'm not experienced in this field, but I beleive that a self resonance frequency of up to a couple of hundred Mhz is quite common amongst standard capacitors. There are of course capacitors who can handle this, but it's not certain that the Xbox has one of those at the power supply. It is more likely that the board containing the sender chip has one, but if the disturbance gets into the shielding box, it could easily propagate to the chip in question through EMI. The decoding logic is probably very resilient to interference, through frequency switching, checksums etc, but the chip itself can still be vulnerable. You are correct when you say that a rectifier usually contains low-pass filters, but the operating frequency of a switched-mode power supply is usually in the kiloherz range, and it is therefore probably not very good at surpressing GHz frequencies.
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MasterPlanSoftware


- Joined on 11-10-2006
- Posts 108
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My guess is that she is just an idiot. That is usually the explanation for these problems that go against laws of nature...
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morbiuswilters


- Joined on 01-15-2008
- East Coast Represent!
- Posts 3,148
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bstorer:My wife has an uncanny knack for ignoring any rules I put into place in our home. I see no reason this wouldn't extend to the laws of physics as well.
I lol'd.
< pstorer> Bans don't mean shit on the forum. It's like being on the Sex Offender List. You can still entice kids into your van with candy.
Want more? Go the IRC channel #TDWTFMafia on irc.slashnet.org.
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shadowman


- Joined on 07-27-2006
- Maryland, USA
- Posts 437
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belgariontheking: El_Heffe:It's usually the last thing you can think of.
Yes, I've noticed that. The last thing I try is always the one that works.
I've noticed that too. I think it's because once I find something that works, I stop trying things. Can you explain that joke a little further? I still don't get it...
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PerdidoPunk


- Joined on 09-17-2007
- nj
- Posts 122
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Obfuscator:You are correct when you say that a rectifier usually contains low-pass filters, but the operating frequency of a switched-mode power supply is usually in the kiloherz range, and it is therefore probably not very good at surpressing GHz frequencies. Actually, a simple RC low pass filter should provide better attenuation at higher frequencies, even into the GHz range. Even a simple first-order filter will continue to provide more attenuation as frequency increases (attenuation doubles as frequency doubles). Higher order filters will provide a sharper drop-off past the cutoff frequency, approaching an ideal filter as the order goes to infinity. However, filters are often designed with resonance around the cutoff point that causes the signal to be amplified around that frequency.
Enterprise Software Design Lifecycle:
1) Receive business case approval 2) Leverage a dynamic solution 3) ??? 4) Value added = Profit!
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WhiskeyJack


- Joined on 12-10-2007
- Posts 31
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shadowman:
Can you explain that joke a little further? I still don't get it...
That's because you need to keep thinking of different possible meanings of the joke. The one that makes sense will probably be the last one you think of.
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TheRider


- Joined on 03-01-2005
- Zurich, Switzerland
- Posts 197
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WhiskeyJack: shadowman:
Can you explain that joke a little further? I still don't get it...
That's because you need to keep thinking of different possible meanings of the joke. The one that makes sense will probably be the last one you think of.
I can't think of any.
"correcting wrongs on the internet is like subtracting 1 from infinity"
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belgariontheking


- Joined on 08-20-2007
- Cincinnati, OH, USA
- Posts 1,459
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shadowman:Can you explain that joke a little further? I still don't get it...
Why would you keep trying things once you've found what works? (Unless you're SpectateSwamp). If you try things until they work, the one that works will be the last thing you try.
SpectateSwamp: I can see you. You don't have to hide anymore. C'mon out and play!
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MasterPlanSoftware


- Joined on 11-10-2006
- Posts 108
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belgariontheking: shadowman:Can you explain that joke a little further? I still don't get it...
Why would you keep trying things once you've found what works? (Unless you're SpectateSwamp). If you try things until they work, the one that works will be the last thing you try. Your sarcasm detector is just all sorts of broken today isn't it?
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morbiuswilters


- Joined on 01-15-2008
- East Coast Represent!
- Posts 3,148
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belgariontheking:Why would you keep trying things once you've found what works? (Unless you're SpectateSwamp). If you try things until they work, the one that works will be the last thing you try.
Hmmm.. in my experience the thing that works is the first one my co-worker tries after I give up and ask for help.
< pstorer> Bans don't mean shit on the forum. It's like being on the Sex Offender List. You can still entice kids into your van with candy.
Want more? Go the IRC channel #TDWTFMafia on irc.slashnet.org.
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n3hat


- Joined on 11-13-2006
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