http://science.discovery.com/tv/build-bigger/episodes/episodes.html
I came across what was my favorite episode of this show on the Science Channel. Broadcast before the City Center in Las Vegas was finished, the show takes a look at the different construction going on for the entire development. So complicated and so many people involved. What a great episode.
I was walking around the other day looking into the hillside thinking about benching a slope. For those not familiar with the word, benching, it’s when you put a swale with a minimum slope for self cleaning on a 2:1 slope that is higher than 30′. This swale then drains to a downdrain which can be connected with multiple swales located on the slope. The downdrain than leads to a stormdrain or street.
What always amazes me is how someone who doesn’t understand how to design these would take the benching and slope for granted. I have worked on some very large planning phases of subdivisions and this was always a very very complicated thing to make work. Not only is the designer making a street work with the mountain, but they also have to get as many rough pads as possible. Not to mention making a street on the toe of the slope work with the street located at the top of the slope and then factoring in if it’s possible to make a rough pad in there. A designer must also keep in mind that a larger bench gets put in for slopes that are higher than 100′ which loses even more valuable space. I really liked this part of the design as it’s very difficult to make work, but once it works the plans look like some kind of beautiful artwork.
Next time you drive or walk around a hillside development make sure to take a look at this very complicated design. And imagine someone trying to make their magic work on the plans, which from what I have seen is always done by hand before going into the computer.
“A construction worker was killed in a grim accident Wednesday in Hermosa Beach after he fell head first into an excavated hole that collapsed around him, police and fire officials said.” http://civildevelopmentgroup.com/blog/yvl
Very sad news. I am curious as to what the difference would be if there was a permit for excavation on the site.
Civil Development in Los Angeles is the blog title. Â We will still be pretty focused on the engineering sector in Southern California, especially anything related to greening or LEED for a project. Â I will have a few non engineering related posts such as the ATI bios fix as I would like to post some useful information that can still be used in this sector.
We have recently been approved to start work on a new project in Downtown LA.  This will be our second larger LEED project.  I will be very interested in seeing how this ties into the new California environmental codes, called CalGreen.  A little more info on CalGreen located at http://civildevelopmentgroup.com/blog/rx4
This is for all those people rocking eyefinity setups now always going into 3d Mode.
I was pulling my hair out today after receiving my Sapphire 5850 in the mail. At stock with a clean install I was getting the annoying flicker issue. I run 2 HP LP2475w monitors, and I now see this flicker issue is very well known.
I figured I would just attach the bios I edited to make this all go away. And anyone can just edit my unlocked Asus bios in RBE themselves if they want to over/underclock the card and immediately get rid of the flicker issue without messing around with CCC Profiles or MSI Afterburner.
So it’s basically in 2d mode 400/1200 at 1.0875 volts and in 3D it’s set at 850/1200 at 1.0875 volts. I think the key to the flicker is the voltage in the x18 register in the GPU voltage editor.
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