Speedcabling - Untangling For Fun and Profit 138
ibnsuleiman writes "A new competitive sport is emerging amongst IT professionals and hobbyists. Speedcabling tests the ability to untangle the rat's nests that grow inside and outside of the beige boxes that pervade todays homes and workplaces. The first public competition was held in an LA gallery for a $50 gift certificate to a local Italian restaurant. The winner, LA web developer Matthew Howell, had to untangle a dozen ethernet cables in record time leaving them in working order to win."
Hmmm... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Hmmm... (Score:5, Funny)
I can see the doping scandals already... Loser: Check his inhaler! I know he's taking stimulants! Look on the inside of glasses I know he's got a hologram of Natalie Portman to keep him relaxed! HE SO CHEATED!!
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What? No one yet wrote a comment about how In soviet russia cables untangle you?
obligatory (Score:1)
in soviet russia, cables untangle you!
Well, makes more sense than curling (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Well, makes more sense than curling (Score:5, Funny)
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Next on... (Score:5, Funny)
Limited real-world relevance (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Limited real-world relevance (Score:5, Funny)
What they really need is a life.
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Re:Limited real-world relevance (Score:5, Funny)
Irritating Wire, the Japanese version (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Limited real-world relevance (Score:5, Funny)
> patch panels at both ends, some at one end only, and some free; your task is to extract
> the loose and dangling cables and leave the working ones.
It's called Network Administration.
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If they must stay plugged in, then there will be situations where the cables cannot be untangled, especially if connected at both ends to equipment you can't move.
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Yes, but I'd add a recommendation to switch to structured cabling with Krone blocks and patch-by-exception panels. I had the job of straightening out several thousand Cat-5 rats nests for a retail chain a couple of years ago, and the Krone stuff worked a treat. Recommended.
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A tip I learned for Cat5: Some cords have rubber pin protectors (little hoods over them, on the ends of the cable), so that if you yank the cable while untangling or pulling it out of a pipe or whatever, the little plastic pin won't get caught on something and snap off. However, the extra cost isn't justfied, because you can just take 4-6 inches of black elec
Must be a slow news day (Score:1)
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Wow (Score:1)
On another note... do we think that this will make the summer olympics??
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Maybe the specialolympics.
I was nearly with you until... (Score:5, Funny)
Working order? Man, there's a catch to everything. I guess I can put my weed whacker with it's steel blades back...
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snapping off the locking tabs (Score:3, Interesting)
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Cup stacking for nerds? (Score:3, Funny)
Another sport that deserves a WTF? award.
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After that was marbles. One cool thing was that a 10-year-old beat out all the 40-year-olds.
I suspect Mike Judge saw that too, and that's where The Ocho came from.
Just part of my job (Score:5, Funny)
And in case anyone is wondering, yes, those are punchdown boxes you see. It would be horrible to run the cable directly to the switch without having boxes and patch cables on each end.
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This [networkboy.net] is one of mine as is this [networkboy.net]and that [networkboy.net]
-nB
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One of the first things I asked if could be done when I started here was to go through each closet and try to get them organized. Make sure they cables were wrapped around each other, each cable was labeled, etc. Obviously my request hasn't been acted upon.
At least I've been able to document what device is using what cable number connected to what port on a switch. Granted, other
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You're in a heap of trouble, boy.
How do they standardize the nest? (Score:2)
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Bah, make it tougher (Score:3, Funny)
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Are there rules? (Score:5, Informative)
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Oh man, he's juicin'!
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This week, on the Ocho! (Score:3, Funny)
heh (Score:2)
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There. Fixed that for ya' This is Slashdot, after all.
Sport? (Score:2)
his secret? (Score:4, Interesting)
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The goggles.... (Score:2)
Speed Cabling (Score:1)
Missing a key part to this competition (Score:1)
Oh noes (Score:1, Funny)
This isn't going anywhere... (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, a hunt for the loose terminator in a Thinnet network, or the forced-duplex port in your Cisco stack, or the one Linksys VPN router with different firmware out among the 50+ telecommuters, or even the splitters over the ceilings in your Localtalk network at the elementary school, or any number of real-world-ish scenarios.
Bah. Like playing pool for money. Too much like real work. And playing for beer makes you pee too much.
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Thinnet? LOCALTALK??? Are you stuck in the '80's?
Next thing you know, you'll be talking about memory optimization for Win3.11 with QMM, filtering SAP advertisements on the WAN, or configuring TCP/IP packet drivers so you can use this new Internet program called "Mosaic."
Elbinian networking (Score:2)
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Aaaaaagh! You've triggered my PTSD again.
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OT: What has happened to slashdot? (Score:2)
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The sport is misnamed (Score:2)
Speed cabling (hooking the wires up) would be round two of the geek triathlon.
Round three: ???
Round 3: Hack the results. (Score:2)
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Basic Skill for Sailors (Score:1)
One of the first things you learn on a sailboat is any line left unattended will soon tie itself into a knot - usually at the worst possible time.
I've noticed the same thing with networking and power cabling both at home and at work.
Re:Basic Skill for Sailors / Sound Engineers (Score:2, Informative)
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Can't be LA (Score:1)
I can't believe... (Score:5, Funny)
that there is finally a story where my following formalization of the process of wire entanglement is on-topic.
Kevin's First Law: For any number of wires, strings or similar objects, the probability of complex entanglement between them increases exponentially with the inverse of distance. Time required to entangle is also affected in a similar fashion. This phenomenon can be observed in consequence, but not in action.
Also, for those who are interested, my second law is formalized thusly:
Kevin's Second Law: There exists no robot that cannot be improved in form or function by the addition of a flamethrower.
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Sure it's all fun and games now... (Score:2)
Gordian Knot (Score:2)
THE sport for Asperger's (Score:2)
The focus required to see which cables are tangled up where and to identify the loops that, once pulled out, will free up a myriad of other cables is just the type of ability you see in Asperger's and other high-order autistics.
spaghetti cable? (Score:2)
Hard Drive Units (Score:1)
Hard drives, eh? So your ethernet cables are inside the case, or what?
Ancient Boredom Buster (Score:1)
"Ethernet Cables"? (Score:3, Informative)
What the hell are 'ethernet cables,' anyway? Ethernet is a protocol. Back in the good ol' days I set up Ethernet LANs with 10BASE-2 coax cable.
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Bah 12 cables? (Score:2)
lol, we used to dye rolls of stockinette for a customer. Do you have any idea what happens when you put a 75ft long sock in the washing machine? in the dryer? you really have to see the knot it makes to believe it
I like the idea of having some live and having to remove the free ones tho
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