J
JosephKK
Guest
On Wed, 14 Jan 2009 07:36:15 -0600, krw <krw@att.zzzzzzzzz> wrote:
packs everywhere. A few had as many as 80 leads. Daisy and Mentor
were booming new businesses.
As a technician i was working on 4 and 6 layer boards by 1973. FlatIn article <k2iqm4ljrbp0kt450u9fbu7ujtvb5bf8nf@4ax.com>,
spam@spam.com says...
On Tue, 13 Jan 2009 17:41:49 -0800, Archimedes' Lever
OneBigLever@InfiniteSeries.Org> wrote:
Look, you dopey, retarded fuckhead... There are IC chips in the
military that you have no clue about, and there are assemblies as well.
An IC chip is not a mainboard. Did I write that nothing man
has ever built had 100 or more layers? No. It seems both
of us should have been more clear on what we meant.
You *DID* say that 2-layers was all there was before 1980, which
shows your absolute ignorance on the subject. 2-layer boards may
have been the norm for consumer electronics (hell, some VCRs are
only one now) but there is obviously a big world out there you have
no clue about. ...and apparently want to keep it that way.
packs everywhere. A few had as many as 80 leads. Daisy and Mentor
were booming new businesses.