PRC as a amplifier in GPS question.

On Stardate Wed, 11 Jul 2001 07:09:11 +1000, "Bushy"
<please@reply.to.group> applied digits to the keyboard and routed the
information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

Have a look at
http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lakes/7156/ir.htm
http://www.epanorama.net/irremote.html

Hope this helps,
Peter

dave <kurribks@telpacific.com.au> wrote in message
news:3b4b678f.0@news.acay.com.au...
Things i think of in the shower.
Does anybody know of something that could be plugged into your computor so
that you could record the signals from your remote controlls to some
program
and then have an infrared led hooked up to your serial port to controll
your
video tv or whatever.
it could also be used so that there could be a database of remote codes on
the net so if you loose your remote you could buy a universal learning
remote and download the codes from the net for it.
This should be possible and not too hard to make up .
maybe one of the magazines could do a project
any ideas anybody

David
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Wed, 11 Jul 2001 11:06:07 +1000, "Rod Speed"
<rod_speed@yahoo.com> applied digits to the keyboard and routed the
information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

dave <kurribks@telpacific.com.au> wrote in
message news:3b4b678f.0@news.acay.com.au...

Things i think of in the shower.

The greenys are sending the death squad around because of your waste of water.

Does anybody know of something that could be plugged into your
computor so that you could record the signals from your remote
controlls to some program and then have an infrared led hooked
up to your serial port to controll your video tv or whatever.

Yes, they are commercially available.

http://www.dodgies.demon.co.uk/

There are a few which are essentially a remote control cabled to the PC too.

it could also be used so that there could be a database of remote
codes on the net so if you loose your remote you could buy a universal
learning remote and download the codes from the net for it.

Yep, and some of those remotes that are cableable to the
PC allow you to download the code sets from the web etc.

This should be possible and not too hard to make up .

Its a bit more tricky than it first looks, primarily because
there isnt just one IR and 'carrier' frequency used etc.

maybe one of the magazines could do a project

Sure, its obviously possible to do the RedRat
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate 4 Sep 2001 13:23:26 GMT, "David Myers"
<davem@1234starnet.com.au> applied digits to the keyboard and routed
the information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

"e" == "eviltim" writes:

e> is there an ic or a simple circuit I could use to convert a black
e> and white signal to another colour eg black and red or black and
e> blue
e
e> tim

Get a MC1377 IC from Dick Smith. This is an RGB to PAL encoder. You
should be able to find circuits for it on the Web. Simply feed the
monochrome video signal into the synch input and whichever RGB
input(s) you desire.

Or, if you have access to an old Amiga 500 computer, you could hack
the A520 modulator that was supplied with it (it also uses the
MC1377)

Regards,
David Myers
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted with Amiga NewsRog
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Fri, 28 Sep 2001 21:32:19 +1200, "Ted Green"
<tg@guess.co.com> applied digits to the keyboard and routed the
information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

Some tips for CD recording, not in any particular order.

1. If MS Office is installed disable FindFast.
2. Switch off any screen-savers.
Recording best done after fresh boot of PC.
4. Close is many, running programs as possible, use CTRL+ALT+DEL to see
what's running, highlight and close unnecessary ones, especially
virus
scanners. Only Systray and Explorer are absolutely necessary,
don't close
them.
5. Use Scandisk & Defragment on HDD even more often than you would normally.
This is because fragmented files take longer to access and can
cause buffer
to run empty, (buffer underrun), leading to ruined discs
(coasters).
6. If doing direct "on the fly" CD to CDR copying, CDROM and CDRW drives
should be installed on separate IDE channels.
7. Avoid "on the fly" recording, preferable to write to image first. Takes
longer but more reliable.
8. if disc appears to write OK but then can't be read back check the DMA
status of the CDRW, (and CDROM if both installed), using Device
Manager. If
ON try switching OFF and vice versa. I know this one from personal
experience after making a load of coasters.
9. Use CD lens cleaner disc on a regular basis.
1 0. CD writing software often includes a packet writing application (Nero
includes InCD and Adaptec includes Direct CD). In theory these
allow you to
treat a CDR as a giant floppy. I and many others find these
troublesome and
don't even install or use them.
1 1. Don't pay extra for discs which say they are especially for audio, the
discs are exactly the same except they have some info already on
them and a
royalty from each one goes to Microsoft and/or the PRS. The only
time these
will to he used is with a stand alone audio CD recorder.
12. With multi-speed recorders don't automatically use the highest speed,
try different speeds to see what your system is capable of
handling. If
finding problems try lowering recording speed.
13. Be careful of installing more than one CD writing application, they call
sometimes conflict with each other.
14. If buying a new CDRW it's worth paying a few pounds extra for one with
Burnproof technology. Not sure of the technical details but in
effect it
can "pause" the recording if CPU very busy or data flow
interrupted. This
virtually eliminates buffer underruns which are the main cause of
failed
recordings.
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Wed, 17 Oct 2001 07:19:44 GMT, "TonyL"
<tleatham@bigpond.net.au> applied digits to the keyboard and routed
the information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

Try this, always works for me.
XCOPY32 /h /i /c /k /e /r /y, copies every single file from one drive to
the other and boots up as normal.
hope this helps
Cheers
Tony..
"skozzy" <no_s_p_a_m_bp6skozzy@netscape.net> wrote in message
news:8bHy7.5$7T4.72@ozemail.com.au...
Use ghost or the dos based command XCOPY.

XCOPY is apart of windows is won't cost anything.


"Kendrick" <kenreed@ozemail.com.au> wrote in message
news:uun8stgu49kf9bco7p6feoroqae2abd5bi@4ax.com...

Is there any program out there that I can use to copy the entire
contents of my win98/2000 based hard drive onto another drive,
so as I can have an emergency backup drive ready to go
and/or for the prupose of upgrading to a larger drive.
IE: so that the full windows installation will work first go without
problems etc ? It must be possible.

re-installing everything is a bloody nightmare as you would appreciate
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Thu, 18 Oct 2001 20:45:56 +0800, "Ben Aylett"
<ben@pilbaratech.com.au> applied digits to the keyboard and routed the
information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

Umm.. I don't know guys..

From my experience, xcopy only worked up until the end of WFW (3.11). When
we went to 95 and beyond, I found that this didn't work as the long file
names were not properly transferred (unless you used the lfnback util on the
cd) AND any security info (esp. WinNt) was also missed..

Get your hands onto the following as I have found them to work.

Ghost (even the pre-norton version works)
Powerquest Drive Copy (slow and cumbersome but has a few extra features)
Laplink 5.0 (Seriously, it works! Even Novell Volumes!)

And a better (free) solution..
If you are dealing with Win2000, you can install the second drive as a slave
and then use disk administrator (courtesy MS) to mirror the drive!. Leave it
run for an hour or so (until disk activity slows down) and there you have
it.. A second hard drive ready to drop into another PC. You may have to
break the mirror first - maybe..

Anyway's hope this helps.

Ben.
"TonyL" <tleatham@bigpond.net.au> wrote in message
news:kiaz7.174803$bY5.821884@news-server.bigpond.net.au...
Try this, always works for me.
XCOPY32 /h /i /c /k /e /r /y, copies every single file from one drive to
the other and boots up as normal.
hope this helps
Cheers
Tony..
"skozzy" <no_s_p_a_m_bp6skozzy@netscape.net> wrote in message
news:8bHy7.5$7T4.72@ozemail.com.au...
Use ghost or the dos based command XCOPY.

XCOPY is apart of windows is won't cost anything.


"Kendrick" <kenreed@ozemail.com.au> wrote in message
news:uun8stgu49kf9bco7p6feoroqae2abd5bi@4ax.com...

Is there any program out there that I can use to copy the entire
contents of my win98/2000 based hard drive onto another drive,
so as I can have an emergency backup drive ready to go
and/or for the prupose of upgrading to a larger drive.
IE: so that the full windows installation will work first go without
problems etc ? It must be possible.

re-installing everything is a bloody nightmare as you would appreciate
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Mon, 24 Dec 2001 20:48:41 -0500, w_tom <w_tom1@usa.net>
applied digits to the keyboard and routed the information from some
kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

Not only does this poster outrightly deny an exact quote from Intel's specs for ATX
power supplies, but he also does not understand a most basic concepts of switching
power supplies. Its called fold back current limiting. All properly designed
switching power supplies feature the concept. Overvoltage crowbars, as required by the
Intel ATX power supply spec, are more than fast enough and sufficient to shutdown a
power supply without motherboard damage - today as it was done even 25+ years ago.

More quotes from Intel specs - Rod Speed will use more insults and foul language to
deny these specs as well:
An output short circuit is defined as any output impedance
of less than 0.1 ohms. ... The power supply shall be capable
of withstanding a continuous short circuit to the output without
damage or over-stress to the unit ... The maximum short circuit
energy in any output shall not exceed 240 VA.

As previously quoted from the spec, all properly designed ATX power supplies contain
some form of an overvoltage crowbar. No power supply, properly designed, will ever
output excessive voltage. However many cheap power supplies have found another way to
sell on price. For example, those Deer supplies contain no Intel ATX required
overvoltage protection - required as posted earlier.

Overvoltage crowbars are more than fast enough and easily implemented. If any
crowbar is triggered, then the supply, as required by the spec, will shutdown all
output voltages. Overvoltage damage from a power supply must never occur. Power
supply outputs must be shorted and create no power supply damage - create no mythical
"fire could well end up sending the house up in flames." It was standard long before
there was an IBM PC and yet still one posts in direct contradiction to basic technical
facts. The expression is called fold back current limiting - understood even by
novices in a power supply shop - and still not comprehended by a poster here.

If selling a power supply for $25 or $40, and since overvoltage crowbar parts can
cost $1 .... well many clone computer builders will never know the difference since
they only purchase based upon price alone. Therefore many clone computer supplies
don't have the required overvoltage crowbars. Some supplies (in direct violation of
specs) even self destruct when shorted. Brand name supplies contain the required
overvoltage protection.

Notice a silly statement from Rod Speed:
Only until the wiring starts to go up in flames very
spectacularly indeed as the power supply delivers
500W into your addon crowbar.

His statement is in direct violation to the quoted ATX power supply specification.
The number was 240 VA. But a foul language critic does not even understand a basic
power supply concept called fold back current limiting. How then can he know anything
about how much current would appear in an overvoltage crowbar. It required him to
first read specs before posting.


Rod Speed wrote:

Phil Allison <bilup@bigpond.com> wrote in message
news:57AV7.14523$HW3.10111@newsfeeds.bigpond.com...
grog <shem_an_na@SPAM_ME_NOTyahoo.com> wrote

Would it not be too slow? By the time the Zenner does it's zennering and the
SCR goes about blowing a rather large fuse, the xGHz computer has probably
enough time to send an email informing of the pending PSU failure.

Once the threshold voltage is reached at say 6 volts or so the zener
conducts and fires the SCR in microseconds. The rail voltage will then
drop to around two diode drops or 1.2 to 1.5 volts. If the PSU then
shuts down, fine. If it persists the load is still protected.

Only until the wiring starts to go up in flames very spectacularly indeed
as the power supply delivers 500W into your addon crowbar.
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Fri, 22 Feb 2002 09:07:05 +1100, Heath Young
<heathryoung@hotmail.com> applied digits to the keyboard and routed
the information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

Adelaide Valve sales.(Shop?) IIRC. They ahve a web address I can't
remember. Use search engine.

Cheers
Heath Young



rarsin wrote:

As the subject line says - needed for a clock project.
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Fri, 2 Aug 2002 14:57:44 +1000, "Phil Allison"
<bilup@bigpond.com> applied digits to the keyboard and routed the
information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

Hi to all,

I have in my workshop a standard (black) IEC female to three pin lead
which arrived with a repair job. The 3 pin plug was damaged so I cut it off
and began to prepare the wires when I stopped dead.

On the IEC plug is printed "10 A / 250 V " and on the cable itself is
printed "18 AWG x 3C " - it is 6.5 mm in diameter.

The wire in fact consists of 18 strands of 0.11mm copper or about 0.17 sq
mm in total while 18 AWG is equal to 0.82 sq mm.

The very thin cable actually used equates to a rating of maybe 4 amps -
this is very dangerous.

I will try to discover where this lead came from.


Regards, Phil
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Mon, 23 Sep 2002 16:14:36 +1000, "Rudolf Ladyzhenskii"
<rudolf.ladyzhenskii@REMOVETOREPLYadcomtech.net> applied digits to the
keyboard and routed the information from some kind of brain
(presumably), thusly:

Goldstar was bloody good for there price, since they have changed there
name
to LG it is total crap almost as bad as Sumsong or is it Samsung.

I think, LG is a good value for money those days. At least their spare parts
department is heaps better than other brands and parts are reasonably
priced.
Also, I think, design is betetr than other cheap brands such as Samsung,
Teac, Palsonic, etc...



I heard that some stores sell more LG tv's than Panasonic.
Is Samsung that bad?

Samsung picture tubes are not that good. They die early. And their equipment
often suffers from some major design problems. Take VB-3xx VCRs for example.
Single capacitor failure causes meltdown of whole VCR.

If I to buy a new TV today, I would probably get LG. As for more expensive
brands -- Panasonic, Hitachi or Toshiba.
And deinetly would stay away from SONY and PHILIPS.

Rudolf
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Fri, 4 Oct 2002 05:22:54 +0000 (UTC), Paul Walker
<p.walker@NOT.econ.canterbury.ac.nz> applied digits to the keyboard
and routed the information from some kind of brain (presumably),
thusly:

Alan Liefting <aliefting@ihug.co.nz> wrote in news:3D9C2580.784B7439
@ihug.co.nz:

Go to:

http://www.ban.org

This site highlights theproblems of globalised trade in electronic
scrap. It is a sad indictment on the perils of free trade. It shows a
need to have "fair" trade not free trade. International agreements are
too slow to enact and are watered down by rapacious Governments and
corporations to control the problems.

The evidence would seem to indicate that free trade is either good for
environment or at least not bad for it. See the abstracts of a couple of
papers on this issue below. Also what *exactly* is "fair" trade? How do I
empirically test to see if any given trading situation is a "fair" trading
situation?


Is Trade Good or Bad for the Environment? Sorting Out the Causality
Jeffrey A. Frankel and Andrew K. Rose
NBER Working Paper No. 9201, September 2002

ABSTRACT
What is the effect of trade on a country’s environment, for a given level
of GDP? Some have observed an apparent positive correlation between
openness to trade and measures of environmental quality. But this could be
due to endogeneity of trade, rather than causality. This paper uses
exogenous determinants of trade geographical variables from the gravity
model as instruments to isolate the effect of openness. The finding is
that trade may indeed have a beneficial effect on three measures of air
pollution. Statistical significance is lacking for Particulate Matter, but
is moderate for NO2, and high for SO2. Results for broader environmental
measures are not as encouraging, but one can at least say that there is
little evidence that trade has the detrimental effect on the environment
that the race-to-the-bottom theory would lead one to expect. The larger
effect appears to come via income itself: our results generally support
the environmental Kuznets curve, which says that growth harms the
environment at low levels of income and helps at high levels, and to
support the proposition that openness to trade accelerates the growth
process.


Is Free Trade Good for the Environment?
Werner Antweiler, Brian R. Cope;and and M. Scott Taylor
NBER Working Paper No. 6707, August 1998

ABSTRACT
This paper sets out a theory of how openness to international goods
markets affects pollution concentrations. We develop a theoretical model
to divide trade's impact on pollution into scale,technique, and
composition effects and then examine this theory using data on sulfur
dioxide concentrations when it alters the composition, and hence the
pollution intensity, of national output. Our estimates of the associated
technique and scale effects created by trade imply a net reduction in
pollution from these sources. Combining our estimates of scale,
composition, and technique efforts yields a somewhat surprising
conclusion: free trade appears to be good for the environment.



--
____________________________________________________
Paul Walker p.walker@econ.canterbury.ac.nz
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Wed, 11 Dec 2002 21:45:25 +1030, "Newsy"
<rlg000AThotmail.com> applied digits to the keyboard and routed the
information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

"Jim" <D3xx@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:254b506.0212100059.30b63956@posting.google.com...
Hi Folks

Is there an Australian retailer - preferably in Perth - that carries an
inline mains switch which is controlled by a 12V line? Eg 3 pin socket
and plug for 240V in/out, screw terminals for 12V control, ideally
weather resistant.

Thanks
Jim

A company called AV Technology on the Gold Coast 07 5531 3103, make the PC-1
and PC-2 switching load controllers. Control is via contact closure. Load
rating is 10 amps.
Rod
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Wed, 19 Feb 2003 01:00:37 GMT, "Steve Andrew"
<sjandrew@bigpond.net.au> applied digits to the keyboard and routed
the information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

Grog wrote:
Greetings Consumer Electronics Repair Gurus,

Is there such a beast as standard IF -> video/audio demod
block that is commonly used by TV/VCR manufacturers.
I don't expect one size fits all, but perhaps the most common.

I am interested in sending CCTV over coax through CH0/CH1
modulator. Just looking for an easy way to receive it. (w/out a TV)

Last time I tried to find something like this, the folk at the tech
shop (out west) needed a model no. or chassis no. They couldn't
come to grips with the concept of using it for something other
than a TV/VCR.

If it's anything like most other things these days, there will be a
factory in china that turns out OEM IF Blocks that multiple TV
manufacturers use in there products. This is the kind of thing
that I am trying to identify.
It may also be that this is not the way it is done and I will just
have to choose a common make/model and get it as a
spare part. :-(

[wish list]
Tuner, IF, AV Demod all in one would be nice.
Horizontal mounting/low profile.
With I2C or SPI interface too thanks.
Ant in, AV out, S/ware control and no VT.. woo hooo!
'Tell him he's dreaming"


Grog

The Philips TV Tuner Type FI-1216, is a TV Tuner, IF Amp, video and
audio detector in a single metal can. It is I2C controlled. No you are
not dreaming :) - It does exactly what you want.

I wish you luck trying to get one from Philips Service (sic). Last
time I tried they told me they were out of production. I got straight
on to the tuner factory and got 2 free samples sent over, that was
around 18 months ago. The Philips web site to start from is

http://www.components.philips.com/InformationCenter/Global/FArticleSum
mary.asp

And navigate to Tuners. They do a large range of tuner/IF/demodulation
solutions mainly aimed at the PC TV card and set-top box market.
Samples are easy to get. Try asktuner@philips.com, they were very
helpful but took several days to reply.

Philips currently make an I2C controlled VHF/UHF (including hyperband)
tuner type UV1316.

Otherwise if your distributing video/audio at IF frequencies then
usesomething like a TDA2540 or TDA8341 video IF amp and demodulation.
An wide-band FM demodulation IC will do the job for audio IF amp and
demodulation.

Let us know how you go.

Steve






If you cannot get that tuner
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Sun, 2 Mar 2003 11:12:52 +1100, "Rudolf Ladyzhenskii"
<rudolfl@REMOVETOREPLYoptusnet.com.au> applied digits to the keyboard
and routed the information from some kind of brain (presumably),
thusly:

Hi, all

Yesterday I found that www.freetradezone.com is not free anymore.

This really leaves only www.bdent.com.

Many manufacturers do not have all IC datasheets on their site. And in some
cases, manufacturer is unknown.

Anyway, are there any other good sites/FTPs that have datasheets available?

Thanks,
Rudolf
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Sun, 2 Mar 2003 11:19:38 +1000, "voltare2 - amstereo"
<amstereo@optushomeDOT.comDOT.au> applied digits to the keyboard and
routed the information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

www.jaycar.com.au has datasheets on a lot of things
"Rudolf Ladyzhenskii" <rudolfl@REMOVETOREPLYoptusnet.com.au> wrote in
message news:3e614c84$0$11661$afc38c87@news.optusnet.com.au...
Hi, all

Yesterday I found that www.freetradezone.com is not free anymore.

This really leaves only www.bdent.com.

Many manufacturers do not have all IC datasheets on their site. And in
some
cases, manufacturer is unknown.

Anyway, are there any other good sites/FTPs that have datasheets
available?

Thanks,
Rudolf
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Sun, 02 Mar 2003 02:43:54 GMT, Bender
<bender@zapo.net.clothes> applied digits to the keyboard and routed
the information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

On Sun, 2 Mar 2003 11:12:52 +1100, "Rudolf Ladyzhenskii"
rudolfl@REMOVETOREPLYoptusnet.com.au> wrote:

Hi, all

Yesterday I found that www.freetradezone.com is not free anymore.

This really leaves only www.bdent.com.

Many manufacturers do not have all IC datasheets on their site. And in some
cases, manufacturer is unknown.

Anyway, are there any other good sites/FTPs that have datasheets available?

Thanks,
Rudolf


http://www.datasheetlocator.com/
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Sun, 02 Mar 2003 06:55:52 GMT, fzabkar@optussnet.com.au
(Franc Zabkar) applied digits to the keyboard and routed the
information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

On Sun, 2 Mar 2003 11:12:52 +1100, "Rudolf Ladyzhenskii"
rudolfl@REMOVETOREPLYoptusnet.com.au> put finger to keyboard and
composed:

Yesterday I found that www.freetradezone.com is not free anymore.

Nothing appears to have changed for me. Certain datasheets have always
been free as long as I've been accessing the site (one year?), but
others are available by subscription only.


-- Franc Zabkar

Please remove one 's' from my address when replying by email.
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Sun, 02 Mar 2003 21:10:36 +1100, Steve Marshall
<steEEEve@actweb.net> applied digits to the keyboard and routed the
information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

In article <3e614c84$0$11661$afc38c87@news.optusnet.com.au>, Rudolf
Ladyzhenskii <rudolfl@REMOVETOREPLYoptusnet.com.au> wrote:


Anyway, are there any other good sites/FTPs that have datasheets available?


it's probably not as extensive as you'd like, but I've always found
www.farnell.com to be useful. The datasheets are free, and so is
registration. But they only have data for what's in their catalogue...

nifty
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate 27 Mar 2003 18:28:34 -0800, mvandere@iprimus.com.au (Mark
van der Eynden) applied digits to the keyboard and routed the
information from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

"Khoa Du" <khoa@scanoptics.com.auspam> wrote in message news:<3e8387f1@duster.adelaide.on.net>...


BTW... using my modem to display CallID didn't work... most likely it doesnt
support it... OR callid is really stuffed... i wonder if i could buy a
callid module from somewhere try it out and return it.......... is that
morally wrong??? >:)

Have you 'enabled' callerID detection on your modem? Unfortunately
there is no standard code sequence. Use Hyper terminal and try the
following

Query Callerid Set Callerid
AT#CID? AT#CID=1
ditto AT#CLS=8#CID=1 (sometimes)
AT#CID? AT#CID=1
AT%CCID? AT%CCID=1
AT+VCID? AT+VCID=1
AT#CC? (unable to verify accuracy of this code) AT#CC1
AT*ID? (unable to verify accuracy of this code) AT*ID1

Also, unfortunately a positive response to the Query does not always
imply the Set will work, as I once saw on a laptop.

Cheers,

Mark
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 
On Stardate Tue, 29 Apr 2003 13:36:11 GMT, tronnort_@yahoo.com (David
L. Jones) applied digits to the keyboard and routed the information
from some kind of brain (presumably), thusly:

On Tue, 29 Apr 2003 21:13:34 +1000, "rarsin"
rarsinREMOVE@hotmail.com> wrote:
Hi all,

I'm interested in experimenting with the SCA (subsidiary communications
authorization) aspect of FM radio and would appreciate any info on the
subject that pertains to Australia. There is much information on the
Internet and many decoding circuits but I would really appreciate specific
info on SCA implementations in Australia (particularly frequencies of SCA FM
broadcasts in Melbourne/Sydney).

Cheers,

Rab (email: rarsin at hotmail dot com)

Try Bob Parkers page:
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~bobpar/acs.htm

Regards
Dave :)
---------------------------
(remove the "_" from my email address to reply)
Foley U. Matthews. there | I believe in : Paying NO voluntary taxes, i.e.
are no e's in my true email | Lotteries, Gambling... The Executive Producer
Visit the Ellen Foley Info | is to blame!... and perhaps, Love (is/can be)
http://www.go.to/ellen-foley | "Fully expecting to be Hurt!"
 

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