PRC as a amplifier in GPS question.

On Fri, 25 Sep 2015 16:12:08 -0700 (PDT), Con Saris
<rpm.cjs@gmail.com> wrote:

On Saturday, September 26, 2015 at 8:13:59 AM UTC+9:30, Seymore4Head wrote:
I assume everyone has heard of this kid and his clock.
http://truthuncensored.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/ahmed-mohamed-clock.jpg

The picture of the clock shows a 9V battery hookup but no battery.
That means the kid either had to plug the clock in or it does have
batteries that are not shown.

If we assume that there are no batteries, can this clock store it's
alarm time? I say no, but I don't know.

If not, that means that the kid had to plug the clock in during class
and also program it to alarm. The clock can not accidentally go off
without battery back up. Right?


There's a 9v battery connector shown on the LHS of the circuitry.

Thanks Hawkeye. :) Now do you see a battery?
 
Vào 12:46:46 UTC+7 Chủ Nhật, ngày 29 tháng 7 năm 2001, Jason Nunn đã viết:
hello all,

i have released a 8051 based ATA/ATAPI application on my web page called
"onhold". this was intended to be a commercial project, but didn't go
ahead. so i have turned it into a GPL project.

you can find it at-
http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html

below is an overview of the project. these are sections taken from my
web page on the subject-


o o o o o


= onhold

= an ATA/ATAPI CDROM application using a 8051 based Micro controller

this is a project i designed for a customer. it would have become a full
on commercial project, but the client never went ahead and so it become
GPL.

the objective was to design a cheap CD player for phone systems- a
device
that plays CD's with recordings of music and people. the signals from
this
device would be fed into a telephone system. whenever somebody would
ring
up the business and get "put on hold" (and behold !- the name), they
would
hear the CD.

yes, i know this sounds like a common old CD sound system, but my client
wanted something very cheap, something that used a simple ATAPI CDROM
that
could be acquired very cheapy. also, the client wanted some custom
features you couldn't get with an off-the-shelf product- he wanted the
device to be mobius (ie play the CD over and over again), and the
customer
only wanted *his* CD's to be played (the idea here was that the CD would
have a digital preamble.. and my device would only play CD's with this
preamble).

when i went about researching ATA/ATAPI. i didn't know anything about it
at all. it was a bit of a grey area to me. i've always been hidden from
it
by drivers or an operating system. as i discovered, you don't need a
flash
processor to talk to an ATAPI device. a simple $4 8051 can do the job.

the finished program itself is very simple in operation. it has 3 LED
flags that tell you status of the device. the program will detect a CD
disk in the drive. if there is one there it will play it's contents. if
there's no CD in the drive, then it just sits in a loop until one is
inserted. if it has finished playing a CD, then it starts playing it
again
from the beginning... in other words, it's stateful.

the source code listing is in A51.

see http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html for more
details.

see ya

--
Jason Nunn- Darwin, Northern Territory- http://jsno.downunder.net.au
private: jsno@downunder.net.au
work: jsno@arafura.net.au


Vào 12:46:46 UTC+7 Chủ Nhật, ngày 29 tháng 7 năm 2001, Jason Nunn đã viết:
hello all,

i have released a 8051 based ATA/ATAPI application on my web page called
"onhold". this was intended to be a commercial project, but didn't go
ahead. so i have turned it into a GPL project.

you can find it at-
http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html

below is an overview of the project. these are sections taken from my
web page on the subject-


o o o o o


= onhold

= an ATA/ATAPI CDROM application using a 8051 based Micro controller

this is a project i designed for a customer. it would have become a full
on commercial project, but the client never went ahead and so it become
GPL.

the objective was to design a cheap CD player for phone systems- a
device
that plays CD's with recordings of music and people. the signals from
this
device would be fed into a telephone system. whenever somebody would
ring
up the business and get "put on hold" (and behold !- the name), they
would
hear the CD.

yes, i know this sounds like a common old CD sound system, but my client
wanted something very cheap, something that used a simple ATAPI CDROM
that
could be acquired very cheapy. also, the client wanted some custom
features you couldn't get with an off-the-shelf product- he wanted the
device to be mobius (ie play the CD over and over again), and the
customer
only wanted *his* CD's to be played (the idea here was that the CD would
have a digital preamble.. and my device would only play CD's with this
preamble).

when i went about researching ATA/ATAPI. i didn't know anything about it
at all. it was a bit of a grey area to me. i've always been hidden from
it
by drivers or an operating system. as i discovered, you don't need a
flash
processor to talk to an ATAPI device. a simple $4 8051 can do the job.

the finished program itself is very simple in operation. it has 3 LED
flags that tell you status of the device. the program will detect a CD
disk in the drive. if there is one there it will play it's contents. if
there's no CD in the drive, then it just sits in a loop until one is
inserted. if it has finished playing a CD, then it starts playing it
again
from the beginning... in other words, it's stateful.

the source code listing is in A51.

see http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html for more
details.

see ya

--
Jason Nunn- Darwin, Northern Territory- http://jsno.downunder.net.au
private: jsno@downunder.net.au
work: jsno@arafura.net.au
 
On 1/10/2015 12:50 PM, huynh.giahoa2@gmail.com wrote:
Vào 12:46:46 UTC+7 Chủ Nhật, ngày 29 tháng 7 năm 2001, Jason Nunn đã viết:
hello all,

i have released a 8051 based ATA/ATAPI application on my web page called
"onhold". this was intended to be a commercial project, but didn't go
ahead. so i have turned it into a GPL project.

you can find it at-
http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html

below is an overview of the project. these are sections taken from my
web page on the subject-


o o o o o


= onhold =


= an ATA/ATAPI CDROM application using a 8051 based Micro controller =


this is a project i designed for a customer. it would have become a full
on commercial project, but the client never went ahead and so it become
GPL.

the objective was to design a cheap CD player for phone systems- a
device
that plays CD's with recordings of music and people. the signals from
this
device would be fed into a telephone system. whenever somebody would
ring
up the business and get "put on hold" (and behold !- the name), they
would
hear the CD.

yes, i know this sounds like a common old CD sound system, but my client
wanted something very cheap, something that used a simple ATAPI CDROM
that
could be acquired very cheapy. also, the client wanted some custom
features you couldn't get with an off-the-shelf product- he wanted the
device to be mobius (ie play the CD over and over again), and the
customer
only wanted *his* CD's to be played (the idea here was that the CD would
have a digital preamble.. and my device would only play CD's with this
preamble).

when i went about researching ATA/ATAPI. i didn't know anything about it
at all. it was a bit of a grey area to me. i've always been hidden from
it
by drivers or an operating system. as i discovered, you don't need a
flash
processor to talk to an ATAPI device. a simple $4 8051 can do the job.

the finished program itself is very simple in operation. it has 3 LED
flags that tell you status of the device. the program will detect a CD
disk in the drive. if there is one there it will play it's contents. if
there's no CD in the drive, then it just sits in a loop until one is
inserted. if it has finished playing a CD, then it starts playing it
again
from the beginning... in other words, it's stateful.

the source code listing is in A51.

see http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html for more
details.

see ya

--
Jason Nunn- Darwin, Northern Territory- http://jsno.downunder.net.au
private: jsno@downunder.net.au
work: jsno@arafura.net.au



Vào 12:46:46 UTC+7 Chủ Nhật, ngày 29 tháng 7 năm 2001, Jason Nunn đã viết:
hello all,

i have released a 8051 based ATA/ATAPI application on my web page called
"onhold". this was intended to be a commercial project, but didn't go
ahead. so i have turned it into a GPL project.

you can find it at-
http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html

below is an overview of the project. these are sections taken from my
web page on the subject-


o o o o o


= onhold =


= an ATA/ATAPI CDROM application using a 8051 based Micro controller =


this is a project i designed for a customer. it would have become a full
on commercial project, but the client never went ahead and so it become
GPL.

the objective was to design a cheap CD player for phone systems- a
device
that plays CD's with recordings of music and people. the signals from
this
device would be fed into a telephone system. whenever somebody would
ring
up the business and get "put on hold" (and behold !- the name), they
would
hear the CD.

yes, i know this sounds like a common old CD sound system, but my client
wanted something very cheap, something that used a simple ATAPI CDROM
that
could be acquired very cheapy. also, the client wanted some custom
features you couldn't get with an off-the-shelf product- he wanted the
device to be mobius (ie play the CD over and over again), and the
customer
only wanted *his* CD's to be played (the idea here was that the CD would
have a digital preamble.. and my device would only play CD's with this
preamble).

when i went about researching ATA/ATAPI. i didn't know anything about it
at all. it was a bit of a grey area to me. i've always been hidden from
it
by drivers or an operating system. as i discovered, you don't need a
flash
processor to talk to an ATAPI device. a simple $4 8051 can do the job.

the finished program itself is very simple in operation. it has 3 LED
flags that tell you status of the device. the program will detect a CD
disk in the drive. if there is one there it will play it's contents. if
there's no CD in the drive, then it just sits in a loop until one is
inserted. if it has finished playing a CD, then it starts playing it
again
from the beginning... in other words, it's stateful.

the source code listing is in A51.

see http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html for more
details.

see ya

--
Jason Nunn- Darwin, Northern Territory- http://jsno.downunder.net.au
private: jsno@downunder.net.au
work: jsno@arafura.net.au

Full marks for development effort.

But you can buy complete MP3 players for as little as $2.00 which would
do that. Simple to transfer the contents of the CD to the flash in the
player.
 
On 2/10/2015 7:12 AM, Adrian Jansen wrote:
On 1/10/2015 12:50 PM, huynh.giahoa2@gmail.com wrote:
Vào 12:46:46 UTC+7 Chủ Nhật, ngày 29 tháng 7 năm 2001, Jason Nunn đã
viáşżt:
hello all,

i have released a 8051 based ATA/ATAPI application on my web page called
"onhold". this was intended to be a commercial project, but didn't go
ahead. so i have turned it into a GPL project.

you can find it at-
http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html

below is an overview of the project. these are sections taken from my
web page on the subject-


o o o o o


= onhold =


= an ATA/ATAPI CDROM application using a 8051 based Micro controller =


this is a project i designed for a customer. it would have become a full
on commercial project, but the client never went ahead and so it become
GPL.

the objective was to design a cheap CD player for phone systems- a
device
that plays CD's with recordings of music and people. the signals from
this
device would be fed into a telephone system. whenever somebody would
ring
up the business and get "put on hold" (and behold !- the name), they
would
hear the CD.

yes, i know this sounds like a common old CD sound system, but my client
wanted something very cheap, something that used a simple ATAPI CDROM
that
could be acquired very cheapy. also, the client wanted some custom
features you couldn't get with an off-the-shelf product- he wanted the
device to be mobius (ie play the CD over and over again), and the
customer
only wanted *his* CD's to be played (the idea here was that the CD would
have a digital preamble.. and my device would only play CD's with this
preamble).

when i went about researching ATA/ATAPI. i didn't know anything about it
at all. it was a bit of a grey area to me. i've always been hidden from
it
by drivers or an operating system. as i discovered, you don't need a
flash
processor to talk to an ATAPI device. a simple $4 8051 can do the job.

the finished program itself is very simple in operation. it has 3 LED
flags that tell you status of the device. the program will detect a CD
disk in the drive. if there is one there it will play it's contents. if
there's no CD in the drive, then it just sits in a loop until one is
inserted. if it has finished playing a CD, then it starts playing it
again
from the beginning... in other words, it's stateful.

the source code listing is in A51.

see http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html for more
details.

see ya

--
Jason Nunn- Darwin, Northern Territory- http://jsno.downunder.net.au
private: jsno@downunder.net.au
work: jsno@arafura.net.au



Vào 12:46:46 UTC+7 Chủ Nhật, ngày 29 tháng 7 năm 2001, Jason Nunn đã
viáşżt:
hello all,

i have released a 8051 based ATA/ATAPI application on my web page called
"onhold". this was intended to be a commercial project, but didn't go
ahead. so i have turned it into a GPL project.

you can find it at-
http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html

below is an overview of the project. these are sections taken from my
web page on the subject-


o o o o o


= onhold =


= an ATA/ATAPI CDROM application using a 8051 based Micro controller =


this is a project i designed for a customer. it would have become a full
on commercial project, but the client never went ahead and so it become
GPL.

the objective was to design a cheap CD player for phone systems- a
device
that plays CD's with recordings of music and people. the signals from
this
device would be fed into a telephone system. whenever somebody would
ring
up the business and get "put on hold" (and behold !- the name), they
would
hear the CD.

yes, i know this sounds like a common old CD sound system, but my client
wanted something very cheap, something that used a simple ATAPI CDROM
that
could be acquired very cheapy. also, the client wanted some custom
features you couldn't get with an off-the-shelf product- he wanted the
device to be mobius (ie play the CD over and over again), and the
customer
only wanted *his* CD's to be played (the idea here was that the CD would
have a digital preamble.. and my device would only play CD's with this
preamble).

when i went about researching ATA/ATAPI. i didn't know anything about it
at all. it was a bit of a grey area to me. i've always been hidden from
it
by drivers or an operating system. as i discovered, you don't need a
flash
processor to talk to an ATAPI device. a simple $4 8051 can do the job.

the finished program itself is very simple in operation. it has 3 LED
flags that tell you status of the device. the program will detect a CD
disk in the drive. if there is one there it will play it's contents. if
there's no CD in the drive, then it just sits in a loop until one is
inserted. if it has finished playing a CD, then it starts playing it
again
from the beginning... in other words, it's stateful.

the source code listing is in A51.

see http://lothar.arafura.net.au/~jsno/proj_micro/index.html for more
details.

see ya

--
Jason Nunn- Darwin, Northern Territory- http://jsno.downunder.net.au
private: jsno@downunder.net.au
work: jsno@arafura.net.au

Full marks for development effort.

But you can buy complete MP3 players for as little as $2.00 which would
do that. Simple to transfer the contents of the CD to the flash in the
player.

Back in 2001 when this thread was initiated they weren't so cheap! ;)
 
On 2/10/2015 1:18 PM, Oltimer wrote:

Back in 2001 when this thread was initiated they weren't so cheap! ;)

Interesting ! I did not notice the date !
What system is regurgitating these ancient posts ?

I can understand some of the psuedo-posts from manufacturers 'answering'
questions with advertising for their products, but this seems to be a
genuine post, just from a time-warp.

Maybe its been to the star Wolf 359 and back.
 
On 03-Oct-15 7:05 AM, Adrian Jansen wrote:
On 2/10/2015 1:18 PM, Oltimer wrote:


Back in 2001 when this thread was initiated they weren't so cheap! ;)

Interesting ! I did not notice the date !
What system is regurgitating these ancient posts ?

I can understand some of the psuedo-posts from manufacturers 'answering'
questions with advertising for their products, but this seems to be a
genuine post, just from a time-warp.

Maybe its been to the star Wolf 359 and back.

Yeah its a bit weird. I thought some spammer had replied to an old post
at first. I tried to follow the links but they were long dead. The OP
still has the stuff online but you need to google his name to find it.

There does seem to have been a run of spammers lately on the groups I read.
 
Oltimer <nup@nup.com> wrote:
On 03-Oct-15 7:05 AM, Adrian Jansen wrote:
On 2/10/2015 1:18 PM, Oltimer wrote:


Back in 2001 when this thread was initiated they weren't so cheap! ;)

Interesting ! I did not notice the date !
What system is regurgitating these ancient posts ?

I can understand some of the psuedo-posts from manufacturers 'answering'
questions with advertising for their products, but this seems to be a
genuine post, just from a time-warp.

Maybe its been to the star Wolf 359 and back.


Yeah its a bit weird. I thought some spammer had replied to an old post
at first. I tried to follow the links but they were long dead. The OP
still has the stuff online but you need to google his name to find it.

Probably some Google Groups user searching for something who somehow
managed to post this by mistake.

It was interesting to read about the project anyway...

> There does seem to have been a run of spammers lately on the groups I read.

They all seem to be coming from Google Groups too.

--
__ __
#_ < |\| |< _#
 
On 4/10/2015 5:52 AM, Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
Oltimer <nup@nup.com> wrote:
On 03-Oct-15 7:05 AM, Adrian Jansen wrote:
On 2/10/2015 1:18 PM, Oltimer wrote:


Back in 2001 when this thread was initiated they weren't so cheap! ;)

Interesting ! I did not notice the date !
What system is regurgitating these ancient posts ?

I can understand some of the psuedo-posts from manufacturers 'answering'
questions with advertising for their products, but this seems to be a
genuine post, just from a time-warp.

Maybe its been to the star Wolf 359 and back.


Yeah its a bit weird. I thought some spammer had replied to an old post
at first. I tried to follow the links but they were long dead. The OP
still has the stuff online but you need to google his name to find it.

Probably some Google Groups user searching for something who somehow
managed to post this by mistake.

It was interesting to read about the project anyway...

There does seem to have been a run of spammers lately on the groups I read.

They all seem to be coming from Google Groups too.

Happening in various newsgroups in the last few months especially, these
repostings of/replying to ancient posts.

I put it down to people not familiar with usenet finding posts with
Google and responding with Google groups without checking the dates on
the posts they are responding to.

It's kinda interesting what gets coughed back up though.
 
Happening in various newsgroups in the last few months especially, these
repostings of/replying to ancient posts.

I put it down to people not familiar with usenet finding posts with
Google and responding with Google groups without checking the dates on
the posts they are responding to.

It's kinda interesting what gets coughed back up though.

Yes, I occasionally use GG to search for old stuff I may have seen way
in the past, but mostly never get a result. And yet I do see some other
ancient posts. As an archive, its pretty spotty.
 
Sell:
China Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co. Ltd engages in designing, manufacturing and marketing all kinds of electric motors. They are mainly suitable for the following applications: smart home application used in smart kitchen and laundry, medical instrument for personal care, smart E-transmission applied in automobile, industry automation applied in telecommunication and a great variety of plastic/metal planetary gearbox in different sizes.
In order to develop the oversea market, we are current seeking new partners around the world to create a bright future together. ZhaoWei is a right choice and excellent partnership with sincere services.

Company: Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co., Ltd
URL: http://www.zwgearbox.com/
Contact: Anny Liu
Tel:+86-755-27322652
Fax:+86-755-27323949
E-mail:sales@zwgearbox.com
Add: Blk. 18, Longwangmiao Industry Park, Fuyong Tn., Bao’an Dist., Shenzhen 518103, Guangdong, China
 
Sell:
China Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co. Ltd engages in designing, manufacturing and marketing all kinds of electric motors. They are mainly suitable for the following applications: smart home application used in smart kitchen and laundry, medical instrument for personal care, smart E-transmission applied in automobile, industry automation applied in telecommunication and a great variety of plastic/metal planetary gearbox in different sizes.
In order to develop the oversea market, we are current seeking new partners around the world to create a bright future together. ZhaoWei is a right choice and excellent partnership with sincere services.

Company: Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co., Ltd
URL: http://www.zwgearbox.com/
Contact: Anny Liu
Tel:+86-755-27322652
Fax:+86-755-27323949
E-mail:sales@zwgearbox.com
Add: Blk. 18, Longwangmiao Industry Park, Fuyong Tn., Bao’an Dist., Shenzhen 518103, Guangdong, China
 
China Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co. Ltd engages in designing, manufacturing and marketing all kinds of electric motors. They are mainly suitable for the following applications: smart home application used in smart kitchen and laundry, medical instrument for personal care, smart E-transmission applied in automobile, industry automation applied in telecommunication and a great variety of plastic/metal planetary gearbox in different sizes.
In order to develop the oversea market, we are current seeking new partners around the world to create a bright future together. ZhaoWei is a right choice and excellent partnership with sincere services.

Company: Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co., Ltd
URL: http://www.zwgearbox.com/
Contact: Anny Liu
Tel:+86-755-27322652
Fax:+86-755-27323949
E-mail:sales@zwgearbox.com
Add: Blk. 18, Longwangmiao Industry Park, Fuyong Tn., Bao’an Dist., Shenzhen 518103, Guangdong, China
 
China Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co. Ltd engages in designing, manufacturing and marketing all kinds of electric motors. They are mainly suitable for the following applications: smart home application used in smart kitchen and laundry, medical instrument for personal care, smart E-transmission applied in automobile, industry automation applied in telecommunication and a great variety of plastic/metal planetary gearbox in different sizes.
In order to develop the oversea market, we are current seeking new partners around the world to create a bright future together. ZhaoWei is a right choice and excellent partnership with sincere services.

Company: Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co., Ltd
URL: http://www.zwgearbox.com/
Contact: Annie Liu
Tel:+86-755-27322652
Fax:+86-755-27323949
E-mail:sales@zwgearbox.com
Add: Blk. 18, Longwangmiao Industry Park, Fuyong Tn., Bao’an Dist., Shenzhen 518103, Guangdong, China
 
China Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co. Ltd engages in designing, manufacturing and marketing all kinds of electric motors. They are mainly suitable for the following applications: smart home application used in smart kitchen and laundry, medical instrument for personal care, smart E-transmission applied in automobile, industry automation applied in telecommunication and a great variety of plastic/metal planetary gearbox in different sizes.
In order to develop the oversea market, we are current seeking new partners around the world to create a bright future together. ZhaoWei is a right choice and excellent partnership with sincere services.

Company: Shenzhen ZHAOWEI Machinery & Electronics Co., Ltd
URL: http://www.zwgearbox.com/
Contact: Annie Liu
Tel:+86-755-27322652
Fax:+86-755-27323949
E-mail:sales@zwgearbox.com
Add: Blk. 18, Longwangmiao Industry Park, Fuyong Tn., Bao’an Dist., Shenzhen 518103, Guangdong, China
 
在 2015年7月27日星期一 UTC+8下午2:08:09,Sylvia Else写道:
Any Chinese readers here?

Can anyone tell me what the Chinese text says here?

https://www.dropbox.com/s/m6w7jc6gwo4exaa/sku151211-1-.jpg?dl=0

BTW, it's a solder mask compound.

Sylvia.

Jiangmen ABQ Electronic Material Co.,LTD was estimated in the year of 2006.

specialized in the production of high-end photoimageable PCB ink.

We passed the ISO9001 quality standard identification.and ISO14001.



Our Main products:

PISM white colour RS-2000 (W series)for LED ( patent products ),

PISM white colour matt for automative (we have TS16949 certificate , in Europe our RS-2000 WDM already be appointed to use in Automative industry,so there are a lot of PCB factory from china ,from korea ,from Thailand are buying RS-2000 WDM for their Europe automotive order).



Electronica spray ink RS-2000 SP(our electronica spray ink is sucessful in Korea market already)

PISM green colour RS-2000GL

PISM other colours RS-2000 BL,K,Y,R ,and others.

$UV cured solder mask UV-1000 G green colour

UV cured solder mask UV-1000 W white colour

Etching ink RS-1200,RS-1280,RS-8580

UV etching ink UV-680,UV 690.

Conduction current carbon ink RF-1860

Low pressure coating ink:RS-2000 BDHF

Marking ink.



All of our products are approved by UL ,(UL filenumber :E-310593).



Main customers in china :Founder technology ,Tiger builder ,Red board ,KB

,mankun and so on.



Due to we are setting up a new factory ,the total produce capacity will

reach 800tons per month.



In order to meet the new capacity we must develop oversea market largely

with very competitive price.



Our oversea market is developing very fast on the basis of our competitive

price ,stable quality ,excellent service.

Now our oversea market is :korea ,russia ,india ,parkistan,saudi,brazil

,usa,vietnam,turkey,Iran,malaysia and so on.



Consindering the cost ,now more and more PCB manufacturers choose china

mainland PCB ink supplier.



Now we are developing your market,so if we can get cooperation chance from

you then we will be very much appreciated.



Looking forward to hearing from you and best regards.



Mrs. Wang


****************************************************************

Export Manager

Jiangmen ABQ Electronic Material CO.,LTD

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/abq.pcb.ink

Video: https://youtu.be/iZEE5h3H6Dg

Web: http://www.jmbq.com.cn

E-MAIL: abqink@hotmail.com | abqink@gmail.com

export@jmbq.com.cn

SKYPE: abqink@hotmail.com

MP: 0086-18501626226

(Whatsapp,Viber,Line,Kakao,Wechat)
 
In article <906a7d4d-c3eb-426e-9511-
ed4603bb7ad6@googlegroups.com>
Davin the Wanker <brewnoser2@gmail.com> wrote:
"EricŠ" wrote in message
news:MPG.3150e7ff57743f43989c17@reader.albasani.net...
It's just one poster, I think. aka brewnoser2 and brewnoserii. Just u
se
your discretion to revert them back again.

On Monday, March 14, 2016 at 5:23:41 PM UTC-7, M.I.Wakefield wrote:
For someone with so few ideas, it's odd that she's so afraid of everyone

else's.

Hmmmm . . . .

These yours, Davin /'wakefield/? Just can't stop that wanking can you? Teenage habits die 'hard'.

How's that godzilla thunderator you got for Christmas holding
up, Karen? It must cost a fortune to keep that thing in
batteries and cleaning solvents.
 
On Fri, 13 May 2016 16:56:35 +1000, felix <me@nothere.invalid> wrote:

However, Monster cables are regarded as the best available, and always
have been

ROTFL. Not even close.
 
On 13/05/2016 9:05 AM, j@j.j wrote:
On Fri, 13 May 2016 16:56:35 +1000, felix <me@nothere.invalid> wrote:

However, Monster cables are regarded as the best available, and always
have been

ROTFL. Not even close.
Monster cables etc. are meant to separate audiofools from their money.
Just like the bullshit with valve amplifiers. There are many fuckwits
who think they have 'golden ears', in fact they are just being conned
and are unable to understand why. Sad but true.
 
On 13-May-2016 5:48 PM, BuckyBalls wrote:
On 13/05/2016 9:05 AM, j@j.j wrote:
On Fri, 13 May 2016 16:56:35 +1000, felix <me@nothere.invalid> wrote:

However, Monster cables are regarded as the best available, and always
have been

ROTFL. Not even close.

Monster cables etc. are meant to separate audiofools from their money.
Just like the bullshit with valve amplifiers.

it aint. the sound has different tonal qualities.. warmer, smoother,
etc., just because you can't notice or appreciate the difference,
doesn't mean others can't

There are many fuckwits who think they have 'golden ears', in fact
they are just being conned
and are unable to understand why. Sad but true.



--
"As long as there is this book [Koran] there will be no peace in the world"
-William Gladstone, four times PM of Great Britain
http://www.siotw.org/
http://www.australianlibertyalliance.org.au/
 
On 13/05/16 7:08 PM, felix wrote:

it aint. the sound has different tonal qualities.. warmer, smoother,
etc., just because you can't notice or appreciate the difference,
doesn't mean others can't

Clinical drug trials give people red smarties and tell them they're a
new drug, and they "feel better" after taking them too.




--
--
--
Regards,
Noddy.
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top