Terminology: "decided signal"

E

Eiffel

Guest
Hello,

Could someone briefly explain what a "decided signal" is? Is it, f. i.,
similar to a "selected signal"?

TIA and have a great day.
Eiffel
 
On Mon, 20 Jun 2005 05:33:07 +0200, Eiffel <none@invalid.com> wrote:

Hello,

Could someone briefly explain what a "decided signal" is? Is it, f. i.,
similar to a "selected signal"?

TIA and have a great day.
Eiffel
Never heard the term.

John
 
On Mon, 20 Jun 2005 05:33:07 +0200, Eiffel <none@invalid.com> wrote:

Hello,

Could someone briefly explain what a "decided signal" is? Is it, f. i.,
similar to a "selected signal"?
---
Perhaps it's a typo? "decoded"?

--
John Fields
Professional Circuit Designer
 
"Eiffel" <none@invalid.com> wrote in message
news:d95lrm$1k8b$1@biggoron.nerim.net...
Hello,

Could someone briefly explain what a "decided signal" is? Is it, f. i.,
similar to a "selected signal"?

TIA and have a great day.
Eiffel

fu on sci.electronics.basics where i originally posted this question.
I assume f.i. means For Instance and fu means Fuck You.... but you only got
'sort of' innocuous replies from John and John....

You could have tried to clarify your meaning.

Unfortunately John and John also visit this place.

So, go fuck yourself.

Or should I say 'gfy'?

Ask the person who asked the question in the first place what they thought
they meant to say.

Going totally off topic.......

What was that shit with the American Grand Prix yesterday...

Michellin, a French Company.......... ;-)

DNA
 
On Mon, 20 Jun 2005 08:05:08 +0200, Eiffel <none@invalid.com> wrote:

Hello,

Could someone briefly explain what a "decided signal" is? Is it, f. i.,
similar to a "selected signal"?

TIA and have a great day.
Eiffel

fu on sci.electronics.basics where i originally posted this question.
---
Could you briefly explain what "fu" is?

TIA and have a great day.

--
John Fields
Professional Circuit Designer
 
"Genome" <ilike_spam@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:Xqzte.1718$EP4.491@newsfe1-win.ntli.net...
"Eiffel" <none@invalid.com> wrote in message
news:d95lrm$1k8b$1@biggoron.nerim.net...
Hello,

Could someone briefly explain what a "decided signal" is? Is it, f. i.,
similar to a "selected signal"?

TIA and have a great day.
Eiffel

fu on sci.electronics.basics where i originally posted this question.

I assume f.i. means For Instance and fu means Fuck You.... but you only
got
'sort of' innocuous replies from John and John....

You could have tried to clarify your meaning.

Unfortunately John and John also visit this place.

So, go fuck yourself.

Or should I say 'gfy'?

Ask the person who asked the question in the first place what they thought
they meant to say.

Going totally off topic.......

What was that shit with the American Grand Prix yesterday...

Michellin, a French Company.......... ;-)

DNA
Oooh, it's a gotcha...... followups to sci.electronics.basics....

Spukely.

DNA
 
PeteS a écrit:

A deterministic signal is used in communications systems (by adding it
at the transmitter) to permit the receiver to lock to the original
*information* signal.
That's it! Muchas gracias PeteS, now i got it.

Excellente journée (have a nice day, not a nice trip... :) )

Eiffel
 
After a little looking around, I found this term in a Sony glossary,
where the real context should apparently be 'deterministic signal'.

See http://products.sel.sony.com/semi/glossary.html

A deterministic signal is used in communications systems (by adding it
at the transmitter) to permit the receiver to lock to the original
*information* signal. There are wide varieties of how this is done.
Note that deterministic signal energy is 'wasted' in terms of
communications systems - i.e. the system power efficiency is
transmitted *information* power / total transmitted power.

I am sure many here could elaborate on deterministic signals (I don't
have a huge amount of time right now).

Cheers

PeteS
 

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