v for frequency?...

On 3 Apr 2023 16:08:12 GMT, rbowman wrote:


afaik things like the 40 m ham band that was assigned in 1924 in the US
has always been called the 40 m band. A specific frequency will be given
as 7.010 MHz but I\'ve never heard it called the 7 MHz band.

You\'re living in the past, senile bigmouth and Trumptard!

--
More of the resident senile bigmouth\'s idiotic \"cool\" blather:
\"For reasons I can\'t recall I painted a spare bedroom in purple. It may
have had something to do with copious quantities of cheap Scotch.\"
MID: <k89lchF8b4pU1@mid.individual.net>
 
On 3 Apr 2023 15:53:33 GMT, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again:


Especially when we asked for corn and you didn\'t send us wheat but
instead you sent us some yellow bubbly stuff :)

Yes, and it was dent corn. (dent corn is a high starch variant chiefly
used for fodder, or ethanol production these days.)

And now you pester humanity with your neglected talkative senile assholes,
American superheroes wannabes and Trumptards on Usenet!

--
Yet more of the so very interesting senile blather by lowbrowwoman:
\"My family loaded me into a \'51 Chevy and drove from NY to Seattle and
back in \'52. I\'m alive. The Chevy had a painted steel dashboard with two
little hand prints worn down to the primer because I liked to stand up
and lean on it to see where we were going.\"
MID: <j2kuc1F3ejsU1@mid.individual.net>
 
On 03/04/2023 03:30, rbowman wrote:
On Sun, 02 Apr 2023 19:46:56 +0100, Commander Kinsey wrote:

To imagine America, just think of any other country 50 years ago. They
evolve slowly over there.

At least America is evolving. The UK has been devolving since they lost
that war they thought they won. How\'s that true Scotsman, Humza Yousaf,
doing?

I wonder whether he puts sugar on his porridge.

--
Max Demian
 
On Mon, 3 Apr 2023 18:41:30 +0100, Max Demian wrote:

On 03/04/2023 03:30, rbowman wrote:
On Sun, 02 Apr 2023 19:46:56 +0100, Commander Kinsey wrote:

To imagine America, just think of any other country 50 years ago.
They evolve slowly over there.

At least America is evolving. The UK has been devolving since they lost
that war they thought they won. How\'s that true Scotsman, Humza Yousaf,
doing?

I wonder whether he puts sugar on his porridge.

I don\'t have a clue what the nuances of that are. I wouldn\'t use
\'porridge\' but when I made oatmeal this weekend I added dried cherries, a
little stevia, and cinnamon. I hope that doesn\'t make me a Scot.
 
On Mon, 03 Apr 2023 09:09:56 -0700, John Larkin wrote:

I read a claim that, in 1900, people mostly married someone born within
15 miles of themselves. Now we have national and international
immigration diffusion gradients thus positive-feedback effects on
populations and genetics.

My wife was born across the river. It was a short walk. Do the positive
effects offset the negative? Some countries aren\'t sending their best and
brightest.
 
\"rbowman\" <bowman@montana.com> wrote in message
news:k90mepFq2rsU1@mid.individual.net...
On Mon, 3 Apr 2023 18:41:30 +0100, Max Demian wrote:

On 03/04/2023 03:30, rbowman wrote:
On Sun, 02 Apr 2023 19:46:56 +0100, Commander Kinsey wrote:

To imagine America, just think of any other country 50 years ago.
They evolve slowly over there.

At least America is evolving. The UK has been devolving since they lost
that war they thought they won. How\'s that true Scotsman, Humza Yousaf,
doing?

I wonder whether he puts sugar on his porridge.

I don\'t have a clue what the nuances of that are. I wouldn\'t use
\'porridge\' but when I made oatmeal this weekend I added dried cherries, a
little stevia, and cinnamon. I hope that doesn\'t make me a Scot.

As I understand it, \"real\" Scotsmen regard porridge as a savoury dish,
seasoned with salt, rather than (as everyone else does) a sweet dish,
seasoned with sugar and maybe fruit.
 
On Mon, 03 Apr 2023 08:17:50 -0700, John Larkin wrote:

> Grits? Grits is wonderful.

Probably apocryphal but my brother had a story about a Yankee engineer
working at Redstone during the BOMARC project. They were under a lot of
pressure and everyone\'s fuse was a little short.

The engineer went to the same diner every morning for breakfast and would
say \"No grits.\" Being Alabama his order would always come with grits.
Finally he snapped, threw the grits through a plate glass window saying
\"No goddamn grits!\"
 
On 3 Apr 2023 19:18:04 GMT, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again:


> My wife was born across the river.

YOU are married, bigmouth? LOL Who are you trying to convince of that? NO
woman could ever stand to live near a bigmouth and chatterbox like you! LOL

--
Yet another thrilling story from the resident senile gossip\'s thrilling
life:
\"Around here you have to be careful to lock your car toward the end of
summer or somebody will leave a grocery sack full of zucchini in it.\"
 
On 3 Apr 2023 19:07:05 GMT, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again:


> I don\'t have a clue

Yes, let\'s leave it at that! You only have a big mouth. That\'s for sure.

--
More of the resident senile bigmouth\'s idiotic \"cool\" blather:
\"For reasons I can\'t recall I painted a spare bedroom in purple. It may
have had something to do with copious quantities of cheap Scotch.\"
MID: <k89lchF8b4pU1@mid.individual.net>
 
On 3 Apr 2023 20:03:50 GMT, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

On Mon, 03 Apr 2023 08:17:50 -0700, John Larkin wrote:

Grits? Grits is wonderful.

Probably apocryphal but my brother had a story about a Yankee engineer
working at Redstone during the BOMARC project. They were under a lot of
pressure and everyone\'s fuse was a little short.

The engineer went to the same diner every morning for breakfast and would
say \"No grits.\" Being Alabama his order would always come with grits.
Finally he snapped, threw the grits through a plate glass window saying
\"No goddamn grits!\"

Yanks eat cream of wheat and toast Wonder Bread. Hopeless.

White grits. Yellow grits. Cheezy grits. Fried grits. Grits and hash.
 
On 4/3/2023 12:09 PM, John Larkin wrote:

I read a claim that, in 1900, people mostly married someone born
within 15 miles of themselves. Now we have national and international
immigration diffusion gradients thus positive-feedback effects on
populations and genetics.

I wonder how much that has changed. We do have one long distance in the
family, my sister married a guy from England but to counter that my
daughter is married to the boy next door.
 
On 3 Apr 2023 20:03:50 GMT, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again:


> Probably apocryphal but my brother had a story about a Yankee engineer

Keep your sick senile shit out of these newsgroups, senile troll! Capisci?

--
Yet another thrilling account from the resident senile superhero\'s senile
life:
\"I went to a Driveby Truckers concert at a local venue and they made me
leave my knife in the car. Never went back. Come to think of it the Truckers
had a Black Lives Matter banner. Never bought any of their music again
either.\"
MID: <k84ip9Fesb1U1@mid.individual.net>
 
On 2023-04-03, NY <me@privacy.invalid> wrote:
\"rbowman\" <bowman@montana.com> wrote in message
news:k90mepFq2rsU1@mid.individual.net...
On Mon, 3 Apr 2023 18:41:30 +0100, Max Demian wrote:

On 03/04/2023 03:30, rbowman wrote:
On Sun, 02 Apr 2023 19:46:56 +0100, Commander Kinsey wrote:

To imagine America, just think of any other country 50 years ago.
They evolve slowly over there.

At least America is evolving. The UK has been devolving since they lost
that war they thought they won. How\'s that true Scotsman, Humza Yousaf,
doing?

I wonder whether he puts sugar on his porridge.

I don\'t have a clue what the nuances of that are. I wouldn\'t use
\'porridge\' but when I made oatmeal this weekend I added dried cherries, a
little stevia, and cinnamon. I hope that doesn\'t make me a Scot.

As I understand it, \"real\" Scotsmen regard porridge as a savoury dish,
seasoned with salt, rather than (as everyone else does) a sweet dish,
seasoned with sugar and maybe fruit.

I probably could eat it with salt and butter. A couple of times I\'ve
forgotten sugar and it was nearly sweet enough. I generally add
raisins, since brown sugar is already in play.

Oatmeal for breakfast every day. Rolled oats, though, so perhaps that\'s
a disqualifier.

--
Cindy Hamilton
 
On 2023-04-03, John Larkin <jlarkin@highlandSNIPMEtechnology.com> wrote:
On 3 Apr 2023 20:03:50 GMT, rbowman <bowman@montana.com> wrote:

On Mon, 03 Apr 2023 08:17:50 -0700, John Larkin wrote:

Grits? Grits is wonderful.

Probably apocryphal but my brother had a story about a Yankee engineer
working at Redstone during the BOMARC project. They were under a lot of
pressure and everyone\'s fuse was a little short.

The engineer went to the same diner every morning for breakfast and would
say \"No grits.\" Being Alabama his order would always come with grits.
Finally he snapped, threw the grits through a plate glass window saying
\"No goddamn grits!\"


Yanks eat cream of wheat and toast Wonder Bread. Hopeless.

Not this Yank. No CoW, no Wonder Bread. Ok, I take that soft, white
stuff and stick it up a turkey\'s ass for Thanksgiving. Real bread
doesn\'t have that nostalgic texture.

> White grits. Yellow grits. Cheezy grits. Fried grits. Grits and hash.

I\'ve never eaten grits, but I got some polenta last week at the grocery
store. I\'ll experiment with it. Probably put red sauce and Italian
sausage on top.

What kind of hash? I\'m not a big hash eater, either.

--
Cindy Hamilton
 
In message <k8veanFk1r7U1@mid.individual.net>, alan_m
<junk@admac.myzen.co.uk> writes
On 01/04/2023 13:17, Ian Jackson wrote:

Now that we\'re free from the oppressive jackboot dictatorship of the
EU, can we now not revert to the traditional cycles per second (c/s,
or simply \'cycles\', etc)?

We used units such as Hertz long before the UK ever joined the EEC.

IIRC, the UK only started using Hz in the early 70s. This was probably
around when we joined the EEC, but I don\'t think that this was the
reason. Until then, I had only seen Hz used on German testgear (Rohde &
Schwarz etc). I believe that it was originally intended to use Hz only
for electrical frequency.
I note on some American videos that they refer to units as either
metric or \"English\" units (rather than Imperial units).

--
Ian
Aims and ambitions are neither attainments nor achievements
 
\"NY\" <me@privacy.invalid> writes:
\"rbowman\" <bowman@montana.com> wrote in message
news:k90mepFq2rsU1@mid.individual.net...
On Mon, 3 Apr 2023 18:41:30 +0100, Max Demian wrote:

On 03/04/2023 03:30, rbowman wrote:
On Sun, 02 Apr 2023 19:46:56 +0100, Commander Kinsey wrote:

To imagine America, just think of any other country 50 years ago.
They evolve slowly over there.

At least America is evolving. The UK has been devolving since they lost
that war they thought they won. How\'s that true Scotsman, Humza Yousaf,
doing?

I wonder whether he puts sugar on his porridge.

I don\'t have a clue what the nuances of that are. I wouldn\'t use
\'porridge\' but when I made oatmeal this weekend I added dried cherries, a
little stevia, and cinnamon. I hope that doesn\'t make me a Scot.

As I understand it, \"real\" Scotsmen regard porridge as a savoury dish,
seasoned with salt, rather than (as everyone else does) a sweet dish,
seasoned with sugar and maybe fruit.

\"Real\" Scotsmen also eat Haggis. \'nuf said.
 
Since when did we start using v for frequency? v is velocity, f is frequency, lambda is wavelength. Using v for frequency is pure insanity.

https://informasisiang.blogspot.com/2023/04/google-groups-karya-larry-page-dan.html
 
Am 03.04.23 um 23:12 schrieb Scott Lurndal:

\"Real\" Scotsmen also eat Haggis. \'nuf said.

I tried it on Orkney. It tasted better than the recipe reads.

<
https://www.flickr.com/photos/137684711@N07/22476076854/in/album-72157660575819870/
>

When you are really hungry after a day\'s motorbiking, even
English Black Pudding passes.


Gerhard
 
On 03/04/2023 22:12, Scott Lurndal wrote:

> \"Real\" Scotsmen also eat Haggis. \'nuf said.

They have been over hunted so there is a ban on hunting Haggis this and
next year to let numbers recover.

--
mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk
 
On 03/04/2023 20:18, rbowman wrote:
On Mon, 03 Apr 2023 09:09:56 -0700, John Larkin wrote:

I read a claim that, in 1900, people mostly married someone born within
15 miles of themselves. Now we have national and international
immigration diffusion gradients thus positive-feedback effects on
populations and genetics.

My wife was born across the river. It was a short walk. Do the positive
effects offset the negative? Some countries aren\'t sending their best and
brightest.

While my wife and I were born in the same English hospital (indeed there
is a 50/50 chance that her mother was the midwife when I was born), both
her parents were born in what is now the Republic of Ireland, but while
it was still part of the UK.
 

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