Driver to drive?

On 2/21/2012 6:22 AM, Uwe Hercksen wrote:
brent schrieb:

I told him that the glow was probably a plasma from the ablation heat
shield, and that given the antenna locations, the plasma had probably
shorted them all out. He spoke to others in the room and then got back
to tell me that I was probably right, and thanks. He asked me to wait on
the line, then after a short time said that communication had been
reestablished. We were both choked up with relief.

Hello,

there were two missions with the Mercury capsule in an earth orbit
before the manned mission with John Glenn, the communication problem
during reentry should have been noticed before. Telemetry was used with
these unmanned missions also.
There was no plasma problem with any of the the sub-orbital reentries. I
can make a reasonable guess about why, but I don't know.

Jerry
--
Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get.
ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ
 
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 12:23:37 -0500, Jerry Avins <jya@ieee.org> wrote:

On 2/21/2012 6:22 AM, Uwe Hercksen wrote:


brent schrieb:

I told him that the glow was probably a plasma from the ablation heat
shield, and that given the antenna locations, the plasma had probably
shorted them all out. He spoke to others in the room and then got back
to tell me that I was probably right, and thanks. He asked me to wait on
the line, then after a short time said that communication had been
reestablished. We were both choked up with relief.

Hello,

there were two missions with the Mercury capsule in an earth orbit
before the manned mission with John Glenn, the communication problem
during reentry should have been noticed before. Telemetry was used with
these unmanned missions also.

There was no plasma problem with any of the the sub-orbital reentries. I
can make a reasonable guess about why, but I don't know.
Not enough energy.
 
On 2/21/2012 1:20 PM, krw@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz wrote:
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 12:23:37 -0500, Jerry Avins<jya@ieee.org> wrote:

On 2/21/2012 6:22 AM, Uwe Hercksen wrote:


brent schrieb:

I told him that the glow was probably a plasma from the ablation heat
shield, and that given the antenna locations, the plasma had probably
shorted them all out. He spoke to others in the room and then got back
to tell me that I was probably right, and thanks. He asked me to wait on
the line, then after a short time said that communication had been
reestablished. We were both choked up with relief.

Hello,

there were two missions with the Mercury capsule in an earth orbit
before the manned mission with John Glenn, the communication problem
during reentry should have been noticed before. Telemetry was used with
these unmanned missions also.

There was no plasma problem with any of the the sub-orbital reentries. I
can make a reasonable guess about why, but I don't know.

Not enough energy.
Possibly also revised antenna placement.

Jerry
--
Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get.
ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ
 
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 15:28:49 -0500, Jerry Avins <jya@ieee.org> wrote:

On 2/21/2012 1:20 PM, krw@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz wrote:
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 12:23:37 -0500, Jerry Avins<jya@ieee.org> wrote:

On 2/21/2012 6:22 AM, Uwe Hercksen wrote:


brent schrieb:

I told him that the glow was probably a plasma from the ablation heat
shield, and that given the antenna locations, the plasma had probably
shorted them all out. He spoke to others in the room and then got back
to tell me that I was probably right, and thanks. He asked me to wait on
the line, then after a short time said that communication had been
reestablished. We were both choked up with relief.

Hello,

there were two missions with the Mercury capsule in an earth orbit
before the manned mission with John Glenn, the communication problem
during reentry should have been noticed before. Telemetry was used with
these unmanned missions also.

There was no plasma problem with any of the the sub-orbital reentries. I
can make a reasonable guess about why, but I don't know.

Not enough energy.

Possibly also revised antenna placement.
No, that would suggest an easy solution when none was ever found.
 
On Sun, 19 Feb 2012 09:27:45 -0500, default <default@nowhere.net>
wrote:

On Sat, 18 Feb 2012 08:45:41 -0800, John Larkin
jjlarkin@highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote:

On Sat, 18 Feb 2012 10:51:00 -0500, default <default@nowhere.net
wrote:

On Fri, 17 Feb 2012 08:35:58 -0800, John Larkin
jjlarkin@highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote:


And, more generally, empathy and an interest in externalities. This is
the opposite of selfishness and neurosis. Of course people with faith
are healthier and happier. And, I'd argue, people who design
electronics get similar benefits.

I agree with you.

But then people with lobotomies are happy as clams. Control the
drooling and keep them from becoming hood ornaments, and maybe you
could make a case for lobotomies.

Do you want to live a long life or do you want a richly fulfilling
life, assuming there are compromises to be made?

Why is that a tradeoff? Fact is, the more you do and the more you keep
your mind and body active, the heppier you will be and the longer you
will live.

Absolutely! Preaching to the choir in that respect.

Wealth and happiness do have a positive correlation; but people don't
all have the same needs. I like the satisfaction of solving problems,
over acquiring wealth. The money I need to be happy has been easy to
acquire, so I don't expend a lot of effort in that direction.


That's one cool thing about the "Who Really Cares" book: there's
overwhelming statistical proof that, the more people give away, the
better off they are.

Or the more they possess the happier they are, and coincidentally the
more they give away.

Wrong. Read the book.

I read ~ 3 a week now, time is limited. What is this book going to do
for me? How does it rank with Daniel Quinn's "Ishmael?"

Seriously though, which books have you read and how do you rank them?
Way too many to list. I have hundreds of linear feet of loaded
bookshelves. My two favorites are "Pride and Prejudice" and
Wodehouse's "A Damsel in Distress", the latter probably the
best-written book in the English language.


What I have read of the reviews makes it sound like a waste of money.
Frankly I don't care who cares. Or who think they care, or say they
care, or pretend to care.
I think you're trying to say that you don't much care.

Any and all claims of moral superiority are always suspect.
Since you won't read the book, you'll never know.


--

John Larkin, President
Highland Technology, Inc

jlarkin at highlandtechnology dot com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com

Precision electronic instrumentation
Picosecond-resolution Digital Delay and Pulse generators
Custom laser controllers
Photonics and fiberoptic TTL data links
VME thermocouple, LVDT, synchro acquisition and simulation
 
In comp.dsp Uwe Hercksen <hercksen@mew.uni-erlangen.de> wrote:

(snip)
I told him that the glow was probably a plasma from the ablation heat
shield, and that given the antenna locations, the plasma had probably
shorted them all out. He spoke to others in the room and then got back
to tell me that I was probably right, and thanks. He asked me to wait on
the line, then after a short time said that communication had been
reestablished. We were both choked up with relief.
As well as I remember it, that was still there in Apollo.

For some time before splashdown there was no communication
with the astronauts, as well as I remember due to the plasma glow.

there were two missions with the Mercury capsule in an earth orbit
before the manned mission with John Glenn, the communication problem
during reentry should have been noticed before. Telemetry was used with
these unmanned missions also.
But they wouldn't be talking to anyone.

-- glen
 
On 2/21/2012 6:40 PM, krw@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz wrote:
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 15:28:49 -0500, Jerry Avins<jya@ieee.org> wrote:

On 2/21/2012 1:20 PM, krw@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz wrote:
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 12:23:37 -0500, Jerry Avins<jya@ieee.org> wrote:

On 2/21/2012 6:22 AM, Uwe Hercksen wrote:


brent schrieb:

I told him that the glow was probably a plasma from the ablation heat
shield, and that given the antenna locations, the plasma had probably
shorted them all out. He spoke to others in the room and then got back
to tell me that I was probably right, and thanks. He asked me to wait on
the line, then after a short time said that communication had been
reestablished. We were both choked up with relief.

Hello,

there were two missions with the Mercury capsule in an earth orbit
before the manned mission with John Glenn, the communication problem
during reentry should have been noticed before. Telemetry was used with
these unmanned missions also.

There was no plasma problem with any of the the sub-orbital reentries. I
can make a reasonable guess about why, but I don't know.

Not enough energy.

Possibly also revised antenna placement.

No, that would suggest an easy solution when none was ever found.
There's some logic to that, but the possibility remains that the revised
placement's advantage outweighed the annoyance of what was -- by then --
known to be a temporary annoyance. There must be someone who actually
knows, so let's not speculate.

Jerry
--
Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get.
ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ
 
On Wed, 22 Feb 2012 00:02:24 -0500, Jerry Avins <jya@ieee.org> wrote:

On 2/21/2012 6:40 PM, krw@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz wrote:
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 15:28:49 -0500, Jerry Avins<jya@ieee.org> wrote:

On 2/21/2012 1:20 PM, krw@att.bizzzzzzzzzzzz wrote:
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 12:23:37 -0500, Jerry Avins<jya@ieee.org> wrote:

On 2/21/2012 6:22 AM, Uwe Hercksen wrote:


brent schrieb:

I told him that the glow was probably a plasma from the ablation heat
shield, and that given the antenna locations, the plasma had probably
shorted them all out. He spoke to others in the room and then got back
to tell me that I was probably right, and thanks. He asked me to wait on
the line, then after a short time said that communication had been
reestablished. We were both choked up with relief.

Hello,

there were two missions with the Mercury capsule in an earth orbit
before the manned mission with John Glenn, the communication problem
during reentry should have been noticed before. Telemetry was used with
these unmanned missions also.

There was no plasma problem with any of the the sub-orbital reentries. I
can make a reasonable guess about why, but I don't know.

Not enough energy.

Possibly also revised antenna placement.

No, that would suggest an easy solution when none was ever found.

There's some logic to that, but the possibility remains that the revised
placement's advantage outweighed the annoyance of what was -- by then --
known to be a temporary annoyance. There must be someone who actually
knows, so let's not speculate.
No, it absolutely does not. The blackout period is a big safety problem and
all sorts of crazy solutions were tried (like trying to cool a hole in the
plasma by injecting water). All failed. If it had been a simple matter of
moving an antenna, or such, it would have been done by the time the Shuttle
flew. I'm not speculating.
 
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 10:51:21 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell"
<mike.terrell@earthlink.net> wrote:

Uwe Hercksen wrote:

Hello,

there were two missions with the Mercury capsule in an earth orbit
before the manned mission with John Glenn, the communication problem
during reentry should have been noticed before. Telemetry was used with
these unmanned missions also.


Sure, but that was before NASA started buying all of their Telemetry
receiving equipment from Microdyne. They bought it from the company that
Microdyne put out of business. :)
Collins (now Rockewll-Collins) never quite went out of business. Their
product line is rather different now. Or did you mean somebody else.

?-)
 
josephkk wrote:
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 10:51:21 -0500, "Michael A. Terrell"
mike.terrell@earthlink.net> wrote:


Uwe Hercksen wrote:

Hello,

there were two missions with the Mercury capsule in an earth orbit
before the manned mission with John Glenn, the communication problem
during reentry should have been noticed before. Telemetry was used with
these unmanned missions also.


Sure, but that was before NASA started buying all of their Telemetry
receiving equipment from Microdyne. They bought it from the company that
Microdyne put out of business. :)

Collins (now Rockewll-Collins) never quite went out of business. Their
product line is rather different now. Or did you mean somebody else.

Yes. Defense Electronics. Several engineers left that company to
found Microdyne, after their bosses refuse to modernize their designs.
They built a prototype in one of the engineer's garage, then talked one
of the salesmen into joining them. One of the engineers was still there
as a consultant when I worked there. He was Asian and spoke in broken
English. He still thought like he was working at a startup, which was a
pain because he was responsible for approving new test equipment
purchase. he didn't think engineers needed computers, and threw a fit
when manufacturing test wanted a network analyzer. He stormed out onto
the floor and jury rigged a setup that he said was all they needed to do
the job. It tied up too much equipment, and wasted a lot of the test
tech's time. He finally gave in ad approvedthe purchase of a used
model. That analyzer cut the test time by over 90%. :)

By the time I left we had almost a dozen in test, and several in
engineering. I shocked the entire test department when a new batch of
test equipment arrived, and i was offered a new HP analyzer for my
bench, and told the boss to assign it to another tech's bench where I
could borrow it, if needed. I did take the Tektronix 2465B scope for my
bench, though. ;-)


--
You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense.
 
On Feb 23, 6:45 pm, small Pox <smallpox...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Feb 22, 3:20 pm, "Jesse F. Hughes" <je...@phiwumbda.org> wrote:

Elisa Lamb <elisala...@gmail.com> writes:
What has any of this political horseshit got to do with sci.math?
Why is this crap cross posted?

I respect your opinion, gentleman. You seem to have deep interest in
maths but little deficient in english vocabulary.

On the contrary, every word he chose seems perfectly apt.

--
Jesse F. Hughes

Jesse: Quincy, you should trust me more.
Quincy (age 4): Baba, I never trust you.  And I've got good reasons.

I support you

FBI pays a fine of 5.8 Million to Steven Hatfill + Judge Sanctions FBI
for Hiding Info From Him

http://www.courthousenews.com/2011/11/18/41587.htm

Friday, November 18, 2011Last Update: 12:25 PM PT
Judge Sanctions FBI for Hiding Info From Him By TIM HULL

                        ShareThis

     (CN) - The FBI must pay for lying to a court and withholding
information about its investigations of Southern California's Muslim
community, a federal judge ruled, calling the government's deception
in the long-running case deliberate and "inexcusable."
     Both U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney and the 9th Circuit have
previously found that the FBI improperly held back a trove of
documents from the court in a lawsuit involving several Muslim-
American community organizations and leaders, including the Islamic
Shura Council of Southern California and the Council on American
Islamic Relations-California.
     The organizations had filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
request in 2006, seeking documents related to any bureau
investigations of their members since 2001. They sued the government a
year later when their request produced a mere eight pages, most of
them heavily redacted.
     The FBI eventually came up with about 100 pages of documents on
nine of the 11 plaintiffs. But the government heavily redacted those
documents, claiming that much of the information was outside the scope
of the FOIA request. Asked to permit release of the redacted
information, Judge Carney reviewed the full documents in chambers.
Only then did the FBI reveal, for the first time, that it had withheld
documents from both the plaintiffs and the court.
     An incensed Judge Carney attempted to unseal the withheld
documents, but the government filed an emergency appeal with the 9th
Circuit. Two panels of the federal appeals court in Pasadena
considered the issue, and in March ruled that the documents should
remain sealed, despite the FBI's deception. While the documents should
have been given to the court, the FBI had justifiably kept them from
the plaintiffs based on national security concerns, according to the
appellate court's finding, to which Carney consented.
     But that decision did not resolve the more-than-5-year-old case,
with the plaintiffs seeking sactions against the government for lying
to the court. Judge Carney agreed, granted the motion Thursday from
Santa Ana with an impassioned defense of the federal judiciary's
oversight responsibilities under FOIA.
     "The government claims that its intention was not to mislead the
court but that it was following a well-established policy of the
attorney general to deny the existence of responsive documents if, in
the sole opinion of the government, the disclosure of the information
in the responsive documents would compromise national security," he
wrote. "The government's deception of the court was inexcusable. The
court cannot perform its important oversight role mandated by FOIA
unless the government provides it with complete and accurate
information. It is the court, not the government, who determines what
the law requires. The court must impose monetary sanctions to deter
the government from deceiving the court again."
     "There is no legal precedent that the court is aware of - and the
government has furnished none - that permits submission of false
information to the court in any circumstance, including in the context
of a FOIA request," he added. "Indeed, presenting false information to
the court is antithetical to the very structure of FOIA, which
mandates judicial oversight by the District Court."
     Judge Carney ordered the government to pay "the amount of
reasonable attorneys' fees to plaintiffs for bringing the instant
motion."
     Islamic Shura Council of Southern California Executive Director
Shakeel Syed praised the decision. "We applaud the Court for
restraining the government and upholding the Bill of Rights," Syed
said in a statement.
Since google disallowed profile, I have put it in my sig

=========

The FAT per DIEM FBI bustards use our TAX PAYER MONEY and
INCOMPETENCE
is UNACCEPTABLE.


====

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lX18zUp6WPY


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQapkVCx1HI


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXJ-k-iOg0M


Hey Racist and INcompetent FBI Bustards, where is the ANTHRAX
Mailer ?
Where are the 4 blackboxes ? Where are the Pentagon Videos ? Why did
you release the 5 dancing Israelis compromising the whole 911
investigation ? If the Dubai Police can catch Mossad Murderers and
put
the videos and Iranian Police can why cant you put the Pentagon
Videos ? If Iran police can put the AMERICAN TERRORIST, Riggi and
puting on INTERNATIONAL MEDIA a day after catching him without
TORTURE, why cant you put the INNOCENT patsies on the MEDIA. Why did
you have to LIE about Dr Afiya Siddiqui and torture that Innocent
little mother of 3 and smashing the skull of her one child ?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhMcii8smxk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0SZ2lxDJmdg


There are CRIMINAL cases against CIA CRIMINAL Bustards in Italian
courts.


FBI bustards paid a penalty of $5.8 million to Steven Hatfill, but
only because he was a white. They got away with MURDER of thousands
of
Non-whites in all parts of the world.


Daily 911 news : http://911blogger.com


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tRfhUezbKLw


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7kGZ3XPEm4


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lX18zUp6WPY


Conclusion : FBI bustards are RACIST and INcompetent. They could
neither catch the ANTHRAX or 911 YANK/Jew criminals nor could they
cover them up - whichever was their actual goal or task.


SLASH the SALARIES of FBI/CIA/NSA etc BUSTARDS into half all across
tbe board, esp the whites/jew on the top.


FBI Bustards failed to Catch BERNARD MADOFF even after that RACIST
and
UNPATRIOTIC Act
FBI bustards failed to prevent ROMAN POLANSKY from absconding to
europe and rapes.
FBI bustards failed to prevent OKLAHOMA


=======Hey RACIST FBI Bustards, where is the ANTHRAX mailer ???


"They tell how they supplied smallpox to General Amherst (Secret
Relationship, pp. 111-114) to send the blankets among the Native
American - it's all here.


"They tell how they supplied smallpox to General Amherst (Secret
Relationship, pp. 111-114) to send the blankets among the Native
American - it's all here.


"They tell how they supplied smallpox to General Amherst (Secret
Relationship, pp. 111-114) to send the blankets among the Native
American - it's all here.
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UqcY8lGUUE&feature=g-vrec&context=G27a74a6RVAAAAAAAAAQ

On Feb 23, 6:51 pm, small Pox <smallpox...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Feb 23, 6:45 pm, small Pox <smallpox...@gmail.com> wrote:





On Feb 22, 3:20 pm, "Jesse F. Hughes" <je...@phiwumbda.org> wrote:

Elisa Lamb <elisala...@gmail.com> writes:
What has any of this political horseshit got to do with sci.math?
Why is this crap cross posted?

I respect your opinion, gentleman. You seem to have deep interest in
maths but little deficient in english vocabulary.

On the contrary, every word he chose seems perfectly apt.

--
Jesse F. Hughes

Jesse: Quincy, you should trust me more.
Quincy (age 4): Baba, I never trust you.  And I've got good reasons..

I support you

FBI pays a fine of 5.8 Million to Steven Hatfill + Judge Sanctions FBI
for Hiding Info From Him

http://www.courthousenews.com/2011/11/18/41587.htm

Friday, November 18, 2011Last Update: 12:25 PM PT
Judge Sanctions FBI for Hiding Info From Him By TIM HULL

                        ShareThis

     (CN) - The FBI must pay for lying to a court and withholding
information about its investigations of Southern California's Muslim
community, a federal judge ruled, calling the government's deception
in the long-running case deliberate and "inexcusable."
     Both U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney and the 9th Circuit have
previously found that the FBI improperly held back a trove of
documents from the court in a lawsuit involving several Muslim-
American community organizations and leaders, including the Islamic
Shura Council of Southern California and the Council on American
Islamic Relations-California.
     The organizations had filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
request in 2006, seeking documents related to any bureau
investigations of their members since 2001. They sued the government a
year later when their request produced a mere eight pages, most of
them heavily redacted.
     The FBI eventually came up with about 100 pages of documents on
nine of the 11 plaintiffs. But the government heavily redacted those
documents, claiming that much of the information was outside the scope
of the FOIA request. Asked to permit release of the redacted
information, Judge Carney reviewed the full documents in chambers.
Only then did the FBI reveal, for the first time, that it had withheld
documents from both the plaintiffs and the court.
     An incensed Judge Carney attempted to unseal the withheld
documents, but the government filed an emergency appeal with the 9th
Circuit. Two panels of the federal appeals court in Pasadena
considered the issue, and in March ruled that the documents should
remain sealed, despite the FBI's deception. While the documents should
have been given to the court, the FBI had justifiably kept them from
the plaintiffs based on national security concerns, according to the
appellate court's finding, to which Carney consented.
     But that decision did not resolve the more-than-5-year-old case,
with the plaintiffs seeking sactions against the government for lying
to the court. Judge Carney agreed, granted the motion Thursday from
Santa Ana with an impassioned defense of the federal judiciary's
oversight responsibilities under FOIA.
     "The government claims that its intention was not to mislead the
court but that it was following a well-established policy of the
attorney general to deny the existence of responsive documents if, in
the sole opinion of the government, the disclosure of the information
in the responsive documents would compromise national security," he
wrote. "The government's deception of the court was inexcusable. The
court cannot perform its important oversight role mandated by FOIA
unless the government provides it with complete and accurate
information. It is the court, not the government, who determines what
the law requires. The court must impose monetary sanctions to deter
the government from deceiving the court again."
     "There is no legal precedent that the court is aware of - and the
government has furnished none - that permits submission of false
information to the court in any circumstance, including in the context
of a FOIA request," he added. "Indeed, presenting false information to
the court is antithetical to the very structure of FOIA, which
mandates judicial oversight by the District Court."
     Judge Carney ordered the government to pay "the amount of
reasonable attorneys' fees to plaintiffs for bringing the instant
motion."
     Islamic Shura Council of Southern California Executive Director
Shakeel Syed praised the decision. "We applaud the Court for
restraining the government and upholding the Bill of Rights," Syed
said in a statement.

Since google disallowed profile, I have put it in my sig

=========
The FAT per DIEM FBI bustards use our TAX PAYER MONEY and
INCOMPETENCE
is UNACCEPTABLE.

====
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lX18zUp6WPY

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQapkVCx1HI

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXJ-k-iOg0M

Hey Racist and INcompetent FBI Bustards, where is the ANTHRAX
Mailer ?
Where are the 4 blackboxes ? Where are the Pentagon Videos ? Why did
you release the 5 dancing Israelis compromising the whole 911
investigation ? If the Dubai Police can catch Mossad Murderers and
put
the videos and Iranian Police can why cant you put the Pentagon
Videos ? If Iran police can put the AMERICAN TERRORIST, Riggi and
puting on INTERNATIONAL MEDIA a day after catching him without
TORTURE, why cant you put the INNOCENT patsies on the MEDIA. Why did
you have to LIE about Dr Afiya Siddiqui and torture that Innocent
little mother of 3 and smashing the skull of her one child ?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DhMcii8smxkhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0SZ2lxDJmdg

There are CRIMINAL cases against CIA CRIMINAL Bustards in Italian
courts.

FBI bustards paid a penalty of $5.8 million to Steven Hatfill, but
only because he was a white. They got away with MURDER of thousands
of
Non-whites in all parts of the world.

Daily 911 news :http://911blogger.com

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tRfhUezbKLw

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7kGZ3XPEm4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lX18zUp6WPY

Conclusion : FBI bustards are RACIST and INcompetent. They could
neither catch the ANTHRAX or 911 YANK/Jew criminals nor could they
cover them up - whichever was their actual goal or task.

SLASH the SALARIES of FBI/CIA/NSA etc BUSTARDS into half all across
tbe board, esp the whites/jew on the top.

FBI Bustards failed to Catch BERNARD MADOFF even after that RACIST
and
UNPATRIOTIC Act
FBI bustards failed to prevent ROMAN POLANSKY from absconding to
europe and rapes.
FBI bustards failed to prevent OKLAHOMA

=======> Hey RACIST FBI Bustards, where is the ANTHRAX mailer ???

"They tell how they supplied smallpox to General Amherst (Secret
Relationship, pp. 111-114) to send the blankets among the Native
American - it's all here.

"They tell how they supplied smallpox to General Amherst (Secret
Relationship, pp. 111-114) to send the blankets among the Native
American - it's all here.

"They tell how they supplied smallpox to General Amherst (Secret
Relationship, pp. 111-114) to send the blankets among the Native
American - it's all here.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -
 
On 26/02/2012 8:00 AM, Fred Abse wrote:
On Fri, 10 Feb 2012 14:38:32 -0800, The Ghost In The Machine wrote:

YOU SHOULD HAVE LEFT IT ALONE....NEXT TIME JUST FLUSH IT OUT WITH
SILICONE LUBRICANT.
There's a recipe for disaster. Watch the commutator ringfire.

Motors that size generally have sealed, pre-lubricated bearings. You can't
replace those without dismantling. Read the OP about "bearing issues".

Silicone lubricants should not be used in such applications, anyway.

Fred, you should know by now that the ghost's comments aren't worth a
response but thanks for the response in this case as some very few may
not realize that what he says is meaningless drivel.

--
Don Kelly
cross out to reply
 
On Feb 26, 11:00 am, Fred Abse <excretatau...@invalid.invalid> wrote:
On Fri, 10 Feb 2012 14:38:32 -0800, The Ghost In The Machine wrote:

YOU SHOULD HAVE LEFT IT ALONE....NEXT TIME JUST FLUSH IT OUT WITH
SILICONE LUBRICANT.

There's a recipe for disaster. Watch the commutator ringfire.

Motors that size generally have sealed, pre-lubricated bearings. You can't
replace those without dismantling. Read the OP about "bearing issues".

Silicone lubricants should not be used in such applications, anyway.

--
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence
over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled."
                                       (Richard Feynman)
BLA BLA BLA WHAT DISASTER ??? SILICONE DOES NOT IGNITE...AND ITS
PRETTY SLICK ACCESSING TOUGH SPOTS....YOU SOUND LIKE A WD40 MAN
YOURSELF, HIGHLY FLAMMABLE, YET STILL RECOMMENDED FOR MOTORS, JUST
DONT SPRAY IT IT WHILE ITS ENERGIZED & RUNNING.
THE BOTTOM LINE IS HE SHOULDN'T HAVE OPENED IT UP.

MR. ABSESS HAVE YOU TRIED VIAGRA OR CIALIS FOR THAT ?
BOOWAHAHAHAHA !
TGITM
 
On Sun, 26 Feb 2012 17:09:06 -0800, The Ghost In The Machine wrote:

-snipped_


<FX: disdain>

:^|

--
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence
over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled."
(Richard Feynman)
 
On Sun, 26 Feb 2012 17:33:58 -0800, Don Kelly wrote:

Fred, you should know by now that the ghost's comments aren't worth a
response but thanks for the response in this case as some very few may
not realize that what he says is meaningless drivel.
Fortunately, I don't inhabit the groups that he frequents, only seeing the
occasional crosspost.

In this case, I thought that some poor schmuck might follow his advice.

--
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence
over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled."
(Richard Feynman)
 
On Feb 27, 12:04 pm, Fred Abse <excretatau...@invalid.invalid> wrote:
On Sun, 26 Feb 2012 17:09:06 -0800, The Ghost In The Machine wrote:

-snipped_

FX: disdain

:^|

--
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence
over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled."
                                       (Richard Feynman)
EXCRETIAN MAN, CUT THE CRAP OUT !

:::CONCERN:::
TGITM
 
On 2/28/2012 10:55 PM, rani bhowani wrote:
Our client is keen to
discover and collaborate with individuals, teams and companies who
have original research, ideas and solutions to solve these problems.


TQS021203 | New Technology to mark Loose Diamonds during Outsourced
Jewellery Manufacturing Process
I have some innovative technology that could be applied to this challenge.
But I'll need some material to demo it.
Please email me for address where to send the diamonds.
Larger diamonds would be much easier to handle.
 
On Tue, 06 Mar 2012 19:30:48 -0600, John Fields
<jfields@austininstruments.com> wrote:

On Tue, 06 Mar 2012 08:50:12 -0800, John Larkin
jjlarkin@highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote:

On Tue, 06 Mar 2012 08:58:27 -0600, John Fields
jfields@austininstruments.com> wrote:

On Tue, 6 Mar 2012 01:22:33 +0100, "petrus bitbyter"
petrus.bitbyter@hotmail.com> wrote:


BTW. Although the circuit may do for the project at hand, I wonder why so
many people spend so much time on an obsolete circuit.

---
It's just for "fun"; a response to a challenge from John Larkin to
start a discussion by posting an original circuit for a zero-crossing
detector.

Looks like it worked!

It did; at least you tried. And it is a nice illustration of the
many-layered hazards of haywire async logic design.

---
Ah, but there's yet more to come, illustrating how the lot of you who
can't make decisions between clock transitions are crippled.

Synchronous logic makes decisions between clocks, namely executes the
combinational logic that maps the current system state into the next
one. But it doesn't *act* on those decisions until they are stable,
and then only at the next clock. It's not the only way to design
logic, but it's the only practical way to design reliable logic of any
complexity, as your circuit bugs demonstrate.

Wikipedia has an article on async logic, and includes a long list of
async computer designs that never made it to production. Intel among
others has dabbled in async design and there are rumors that some
sections of some of their CPUs are async logic. Also rumors that an
async x86 design was scrapped in 1997.

Stay tuned...
Can't wait.


--

John Larkin, President Highland Technology Inc
www.highlandtechnology.com jlarkin at highlandtechnology dot com

Precision electronic instrumentation
Picosecond-resolution Digital Delay and Pulse generators
Custom timing and laser controllers
Photonics and fiberoptic TTL data links
VME analog, thermocouple, LVDT, synchro, tachometer
Multichannel arbitrary waveform generators
 
On Wednesday, March 7, 2012 12:54:41 AM UTC-5, John Larkin wrote:
On Tue, 06 Mar 2012 19:30:48 -0600, John Fields
jfields@austininstruments.com> wrote:

On Tue, 06 Mar 2012 08:50:12 -0800, John Larkin
jjlarkin@highNOTlandTHIStechnologyPART.com> wrote:

On Tue, 06 Mar 2012 08:58:27 -0600, John Fields
jfields@austininstruments.com> wrote:

On Tue, 6 Mar 2012 01:22:33 +0100, "petrus bitbyter"

wrote:


BTW. Although the circuit may do for the project at hand, I wonder why so
many people spend so much time on an obsolete circuit.

---
It's just for "fun"; a response to a challenge from John Larkin to
start a discussion by posting an original circuit for a zero-crossing
detector.

Looks like it worked!

It did; at least you tried. And it is a nice illustration of the
many-layered hazards of haywire async logic design.

---
Ah, but there's yet more to come, illustrating how the lot of you who
can't make decisions between clock transitions are crippled.


Synchronous logic makes decisions between clocks, namely executes the
combinational logic that maps the current system state into the next
one. But it doesn't *act* on those decisions until they are stable,
and then only at the next clock. It's not the only way to design
logic, but it's the only practical way to design reliable logic of any
complexity, as your circuit bugs demonstrate.

Wikipedia has an article on async logic, and includes a long list of
async computer designs that never made it to production. Intel among
others has dabbled in async design and there are rumors that some
sections of some of their CPUs are async logic. Also rumors that an
async x86 design was scrapped in 1997.


Stay tuned...

Can't wait.


--

John Larkin, President Highland Technology Inc
www.highlandtechnology.com jlarkin at highlandtechnology dot com

Precision electronic instrumentation
Picosecond-resolution Digital Delay and Pulse generators
Custom timing and laser controllers
Photonics and fiberoptic TTL data links
VME analog, thermocouple, LVDT, synchro, tachometer
Multichannel arbitrary waveform generators
There is such a thing as event driven logic, it does not need to be synchronous with a common clock. Synchronous logic is event driven, the defining event being the occurrence of a common clock (edge usually).
 

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