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On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 14:59:01 -0800, Richard Clark
wrote: On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 12:01:35 -0800, Jeff Liebermann wrote: Do I spend the money, or do I seach for your secret horde of free university publications on antenna design? Surely you must realize that this is not about money (a convenient foil in this troll topic), but about skill (what the troll lacks). If I had money and the necessary skills, I wouldn't be asking dumb questions in this newsgroup. The cheesy inventions that we have been breathlessly advised of have the commensurate value of the bandwidth they return in a simple Google search. It takes very little effort to recognize the moldy fluorescence surrounding those meager offerings. Wrong. Techno-hype became somewhat of a hobby of mine. During the dot.com boom of the late 1990's, I was deriving considerable income from doing technical sanity checks on business plans and projects. During this time, I accumulated a fair collection of patents and ideas that are pure bogus, yet were successfully promoted at least to the point of being funded by technically clueless investors. Many are still around today. Considering extent of the problem, and the fair number of bogus patents, I would suggest that it is NOT easy to recognize technical quackery. If you want the exact article specified, yes you can shell out money. If you want the research behind it, and probably more data than you would care to wade through, you simply investigate the investigator. I've been shelling out the money. I just want to shell out less money. Your suggestion that there was some secret horde of free research articles on antenna research at universities caught my attention. I guess not. Myself, if I don't want to spend any more than the cost of bus fare, I go to the engineering library, check it out, bring it home, scan it, and its done. As I am on campus twice a week anyway (and the cost of bus fare is already covered for my other activities), it is hardly an imposition and the university certainly isn't suppressing me as they give alumni library privileges. I haven't been on a bus in perhaps 25 years. The local multiversity (UCSC) is on top of a mountain. I like to bicycle but at my age, the hill is a challenge. Parking is impossible, expensive, or both. I'm not an alumni, but am tempted to take exactly one class just to become one. I've been "borrowing" accounts, but that has it's limitations. Even public libraries have online access to special topic databases (subscriptions) - unless you live in Bumf**k, Illinois. Thanks, but I've tried that. See my other rant in this thread. Now, if you happen to be a troll who visits a campus infrequently only to spit on their library shelves, I can well imagine the ego-bruised outrage that is visited upon us here after they give you the bum's rush. Punch my name into the Google Groups search page and read some of my past postings. Then decide for yourself if I'm a troll or not. This might help: http://groups.google.com/groups/profile?hl=en&enc_user=tWGMphwAAAAGTj9X4k0U7wKkGyU 8QhaBhaxMG2M1PWkMtCZAt5tdxQ 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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