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#31
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In article ,
John Smith wrote: | I NEVER want to copy whole books, I can't see a reason for copying | whole chapters, seldom would there be a need for whole | pages--usually short of a page would suffice--this would fall under | "fair use", if proper credit is give author/material You stated that most technical docs fall out of copyright quickly. I asked how you defined quickly, since technical docs don't fall out of copyright now any faster than anything else. (And they didn't before either, though it's possible that copyrights were not renewed more often for technical docs.) As for facts and ideas, neither are copyrightable. Books are. If you learn something from a book, the knowledge is yours, not covered by the copyright by the book. (It may be covered by a patent, or a small phrase you learn may be trademarked, but that's different.) | But, make no mistake, I am not here for "hero worship." However, if you | don't think I have gotten to here without having stood upon the shoulders of | others--you are mistaken--and I DO NOT make that mistake What are you talking about? Obviously, all of civilization is based on what our ancestors learned. If we were each starting out fresh every generation, we'd be just another animal, and even they pass knowledge down from generation to generation (like how to hunt, etc.) But none of this has anything to do with copyrights. I never said you had or had not violated any copyrights. Fair use is another issue that I did not touch. | I am not here to claim other mens knowledge as "original ideas" of my | own--rather my whole knowledge is composed of bits and pieces of | others--isn't yours? The majority of my knowledge is, perhaps. Not all of it. I suspect you've learned a few things on your own too. For example, to make this antenna related, I've learned, on my own, that if your SWR meter is pegging, and your transmitter is only putting out one watt of power (when it's capable of 100 watts) that one thing to check is that all your connectors are tight. I'm sure that somebody figured this out before me, but I did learn it on my own, as I was trying to figure out what the hell was wrong with my radio ![]() probably because somebody learned before me that if they don't make the transmitter back off when the SWR goes high, the magic smoke escapes and that's best avoided.) | At this point, it would be impossible to tell what bit or what piece | has come from who--or when... but I will do the best I can | here... someway we will find a way for this to work... I wasn't talking about bits of knowledge. I was talking about books, or parts of a book, or diagrams, schematics, etc. These are all covered by copyrights, though many have expired, and smaller parts of a larger work may be usable under fair use. As a society, there is some benefit to having things protected by copyright (and patents, but they're different), as it can help provide an incentive for people to create things. But I suspect that our current society has gone too far, with Disney buying extensions from Congress every few decades, just in time to keep Mickey Mouse from becoming public domain. I do believe that we've already found a way to make it work, but the beaurocrats are finding ways to keep it from working for everybody, and instead keep it working for them. -- Doug McLaren, internet, eh? I hear they have that on computers now. |
#32
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I would say over 50% of all technical books since 1950 are expired
copyright... But, the thread which dealt with copyright, here, contains enough info to be able to research any book you might choose... can be done in a matter of minutes... Easier to research any given book than argue it... and that was the point of that thread... I havent looked at John Kraus's(sp?) works.... the university may have picked up his copyrights... Warmest regards, John "Doug McLaren" wrote in message ... In article , John Smith wrote: | I NEVER want to copy whole books, I can't see a reason for copying | whole chapters, seldom would there be a need for whole | pages--usually short of a page would suffice--this would fall under | "fair use", if proper credit is give author/material You stated that most technical docs fall out of copyright quickly. I asked how you defined quickly, since technical docs don't fall out of copyright now any faster than anything else. (And they didn't before either, though it's possible that copyrights were not renewed more often for technical docs.) As for facts and ideas, neither are copyrightable. Books are. If you learn something from a book, the knowledge is yours, not covered by the copyright by the book. (It may be covered by a patent, or a small phrase you learn may be trademarked, but that's different.) | But, make no mistake, I am not here for "hero worship." However, if you | don't think I have gotten to here without having stood upon the shoulders of | others--you are mistaken--and I DO NOT make that mistake What are you talking about? Obviously, all of civilization is based on what our ancestors learned. If we were each starting out fresh every generation, we'd be just another animal, and even they pass knowledge down from generation to generation (like how to hunt, etc.) But none of this has anything to do with copyrights. I never said you had or had not violated any copyrights. Fair use is another issue that I did not touch. | I am not here to claim other mens knowledge as "original ideas" of my | own--rather my whole knowledge is composed of bits and pieces of | others--isn't yours? The majority of my knowledge is, perhaps. Not all of it. I suspect you've learned a few things on your own too. For example, to make this antenna related, I've learned, on my own, that if your SWR meter is pegging, and your transmitter is only putting out one watt of power (when it's capable of 100 watts) that one thing to check is that all your connectors are tight. I'm sure that somebody figured this out before me, but I did learn it on my own, as I was trying to figure out what the hell was wrong with my radio ![]() probably because somebody learned before me that if they don't make the transmitter back off when the SWR goes high, the magic smoke escapes and that's best avoided.) | At this point, it would be impossible to tell what bit or what piece | has come from who--or when... but I will do the best I can | here... someway we will find a way for this to work... I wasn't talking about bits of knowledge. I was talking about books, or parts of a book, or diagrams, schematics, etc. These are all covered by copyrights, though many have expired, and smaller parts of a larger work may be usable under fair use. As a society, there is some benefit to having things protected by copyright (and patents, but they're different), as it can help provide an incentive for people to create things. But I suspect that our current society has gone too far, with Disney buying extensions from Congress every few decades, just in time to keep Mickey Mouse from becoming public domain. I do believe that we've already found a way to make it work, but the beaurocrats are finding ways to keep it from working for everybody, and instead keep it working for them. -- Doug McLaren, internet, eh? I hear they have that on computers now. |
#33
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Well, enough of copyright... do as you see fit with your understanding... I
certainly will with mine... Warmest regards, John "Doug McLaren" wrote in message ... In article , John Smith wrote: | I NEVER want to copy whole books, I can't see a reason for copying | whole chapters, seldom would there be a need for whole | pages--usually short of a page would suffice--this would fall under | "fair use", if proper credit is give author/material You stated that most technical docs fall out of copyright quickly. I asked how you defined quickly, since technical docs don't fall out of copyright now any faster than anything else. (And they didn't before either, though it's possible that copyrights were not renewed more often for technical docs.) As for facts and ideas, neither are copyrightable. Books are. If you learn something from a book, the knowledge is yours, not covered by the copyright by the book. (It may be covered by a patent, or a small phrase you learn may be trademarked, but that's different.) | But, make no mistake, I am not here for "hero worship." However, if you | don't think I have gotten to here without having stood upon the shoulders of | others--you are mistaken--and I DO NOT make that mistake What are you talking about? Obviously, all of civilization is based on what our ancestors learned. If we were each starting out fresh every generation, we'd be just another animal, and even they pass knowledge down from generation to generation (like how to hunt, etc.) But none of this has anything to do with copyrights. I never said you had or had not violated any copyrights. Fair use is another issue that I did not touch. | I am not here to claim other mens knowledge as "original ideas" of my | own--rather my whole knowledge is composed of bits and pieces of | others--isn't yours? The majority of my knowledge is, perhaps. Not all of it. I suspect you've learned a few things on your own too. For example, to make this antenna related, I've learned, on my own, that if your SWR meter is pegging, and your transmitter is only putting out one watt of power (when it's capable of 100 watts) that one thing to check is that all your connectors are tight. I'm sure that somebody figured this out before me, but I did learn it on my own, as I was trying to figure out what the hell was wrong with my radio ![]() probably because somebody learned before me that if they don't make the transmitter back off when the SWR goes high, the magic smoke escapes and that's best avoided.) | At this point, it would be impossible to tell what bit or what piece | has come from who--or when... but I will do the best I can | here... someway we will find a way for this to work... I wasn't talking about bits of knowledge. I was talking about books, or parts of a book, or diagrams, schematics, etc. These are all covered by copyrights, though many have expired, and smaller parts of a larger work may be usable under fair use. As a society, there is some benefit to having things protected by copyright (and patents, but they're different), as it can help provide an incentive for people to create things. But I suspect that our current society has gone too far, with Disney buying extensions from Congress every few decades, just in time to keep Mickey Mouse from becoming public domain. I do believe that we've already found a way to make it work, but the beaurocrats are finding ways to keep it from working for everybody, and instead keep it working for them. -- Doug McLaren, internet, eh? I hear they have that on computers now. |
#34
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NOT "since 1950", rather "before 1950"... and everyone here seems to have
libraries full of decades old works--I have a few myself... Warmest regards, John "John Smith" wrote in message ... I would say over 50% of all technical books since 1950 are expired copyright... But, the thread which dealt with copyright, here, contains enough info to be able to research any book you might choose... can be done in a matter of minutes... Easier to research any given book than argue it... and that was the point of that thread... I havent looked at John Kraus's(sp?) works.... the university may have picked up his copyrights... Warmest regards, John "Doug McLaren" wrote in message ... In article , John Smith wrote: | I NEVER want to copy whole books, I can't see a reason for copying | whole chapters, seldom would there be a need for whole | pages--usually short of a page would suffice--this would fall under | "fair use", if proper credit is give author/material You stated that most technical docs fall out of copyright quickly. I asked how you defined quickly, since technical docs don't fall out of copyright now any faster than anything else. (And they didn't before either, though it's possible that copyrights were not renewed more often for technical docs.) As for facts and ideas, neither are copyrightable. Books are. If you learn something from a book, the knowledge is yours, not covered by the copyright by the book. (It may be covered by a patent, or a small phrase you learn may be trademarked, but that's different.) | But, make no mistake, I am not here for "hero worship." However, if you | don't think I have gotten to here without having stood upon the shoulders of | others--you are mistaken--and I DO NOT make that mistake What are you talking about? Obviously, all of civilization is based on what our ancestors learned. If we were each starting out fresh every generation, we'd be just another animal, and even they pass knowledge down from generation to generation (like how to hunt, etc.) But none of this has anything to do with copyrights. I never said you had or had not violated any copyrights. Fair use is another issue that I did not touch. | I am not here to claim other mens knowledge as "original ideas" of my | own--rather my whole knowledge is composed of bits and pieces of | others--isn't yours? The majority of my knowledge is, perhaps. Not all of it. I suspect you've learned a few things on your own too. For example, to make this antenna related, I've learned, on my own, that if your SWR meter is pegging, and your transmitter is only putting out one watt of power (when it's capable of 100 watts) that one thing to check is that all your connectors are tight. I'm sure that somebody figured this out before me, but I did learn it on my own, as I was trying to figure out what the hell was wrong with my radio ![]() probably because somebody learned before me that if they don't make the transmitter back off when the SWR goes high, the magic smoke escapes and that's best avoided.) | At this point, it would be impossible to tell what bit or what piece | has come from who--or when... but I will do the best I can | here... someway we will find a way for this to work... I wasn't talking about bits of knowledge. I was talking about books, or parts of a book, or diagrams, schematics, etc. These are all covered by copyrights, though many have expired, and smaller parts of a larger work may be usable under fair use. As a society, there is some benefit to having things protected by copyright (and patents, but they're different), as it can help provide an incentive for people to create things. But I suspect that our current society has gone too far, with Disney buying extensions from Congress every few decades, just in time to keep Mickey Mouse from becoming public domain. I do believe that we've already found a way to make it work, but the beaurocrats are finding ways to keep it from working for everybody, and instead keep it working for them. -- Doug McLaren, internet, eh? I hear they have that on computers now. |
#35
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.... just realized...
I got this post mixed up with an email converstation I was engaged in at the same time... sorry about the reference to "John Kraus"... that was part of another conversation... Warmest regards, John "John Smith" wrote in message ... I would say over 50% of all technical books since 1950 are expired copyright... But, the thread which dealt with copyright, here, contains enough info to be able to research any book you might choose... can be done in a matter of minutes... Easier to research any given book than argue it... and that was the point of that thread... I havent looked at John Kraus's(sp?) works.... the university may have picked up his copyrights... Warmest regards, John "Doug McLaren" wrote in message ... In article , John Smith wrote: | I NEVER want to copy whole books, I can't see a reason for copying | whole chapters, seldom would there be a need for whole | pages--usually short of a page would suffice--this would fall under | "fair use", if proper credit is give author/material You stated that most technical docs fall out of copyright quickly. I asked how you defined quickly, since technical docs don't fall out of copyright now any faster than anything else. (And they didn't before either, though it's possible that copyrights were not renewed more often for technical docs.) As for facts and ideas, neither are copyrightable. Books are. If you learn something from a book, the knowledge is yours, not covered by the copyright by the book. (It may be covered by a patent, or a small phrase you learn may be trademarked, but that's different.) | But, make no mistake, I am not here for "hero worship." However, if you | don't think I have gotten to here without having stood upon the shoulders of | others--you are mistaken--and I DO NOT make that mistake What are you talking about? Obviously, all of civilization is based on what our ancestors learned. If we were each starting out fresh every generation, we'd be just another animal, and even they pass knowledge down from generation to generation (like how to hunt, etc.) But none of this has anything to do with copyrights. I never said you had or had not violated any copyrights. Fair use is another issue that I did not touch. | I am not here to claim other mens knowledge as "original ideas" of my | own--rather my whole knowledge is composed of bits and pieces of | others--isn't yours? The majority of my knowledge is, perhaps. Not all of it. I suspect you've learned a few things on your own too. For example, to make this antenna related, I've learned, on my own, that if your SWR meter is pegging, and your transmitter is only putting out one watt of power (when it's capable of 100 watts) that one thing to check is that all your connectors are tight. I'm sure that somebody figured this out before me, but I did learn it on my own, as I was trying to figure out what the hell was wrong with my radio ![]() probably because somebody learned before me that if they don't make the transmitter back off when the SWR goes high, the magic smoke escapes and that's best avoided.) | At this point, it would be impossible to tell what bit or what piece | has come from who--or when... but I will do the best I can | here... someway we will find a way for this to work... I wasn't talking about bits of knowledge. I was talking about books, or parts of a book, or diagrams, schematics, etc. These are all covered by copyrights, though many have expired, and smaller parts of a larger work may be usable under fair use. As a society, there is some benefit to having things protected by copyright (and patents, but they're different), as it can help provide an incentive for people to create things. But I suspect that our current society has gone too far, with Disney buying extensions from Congress every few decades, just in time to keep Mickey Mouse from becoming public domain. I do believe that we've already found a way to make it work, but the beaurocrats are finding ways to keep it from working for everybody, and instead keep it working for them. -- Doug McLaren, internet, eh? I hear they have that on computers now. |
#36
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John Smith wrote:
No, no leg pulling, toroids can be lossy (and, as we all know, more often than not--loss = heat)... I find a 2-50 Mhz balun to be more of a "myth" than a reality... Me too - that's why I knew you were pulling my leg. :-) -- 73, Cecil, http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#37
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I have a quality linear, custom made, it does cover 2-50 Mhz, to couple the
mosfets to the antenna it uses the ferrite bead/pc board/tubing output xfrmr--I have often wondered if that xfrmr design could be used... but never did any expermenting... other than dropping the beads over coax shielding... Warmest regards, John "Cecil Moore" wrote in message ... John Smith wrote: No, no leg pulling, toroids can be lossy (and, as we all know, more often than not--loss = heat)... I find a 2-50 Mhz balun to be more of a "myth" than a reality... Me too - that's why I knew you were pulling my leg. :-) -- 73, Cecil, http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#38
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Here is a guy with an interesting balun design--and provides EXCELLENT
construction details, two cores are needed--however, you end up with 1:1 - 1:2 and 1:4 ratios, all in one balun... interesting design... I think it is inspired by Dr. sevicks' work... http://www.qsl.net/wb6zqz/3in1balun/construct.html Warmest regards, John "Jayson Davis" wrote in message ... I'd like to make a 1:1 balun, similar to what you'd buy from Van Gorden Engineering. Anyone know of online designs/prints/instructions? Thanks |
#39
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John Smith wrote:
Here is a guy with an interesting balun design--and provides EXCELLENT construction details, two cores are needed--however, you end up with 1:1 - 1:2 and 1:4 ratios, all in one balun... interesting design... I think it is inspired by Dr. sevicks' work... http://www.qsl.net/wb6zqz/3in1balun/construct.html Wow, great photography. I think this device is more properly labeled a "Multimatch Unun", Chapter 9, "Building and Using Baluns and Ununs", by Jerry Sevick, W2FMI. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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