RadioBanter

RadioBanter (https://www.radiobanter.com/)
-   General (https://www.radiobanter.com/general/)
-   -   Cutting your own (https://www.radiobanter.com/general/24666-cutting-your-own.html)

A Veteran Has Lung October 15th 03 08:30 PM


"class_a_zpk_12wpm"
.uk.net wrote in message
...
On Sat, 11 Oct 2003 18:14:40 +0100, "A Veteran Has Lung"
wrote:

DAMN! I thought you were going to say throat/wrists, and was going to

reply
that in your case it is an excellent idea.

Not you've gone and spoiled all my fun


now now.
whilst you may not enjoy the same opinions as Airy or anyone
else for that matter...who expresses their opinion through
various uses of the english language....

wishing them dead or worse is not cricket ol' boy.

Who said anything about dead my good man, purely suffering in silence would
suffice...



class_a_zpk_12wpm October 15th 03 08:44 PM

On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 20:30:18 +0100, "A Veteran Has Lung"
wrote:


Who said anything about dead my good man, purely suffering in silence would
suffice...


ok then...i'll let you off this time (!!)


on a lighter note...

just paid a visit to a certain laughing p----- website


http://www.laughingpoliceman.com/loony.htm

and look at the picture in the bottom left hand 'corner-ish'
(entitled 'care in the community')

priceless!!!

class_a_zpk_12wpm October 15th 03 08:44 PM

On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 20:30:18 +0100, "A Veteran Has Lung"
wrote:


Who said anything about dead my good man, purely suffering in silence would
suffice...


ok then...i'll let you off this time (!!)


on a lighter note...

just paid a visit to a certain laughing p----- website


http://www.laughingpoliceman.com/loony.htm

and look at the picture in the bottom left hand 'corner-ish'
(entitled 'care in the community')

priceless!!!

class_a_zpk_12wpm October 15th 03 08:52 PM

On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 19:44:22 GMT,

(class_a_zpk_12wpm) wrote:

priceless!!!


http://www.laughingpoliceman.com/images/idi.gif

is just as good!


class_a_zpk_12wpm October 15th 03 08:52 PM

On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 19:44:22 GMT,

(class_a_zpk_12wpm) wrote:

priceless!!!


http://www.laughingpoliceman.com/images/idi.gif

is just as good!


Brian Reay October 15th 03 09:03 PM


"Airy R. Bean" wrote in message
...
ISTR that the Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy of BT ran
via a single master oscillator.



Plesiochronous refers to a system with signals having a common data rate
(within defined limits) which are sychronised to different clocks. Sometimes
referred tp as 'nearly synchronised'.

ie no 'master clock', with or without a remontoire ;-).

In a plesiochronous switched data system, the signals may be synchronised
at a given instant permitting switching withourt loss of frames but, when
the signals drift apart, the switches must compensate by a process known as
'frame slip'- not required in a system synchronised to a master oscillator.

I've no doubt you will respond with 'rubbish' etc. but I invite the others
on the NG to look up the term and decide who is correct.



--
73
Brian
G8OSN
www.g8osn.org.uk
www.amateurradiotraining.org.uk for FREE training material for the UK
Foundation and Intermediate Licences
www.phoenixradioclub.org.uk - a RADIO club specifically for those wishing
to learn more about amateur radio



Brian Reay October 15th 03 09:03 PM


"Airy R. Bean" wrote in message
...
ISTR that the Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy of BT ran
via a single master oscillator.



Plesiochronous refers to a system with signals having a common data rate
(within defined limits) which are sychronised to different clocks. Sometimes
referred tp as 'nearly synchronised'.

ie no 'master clock', with or without a remontoire ;-).

In a plesiochronous switched data system, the signals may be synchronised
at a given instant permitting switching withourt loss of frames but, when
the signals drift apart, the switches must compensate by a process known as
'frame slip'- not required in a system synchronised to a master oscillator.

I've no doubt you will respond with 'rubbish' etc. but I invite the others
on the NG to look up the term and decide who is correct.



--
73
Brian
G8OSN
www.g8osn.org.uk
www.amateurradiotraining.org.uk for FREE training material for the UK
Foundation and Intermediate Licences
www.phoenixradioclub.org.uk - a RADIO club specifically for those wishing
to learn more about amateur radio



Lurker October 15th 03 10:10 PM


"Brian Reay" wrote in message
...

"Airy R. Bean" wrote in message
...
ISTR that the Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy of BT ran
via a single master oscillator.



Plesiochronous refers to a system with signals having a common data rate
(within defined limits) which are sychronised to different clocks.

Sometimes
referred tp as 'nearly synchronised'.

ie no 'master clock', with or without a remontoire ;-).

In a plesiochronous switched data system, the signals may be synchronised
at a given instant permitting switching withourt loss of frames but, when
the signals drift apart, the switches must compensate by a process known

as
'frame slip'- not required in a system synchronised to a master

oscillator.

I've no doubt you will respond with 'rubbish' etc. but I invite the others
on the NG to look up the term and decide who is correct.


Yep, checks out.

Gareth downed in one. Will he have the sense to crawl back under his stone
or start a personal attack?

Bayes theory points to the latter.

Next round please.




---

Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.518 / Virus Database: 316 - Release Date: 11/09/03



Lurker October 15th 03 10:10 PM


"Brian Reay" wrote in message
...

"Airy R. Bean" wrote in message
...
ISTR that the Plesiochronous Digital Hierarchy of BT ran
via a single master oscillator.



Plesiochronous refers to a system with signals having a common data rate
(within defined limits) which are sychronised to different clocks.

Sometimes
referred tp as 'nearly synchronised'.

ie no 'master clock', with or without a remontoire ;-).

In a plesiochronous switched data system, the signals may be synchronised
at a given instant permitting switching withourt loss of frames but, when
the signals drift apart, the switches must compensate by a process known

as
'frame slip'- not required in a system synchronised to a master

oscillator.

I've no doubt you will respond with 'rubbish' etc. but I invite the others
on the NG to look up the term and decide who is correct.


Yep, checks out.

Gareth downed in one. Will he have the sense to crawl back under his stone
or start a personal attack?

Bayes theory points to the latter.

Next round please.




---

Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.518 / Virus Database: 316 - Release Date: 11/09/03



Airy R. Bean October 16th 03 01:30 AM

Careful, OM, your true motivation is showing through, and
once again it's not the pursuit of technical excellence, it
is a desire to do a Childish Broadcast (CB).

Grow up.

"decide who is correct"? Since when was this topic one
of your childish sneering contests?

Stupid boy.

Brian Reay wrote in message
...
I've no doubt you will respond with 'rubbish' etc. but I invite the others
on the NG to look up the term and decide who is correct.






All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:17 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com