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#1
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I've got used to the fact that when a customer says 'analogue' they probably
mean 'terrestrial'. Bill |
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#2
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On 8 Jan, 03:41, "Bill Wright" wrote:
I've got used to the fact that when a customer says 'analogue' they probably mean 'terrestrial'. Bill Thirty Five years ago I was at school doing PE and the teacher asked us to spin around clockwise. One kid sat down crying "but i've got a digital watch". Doc |
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#4
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"ChrisM" wrote in message 35 years ago...? Were digital watches commonly available in 1973? Yes they were but "digital" meant different then. The watch would have numbers to display the time, rather than hands. Same with radio displays, anologue would be a string pulling a pionter on a scale, later we had "digital" tuning, a readout with numbers. -- Regards, David Please reply to News Group |
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#5
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On 8 Jan, 09:30, "ChrisM" wrote:
In message , Dr Hfuhruhurr Proclaimed from the tallest tower: On 8 Jan, 03:41, "Bill Wright" wrote: I've got used to the fact that when a customer says 'analogue' they probably mean 'terrestrial'. Bill Thirty Five years ago I was at school doing PE and the teacher asked us to spin around clockwise. One kid sat down crying "but i've got a digital watch". Doc 35 years ago...? Were digital watches commonly available in 1973? Or was this a very rich kid...? ...Or was it just a joke? It was a joke, but I did get my years wrong. it was more like 30 years ago. I had one, a Casio. I looked just like this http://www.casio.co.uk/Products/Watc...%20a%20Glance/ Doc |
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#7
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In article ,
ChrisM wrote: In message , Dr Hfuhruhurr Proclaimed from the tallest tower: On 8 Jan, 03:41, "Bill Wright" wrote: I've got used to the fact that when a customer says 'analogue' they probably mean 'terrestrial'. Bill Thirty Five years ago I was at school doing PE and the teacher asked us to spin around clockwise. One kid sat down crying "but i've got a digital watch". Doc 35 years ago...? Were digital watches commonly available in 1973? Or was this a very rich kid...? ...Or was it just a joke? I well remember a workmate 'flashing' his new Sinclair LED watch in '78. If such a thing was available 5 years earlier I doubt a kid would have afforded one. -- *Growing old is inevitable, growing up is optional Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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#8
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"Bill Wright" wrote:
I've got used to the fact that when a customer says 'analogue' they probably mean 'terrestrial'. Have you got that backwards? Or are some people really calling their DTT reception "analogue"? -- Dave Farrance |
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#9
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Steve Wolstenholme wrote:
I had a LED digital watch about 35 years ago. It was silly money but I didn't buy it. It was a present. I had to press a button to switch on the display which was a stupid idea but, as I said, it was a present. Didn't somebody come up with a plastic widget which slipped underneath the watch, enabling the button to be pressed by flexing the wrist? Chris -- Chris J Dixon Nottingham UK Have dancing shoes, will ceilidh. |
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#10
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"Dave Farrance" wrote in message ... "Bill Wright" wrote: I've got used to the fact that when a customer says 'analogue' they probably mean 'terrestrial'. Have you got that backwards? Or are some people really calling their DTT reception "analogue"? That's exactly what I mean. They refer to satellite as 'digital' and DTT as 'analogue'. When they have an IDTV they have no idea that the transmission is digital. All they know is that they have a new telly and it gets more channels than the old telly, and that they also have Sky, which as everyone knows is synonymous with 'satellite' and 'digital'. To differentiate between the two they call everything that isn't Sky 'analogue'. Of course customers often ring up to say that they need an aerial for the Sky, which could mean that they need a dish, or it could mean that they want to extend the dish cable. Because the cable is known as the aerial, you see. So when someone rings up and says that they want to move the aerial to the other side of the room it could mean that they want to lengthen the dish cable. Or it might mean something else completely. Geddit? Sometimes people ring up and say, "Could you sell me a fifty foot aerial, Bill? I'll come round for it on my bike if that's all right. Will you put the plugs on?" I've told it on here before, but I used to have a customer whose signal varied enormously with the seasons, due to trees. He had a variety of attenuators at the ready near his distribution amp, called 'my calmer-downers'. These days when they book a call I just put a question mark in the box and turn up fully equippped. Oh, and when the old ones complain about the Light Programme they usually mean ITV. Bill |
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