| General > General Technical Chat |
| Baidu is trawling the EEVblog forum |
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| SiliconWizard:
--- Quote from: T3sl4co1l on March 27, 2023, 08:13:21 pm ---It is possible to separate oneself from this dynamic, at least in part. But it's also a very lonely existence, and few have the will, or reason, to do so. (Example: one could probably argue, say, certain Buddhist monks follow such a path. Again, at least in part. A desire to separate oneself from all desires, is a paradox of course.) --- End quote --- By identifying as buddhist monks and living life under this umbrella, they are still making themselves part of a group, with well-defined rules, a long history, a wide philosophical corpus, and so on. Day-to-day life may look a lot lonelier than average, but they are not separating themselves from this dynamic whatsoever IMO. They are just choosing their group, as we almost all do. Maybe a "better" example would be some hermits with absolutely no tie whatsoever to anyone or any human group. Those are extremely rare, to the point of being curiosities more than anything else. |
| Kerlin:
V V V V V |
| EPAIII:
Sooo Solly, but China worse! --- Quote from: RoGeorge on March 23, 2023, 04:31:28 pm ---It's the propaganda we all have been exposed to (here the western propaganda), that makes us virtue-signaling out of the blue. There is the so called brain plasticity, the brain is being continuously shaped by the stimuli it is exposed to, no matter what. Therefore propaganda affects everybody. No matter if the subject is aware or not about the exposure to propaganda, the subject will still be mind conditioned eventually. :-\ The western world does censorship, too, similar with China. We have laws against holocaust deniers, against spread covid misinformation, or antisemitism, or hate speech, etc. Australia has laws against encryption, some nordic countries have laws against criticizing their politicians, and so on. :-// So yes, China bad. Similar with everybody else. --- End quote --- |
| RJSV:
"Voice-coil-Over Valve"...(thanks Whales); Won't work...tried that. Can't get sound out, from vacume (that's why they're called a Vac Tube). But, we've gone non-partisan, and attached transistor to drive the vac tube grid. (Don't try to hoodbazzle the Chinese,. Just play it straight and there will be confusion enough.) Insert transistor (NPP, or PNN OK), but do it fast, and MOST of the vaccination won't escape. I guess for stereo you'd need two channels, calibrated for head-meat (audio) diffusion. Call me, if auntie questions. |
| AVGresponding:
--- Quote from: RJHayward on April 01, 2023, 10:08:34 pm ---"Voice-coil-Over Valve"...(thanks Whales); Won't work...tried that. Can't get sound out, from vacume (that's why they're called a Vac Tube). But, we've gone non-partisan, and attached transistor to drive the vac tube grid. (Don't try to hoodbazzle the Chinese,. Just play it straight and there will be confusion enough.) Insert transistor (NPP, or PNN OK), but do it fast, and MOST of the vaccination won't escape. I guess for stereo you'd need two channels, calibrated for head-meat (audio) diffusion. Call me, if auntie questions. --- End quote --- Sound and vibrations generally, are coupled through the base of the tube, where the pins go through the glass. The vacuum is irrelevant, except to note that the transmission method affects resonance and transmission speed. |
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