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The dam is leaking...
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June 8th 04, 11:08 PM
Len Over 21
Posts: n/a
In article ,
(Steve
Robeson K4CAP) writes:
Subject: The dam is leaking...
From:
(Len Over 21)
Date: 6/7/2004 9:25 PM Central Standard Time
Message-id:
In article ,
writes:
"I am going to get my "extra lite" out of the box".
Why should I do that?
Why, indeed, Lennie?
We ahve learned, of course, that anything you say youa re going to do
trutly is a "flight of fantasy"...
Tsk, tsk, tsk, Mavis Bacon certainly never taught nursie how to
type during an outrage session... :-)
[this must be one of those "hostile actions" nursie is in... :-) ]
"I am only here to civilly debate the Morse Code test issue"
That's what I originally thought way back when...but then all
those OFs of the morse persuasion got so evil, wicked, mean
and nasty towards anyone who didn't love, honor, and cherish
telegraphy.
Actually a review of the "evil, wicked, mean and nasty" would reveal that
one ", then "owned" by you, was the one slinging rather
inciteful and uncivil epithets towrds others.
Poor baby. Still hurt and angry from 5 years ago? Awwww...
Not loving telegraphy = Inciteful and uncivil epithets?
I don't think so. See the Google archives for "communications"
from Jim Kehler back then. [a CWholic if there ever was one]
Anyone can search and find KH2D's new site now (in the states)
and see how he feels about "brain-dead old farts." :-)
Of course the truth is not one of your stronger suits.
Did nursie put on his Colonel Jessup uniform again?
Jack Nicholson's wonderful portrayal of a USMC officer in
"A Few Good Men." [character was an ultraconservative
nutso] Famous line, "You can't handle the TRUTH!!!" :-)
I have no reason to lie about anything. Been there, done
lots of things, got the T-shirts...and a comfortable income
as a result.
And you never did explain to us how the FCC tested for CW.
Oscilliscope? Spectrum Analyzer?
What prompted THAT question? Are you flipping out even
more?
[the instrument is spelled "oscilloscope" or, in familiar terms,
just "scope"]
"I'll send a scanned image of my FCC License to anyone who asks
for it"
I did that already.
Then you have again expressed yet ANOTHER lie.
No lie. I scanned it and sent it as an e-mail attachment.
More than once.
Nursie can't handle the truth so she lied and said I never sent it.
Tsk, tsk, tsk. Not "meaningful discussion" at all.
We'll just heap it up on the others.
Heap big nutso nursie need mental therapy.
You want to suggest legal action by the IEEE against me?
The quickest way for you to contact them is to go to
www.ieee.org
and get an address or send them some of
your filthymouth e-mail. IEEE has automatic virus detection
software to detect badness in e-mail...they just don't always
detect badasses in e-mail.
Obviously.
They also "don't always detect" who is bruising thier propfessional
reputation by association.
Speaking of associations, I was a member of the Association
for Computing Machinery (ACM) for three years as a courtesy of
the IEEE membership. ACM is the first and the biggest of the
professional associations on computing and information
technology.
Ever written any computer code, nursie? I have. Taught myself
how to write FORTRAN through Jim McCracken's book on
FORTRAN IV. Used it to write six engineering-analysis programs
that became a part of the RCA Corporate Software Library. Used
it to write five more programs that became shareware on the 'net
and are now freeware. [McCracken later became president of
the ACM]
Ever get down to Assembler level? I learned Morotola 6800
Assembler first, then 6502 Assembler (thanks to the nice macro
assembler program from Call-A.P.P.L.E., the Apple Puget
Sound Program Library Exchange that was based in Seattle),
got published in the Call-A.P.P.L.E. monthly magazine (but I
don't count that as part of my professional resume). See also
Microcomputing and BYTE magazines for more of the same.
I've done some 8051 and Intel Assembler programming but not
a great deal of it despite having MASM in the PC.
Writing computer code is lots of intellectual fun, sort of like a
super crossword but the end product is very useful for lots of
things. Sending and receiving telegraphy code is old stuff,
outdated, no real usefulness except for some OFs to brag
about in their boasts of "superiority."
I've been an IEEE member for 31 years. It is a professional
association involved in reality, of pushing the technical envelope
constantly outwards, advancing the electrical and electronic
arts. I'm proud to have been a member of that distinguished
group and continue to be involved and still learning with each
technological plateau jump after reaching Life Member status.
IEEE doesn't require any morse code knowledge for any
membership level. :-)
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