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hamradio

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Posts posted by hamradio

  1. It makes economic sense to produce combo units only. You can find very well made ones if you do your research. You might come across a NIB VHS only machine on Ebay once in a while. I just bought a new Optimus dual cassette deck on Ebay and its great. Saving it for spare.

     

    IMAGINE trying to find blank tapes for these machines.

    http://www.rewindmuseum.com/umatic.htm

     

    and http://www.labguysworld.com/VTR-Museum_001.htm

     

    which includes the very unique stacked reel cassettes used in Quasars VR-1000 "Great Time Machine" (man, does that ever apply today, LOL!!!)

     

    VR-1000_005.jpg

     

    The tape is on the top right in the photo

    VX-Tape_007.jpg

  2. I must have missed that info about the fireproof house, a fireman told me a long time ago, a building may be made fireproof but not the people! inside, lol!

     

    So we don't get off track I was NOT impling that the written word would be obsolete but what the so called future historians was prophecing, a change of the written format. One great example is the movie "Star Wars, Episode II" Did you pay attention to the Jedi Library? It was all futuristic electronic, not a book to be seen.

     

    Like the fireproof house, they more likely got it wrong about the demise of the "book" itself. My post was regarding this topic. I lived through the 1970's and 80's in which we were told that the book will soon be a thing of the past. Surely you heard that as well.

     

    I understand and agree about that civilization can not exist without the written word. I like to add that civilization has *already suffered* from the lost of it. I am referring to the ancient Library of Alexandria which burned along with *thousands* of scrolls. Today only a handful exist

     

    Many historians has pondered what was lost. Its beleived that we are rediscovering and reinventing ancient technology. Mindboggling that an analog computer existed 2500 years ago. Could the Industrial Revolution started 2,000 years ago instead of a couple of hundred?

  3. libradoll wrote:

    << You know the saying 'if it's not broken, don't fix it' - this applies. >>

     

    I always lived by that rule. The only video I have of "Casablanca" is the original B&W VHS release.

    That rule also applies to *this website* whenever they do an update!!!!!

  4. Talk about great timing. I just watched the documentary "Universal Horror" (1998) on the Chiller Channel last night and they showed the *one take* shot transformation John Barrymore did in "Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" (1920). Thats a talent very rare.

     

    hydebarrymore.jpg

     

    Footnote: They claimed in "Universal Horror" that the spanish version of "Dracula" was better than the Bela Lugosi film. Never heard of that before!

  5. It depends on the frequency and the material. I remembered back in the 1970's when CB was most active, a ragchewer use to bounce his signal off a large water tower several miles from me. He got around a mountain bend using that technique.

     

    Oh yes, remember the "Moonbounce" operations a few hams use. The *moon* is used as a reflector.

     

    Directv's frequencies and transponder info http://www.dbstalk.com/showthread.php?t=82295

  6. FredCDobbs wrote:

    << I found my dish covered with snow. I wiped the snow off and came back inside, and I had a picture! >>

     

    This is why I mounted my dish beneath my 2nd story window which has an awning. I never had snow on it and it keeps it out of the worst of the rain. I found out by accident when mounting it that I was receiving the signal which was being reflected off the siding - turns out the outside wall was acting like a reflector. I kept it like that - the dish doesn't stick out!

     

    It looks like the signal was hitting the side of my house at an angle.

     

    By the way I use the older round small dish, a dual LNA and an RCA 4 output distribution switch.

  7. When I wrote the original post, I was thinking about the "paperless" society, computers suppose to bring and the movie WALL-E at the same time. The amusing scene in WALL-E was when the captain of the Axiom was presented an "operation manual" (he referred to it as man-well) which was in hard cover. He never seen a book before and didn't know that it opened, lol. The Auto Pilot showed him how.

     

    This is the newest movie that sort of told us that books will be obsolete in the future.

     

    Is those slobs in hoverchairs our *future??* I hope humanity has a better outcome.

  8. I was a bit disappointed that the Panasonic recorder didn't have a Compact Flash slot and it just occured to me to try my PQI Travel Flash USB reader / writer and it worked. The Compact Flash is used in my *ha,* Panasonic Digital Camera.

     

    My thoughts was mostly of the flash drives like the Toshiba TransMemory devices.

     

    Has anyone tried a true USB hard drive or 3.5 inch USB drive?

  9. I was referring to the recent Micheal Moore movie (both are political and hence the flame thrower pun).

     

    By the way I was wondering, in the 451 movie, if the firemans only job is to burn books, who do you call when your house is on fire???

     

    Having your local fireman to inforce the states Nazi type laws instead of the standard police (or Gestapo) is really "out there".

  10. Did anyone noticed the widescreen Hi Def TV set in the movie. Who knew in 1966 that in the future, people would be watching *Fahrenheit 9/11* on it? (that in itself is just cause to take a flame thrower to it)

     

    A lady was noticing all the roof mounted antennas and said "look at that house, nothing".

     

    DUH, Maybe they got cable!

     

    In the future it turns out there was no need to burn books, we simply stop reading them.

     

    Edited by: hamradio on Jan 1, 2010 11:39 PM

  11. I already had, yes I always clean the inside of my electronics manually and use a cotton swab to clean the lens inside my CD players.

     

    The cheap players always have transport failures - thats why I avoid them.

     

    You might be interested in the Audio Advisor website which deticates better CD / DVD transport design.

     

    http://www.audioadvisor.com/products.asp?dept=5

     

    Notice what the $5,999.99 Marantz player gives you (ouch)!!

     

    Oh yes they also destroys the myth about the *death* of vinyl

     

    http://www.audioadvisor.com/products.asp?dept=78

     

    Edited by: hamradio on Jan 1, 2010 2:42 PM

  12. I like to mention that I keep my DVD's and Laserdisc *clean*. I only handle them at the edges and whenever I do clean them, I only use Windex (NO generic brand) and a Viva paper towel thats used very lightly. Viva is the only paper towel on the market that don't scratch plastic or pexiglass.

     

    The Bounty brand use to be soft but they changed it about 8 years ago and it scratches. My horror will be if Viva goes the same route!

     

    Kleenex is fine but it leaves a lot of lint, I only use it to clean the displays only (with a can of "Dust Off").

     

    To this date I had never to replace a single DVD, Laserdisc or CD (even software). I have a first generation CD (maybe the first period) which is a Christopher Cross made in West Germany in *1978*, bought it in 1983 and it is still in new condition with absolutely NO blemishes of any type.

     

    Edited by: hamradio on Jan 1, 2010 3:12 PM

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