remember the old direct
stereo (2 mics) recordings as sounding better than the current mixed
stuff, maybe just a case of reminiscence making it seem so, but I want
to give it a try.
-graywolf
Cotty wrote:
I suppose it depends what you're going to mic up WRT what you need. I
have a friend who
And 1 to point out that that California is trying to make regular $0.29
light bulbs illegal, and make everyone buy those $8.99 energy saving
thingies GRIN
Tom C wrote:
27 to say the new energy saving bulbs will never replace the old
standards and speculate which models will be discontinued
Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis (at least the last I heard
several years back). Oops, that is the longest. OK, I'll bite, Pete,
what is the biggest?
John Sessoms wrote:
From:
P. J. Alling
You know what the biggest word in the English Language is don't you?
the way you expected it to? Don't
remind me, it never existed and probably never well.
-graywolf
David Mann wrote:
I would definitely advise against saving a jpg from a Pro Photo file
without converting to sRGB first.
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1.5.0.9, Pete, I have been letting things do automatic updates. Now, why
when did I start doing something as stupid as that?
P. J. Alling wrote:
What version are you using? I'm not having any trouble with 1.5.0.7,
which is only a couple of minor rev.s out of date.
graywolf wrote:
Well, I
of the older images on my webpage just to make
sure that was not happening in the past without my noticing. It was not.
-graywolf
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of the older images on my webpage just to make
sure that was not happening in the past without my noticing. It was not.
-graywolf
=
What do you do with those microphones???
Uh, maybe a color space issue? One different for the JPEGs than the PSDs?
Marnie aka Doe
David Savage wrote:
What's your working space in PS?
Do you convert to sRGB (EditConvert to Profile) before you save for web?
Nope, and I didn't do that before. AFAIK, SFW is set up to automatically
convert your photo to a standard web image from whatever it is to begin
with. Let me
OK, I will give it a try. I will also see if it works from the Adobe
color space, as I seem to recall I fairly recently switch over to ProPhoto.
Tom C wrote:
I had the same issue over a year ago. It was suggested I use Convert to
SRGB before doing a Save for Web.
That appeared to solve
To the best of my knowledge it does. However there may be and issue with
ProPhoto that was not there with Adobe98. I will double check that.
Brian Walters wrote:
Given that sRGB is required for web images, I wonder why Photoshop's Save
for web doesn't do the conversion automatically when
That did not fix it, nor did converting to SRGB, but strangely
converting to 8 bit first looks like maybe it has. Humm? I thought I
have been using 16 bit all along? Maybe Adobe has hired some of those
experts at writing self-modifying code from MS?
Thanks to all who have commented, and I
Hum...? You are right it did not change it.
However, manually changing it resulted in a smaller, but otherwise
deteriorated jpeg. At the moment it seems the problem has to do with the
files being 16bit, although it had not seemed to matter in the past. I
have been thinking that I ought to work
I knew my mind was going but not that badly. It sure looks like a
vertical to me. Nice pic, by the way.
P. J. Alling wrote:
Well, I've grown annoyed with BW conversions, some work well, some you
can't get anywhere with. So here's something completely different. A
horizontal landscape.
The obvious reply to that straight line is, You haven't met Norm.
With apologies to Norm who, except for being a manic practical joker,
seems like a nice guy. I still do not remember no Norm Bower from the
list though embarrassed grin.
-graywolf
William Robb wrote:
- Original Message
Which reminds me, I ought to delete my journal which has had no updates
in a couple of years. Kind of obsolete in this age of 30 million blogs
anyway.
David J Brooks wrote:
http://brooksinthecountry.blogspot.com/
Just signed up and did a start/hello page.
I'll hope to do a daily
No, when I met him at GFM he introduced himself as Norm Bower,
everyone seemed to know who he was but I could not place him in my mind.
It was only after I got home that I realized he was saying Norm Bauer
a name I did recognize.
mike wilson wrote:
From: graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 2007
I
am finding that to be more and more the case.
-graywolf
Markus Maurer wrote:
Hi Graywolf
I looked it up on Ebay and it is a lovely piece from a famous brand .
The price seems a little bit on the high side for a non flawless item for me
nut that is true for a lot of international autction
I have the Vivitar version of the Kiron 24/2. I like it a bunch, and I
think it is plenty sharp wide open; but that is on film, YMMV.
-graywolf
Cory Papenfuss wrote:
On Fri, 16 Feb 2007, Adam Maas wrote:
That's definitely Kiron-made. And the Kiron 24/2 is a gem.
-Adam
Anyone
DeJur that violates both of those conditions, it
is both broken, and worn out, but still it makes a decent 8x10. Those
are the ones I have actually used.
-graywolf
Scott Loveless wrote:
On 2/16/07, Godfrey DiGiorgi [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 16, 2007, at 9:52 AM, Scott Loveless wrote:
I
60x60's GRIN! 5 inch roll film is arial film. There are a few backs
that allow you to to use cut lengths of it, sort of like a giant 35mm
cassette, on your Graphic or Linhof.
-graywolf
P. J. Alling wrote:
Hell, if you're shooting 4x5 roll film then you have to make at least
11x14s
hope
I will have it working just about like new (or will have decided it is
junk).
--graywolf
David J Brooks wrote:
I'll need to record a short demo for my proposed radio showsoon, and i
fiqure it would probably be done on the ibook and garage band and or
itunes which ever works best i
Mic's and Mac's even if you posted it three times mics is incorrect.
Microphones or mic's. GRIN!
Mark Roberts wrote:
Well first of all, it should be Re: mics and Mac's if yer
abbreviating microphones ;-)
But you probably ought to have a look at Audacity. Free, open-source
sound editing
Yes, Audacity is what I am using myself. But get the plugins as well or
it is kind of limited. It and they are free downloads.
Adam Maas wrote:
Certainly better than GarageBand for simple work. I'd forgotten about
it as well.
-Adam
Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:
Audacity is pretty darn nice!
I used to recommend the one I use, but they sold out and reliability has
gone down the drain. I should watch this thread closely myself.
-graywolf
J wrote:
Well I guess it is about time I put some of my photos up a on web
page..What is the best hosting service and best price that anyone
Funny, they look just like something AnnSan would do.
-graywolf 8^)
ann sanfedele wrote:
ooops!
try this
http://www.photo.net/photodb/folder?folder_id=449168
http://www.photo.net/photodb/folder?folder_id=449168
William Robb wrote:
- Original Message -
From: ann
LOL!
John Francis wrote:
On Tue, Feb 13, 2007 at 10:06:29PM -, Bob W wrote:
I'm not a transport lobby shill and here's the proof.
No, you're a running-dog, lickle-spittle lackey of the international
petro-chemical conspiracy!
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/6354103.stm
There is also the returned mail with virus scam, I have been getting at
this address. Oh, well, this crap comes and goes.
Hint to Marnie, use a different email account for eBay and only eBay.
Then you know anything you get at another account is a scam. That way
you do not have to even think
You going to take my suggestion and do a video of the weekend for
British Telly?
-graywolf
Cotty wrote:
On 10/2/07, Mark Roberts, discombobulated, unleashed:
I just ordered the SCSI/Firewire adapter mentioned a few days ago. If
Scott Loveless brings his BW chemistry and developing tanks
to replace. You can still buy a version of it,
Norman 200C, for something over $1000, it only weigh about 1/2 as much
as the 200B did.
Anyway a Norman 200B slaved to my Oly C-5050Z PS is a strange
combination. Lots of light though.
-graywolf
Paul Stenquist wrote:
Speaking of Honeywell, I
diaphragm to work.
Aside to Tom S, I'm jealous. I do have an 1892 watchmaker's lathe but
the spindle is bent, so it is on display in my living room. Oh well, I
seem to be in an audio/electronics mode right now anyway.
-graywolf
Cory Papenfuss wrote:
Pentax K register distance is 45.46mm
Canon
...And the guy with the helmet mounted camera is the craziest one of the
lot.
frank theriault wrote:
On 2/1/07, David Mann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This has to be about the scariest video I've ever seen. These guys
wouldn't last 5 minutes in my city.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=nR2ygFn-yR8
I will have you know that I have the maturity of a 10 year old.
So there! Yadda, yadda, ya! GRIN
-graywolf
(Hum...? My smell checkers do not recognize yadda as a proper word.
Must not have asked any 10 year olds about it.)
Doug Franklin wrote:
P. J. Alling wrote:
Because we have
You mean USPS Global Express? That is about the best way in my limited
experience. Two weeks tends to be about the minimum, not the maximum. I
do not think the problems are with the USPS, but with the postal service
on the other end.
-graywolf
Amita Guha wrote:
I just had to ship two lenses
Maybe I should get Cotty to put a Pentax lensmount on my Olympus C-5050
GRIN.
Mark Roberts wrote:
Talk about frankencameras!
http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1036message=21862555
Apparently you get a 5x crop factor so your 50mm lens has the FOV of a
250 on full frame :)
Oops! Hope everything but the car is OK in the long run.
-graywolf
Boris Liberman wrote:
I've had a car crash this morning. The other guy just drove to the red
light to my right in such a way that I could only brake and eventually
we've hit each other. I'm completely uninjured. Just
Actually, it was labeled as the DCS no number, people started referring
to it as the DSC-100 after the DSC-200 replaced it. It was a whopping
1.3MP camera with, you guessed it, a 1.5x sensor just like your pentax.
Adam Maas wrote:
Nope,
The first DSLR (Kodak DCS100 based on the F3HP) was
have worked here
in NC, but in Michigan I just went down an filed a forced quit.
-graywolf
David J Brooks wrote:
Well, i did see the writing on the wall a while back, but thought it
would boil over.
For the past 33 and a bit years, i have been employed in the survey
depart of a large Eng
Anyway the one in my camera does not work correctly.
Cory Papenfuss wrote:
The are essentially a little battery but they utilize classic
electrolytic capacior chemistry however due to their extremely dense
charge/volume they have exceedingly high internal resistance.
I don't know that
Well, I was more than twice as old as you back then, now we are about
the same age grin. I agree about the beer, it has been a good
companion all these years. The girls caused a lot of pain, however.
-graywolf
Cotty wrote:
I was 16 and in Cupertino. A month later I was back in the UK as my
for proof sheets and editing, and the 'professionals'
are the ones who make the most use of them.
Tom C.
From: graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List pdml@pdml.net
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List pdml@pdml.net
Subject: Re: OT - Taking Your Photography To The Next
As I recall the model was contrived, the bystanders were candid. I
imagine she did that little charade on several corners before she got
what she wanted.
Jens Bladt wrote:
What is the truth about American Girl in Italy, which is one of my all
time favorite photogarphs?
The New York Times,
And that caterer is one of your best sources of new clients, make damn
sure she likes you.
William Robb wrote:
If you are planning on taking up weddings as a money earner, remember that
you are working for the bride and groom, but you are working with the
caterer and the minister.
If you
not actually sought any photography work in years.
Cotty wrote:
On 25/1/07, graywolf, discombobulated, unleashed:
That puts it in a nutshell!
Thanks Tom. Coming from you that's a welcome compliment.
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And these cameras really need 1.5x viewfinder magnification to match a
similar 35mm. I suppose the eyepiece is too far from the ground glass to
do that economically.
Adam Maas wrote:
Note the 10D/20D/30D finder is smaller than the *istD or K10D (it's the
same coverage, but only .9x
, but it is the only way both
sides are going to know exactly what the other expects. Do it!
-graywolf
Patrick Genovese wrote:
It sounds like a solicitation for work for hire. Does the client
retain rights to ALL of the images from the shoot or just the 50 or so
images submitted?
Effectively that's what
%, 0.76x [x1.5x=1.14]) to a D200+DK-21M
(0.95%, 0.94x x 1.17x = 1.0998x) and they're nearly indistinguishable.
-Adam
graywolf wrote:
And these cameras really need 1.5x viewfinder magnification to match a
similar 35mm. I suppose the eyepiece is too far from the ground glass to
do
even more impact that his previously published work.
-graywolf
Tim Øsleby wrote:
Silly question: What's tear sheets?
Tim
Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
graywolf
Sent: 24. januar 2007
LOL! And, leave the user to spend hours getting things back to how they
like them. How true. I will admit that sometimes that is the only way to
get things fixed when the OS goes off into some other reality of its own.
P. J. Alling wrote:
Rattle some bones, burn some incense, prostrate
simply because when I
want to use something they are 3/4 dead from self-discharge. I am
currently using lithium drycells in almost everything that takes AA's
for that reason.
-graywolf
Digital Image Studio wrote:
On 26/01/07, Cory Papenfuss [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Bottom line
rechargeables.
-graywolf
Paul Stenquist wrote:
I can't see using NIMH in my D, but I do use them in my flash. The D
sits too long. I'd be charging the batteries every time I used it. The
flash, on the other hand, will burn through four batteries of any type
in short order. So the NIMH seem
MX's viewfinder to the F3hp's.
The best viewfinder on any camera I have ever used was the old Leica M3,
my Mamiya Universal Press's viewfinder was almost as good. Of course,
they were not SLR's. Maybe Rob can tell us how the Mamiya 7's compares,
it is supposed to be rather good.
-graywolf
Adam
--
From: graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Not a silly question at all. Tear sheets are pages cut out of the
publications where your photos appeared. Usually they simply give you
several copies of the publication and you cut them out yourself. In the
case of expensive books you usually get just
at what knowing that every time you press the
button it is going to cost you $2.50-$3.00 ($5.00 with flashbulbs) will
do for it.
-graywolf
Tom C wrote:
I thought it contained some useful reminders. What he fails to mention
though, is that no matter how good or celebrated a photographer one
Nah, last year was the 230th and nobody even mentioned it grin.
William Robb wrote:
On 1/26/07, Jack Davis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Put it up again in 2076, along with a price.
At my age, 1976 seems a recent year.
Jack
Ok, for some reason, when I saw the publishing date was the 200th
Tear sheets should be a demand that goes with any sale. Tear sheets are
better than portfolio shots because they have obviously been paid for
and published.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 1/24/2007 7:21:07 AM Pacific Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Regards
Patrick
From one of my ads:
--
THE FINE PRINT
WARRANTY: The only warranty is that the item is as described above, and
shown in the photos. Winner must notify me withing 7 days of any
discrepancies, after that the sale is final.
RESERVE: I have set a reasonable reserve of $xxx which is well below
That puts it in a nutshell!
Cotty wrote:
On 24/1/07, Markus Maurer, discombobulated, unleashed:
How about PJ's, do they engage assistants?
Certainly not paid. PJs are a lonely breed. I have, however, seen some
toting the odd acolyte, so it certainly is possible to find a guru. The
not even offer the option of separating out
the buyer and seller ratings at least that much has improved.
-graywolf
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? Before you folks answer, remember that your time
is an expense.
-graywolf
Markus Maurer wrote:
Hi Mark and Jens
Marks description of the wildflower taking on windy days is a good example
of using the advantages of digital photography versus film use for me.
But, to do the math, I would
I would like to point out that you would have gotten a large discount on
film and processing if you had prepaid a thousand bucks or so in
advance, which is what you in effect did by buying a digital camera.
-graywolf
Boris Liberman wrote:
Yes, I can relate to that. When I owned my cars (I
Ah, another Zenith, RCA, or Sylvania! Just a name to market third party
products under. Beginning to look like the doomsayers were right.
-graywolf
K.Takeshita wrote:
Folks, sky is not falling but a today's news indicated that CEO of Hoya, in
the presentation today on their financials
How about a database to automatically catalog digital photo files on the
computer using the embedded info with the only manual input being an
optional caption?
-graywolf
Thibouille wrote:
I have to produce a software as a final evaluation of my computer
sciences studies.
Of course, nothing
. Hence, distasteful = Cotty. GRIN
-graywolf
PS: 2 of my 3 electronic dictionaries recognized limey as a proper
word, but one of them did mention it was considered derogatory.
Cotty wrote:
On 23/1/07, mike wilson, discombobulated, unleashed:
My pleasure. 8-) As you so elegantly stated, journos
You mean like standing under the snow machine at a ski resort and
talking about the blizzard that is hitting the area? Let's see, I think
I still have my photo of the aftermath somewhere
Yes, here it is:
http://www.graywolfphoto.com/digital/_images/Misc/Blizzard-of-05.jpg
David Savage
BBC seems fascinated with America. Earlier I was listening to a (On a, I
hear, non-existent shortwave broadcast) BBC commentary on Ms Clinton's
coy I am not running for President Campaign.
The half century old radio is working very well on its (non-existent)
battery, thank you.
-graywolf
Is it just me, or has things gotten out of hand?
I received a package today that had postage due on it. The shipper had
used empty pop can boxes as packing (for electronic test equipment, yet)
that had of course collapsed. He spent far less than I had paid for
shipping. This is just the latest
it?
-graywolf
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Computer woes kept me away for about 3-31/2 weeks. Think it was the latter.
Some may remember I had just got a new computer, a AMD 64X2. My old desktop
still worked, but I was getting blue error screens (Windows) more and more.
Plus it was only a Pentium
You have my best wishes, Shel.
Shel Belinkoff wrote:
The doctor called me yesterday and wants me to go into the hospital for
some tests. I'll be leaving in a couple of hours and will be away for a
short while. I usually don't put my business on the internet, but I'm a
little concerned, and
That is not 35mm, it is 127 slide film (sometimes called super slides
because it would fit in a 2x2 mount).
-graywolf
Mark Cassino wrote:
My sister in law asked me to scan some old 35mm slides, which of course
is no problem. But I wasn't expecting 35 mm _square_ exposures:
http
You are going to regret that post. Watch your mailbox for seven thousand
megabytes of images.
grin
Digital Image Studio wrote:
On 12/01/07, graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.graywolfphoto.com/digital/_images/TO-Y600.jpg
Any of you remember those things? You will notice
Quite a bargain for those wealthy enough to afford it. In fact why just
hire him for your vacation, have him document your whole life.
Politicians hire photographers to do that on a semi-permanent basis.
Cotty wrote:
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=200066245436
LOL
--
that the on-topic stuff should be eliminated because someone is not
interested in it is so far out it is rather humorous.
-graywolf
Digital Image Studio wrote:
On 11/01/07, Shel Belinkoff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well, let me then amend my post: I think he's more a technician than a
photographer concerned
Mr Brewer is a rather nice guy in person, and nowhere near as taciturn
as he is here on the list grin.
Shel Belinkoff wrote:
My apologies to all as I frequently get Doug Brewer and Doug Franklin mixed
up - which is the list owner?
Shel
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PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
http://www.graywolfphoto.com/digital/_images/TO-Y600.jpg
Any of you remember those things? You will notice the great aesthetics
(none) of this garden variety snapshot.
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radio because the HIGH sampling/data rate
that is much better than analog FM. I
think if you have any ears at all and listen,
it IS pretty impressive.
me
graywolf wrote:
http://www.graywolfphoto.com/digital/_images/TO-Y600.jpg
Any of you remember those things? You will notice the great
AM/FM pushbutton memory
console model radio around here somewhere... powers up
but makes a buzzing sound... i've been told it's got a
bad capacitor somewhere in it... not too many there,
so that shouldn't be TOO hard to hunt down.
--- graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http
GRIN!
We are not xenophobic, we get along with Americans of all backgrounds,
we welcome tourists in a friendly manner, but we do get tired of the
invaders who have come to pillage and loot and then return home. When I
lived in Detroit I remember there were a lot of Canadians in that catagory.
Those four foot thick stone walls wouldn't have anything to do with
that, would they?
Cotty wrote:
Believe me, I would switch it off if I could. I haved to have mine on
for work. In fact the reception in our area is shady - I have to have it
in the window or it won't work.
--
PDML
.
-graywolf
David Savage wrote:
Maybe some of the older list members can educate me. What did you all
do before mobile phones?
How did you manage not being in contact with all and sundry 24/7?
Dave (I'm being sarcastic)
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Hey! We invented the dictionary. That insured that we had a standardized
way to misspell the words.
Stan Halpin wrote:
Some time ago, (late 1800's?) there was a spelling reform movement in
the U.K. Strangely, they got rid of the z's, but kept the ou's (as in
colour, honour, ...). In the
Well, you can trust anything I say.*
*Except when I am lying or wrong...
David Savage wrote:
Man, that list keeps growing. Are certain people more believable now?
Dave :-)
On 1/7/07, Tom C [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Welcome.
BTW, Don't believe anything Paul Stenquist, William Robb,
While we are talking about this kind of stuff. What about folks who take
the stroller inside the store. When I was young no one did that. If?
they took the kid in with them they picked carried him/her. Now you go
in the store and there are two women with their strollers completely
blocking the
You guys have way too much money. The proper bag is the smallest one
that will hold what you have to have with you, and costs less than $20,
used.
I guess my favorite bag of all time was a nylon copy of a Domke F2 (I
had it long before Domke started making nylon bags) that I think I paid
I quit using neck straps when my belly got in the way grin.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I agree. I recall that when I was shooting a lot of motorsports, everyone
hung their cameras around their neck. Most used more than one, and when
loading film, a neck strap was essential. A good strap
You, know what? That is exactly what I said when stereo came out. Truth
be known, I still would rather have a good mono system.
DagT wrote:
Fra: Boris Liberman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On 1/3/07, DagT [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I find it very convenient to have just plain stereo. Even with DVDs
Is that from experience on your part or just an assumption?
Me? I had to start carrying a stick to drive them off with. Seems there
is a rumor out there that he only thing sexier than a Rock Star, a Foot
Ball Player, or a Race Car Driver, is a Dirty Old Man.
John Sessoms wrote:
From:
HAR!
Margus Männik wrote:
The same time I can't understand - how some people with such wonderful
ears can be SO BLIND that they can't distinguish old Fuji Velvia from
new one... awful :)))
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Some day we shall have to talk grin.
Strangely I have not used a soldering iron on a job since I worked in a
TV shop back in 63-64. While I usually refer to my primary occupation as
an EMT (electro-mechanical technician), every employer I've worked for
has had a different name for what I did.
Tim Øsleby wrote:
Don't believe you.
With an IQ of 50 you should have trouble opening a door on your own ;-)
Why, you don't seem to have any trouble with doors? wink
If it went down another 50 points it would still be well above 50, but I
can not imagine what it would be like as I already
Well, if you can not clearly hear the difference between one brand of
10ga. wire and another, there is something wrong with your hearing.
I have been reading some stuff on an audio forum and have finally came
to the understanding that what folks who call themselves audiophiles
mean by HiFi is
Kostas Kavoussanakis wrote:
On Tue, 2 Jan 2007, Tim ?sleby wrote:
Don't believe you.
With an IQ of 50 you should have trouble opening a door on your own ;-)
Loss of 50 IQ points. But we agree, he must have started pretty high.
Not sure if get well soon applies, Graywolf, but here goes
CHUCKLE!
Tom C wrote:
From: graywolf [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I really didn't use to
understand why people didn't get it when I gave them a couple of hints,
much less why I should have to explain the same thing over, and over,
and over. Now, unfortunately, I do understand.
What?
Tom C
Hum...? Did that crash my system? Or was it just a coincidence. Got one
of those if this is the first time you have seen this message restart
windows things. I am not going back to see. First a full virus scan...
Perry Pellechia wrote:
LOL!
On 1/2/07, George Sinos [EMAIL PROTECTED]
of feeble mindedness?
K.Takeshita wrote:
On 1/02/07 8:43 PM, graywolf, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes this third neurologist's profound $3000 opinion was, Duh, I dunno!
Which confirms the second's professional opinion. The first was sure she
knew exactly what the problem was, only the treatment
Well, I did refuse the last Flash upgrade, my my Multimedia Suite
installation predates the Adobe buyout.
David Savage wrote:
How's your system set up to handle Flash media? It's just a Flash video.
YouTube is pretty save as far as I know.
Cheers,
Dave
On 1/3/07, graywolf [EMAIL
. However I am not a 'file, and only require my system to
sound OK, not fabulous, not great, just OK.
David Mann wrote:
On Jan 3, 2007, at 2:28 PM, graywolf wrote:
I have been reading some stuff on an audio forum and have finally came
to the understanding that what folks who call themselves
quoting myself Hum...? Did that crash my system? Or was it just a
coincidence. Got one of those if this is the first time you have seen
this message restart windows things. I am not going back to see. First
a full virus scan...end quote
Well, AVQ scan found a threat that was not there this
Found the virus on the second pass. Had nothing to do with the video. It
was in a zip file and AVQ had not found it previously. Kind of strange,
but it does not seem like it could have had anything to do with the
crash. OH WELL.
graywolf wrote:
quoting myself Hum...? Did that crash my system
I noticed a slight problem you guys are going to have. There are only
165 seats in the auditorium.
Paul Stenquist wrote:
I'm 308.
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It is still a while until 2007 here, but I thought this would be good
advice for the new year, or any year (especially for those who never
heard the Les Crane record back when):
DESIDERATA
By Max Ehrmann 1927
Go placidly amid the noise and haste, and
remember what peace there may be in
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