ECN Electrical Forum - Discussion Forums for Electricians, Inspectors and Related Professionals
ECN Shout Chat
ShoutChat
Recent Posts
Do we need grounding?
by gfretwell - 04/06/24 08:32 PM
UL 508A SPACING
by tortuga - 03/30/24 07:39 PM
Increasing demand factors in residential
by tortuga - 03/28/24 05:57 PM
New in the Gallery:
This is a new one
This is a new one
by timmp, September 24
Few pics I found
Few pics I found
by timmp, August 15
Who's Online Now
1 members (Scott35), 466 guests, and 10 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Rate Thread
Page 2 of 3 1 2 3
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,928
Likes: 34
G
Member
Ed, I had luck buying a real nice turntable on Ebay for about $30. I am ripping the LPs to MP3 tho. I have given up on little bits of plastic to store my music on. I am going with silicon and oxide.

I still like my DOS based players. If somebody would make a player with a "bell phone" sized key pad I would buy it in the morning. Sometimes smaller is not better


Greg Fretwell
Stay up to Code with the Latest NEC:


>> 2023 NEC & Related Reference & Exam Prep
2023 NEC & Related Reference & Study Guides

Pass Your Exam the FIRST TIME with the Latest NEC & Exam Prep

>> 2020 NEC & Related Reference & Study Guides
 

Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 827
Likes: 1
J
Member
http://www.mcminone.com/search.asp?...t.x=4&btnSubmit.y=8&btnSubmit=GO

Well guys, I'm glad to see that the place where I buy alot of VCR and TV repair parts, still sells turntables. They listed 5 replacement tone arms but none were for Marantz. My turntable is an old Technics SL-Q300. I'm thinking that I need to get a replacement P-mount cartridge for it while I still can.
Joe

Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 7,520
P
Member
I don't think it's a secret around here that I like old equipment, so sign me up for the Luddite Club as well! wink

There have been wonderful advances in technology. I've just been sorting out some old computer parts, and I have in front of me a 10MB full-height hard disk and a 128KB full-length expansion board from an old AT. It's almost incredible to think that a little more than 20 years later we can cram 200GB+ onto a disk a fraction of the size and at least a thousand times as much RAM onto a tiny strip about 4 inches long, not to mention that 128MB of RAM today costs a fraction of what 128KB cost 20+ years ago.

Yet I can't help feeling that so much of these advances are either being abused, or at best not being made the possible use of. Computers are certainly a prime example.

I'll see somebody using a fancy Windows word processor to write a simple letter. It won't run with anything less than 50MB of disk space and 2MB of RAM. Does it reformat a paragraph any faster than you could do with a 30-year-old version of Wordstar on a CP/M system? Quite often the answer is no. And Wordstar could be run from a single floppy with a mere 64KB of RAM. What's more, it was a darn sight easier to use too.

I don't have objections to making something as complex as it needs to be to do the job, but I don't see the point in introducing unnecessary complexities just for the sake of it.

Quote
the 386 desktop with DOS 4.01 but I know that they shall rise again.


The system that I maintain for the local taxi company is running DOS 4.01. It was a deliberate decision on my part when I set them up about 6 years ago, along with the custom software that I wrote under Borland's Turbo Pascal 5.

Quote
I still have 3 with rotary dial, the rest are still Western Electrics and all of them are corded


Same here. I have a few Western Electric 500 sets, and GPO 700-series which were the nearest British equivalent of the same era. The newest (POTS) phone I have is a 1980s ITT 2500 TouchTone set.

Some (most) of the modern phones are junk. It's all about supposed style -- Weird shaped buttons arranged in odd ways, horrible handsets that are uncomfortable to use, etc., not to mention the overall poor construction quality.

Quote
By the way, I have about 300 LP's left from my collection, but nothing to play them on.


I'm an avid record collector: LPs, 45s, and 78s. I probably have more turntables around than would be considered normal, including a number of Garrard and Goldring-Lenco units from the 1960s (Garrard is a favorite -- See my post in the nostalgia area). In fact the newest deck I have is a Pioneer unit from the mid-1970s.

As most of my records are 1950s/1960s though, it somehow wouldn't be appropriate to use anything newer.

Tell you what: I'd just about gotten use to younger people having never seen a 78rpm record before. But it still came as something of a shock the other day when I was chatting with a kid about 45s and the response was "What's that?"

[Linked Image]


Last edited by pauluk; 06/13/07 09:17 AM. Reason: Add image for fellow Luddites!
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 745
E
Member
Retired_Helper:

No, my Startac will easily last two days on a single charge. I have a stockpile of extra batteries and replacement antennas that I got on e-bay for next to nothing. I sat in line for 45 minutes at Verizon Wireless yesterday waiting to get my 5-month old LG VX9900 replaced. In the meantime, I had my calls forwarded to my Startac and I talked on it the whole time. The VZW rep offered to buy mine from me but I refuse to part with it!

Joe:

My broken tone arm on my turntable is definitely not an MCM replacement part. It's a linear tone arm and will probably never be found. I've just learned to cope.


---Ed---

"But the guy at Home Depot said it would work."
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,928
Likes: 34
G
Member
AllTel still supports my analog phone but I got the impression when I was there setting up a flip phone account for my wife, that they hope I will die.
He pulled up my account and gave me the "Oh you are the one" kinda look.
$15 a month and 20 cents a minute. My bill is always about $23 with all the taxes.


Greg Fretwell
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 247
T
Member
Originally Posted by gfretwell
AllTel still supports my analog phone but I got the impression when I was there setting up a flip phone account for my wife, that they hope I will die.
He pulled up my account and gave me the "Oh you are the one" kinda look.
$15 a month and 20 cents a minute. My bill is always about $23 with all the taxes.


Your analog account will probably go away in Feb 2008, when the carriers have permission to pull the plug on analog cellular service.

The sunset date is Feb 18, 2008, unless it get extended.

The cellular companies want to kill it ASAP, as it takes up channel capacity that can be used more efficiently with digital technologies.

The alarm industry wants to keep it alive for another couple years, citing a shortage of available equipment to replace existing analog components, and a lack of equipment supporting non-GSM systems.

Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 7,520
P
Member
We have the push for all-digital TV over here at the moment. All existing analog broadcasts are to be closed down between 2008 and 2012.

http://www.dtg.org.uk/consumer/switchover_map.html

The quality on some multiplexes is already suffering as the broadcasters are cramming more and more channels on.

"Never mind the quality, just look at the quantity." frown

Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,928
Likes: 34
G
Member
This whole boondoggle of digital TV has to to with advertising space, not an increased amount of content. I have cable with about 90 channels. 15 of them are nothing but ads, 15 are news or government a half dozen actually have new content and the rest are a mix of old movies and reruns of old TV shows. All still have 10-20 minutes of ads in every hour. If they put 100 more channels up they will still have about the same amount of new content but they can sell a couple thousand extra minutes of ads each hour.

Personally I hope internet 'content on demand' puts the whole bunch if trouser snakes out of business.


Greg Fretwell
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,803
Member
Quote
Personally I hope internet 'content on demand' puts the whole bunch if trouser snakes out of business

ROFL! laugh laugh laugh

Just been acting my age & viewing some Flatt & Scruggs numbers on YouTube. Linked to some Beverley Hillbillies early episodes, Series #1. All free, no ads and the quality was so awful, it was just like sitting in the 'one 'n sixes' in 'ol flea-pit back home in the 'fifties!
Wonderful: Roll it out!

Alan

Last edited by Alan Belson; 06/14/07 02:43 PM. Reason: smiley malfunction

Wood work but can't!
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 9,928
Likes: 34
G
Member
I have the perfect hardware for content on demand but the production people sued it and the company that made it out of existance. (Sonic Blue ReplayTV 4000/5000 series)
This is an internet connected DVR that works with your regular TV ... and automatically skips commercials. I can still program it from anywhere over the internet but the content still comes from the cable company or over the air. The software is already there to handle content via the ethernet port tho. I can send it to and from my PCs or another net connected 4000/5000 RTV, anywhere in the world. I just can't get the content providers to send it to me over the net ... on demand.


Greg Fretwell
Page 2 of 3 1 2 3

Link Copied to Clipboard
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5