
February 22nd 17, 08:13 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
On Wed, 22 Feb 2017 10:05:14 +0200, "Iain Churches"
wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
Been dead now some time,
Five years.
lovely bloke and his wife Swimm was she
called?..
An acronym:-)
SWMBO
She who must be obeyed
from Rider Haggard via John Mortimer.
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February 22nd 17, 08:53 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
On 22/02/2017 09:13, Bill Taylor wrote:
On Wed, 22 Feb 2017 10:05:14 +0200, "Iain Churches"
wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
Been dead now some time,
Five years.
lovely bloke and his wife Swimm was she
called?..
An acronym:-)
SWMBO
She who must be obeyed
from Rider Haggard via John Mortimer.
Sounds better than 'er indoors.
--
Graeme Wall
This account not read.
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February 22nd 17, 09:15 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
On 22/02/2017 08:05, Iain Churches wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
...
In article , Iain Churches
Do you remember Keith G who was one of the more
"interesting" subscribers to this group some years back?
When the drilling of small holes in CDs, and the fact that
they still played, was mentioned. He wrote: "That' nothing!
Every LP I own has a much bigger hole, and right through the
centre. The only error correction they have is an occasional
wipe with a DustBug. and they all play perfectly"
:-)
Yes met him at home once bought a brace of QUAD II's off him. Was a real
character Keith he had a sort of bedroom with most of the gear in, all
units piled on top of each other not an audio purist by any means but
very much an enthusiast, and that in abundance!.
Yes a hi-fi enthusiast in the real sense. We never met,
but corresponded regularly. I got the impression
he was a very practical chap, good at carpentry,
and handy with the soldering iron. Quite rare
attributes for an audiophile in these plug-and-play
days.
Nil nisi bonum and all that, but there are limits.
--
Eiron.
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February 22nd 17, 10:23 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
"Bill Taylor" wrote in message
news 
On Wed, 22 Feb 2017 10:05:14 +0200, "Iain Churches"
wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
Been dead now some time,
Five years.
lovely bloke and his wife Swimm was she
called?..
An acronym:-)
SWMBO
She who must be obeyed
from Rider Haggard via John Mortimer.
In this case it was definately
SWIMM
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February 22nd 17, 11:31 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
On 22/02/2017 11:23, Iain Churches wrote:
"Bill Taylor" wrote in message
news
On Wed, 22 Feb 2017 10:05:14 +0200, "Iain Churches"
wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
Been dead now some time,
Five years.
lovely bloke and his wife Swimm was she
called?..
An acronym:-)
SWMBO
She who must be obeyed
from Rider Haggard via John Mortimer.
In this case it was definately
SWIMM
She Who I Must Marry?
--
Graeme Wall
This account not read.
|

February 22nd 17, 11:31 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
Iain Churches wrote:
Bill Taylor wrote:
SWMBO
She who must be obeyed
from Rider Haggard via John Mortimer.
In this case it was definately
SWIMM
She who I mistakenly married?
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February 22nd 17, 11:38 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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|
Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
On Wed, 22 Feb 2017 13:23:28 +0200, "Iain Churches"
wrote:
"Bill Taylor" wrote in message
news
On Wed, 22 Feb 2017 10:05:14 +0200, "Iain Churches"
wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
Been dead now some time,
Five years.
lovely bloke and his wife Swimm was she
called?..
An acronym:-)
SWMBO
She who must be obeyed
from Rider Haggard via John Mortimer.
In this case it was definately
SWIMM
He used Swimm and SWMBO interchangeably - I think swimm was just the
one he could pronounce easily.
d
---
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https://www.avast.com/antivirus
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February 22nd 17, 01:06 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
In article ,
Eiron wrote:
On 22/02/2017 08:05, Iain Churches wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
...
In article , Iain Churches
Do you remember Keith G who was one of the more
"interesting" subscribers to this group some years back?
When the drilling of small holes in CDs, and the fact that
they still played, was mentioned. He wrote: "That' nothing!
Every LP I own has a much bigger hole, and right through the
centre. The only error correction they have is an occasional
wipe with a DustBug. and they all play perfectly"
:-)
Yes met him at home once bought a brace of QUAD II's off him. Was a real
character Keith he had a sort of bedroom with most of the gear in, all
units piled on top of each other not an audio purist by any means but
very much an enthusiast, and that in abundance!.
Yes a hi-fi enthusiast in the real sense. We never met,
but corresponded regularly. I got the impression
he was a very practical chap, good at carpentry,
and handy with the soldering iron. Quite rare
attributes for an audiophile in these plug-and-play
days.
Nil nisi bonum and all that, but there are limits.
Quite. I remember him best for going on an on about how much better vinyl
was than CD.
And how his 'firewood' single driver speakers beat all. With each new
variation being miles better than the previous one.
But as a character, much missed.
--
*Why is it that doctors call what they do "practice"?
Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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February 22nd 17, 04:57 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
In article ,
Eiron wrote:
On 22/02/2017 08:05, Iain Churches wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
...
In article , Iain Churches
Do you remember Keith G who was one of the more
"interesting" subscribers to this group some years back?
When the drilling of small holes in CDs, and the fact that
they still played, was mentioned. He wrote: "That' nothing!
Every LP I own has a much bigger hole, and right through the
centre. The only error correction they have is an occasional
wipe with a DustBug. and they all play perfectly"
:-)
Yes met him at home once bought a brace of QUAD II's off him. Was a
real
character Keith he had a sort of bedroom with most of the gear in, all
units piled on top of each other not an audio purist by any means but
very much an enthusiast, and that in abundance!.
Yes a hi-fi enthusiast in the real sense. We never met,
but corresponded regularly. I got the impression
he was a very practical chap, good at carpentry,
and handy with the soldering iron. Quite rare
attributes for an audiophile in these plug-and-play
days.
Nil nisi bonum and all that, but there are limits.
I wonder, is there anyone these days who builds their
own equipment?. Back in the day, I knew dozens of
people who built turntable plinths, speaker cabinets,
valve amps, preamps, and transistor preamps in tobacco
tins.
Halycon days :-)
Iain
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February 22nd 17, 05:04 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
Noise Shaping for high rez files and streams
On Wed, 22 Feb 2017 19:57:52 +0200, "Iain Churches"
wrote:
In article ,
Eiron wrote:
On 22/02/2017 08:05, Iain Churches wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message
...
In article , Iain Churches
Do you remember Keith G who was one of the more
"interesting" subscribers to this group some years back?
When the drilling of small holes in CDs, and the fact that
they still played, was mentioned. He wrote: "That' nothing!
Every LP I own has a much bigger hole, and right through the
centre. The only error correction they have is an occasional
wipe with a DustBug. and they all play perfectly"
:-)
Yes met him at home once bought a brace of QUAD II's off him. Was a
real
character Keith he had a sort of bedroom with most of the gear in, all
units piled on top of each other not an audio purist by any means but
very much an enthusiast, and that in abundance!.
Yes a hi-fi enthusiast in the real sense. We never met,
but corresponded regularly. I got the impression
he was a very practical chap, good at carpentry,
and handy with the soldering iron. Quite rare
attributes for an audiophile in these plug-and-play
days.
Nil nisi bonum and all that, but there are limits.
I wonder, is there anyone these days who builds their
own equipment?. Back in the day, I knew dozens of
people who built turntable plinths, speaker cabinets,
valve amps, preamps, and transistor preamps in tobacco
tins.
Halycon days :-)
I'm holding my hand up. I learned Solidworks, and got a laser cutter
and 3D printer. And I have access any time I want to a CNC mill and a
lathe. So yes, plenty of things - mostly controlled using an Arduino
micro. Most of the electronics is for interfaces, but two months ago I
built a mic preamp specially for a high impedance mic I have.
Commercial pre-amps are all aimed at low impedance mics, and totally
unsuited to this one. Not in a tobacco tin - much better, an Altoids
tin.
d
---
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