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From: Grant Edwards on 11 Mar 2010 20:34 On 2010-03-11, RalfM <rm(a)invalid.invalid> wrote: > Grant Edwards wrote: >> >> Nobody with more than five firing neurons would think they could send >> 4 billion different DC levels down a cable and correctly discriminate >> them at the far end. > > And, what about just 256 levels? Would that be impossible too? Well, I can see how somebody with no experience or limited education in electrical engineering might think it would work. But it won't. Not in the real world with a real cable. -- Grant
From: Grant Edwards on 13 Mar 2010 10:37
On 2010-03-13, Glenn <nomail(a)xx.dk> wrote: >> Are you Radium the Troll ? > > No he is not a troll, he is just a bright person that is starting to > think about how to improve data transmissions. > > He is now testing his ideas on you - "in the real world" - actually > on people that *has* practical experience. He's completely ignoring what he's being told by people who do know what they're talking about and just keeps repeating his claims no matter how much information he's given. He claimed all of the engineers who've been working on data transmission for the past 50 years were just plain too stupid and close minded to percieve his brilliance. He's a troll. > Theoretically he is right, but he has not yet "invented"/"discovered" > all the filthy signal degrading phenomenas in the transmitter, during > transmission and in the receiver - and from the environment; noise > signals. Some practical tests will help. I doubt it. -- Grant |