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From: Arny Krueger on 2 Nov 2009 19:25 "Phildo" <Phil(a)phildo.net> wrote in message news:hcnn30$d65$1(a)news.eternal-september.org > "Arny Krueger" <arnyk(a)hotpop.com> wrote in message > news:xtGdnWWGRoQnwXLXnZ2dnUVZ_h2dnZ2d(a)giganews.com... >> "Phildo" <Phil(a)phildo.net> wrote in message >> news:hcnlt1$31q$1(a)news.eternal-september.org >> >>> Nah, he's getting more and more desperate as witnessed >>> by his blatant lies about PSW when everyobne (sic) saw >>> him get banned. >> >> Phildo, is that a Freudian slip? > > No, a typo as you well know. I know no such thing. What I know is that you were lying, and in your anxiety you stared making dumb mistakes. You must be growing weak, because in the past you have lied incessantly without even the slightest trace of anxiety. >> Phildo, you keep saying that everybody saw me get >> banned, but you can't explain why I have been a user >> there, registered in good standing since before you say >> I was banned. > > It shows the date you registered but there is a 22 month > gap before you were allowed to post there again. Phildo, the only thing that stopped me from posting was my lack of desire to do so, and that was because of your flames and lies on AAPLS. You went ballistic when you found out that I had posted there for over a week without incident, because you predicted over and over again on AAPLS that I wouldn't last there even one day. I dare you to admit that you were in error! There is no evidence of the flamewar that you fantasize existed, Phildo. Lack of evidence proves nothing.
From: George's Pro Sound Co. on 2 Nov 2009 19:33 <bob(a)nospam.com> wrote in message news:a4tue591vsrm49nleme2tbt1bh8dug7m4m(a)4ax.com... > On Mon, 2 Nov 2009 09:08:34 -0500, "George's Pro Sound Co." > <bmoas(a)yahoo.com> > wrote: > >> >>"Getting Older and Grumpier Gear Minion" <westpase-he_ac(a)hotmail.com> >>wrote >>in message >>news:8342deab-d1c7-4050-9b41-e8a12b869ccc(a)d10g2000yqh.googlegroups.com... >>On Nov 1, 10:36 pm, "Sean Conolly" <sjconolly...(a)yaaho.com> wrote: >>> "Getting Older and Grumpier Gear Minion" <westpase-he...(a)hotmail.com> >>> wrote >>> in >>> messagenews:2e0814e5-0b78-4abf-a81a-684575bc8578(a)k17g2000yqh.googlegroups.com... >>> >>> >I decided to review some of the posting history >>> > since Arnold B. posted his bio in a previous >>> > thread, and couldn't take critique well. >>> > I came across a quote from one of his 12-2005 >>> > postings: >>> > "I quit before I got banned." >>> > Much like commiting suicide before execution. >>> > 22 months of blessed silence over there.(PSW) >>> >>> I really loved this part: >>> >>> "Previously I worked for several decades on computer mainframes and was >>> well-known internationally for my software developments and training >>> seminars related to the IBM VM/370-XP operating system." >>> >>> Um.. if you're famous you don't need to tell people that you're famous, >>> right? >>> >>> As I frequently tell my grown kids, never believe your own PR/BS. You're >>> only as good as your last gig. >>> >>> Sean >> >>He must have been involved with audio playback >>from punch cards clipped to his tricycle frame. >>It was an industrial model, so he considered it >>pro audio. Big Wheel keeps on rollin' >> >>My brother was a lead designer on the Univac and PDP-8s >>george >> > > I tried to get a job at Univac in 1970 but there was too much > competition... > > The PDP-8 was a funky little machine, could run a newspaper. I have 2 PDP > 11/73's in my basement. Those were the machines that B was written for, > and C > came from them. B was for Bell I think, not sure what C was, just one past > B > perhaps... Those machines had lots of rs232 ports, I used to have the > system > printer/keyboard but it was too friggin' big for my house so I scrapped > it. > > Arny worked on the IBM370 he says, that was even more primitive I think! > More of > a database card sorter type computer... probably ran COBOL... good for > payrolls > and such. I programmed in Fortran for the University computer but not sure > if it > was a 370 or another company, possibly a Data Gen. I worked from a distant > school terminal and never saw it. > > Just think, a cable modem is more powerful today! sorry I can't trade more stories, simply picked up bits from hearing him talk about his work I got my first computer 1997 or so H-P pavillion desk top :-) george >
From: Phildo on 2 Nov 2009 19:33 "Arny Krueger" <arnyk(a)hotpop.com> wrote in message news:dqqdnSTm889763LXnZ2dnUVZ_gKdnZ2d(a)giganews.com... > "Phildo" <Phil(a)phildo.net> wrote in message > news:hcnri1$i5p$1(a)news.eternal-september.org > >> "Arny Krueger" <arnyk(a)hotpop.com> wrote in message >> news:HNydnaQkN87txXLXnZ2dnUVZ_vSdnZ2d(a)giganews.com... >>> "Ron" <ron(a)lunevalleyaudio.com> wrote in message >>> news:e-adnTEeioGArnLXnZ2dnUVZ8tidnZ2d(a)bt.com >>> >>>> The only thing he fears is to be ignored. >>> >>> You're absolutely nuts, Ron. > >> No Arnold. That would be you. > > Phildo if that were really true, you wouldn't be so compulsive about > saying it over and over again. It is true and the more I say it, the more you look foolish for denying it. > If it were true, you'd be able to show convincing evidence, not old posts > of you telling the same lies over and over again. Those posts are not just convincing evidence, they are PROOF that you are lying. They are archived for posterity meaning you can never lie about your banishment from PSW again, even if the original thread on PSW has been deleted. >> Trying to tell a whole >> bunch of people who saw something happen that it never >> did and all your admissions of it in the google archives >> doesn't exactly paint you as exactly sane. > > All you've shown Phildo is posts of you lying about what happened. No, I've posted links to threads on here where lots of people have a good laugh about you being banned from PSW, people who SAW IT HAPPEN !!! > The facts are there Phildo - I've been a member of PSW in good standing > from *before* you lied and said that I was banned. Your own posts prove > that you are a liar. No Arnold, you were banned and no matter how many times you say otherwise that will always be true and the google archives will prove it. I bet your son is real proud of you looking down and seeing his father lie so blatantly while claiming to be a xtian. Phildo
From: Arny Krueger on 2 Nov 2009 19:42 <bob(a)nospam.com> wrote in message news:a4tue591vsrm49nleme2tbt1bh8dug7m4m(a)4ax.com > The PDP-8 was a funky little machine, could run a > newspaper. I have 2 PDP 11/73's in my basement. Those > were the machines that B was written for, and C came from > them. B was for Bell I think, not sure what C was, just > one past B perhaps... Those machines had lots of rs232 > ports, I used to have the system printer/keyboard but it > was too friggin' big for my house so I scrapped it. > Arny worked on the IBM370 he says, that was even more > primitive I think! You clearly know not what you are talking about. > More of a database card sorter type computer... The 370 was a true general-purpose computer, both business and scientific. It ran the books at almost all of the Fortune 500, ran all kinds of scientific work at many of the largest Universities (UCLA, Princeton, U of Michigan, Cornell, etc.), and was also heavily used by the FAA(for ATC), FBI, NASA and the CIA. BTW I know this for sure because the top system programming folks at all of those shops were personal friends. Your PDP's were peanut-whistle mini computers. They plugged into ordinary wall outlets, were air-cooled, and fit in a rack or two. The small ones were under $10,000 and the bigger ones might run just under $100,000. The IBM 370s I worked with filled large rooms. Simply walking all of the way around the larger ones was fair exercise. They used huge amounts of power and air conditioning. All but the small ones were water-cooled. With their peripherals, they cost 10's of millions of dollars. I was also the lead system programmer of a DEC VAX system in my "spare time", which was a mid-sized computer from DEC that was sort of like a PDP for grown-ups. > probably ran COBOL... The IBM 370 ran virtually every computer programming language that existed at the time, including COBOL. > good for payrolls and such. Good for real computing, not just lab toys like PDP. > I programmed in Fortran for the University computer > but not sure if it was a 370 or another company, possibly > a Data Gen. I worked from a distant school terminal and > never saw it. The terminal network that I worked with covered most of the US and had 100's of terminals, 24/7. > Just think, a cable modem is more powerful today! Maybe, maybe not. Thanks for sharing your ignorance, chump! BTW, here is some light reading for you: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_System/370 http://www.beagle-ears.com/lars/engineer/comphist/ibm360.htm http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cwj6pfhWBps
From: Sean Conolly on 2 Nov 2009 20:46
"Arny Krueger" <arnyk(a)hotpop.com> wrote in message news:0c-dnS32g8O6VnPXnZ2dnUVZ_uGdnZ2d(a)giganews.com... > "Sean Conolly" <sjconolly_98(a)yaaho.com> wrote in message > news:hclk4p$kp0$1(a)news.eternal-september.org >> "Getting Older and Grumpier Gear Minion" >> <westpase-he_ac(a)hotmail.com> wrote in message >> news:2e0814e5-0b78-4abf-a81a-684575bc8578(a)k17g2000yqh.googlegroups.com... >>> I decided to review some of the posting history >>> since Arnold B. posted his bio in a previous >>> thread, and couldn't take critique well. >>> I came across a quote from one of his 12-2005 >>> postings: >>> "I quit before I got banned." >>> Much like commiting suicide before execution. >>> 22 months of blessed silence over there.(PSW) > >> I really loved this part: > >> "Previously I worked for several decades on computer >> mainframes and was well-known internationally for my >> software developments and training seminars related to >> the IBM VM/370-XP operating system." > >> Um.. if you're famous you don't need to tell people that >> you're famous, right? > > Do you seriously think that in 2009, a bunch of live sound people would > know who's who among high end mainframe system programmers back in the > 1980s? > > If you're so knowlegable about things back then, off the top of your head > give us the name of the well-known consulting group I worked for, and the > name of the well-known president of that company. Like I said - you're only as good as your last gig - which in your case is building PC's for the local church. It's not an insult, it's true for everyone. I could sit here and brag all day about the systems and things I've built/designed/improved whatever but now I'm just another developer when it comes right down to it. So it goes. Sean |