v for frequency?

My parents' portable radio, a Grundig Yacht Boy, which they got in the mid-to-late 1960s, was calibrated in kHz and MHz rather than kc/s and Mc/s (or even wavelengths in metres).

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(actually the SW band was also marked in metres in the sense of "41 m band" etc).

Reply to
NY
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Grits? Grits is wonderful.

It's popular in the Olde Country because it so much better than what you had.

Popeyes is much better chicken.

Reply to
John Larkin

Yes, and it was dent corn. (dent corn is a high starch variant chiefly used for fodder, or ethanol production these days.)

Reply to
rbowman

afaik things like the 40 m ham band that was assigned in 1924 in the US has always been called the 40 m band. A specific frequency will be given as 7.010 MHz but I've never heard it called the 7 MHz band.

otoh 2 m is often referred to as 144 MHz and 440 MHz is rarely referred to as 70 centimeters.

Why be consistent?

Reply to
rbowman

England was the cultural and technical driving force of the world, a long time ago. The US has taken over those roles.

The class structure of many countries drives the best and brightest individuals to the US. It's so big and there are so many different places and cultures here, it's a good place for unusual people to come and find a place to fit in. I have several very smart and very nice neighbors with huge incomes and interesting accents.

I think that Putin actually wants the war objectors and draft dodgers to leave Russia. He wants a country of dumb poor alcoholic patriots, and he'll get it. We'll take the troublemakers.

Long term, diffusion of talent dominates progress.

I read a claim that, in 1900, people mostly married someone born within 15 miles of themselves. Now we have national and international immigration diffusion gradients thus positive-feedback effects on populations and genetics.

Reply to
John Larkin

Generating limp insults can be done with much less IQ than electronic design.

Reply to
John Larkin

Utter bollocks. There are 10 times as many acres per head of habitable land in the USA as in Europe, and ten time as as many resources under it. The miracles is that middle class americans are not ten times as rich as Europeans, a tribute to the rapacity of its leaders. Like any other country,Such success as the US has us *despite* it's (lack of) culture religion ethnicity and political, ideology.

It's so big and there are so many different

In pakistan, its rare to marry outside your own family

Reply to
The Natural Philosopher

I wonder whether he puts sugar on his porridge.

Reply to
Max Demian

I don't have a clue what the nuances of that are. I wouldn't use 'porridge' but when I made oatmeal this weekend I added dried cherries, a little stevia, and cinnamon. I hope that doesn't make me a Scot.

Reply to
rbowman

My wife was born across the river. It was a short walk. Do the positive effects offset the negative? Some countries aren't sending their best and brightest.

Reply to
rbowman

As I understand it, "real" Scotsmen regard porridge as a savoury dish, seasoned with salt, rather than (as everyone else does) a sweet dish, seasoned with sugar and maybe fruit.

Reply to
NY

Probably apocryphal but my brother had a story about a Yankee engineer working at Redstone during the BOMARC project. They were under a lot of pressure and everyone's fuse was a little short.

The engineer went to the same diner every morning for breakfast and would say "No grits." Being Alabama his order would always come with grits. Finally he snapped, threw the grits through a plate glass window saying "No goddamn grits!"

Reply to
rbowman

Yanks eat cream of wheat and toast Wonder Bread. Hopeless.

White grits. Yellow grits. Cheezy grits. Fried grits. Grits and hash.

Reply to
John Larkin

I wonder how much that has changed. We do have one long distance in the family, my sister married a guy from England but to counter that my daughter is married to the boy next door.

Reply to
Ed P

I probably could eat it with salt and butter. A couple of times I've forgotten sugar and it was nearly sweet enough. I generally add raisins, since brown sugar is already in play.

Oatmeal for breakfast every day. Rolled oats, though, so perhaps that's a disqualifier.

Reply to
Cindy Hamilton

Not this Yank. No CoW, no Wonder Bread. Ok, I take that soft, white stuff and stick it up a turkey's ass for Thanksgiving. Real bread doesn't have that nostalgic texture.

I've never eaten grits, but I got some polenta last week at the grocery store. I'll experiment with it. Probably put red sauce and Italian sausage on top.

What kind of hash? I'm not a big hash eater, either.

Reply to
Cindy Hamilton

IIRC, the UK only started using Hz in the early 70s. This was probably around when we joined the EEC, but I don't think that this was the reason. Until then, I had only seen Hz used on German testgear (Rohde & Schwarz etc). I believe that it was originally intended to use Hz only for electrical frequency.

Reply to
Ian Jackson

"Real" Scotsmen also eat Haggis. 'nuf said.

Reply to
Scott Lurndal

Am 03.04.23 um 23:12 schrieb Scott Lurndal:

I tried it on Orkney. It tasted better than the recipe reads.

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When you are really hungry after a day's motorbiking, even English Black Pudding passes.

Gerhard

Reply to
Gerhard Hoffmann

They have been over hunted so there is a ban on hunting Haggis this and next year to let numbers recover.

Reply to
alan_m

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