> it is certainly appropriate to increase the footprint of the monitoring of the speaker using centers of excellence before evaluating sound or its association with speaker security.
> afaik, some more work has to be done in order to develop the processing of the speaker using the best suited approach.
> subsequently, it might be better to implement and test the supervision of the speaker by the use of dedicated know-how.
> otherwise, it should be helpful to design the optimization of the speaker with collaborative contributions before designing sound or speaker customizingwhy do you use sound design?
>
> -------------
On 3/25/2010 10:50 AM None spake thus:
> On Mar 25, 10:05 am, "St...@free.fr" wrote:
>
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>> contributions before designing sound or speaker customizingwhy do
>> you use sound design?
Spam. No sh.t, spam.
Hell, I knew it was spam even before I read the message. Lessee, OP was
"incs" (w/quotation marks), 1st response was from "Sylvia" (again with
the quotes), followed by a response from "Steve@free.fr". So what are
the odds that all posters put their handle in quotation marks?
Although what the *point* of this spam is I have no friggin' idea ...

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Trifle Menot - 26 Mar 2010 02:26 GMT
>>> it is certainly appropriate to increase the footprint of the
>>> monitoring of the speaker using centers of excellence before
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>>> contributions before designing sound or speaker customizingwhy do
>>> you use sound design?
>Although what the *point* of this spam is I have no friggin' idea ...
Not everything has a point.
Outside a liquor store, I ran into an old high school pal who didn't
recognize me. He didn't even notice I was looking at him. Though not
drunk, he was babbling incoherently to himself. Psychotropic drugs had
totally blown his mind. The text above reminds me of him. Poor soul.

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Frank A. Rosenbaum - 26 Mar 2010 15:45 GMT
> Not everything has a point.
>
> Outside a liquor store, I ran into an old high school pal who didn't
> recognize me. He didn't even notice I was looking at him. Though not
> drunk, he was babbling incoherently to himself. Psychotropic drugs had
> totally blown his mind. The text above reminds me of him. Poor soul.
Are you sure he wasn't talking on his Bluetooth headset?

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David Nebenzahl - 27 Mar 2010 04:33 GMT
On 3/26/2010 6:45 AM Frank A. Rosenbaum spake thus:
>> Outside a liquor store, I ran into an old high school pal who didn't
>> recognize me. He didn't even notice I was looking at him. Though not
>> drunk, he was babbling incoherently to himself. Psychotropic drugs had
>> totally blown his mind. The text above reminds me of him. Poor soul.
>>
> Are you sure he wasn't talking on his Bluetooth headset?
This is probably a trivial observation, but it always makes me think of
how back in my younger days one could always pretty much tell when
someone was crazy because they were talking to themselves. Nowadays
there's no telling if they're nuts or just talking to someone else
wirelessly ...

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Steve Caple - 27 Mar 2010 08:15 GMT
> On 3/26/2010 6:45 AM Frank A. Rosenbaum spake thus:
>
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> there's no telling if they're nuts or just talking to someone else
> wirelessly ...
Waiting in line to pay the cashier at a Barstow coffee shop (breakfast is
the hardest meal of the day to f--k up, so be glad you're in Barstow for
breakfast, not dinner) I was behind a 20-something with his Bluetooth piece
perched on his ear lie a big old fashioned hearing aid. When he completed
his transaction and it was my turn I said to the cashier that it was so sad
to see such a young man gone deaf already from his 500 watt car stereo.
Don't think she got it . . .

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Steve
Frank A. Rosenbaum - 27 Mar 2010 13:09 GMT
> Waiting in line to pay the cashier at a Barstow coffee shop (breakfast is
> the hardest meal of the day to f--k up, so be glad you're in Barstow for
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> Don't think she got it . . .
She is probably the same person who thought a two dollar bill was forged.

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Frank Rosenbaum
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