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rlindsey0

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  1. That's all well and good but you're showing 11 or 12 samples per cycle there for a 20kHz waveform in 44.1kHz and that's just not correct. Could you redraw it showing what happens to a 20kHz square waveform when you sample it at 44.1kHz? According to other posters who were arguing with me, it should come out sinusoidal. I had it all arse-backwards earlier on in the thread but now I know I'm 100% correct. This may be of interest. www.lavryengineering.com/documents/Sampling_Theory.pdf
  2. http://www.dailytech.com/Alaskan%2BGlaciers%2BGrow%2Bfor%2BFirst%2BTime%2Bin%2B250%2Byears/article13215.htm I've never accepted the "fight climate change" hysteria. Nature does what it does. For us to invest resources into an intentional attempt to block nature from taking its course in order to somehow "reverse" the unintentional harms we create is probably the single stupidest idea I've ever heard. The Alaskan glaciers have grown this year, Arctic sea ice has increased this year, some areas just had the coldest summer in several decades -- and yet the press isn't giving it any coverage. Odd. I wonder how global warming alarmists will obfuscate this one. They don't have to "obfuscate" anything. The fact is that when you look at overall climate change, what happens in one year, in one place, means little or nothing. That's the nature of the beast. If it's happening, it's not some universal linear step-by-step up-and-up all across the board. It's a long-term process that has to be studied across decades and centuries. It would be naive to expect that global warming means that everywhere in the world must be getting slightly warmer by the same amount every year, and in fact no scientist would argue this. It's the overall long-term trend that matters. I would say that the reason the press appears not to be splashing this all over front pages everywhere is that while it is one more set of data that must be added to our study of this, by itself it proves absolutely nothing about global warming. And BTW, efforts to reduce global warming have nothing at all with trying to get nature to stop doing what it does. It's about getting us to change what WE do, and thus to alter the effects of our activities on the ecosystem. Opinions will vary on whether that's good, bad, or neutral, but it's certain that it has nothing to do with changing how nature operates.
  3. Okay, thanks, I'll read that!!!! You might also like to read these: http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2008/07/once-more-unto-the-bray/ http://www.altenergyaction.org/Monckton.html
  4. I think the Chinese versions are actually MC012's instead of MK012's, but I could be wrong. Apparently, it's not quite that simple, unfortunately for us all. Some older Russian ones were MCs, for example. I've found this link helpful: http://oktava.tula.net/fake/ I have a Russian pair and like them quite a bit. One nice thing is that you can get different capsules for them (e.g., omni). There are also large-diaphragm capsules you can screw onto the 012 bodies that effectively turn these into LDCs. Haven't heard those yet, but they seem like a potentially good idea for those on a tight budget (like me).
  5. Hey this looks a nice piece of software indeed, looks real simple to use.... It is. I'm no pro, but this is all I use, and I love it. I was better at Tracktion within one week than I was at Logic (v5 for PC, when there actually was a PC version) in one year. There's a Tracktion demo you can download if you like. I believe the demo is just of Tracktion 2, and not the forthcoming Tracktion 3, but it should suffice to give you the idea. Actually, most of the programs you're considering should have downloadable demos. That's a good way to test-drive them. Another one you could try is n-Track. http://fasoft.com/
  6. Good point about Reaper. I'm also hearing good things said about Zynewave Podium. www.zynewave.com
  7. Have a look at Mackie Tracktion too. For your purposes it might be among the easiest to get a handle on. And though it's easy to learn, it gives you room to grow--it is by no means a mere toy. It was even first created by a British developer, if that matters to you.
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