Re: [opensuse] Ballmer: Linux users owe Microsoft



On Sunday 19 November 2006 18:09, Doug McGarrett wrote:
At 05:09 PM 11/19/2006 -0600, Rajko M wrote:
Content-Disposition: inline

On Sunday 19 November 2006 16:35, James Knott wrote:
...

Well, for starters, electricity i.e. electrons flows from negative to
positive.

I thought too, but this makes my knowledge obsolete ;-)


--
Regards,
Rajko M.

ELECTRONS flow from a negative point to a more positive point; what is
known as "conventional current" --what all engineers design with--
goes from positive to negative. I think it was Benjamin Franklin who
made the original mistake, in deciding that current flows from a
positive terminal to a negative. It really makes no difference to
design calculations, so long as you keep your conventions in mind.

--doug

That is what I used whole life, but now somebody found new way :-D
Please see the other post.

It is just so fun to read patent claims that start with "new way to connect
multitude of fibers in one composite object" referring to new shaped needle
that make sawing easier.

--
Regards,
Rajko Matovic.
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxx
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@xxxxxxxxxxxx



Relevant Pages

  • Re: [SLE] attached .doc files problem (9.1)
    ... On Sunday 15 August 2004 09:27, James Knott wrote: ... > Doug McGarrett wrote: ... >> In accordance with some help from this group a week or two ago, ... > in Mozilla and it starts up OO just fine. ...
    (SuSE)
  • Re: [opensuse] Ballmer: Linux users owe Microsoft
    ... On Sunday 19 November 2006 12:14, Doug McGarrett wrote: ... On Saturday 18 November 2006 06:37, James Knott wrote: ... many considered a step backwards from what 8 bit ... I was writing BASIC programs in the latter 1960's, ...
    (SuSE)
  • Re: [opensuse] Ballmer: Linux users owe Microsoft
    ... On Sunday 19 November 2006 16:35, James Knott wrote: ... but this makes my knowledge obsolete;-) ... Rajko M. ... ELECTRONS flow from a negative point to a more positive point; ...
    (SuSE)