How (and why) to Ramble on your goat sideways
Boost Pope
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Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,031
Total Cats: 6,596
Every Sony headphones I've seen, of this style, has used a 1/8" plug natively and then included a thread-on adapter to convert it to 1/4" if needed. Granted, this data goes back only to the late 80s.
Unlike monsters such as the Koss Pro4-AA, Sony seems to recognize with these that the high-end consumer market is a heck of a lot larger than the broadcast market.
mkturbo.com
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Join Date: May 2006
Location: Charleston SC
Posts: 15,177
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There is a local team that works out of the local Bosch plant. If mentoring would get me access to the machine shop and lab they can use all year round it would be worth it.
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,031
Total Cats: 6,596
I don't know how this took me so long to figure out...
During the Roger Moore era, James Bond commonly uses the alias James Stock as a cover.
Bond and Stock.... Stocks and Bonds are the two most commonly traded investment instruments.
Very clever, Ian Fleming.
During the Roger Moore era, James Bond commonly uses the alias James Stock as a cover.
Bond and Stock.... Stocks and Bonds are the two most commonly traded investment instruments.
Very clever, Ian Fleming.
Elite Member
iTrader: (2)
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Istanbul, Turkey
Posts: 3,214
Total Cats: 1,687
Eddie is going under the knife in about 18 hours.
He is an 11 year old Terrier mix, and we have lived together for over 10 years now.
Eddie's life has been far from uneventful so far. Someone had slit his throat when I found him. He had several serious cuts all over his body. Repairing the wounds and stitching him up took hours, and I saw the light in his eyes go out during that time.
We took care of Eddie as best as we could, and he recovered.
A few years later someone slashed Eddie's "wrists". Not wrists per se, but those areas on his limbs where bleeding would be profuse.
About 2 1/2 hours into the surgery, the vet wanted to give up and I had to plead him to continue while I was trying to stop the stubborn bleeding. His eyes went dark again.
It took a whole lot more than TLC for him to recover, but he recovered fully.
All of that is ancient history now.
We noticed blood in his urine about 8 months ago. Canine TVT. Transmissible Venereal Tumor.
Vets suggested an aggressive immune boosting drug and supplement therapy, and we followed it to the letter. It helped, but did not fully cure Eddie.
Then came chemo...
Chemo almost killed him. He stopped eating, threw up for days, and lost too much weight.
Eddie used to be around 35 lbs, he went down to 26.
I concocted a recipe in desperation - a "tasty" meal with chicken livers, carrots, zucchinis, rice, olive oil, curcumin.
He was not able to eat any of it, so we blended his meals and fed him with a large syringe.
He begun gaining weight a couple ounces at a time, and started to eat on his own once he was over the trauma of chemo.
Then, I had to leave for Zanzibar for three weeks to shoot some episodes.
I came back home to find a lemon size tumor on Eddie's hip. Biopsies, tests followed. It was malignant.
So, we spent a month trying to boost his immune system and make him strong enough for a major surgery.
He's back to his normal weight now. Meanwhile, the tumor has grown somewhat .
Two experienced vets and a surgeon from the University will be operating on him tomorrow.
I will have a couple weeks with him during his recovery before I have to leave for Nepal till the end of March.
I have no idea why I am typing all these details here, but Eddie is a part of me. We are family after all these years.
So, Monday evening 9 pm Turkish standard time is when Eddie will be sedated and prepped for surgery.
I will be there to wake him up.
He is an 11 year old Terrier mix, and we have lived together for over 10 years now.
Eddie's life has been far from uneventful so far. Someone had slit his throat when I found him. He had several serious cuts all over his body. Repairing the wounds and stitching him up took hours, and I saw the light in his eyes go out during that time.
We took care of Eddie as best as we could, and he recovered.
A few years later someone slashed Eddie's "wrists". Not wrists per se, but those areas on his limbs where bleeding would be profuse.
About 2 1/2 hours into the surgery, the vet wanted to give up and I had to plead him to continue while I was trying to stop the stubborn bleeding. His eyes went dark again.
It took a whole lot more than TLC for him to recover, but he recovered fully.
All of that is ancient history now.
We noticed blood in his urine about 8 months ago. Canine TVT. Transmissible Venereal Tumor.
Vets suggested an aggressive immune boosting drug and supplement therapy, and we followed it to the letter. It helped, but did not fully cure Eddie.
Then came chemo...
Chemo almost killed him. He stopped eating, threw up for days, and lost too much weight.
Eddie used to be around 35 lbs, he went down to 26.
I concocted a recipe in desperation - a "tasty" meal with chicken livers, carrots, zucchinis, rice, olive oil, curcumin.
He was not able to eat any of it, so we blended his meals and fed him with a large syringe.
He begun gaining weight a couple ounces at a time, and started to eat on his own once he was over the trauma of chemo.
Then, I had to leave for Zanzibar for three weeks to shoot some episodes.
I came back home to find a lemon size tumor on Eddie's hip. Biopsies, tests followed. It was malignant.
So, we spent a month trying to boost his immune system and make him strong enough for a major surgery.
He's back to his normal weight now. Meanwhile, the tumor has grown somewhat .
Two experienced vets and a surgeon from the University will be operating on him tomorrow.
I will have a couple weeks with him during his recovery before I have to leave for Nepal till the end of March.
I have no idea why I am typing all these details here, but Eddie is a part of me. We are family after all these years.
So, Monday evening 9 pm Turkish standard time is when Eddie will be sedated and prepped for surgery.
I will be there to wake him up.
Best wishes (dare i say godspeed to a commie?) for Eddie. He's lucky to have you to look after him, and even luckier that you have the resources to address his issues. I'm sure you're both pretty stuck on each other. It's funny how the little rascals can wrap you up like that. I've got a little Terrier that's into me for about a thousand dollars a pound at this point, but I would surely do it all over again.
Elite Member
iTrader: (2)
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Istanbul, Turkey
Posts: 3,214
Total Cats: 1,687
All went well.
Poor dog is wearing a diaper and snoozing off in his favorite chair now.
I would like to spare you guys and refrain from posting the gory surgery photos, but the damn tumor is almost a full pound.
The surgeons had to use liberal amounts of synthetic mesh to form a foundation for tissue growth in the massive cavity.
The drain will be removed on Thursday, and we will start feeding him solid food in about a week.
I went to bed at around 7:30 am and slept for a few hours.
We will be going to the vet everyday for about a week, maybe 10 days for redressing, antibiotics, other medication and stuff.
He is OK, and that's what matters now.
Poor dog is wearing a diaper and snoozing off in his favorite chair now.
I would like to spare you guys and refrain from posting the gory surgery photos, but the damn tumor is almost a full pound.
The surgeons had to use liberal amounts of synthetic mesh to form a foundation for tissue growth in the massive cavity.
The drain will be removed on Thursday, and we will start feeding him solid food in about a week.
I went to bed at around 7:30 am and slept for a few hours.
We will be going to the vet everyday for about a week, maybe 10 days for redressing, antibiotics, other medication and stuff.
He is OK, and that's what matters now.
Not quite as bad as "What is that noise and smoke coming from my APC UPS?" Which I promptly unplugged and rushed to the driveway last night.
Boost Pope
iTrader: (8)
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Chicago. (The less-murder part.)
Posts: 33,031
Total Cats: 6,596
Reminds me of when I changed the battery in my old Kindle about a year ago. It's a pouch-type lipo, and judging by the amount of adhesive holding it to the case, Amazon really did not intend for you to be replacing it. After heating the lid with a hair-dryer, you have to scrape the batter out of the device. The vendor I bought the battery from even includes a little plastic scraping tool for this purpose, and cautions you to be careful not to puncture the battery.
Well, I punctured the battery. Since it was almost fully discharged to begin with, the subsequent thermal excursion was not quite as energetic as some of the youtube videos you see, but I still wound up running outside, in the snow, in my pajamas, with the battery smoldering in a large glass bowl, looking for a place where I could toss it. I wound up just dumping in on the ground and waiting for it to finish.
LiPo batteries scare me.