Re: OT Gas Prices and the Blame Game



On 26 mei, 05:59, "Michael A. Terrell" <mike.terr...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
bill.slo...@xxxxxxxx wrote:

On 19 mei, 09:46, "Michael A. Terrell" <mike.terr...@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
bill.slo...@xxxxxxxx wrote:

And - just for the record - I'm all in favour of cutting carbon diode
emissions back to the point where we won't lose the the ice caps and
Florida.

   WTF is a 'carbon diode'?

As a service for the terminally stupid - I meant to type "carbon
dioxide", as is obvious from the context, but made an error of
omission (a typo) which I didn't notice when I re-read the post before
sending it.

   In other words, don't blame yo for posting more nonsense.

If Michael had two neurones to rub together, he'd know about carbon
transistors - built with bucky-tubes - which are all the rage amongst
university researchers at the moment.

   Who gives a *** about sopmething that doesn't exist outside a lab?
If you can't buy it, use it, or design it into a product it is
worthless,

Agreed, for the moment. But - as Faraday said - what use is a newborn
baby?

like all the other nonsense you post in a pathetic attempt to
make others think makes you are worthwhile.

Did you have any particular nonsense (something else you didn't
understand) in mind?
Or is this just more of your improvised abuse?

Apparently someone from GE
published a paper in Applied Physics Letters back on August 15, 2005
which also mentioned carbon diodes. Google does find a lot more
references to "carbon diode" where the authors clearly intended to
type "carbon dioxide".

   Which has absolutely nothing to do with your string of errors, does
it?  Pathetic.

Your capacity to get excited about typos is pathetic, but then you
really don't know enough about electronics to get excited about
anything with any content. This puts you even further down the food
chain than John Fields who can still get excited about the 555 even
though it came out in 1971 and is - with 24 transistors and 15
resistors - a trivially simple integrated circuit.

--
Bill Sloman, Nijmegen
.


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