Sujet : Re: China: Government Starts Phasing Out American Processors, Operating Systems on Government Computers
De : albert (at) *nospam* spenarnc.xs4all.nl
Groupes : comp.miscDate : 29. Mar 2024, 14:12:27
Autres entêtes
Organisation : KPN B.V.
Message-ID : <nnd$63b03fb3$29ac0be6@ead54f5cc27fa1e7>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : trn 4.0-test77 (Sep 1, 2010)
In article <
87h6gqf30h.fsf@eder.anydns.info>,
Andreas Eder <
a_eder_muc@web.de> wrote:
On Do 28 Mär 2024 at 11:22, Governor Swill <governor.swill@gmail.com> wrote:
>
On Thu, 28 Mar 2024 07:22:14 -0700, John Larkin <jl@997PotHill.com> wrote:
>
On Wed, 27 Mar 2024 21:45:00 -0700, Siri Cruise
<chine.bleu@www.yahoo.com> wrote:
>
Computer Nerd Kev wrote:
In comp.misc Computer Nerd Kev <not@telling.you.invalid> wrote:
In a practical sense an important factor for semiconductor fabs has
always been yeild - how many failed chips they get in a batch.
^^^^^
I mean yield of course. I meant to spell-check that before posting
but got distracted.
>
>
How boaring to have only one way to spell un mot.
>
Rigid spelling rules are a fairly new concept. People used to write
anything that sounded about right. Looking at old correspondence, it
was common to have the same word spelled different ways in a single
letter.
>
Early versions of American documents used "f" in place of "s".
>
That was in all probability not an "f"m but a "long s".
I have a 19th century Dover book of Heuring orgelbouw.
The f and s in this book use the same character.
>
'Andreas
--
ceterum censeo redmondinem esse delendam
I hate it that a shameless call for genocide isbrainlessly quoted and paraphrased.-- Don't praise the day before the evening. One swallow doesn't make spring.You must not say "hey" before you have crossed the bridge. Don't sell thehide of the bear until you shot it. Better one bird in the hand than ten inthe air. First gain is a cat purring. - the Wise from Antrim -