Maker Pro
Maker Pro

This is getting ridiculous

G

GregS

Jan 1, 1970
0
www.speff.com/DSC_0004.jpg

Strapping... it's only a matter of time before a wooden pallet will be
required.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany

I like to have small catalogs like Jameco, and the old Digi-Key,
but I try to avoid catalogs that are hard to hold and, or, handle.
Pages are too thin, and of course I have to put on my Digi-Key
glasses.

greg
 
J

John Larkin

Jan 1, 1970
0
www.speff.com/DSC_0004.jpg

Strapping... it's only a matter of time before a wooden pallet will be
required.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany

If you didn't drink so much beer, you wouldn't be seeing everything
triple.

And our Digikey catalogs don't have American flags, so how come you
get those red leafy things?

(I've go to go down in testing and fix a nasty old problem, so that
makes me crabby. Snarl.)

John
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hello Spehro,
Strapping... it's only a matter of time before a wooden pallet will be
required.

For the beer? I like that new layout on the Killian's bottle.

Regards, Joerg
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hello zws,
Weird, the last D-K catalog I got (last year?) was only one volume.
Maybe that is the Canadian large-print edition?

Maybe it has to be printed in English and French. Just wait, it's only a
matter of time until California requires all catalogs to be bilingual.
Then you can order a new hierro de la soldadura and some of the latest
procesadores. Just came back from the plomería at the hardware store.

Regards, Joerg
 
John said:
And our Digikey catalogs don't have American flags, so how come you
get those red leafy things?

That's odd if yours doesn't, my version of the pictured catalog has the
stars and stripes on the spine about where the maple leaf is on the one
in the picture.
 
M

martin griffith

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hello Spehro,


For the beer? I like that new layout on the Killian's bottle.

Regards, Joerg
Forget the label. What's the beer like?
my favorite cheapo spanish wine looks as if they use a photocopier for
the label


martin
 
J

James Beck

Jan 1, 1970
0
That's odd if yours doesn't, my version of the pictured catalog has the
stars and stripes on the spine about where the maple leaf is on the one
in the picture.
Mine too.
 
S

Spehro Pefhany

Jan 1, 1970
0
Weird, the last D-K catalog I got (last year?) was only one volume.
Maybe that is the Canadian large-print edition?

Yeah, big print and lots of pictures. ;-) It's 3 copies of the same
thing.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
 
B

Boris Mohar

Jan 1, 1970
0
Yeah, big print and lots of pictures. ;-) It's 3 copies of the same
thing.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany

Did you ever see Allied catalog. 1900+ pages.
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hello Martin,
Forget the label. What's the beer like?
my favorite cheapo spanish wine looks as if they use a photocopier for
the label

I only had Killian's Red lately. Pretty good brew. But my favorite is
our local brewpub (Placerville Brewing Co.). Fresh from the tap into the
growler. We'll have some tonight.

Regards, Joerg
 
P

Pooh Bear

Jan 1, 1970
0
Spehro said:
www.speff.com/DSC_0004.jpg

Strapping... it's only a matter of time before a wooden pallet will be
required.

You're not familiar with Farnell obviously. 7 ? sections now I think it is. All
printed on 'rice paper'. Bloody heavy too .

Graham
 
J

John Miles

Jan 1, 1970
0
www.speff.com/DSC_0004.jpg

Strapping... it's only a matter of time before a wooden pallet will be
required.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany

Every time I get one of their new-and-improved catalogs in the mail, I'm
reminded that NOW is the "good old days." It would take a dozen career-
lifetimes to exhaust the creative possibilities in that catalog.

-- jm
 
J

Joel Kolstad

Jan 1, 1970
0
Boris Mohar said:
Did you ever see Allied catalog. 1900+ pages.

McMaster-Carr's catalog is in that same ballpark and darned difficult to get a
copy of... many end up buying them on eBay!
 
S

Spehro Pefhany

Jan 1, 1970
0
You're not familiar with Farnell obviously. 7 ? sections now I think it is. All
printed on 'rice paper'. Bloody heavy too .

Graham

Not quite free, but I think the Thomas Register has them all beat.


Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
 
J

Joerg

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hello John,
Every time I get one of their new-and-improved catalogs in the mail, I'm
reminded that NOW is the "good old days." It would take a dozen career-
lifetimes to exhaust the creative possibilities in that catalog.

Absolutely. Even the old stuff is so cheap compared to the 70's. We can
now buy ten 2N3904 for under $1.50 at Digikey. In the 70's I could not
even buy one for that, and $1.50 was a lot more money back then.

If we need a blazingly fast inverter they'll sell you the AUP1G06 for
under 50c. When I was young I had to canvass the streets on my bicycle
until I had scrapped enough AF139 transistors out of discarded TV sets
to built the same type circuit. Buying them was completely out of the
question since that would have swallowed more than a month's allowance.

Come to think of it, we didn't even have Digikey. We had a 15 mile trip
by bicycle into town hoping the electronics surplus store there carried
the needed part or something that could be kludged in. And that it was
somehow affordable.

Regards, Joerg
 
J

Joel Kolstad

Jan 1, 1970
0
Joerg said:
Come to think of it, we didn't even have Digikey. We had a 15 mile trip by
bicycle into town hoping the electronics surplus store there carried the
needed part or something that could be kludged in. And that it was somehow
affordable.

....because that's (almost) what everyone else had to do as well. These days I
think that part of the reason that analog design engineering is becoming a
lost art is that, compared to the advances in performing digital design (where
you can literally build your own CPU in Verilog in VHDL in a day), analog
design is still relatively slow.

Joerg, I think you'd be a good candidate to write a book as well! (I want to
believe that with todays cheap processors and high speed logic, with creative
analog design one should be able to build stuff like "do it at home"
ultrasound machines to sell to expectant mothers or something for, I dunno,
$149... and I figure you're the guy to be able to pull off the analog part of
the design on the cheap. :) )

---Joel
 
Joerg said:
matter of time until California requires all catalogs to be bilingual.
Then you can order a new hierro de la soldadura and some of the latest
procesadores. Just came back from the plomería at the hardware store.

Mm, but Home Depot reflects the fact that a large number of people
doing that kind of home improvement work professionally are
Spanish-speaking.

If Digi-Key's catalog went bilingual, I'd expect it to be in Hindi and
Chinese.
 
W

Winfield Hill

Jan 1, 1970
0
Joerg wrote...
When I was young I had to canvass the streets on my bicycle
until I had scrapped enough AF139 transistors out of discarded
TV sets to ...

Come to think of it, we didn't even have Digikey. We had a
15 mile trip by bicycle into town ...

Hey, you were lucky to have a bicycle. And, we didn't even
have a town. How bad was it? It was sooo bad....
 
Top