On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 12:26:42 -0500, Don Pearce wrote
(in article ):
On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 10:48:32 -0500, Ty Ford
wrote:
On Fri, 9 Dec 2011 10:33:29 -0500, Don Pearce wrote
(in article ):
OK, just a difference in definition of the word "dead". For me, dead
equals anechoic. If there is any kind of reverb, the room is not dead.
d
Please revisit the OP.
"kind of 'dead' "
The modifiers "kind" and "of" = "not"
Do any of us have access to an anechoic room?
Other than Don, of course.
I no longer take any notice of words like "kind of". They are
meaningless in the modern argot.
d
That explains so much! Henceforth I'll remember that you truncate instead of
dither.
Regards,
Ty Ford
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