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|  Message 24433  |
|  Mike Powell to BOB WORM  |
|  I watched a movie the oth  |
|  08 Sep 25 08:43:27  |
 TZUTC: -0500 MSGID: 26719.memoryln@1:2320/105 2d247bde REPLY: 5381.fidonet_memories@2:250/3 2d22e8d5 PID: Synchronet 3.21a-Linux master/123f2d28a Jul 12 2025 GCC 12.2.0 TID: SBBSecho 3.28-Linux master/123f2d28a Jul 12 2025 GCC 12.2.0 BBSID: CAPCITY2 CHRS: ASCII 1 FORMAT: flowed > This echo is unlocking memories left and right :) Good! > One of my good friends used to work in a radio station (in the UK, where we > both live). The button, down in engineering at least, to drop the 8 second (?) > buffer contents was marked "DUMP", which my brother and I always thought was > hilarious for, well, being another word for poo. We never got to press it :( That might be appropriate, considering what the buffer might be used for. ;) > Anyway, the real reason I'm replying about this is because the mechanism they > used to build up the 8s buffer was a little bit smart (for the nineties, at > least). It used to, supposedly imperceptibly, extend the tiny bits of silence > in between songs, adverts and spoken words, until it had added the magic 8s of > extra silence and the program was running 8s behind live ready to dump again. > am not sure what happened if your next caller swore as well before it had > banked enough time. Possibly you got dead air, then. But that might have > tripped off the dead air detector. That is interesting! I wonder what made them settle on 8 vs. some other number (like 10). Maybe that is the number of seconds it takes the average user to realize something is being said and hit the button? > Unlikely, though, being as my mate had it tuned to a different radio station > which was more his taste to listen to in the engineering room :) LOL Mike * SLMR 2.1a * Only XT users know that January 1, 1980 was a Tuesday. --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105) SEEN-BY: 4/0 19/10 90/0 93/1 104/119 105/81 106/201 114/10 120/302 SEEN-BY: 120/616 128/187 129/14 305 153/757 7715 154/10 30 50 110 SEEN-BY: 154/700 218/700 840 220/30 90 221/1 6 360 226/18 30 44 50 SEEN-BY: 227/114 229/110 206 300 317 400 426 428 470 664 700 705 266/512 SEEN-BY: 280/464 291/111 292/854 301/1 320/219 322/757 335/364 341/66 SEEN-BY: 341/200 234 342/200 396/45 460/58 633/280 712/848 900/0 102 SEEN-BY: 900/106 902/0 19 26 905/0 2320/0 105 304 3634/12 5019/40 SEEN-BY: 5075/35 PATH: 2320/105 154/10 221/6 341/66 902/26 229/426 |
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