[sdiy] Synth Electronics

Mike Bryant mbryant at futurehorizons.com
Thu May 9 11:51:11 CEST 2024


I totally agree.  But DIY piracy of copyrighted information doesn't have a place anywhere.
________________________________
From: Synth-diy <synth-diy-bounces at synth-diy.org> on behalf of Ashlyn Black <ashlyn at ashlynblack.com>
Sent: 09 May 2024 05:33
To: synth-diy at synth-diy.org <synth-diy at synth-diy.org>
Subject: Re: [sdiy] Synth Electronics


Irrespective of Electronotes or other copyrighted material, it is my opinion that free information, advice, anecdotes, independent research etc and discussion on the nature of such things absolutely belong on a publicly available community mailing list named "Synth Do-It-Yourself."

On 9/5/24 13:53, Michael E Caloroso via Synth-diy wrote:
Oh noes they are using shaming language again.

This is just a rephrasing of the tired "music wants to be free" credo, so knock it off.  We did not spend a fortune learning engineering in college and a lifetime of acquiring knowledge to give it away for free.  That discussion does not belong on SDIY.  Do not even start.  I will not submit to manipulation or respond to replies.

MC

On Wed, May 8, 2024 at 7:17 AM Paulo Constantino via Synth-diy <synth-diy at synth-diy.org<mailto:synth-diy at synth-diy.org>> wrote:
Some people here have the full electro notes as PDF and refuse to give it to others.
Come on. We live in an open source world and the point of the internet is to share.
THere should be no morals concerning the. The book is outdated and can't be found anywhere.

Someone who refuses to share such a thing is really a blind and selfish person who thinks
are doing any moral good.

Moral good is sharing the knowledge to others. Nothing is ever achieved by selfishness and short sightedness like
this person is exhibiting.

Science and engineering is done by sharing information and not by moral principles.

Damn your moral principles. Damn them all.

On Tue, May 7, 2024 at 5:35 PM Neil Johnson <neil.johnson71 at gmail.com<mailto:neil.johnson71 at gmail.com>> wrote:
Amos wrote:
> I'm a little surprised nobody here has mentioned Horowitz and Hill's book "The Art of Electronics" (unless I missed where someone did). I think it's a great resource in terms of providing some depth and nuance to the discussion of why to to use certain designs, how to adjust them to achieve various performance goals/tradeoffs... for someone who wants to achieve musicality in their analog circuit design, I think it has some things to offer.

For opamps I prefer Sergio Franco's book "Design With Operational
Amplifiers And Analog Integrated Circuits".  Although AoE does have a
lot of useful information in it and has steadily grown in size over
the years.

Neil
________________________________________________________
This is the Synth-diy mailing list
Submit email to: Synth-diy at synth-diy.org<mailto:Synth-diy at synth-diy.org>
View archive at: https://synth-diy.org/pipermail/synth-diy/
Check your settings at: https://synth-diy.org/mailman/listinfo/synth-diy
Selling or trading? Use marketplace at synth-diy.org<mailto:marketplace at synth-diy.org>



________________________________________________________
This is the Synth-diy mailing list
Submit email to: Synth-diy at synth-diy.org<mailto:Synth-diy at synth-diy.org>
View archive at: https://synth-diy.org/pipermail/synth-diy/
Check your settings at: https://synth-diy.org/mailman/listinfo/synth-diy
Selling or trading? Use marketplace at synth-diy.org<mailto:marketplace at synth-diy.org>

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://synth-diy.org/pipermail/synth-diy/attachments/20240509/26a5b54a/attachment.htm>


More information about the Synth-diy mailing list