<div><span class="gmail_quote">On 9/22/05, <b class="gmail_sendername">Paul Perry</b> <<a href="mailto:pfperry@melbpc.org.au">pfperry@melbpc.org.au</a>> wrote:</span>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="PADDING-LEFT: 1ex; MARGIN: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex; BORDER-LEFT: #ccc 1px solid"><snip><br>paul perry Melb australia<br>(BTW I had an EE graduate ask me "why do those resistors have an extra
<br>band?"<br>well, that was a give away that there wasn't too much hands-on analog in the<br>course<br>at Latrobe University!!!<br></snip><br></blockquote></div>
<div>I once (unintentionally) started an argument between two EEs at work by showing them a schematic for a simple envelope generator. It took one EE (a 30 year old) about half an hour to explain to the other (a 28 year old recent graduate who was running some very high-end electrical field simulation software for us) that the DC pulse coming in (the gate signal) caused the timing cap to charge up. The second EE kept coming back with "but it's a DC signal and caps block DC." He was absolutely convinced that the cap would never charge and the circuit did nothing. Neither one of them was able to answer a question I had about adding a constant-current source to make linear ramps instead of expo/RC ramps. After the dust settled, I asked both of them if either one owned a breadboard or had any test equipment at home. Both said no, in fact, the younger guy asked "what's a 'breadboard'?"
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<div>I kid you not. </div>
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<div>Now both of these guys were doing VERY involved simulations of connectors and the resulting EFI and magnetic fields with signals in the 5 to 10 GHz range, and they knew this simulation software backwards and forwards, but... ANYway, that company folded and I'm working somewhere else now. THAT shouldn't come as a surprise.
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<div><br clear="all">Tim (no longer surprised) Servo<br>-- <br>"Imagination is more important than knowledge." - Albert Einstein </div>