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In Reply to: "AAAI (Ad Absurdum Ad Infinitum)" ... a nice definition of the whole GSIC affair, isn´t it? (nt) posted by orejones on June 22, 2005 at 02:31:46:
nope
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Follow Ups:
Galle, amant de la reine, alla, tour magnanime, galamment de l'arène à la Tour Magne à Nîmes.
In Germany we use to say : Ein Neger mit Gazelle zagt im Regen nie.In yout case we'd say : Unter den Blinden ist der Einäugige König.
Niemand ist so blind als diejenigen, die sich weigern zu sehen.Enjoy!
See what? Holes in you explanation? Missing evidence? You and John and Clark not answering questions?Give me facts and I won't refuse to recognize them.
I've already given you facts, many times, but you've demonstrated a certain inability to separate fact and fiction.You'll pardon me for saying this, but you've always appeared to have some bizarre ulterior motive for attacking the chip; must Revenge of the DBT'ers, who failed in their attempts to get high end sound and reverted back to some idealized vision of the past.
the only FACT we have is a plastic thing with a dotty something on it. This I can't deny since such can be seen on the pics.Apart from that there's only fiction, good enough to fool the layman.
W.r.t. DBT, even Jon Risch does NOT say that they are not appropriate (or at least, he did not in his AES paper).
I'm DBTer (or subjectivist), I don't have high-end sound (but much better!!) and I'm satisfied (which is more than many audiophiles do say of themselves).
"Much as I always enjoy a good debate with absolutely no evidence, in the case of your tango/tangle argument there is, in fact, a surprisingly definite answer to at least part of your question. The phrase "It takes two to tango" appeared in popular usage in 1952, shortly after the song "Takes Two to Tango," written by Al Hoffman and Dick Manning, and sung by Pearl Bailey, became a hit. The lyrics are an argument against the single life ("You can haunt any house by yourself, Be a man or a mouse by yourself, You can act like a king on a throne, There are lots of things that you can do alone, But it takes ... Two to tango, two to tango"), but "two to tango" was almost immediately drafted to describe any situation, from international negotiations to bar fights, that required, by definition, two participants. "
I must have been thinking of, "It takes two to Cha-cha." :-)
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Or maybe you should ........
cha-cha-(cha) is latin via Peurto-Rica / USA.About as french as giving up a CAP farm subsidy.
nope
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