Listening to a podcast this morning, Guy Relford said, let me show my age with this.
Then went on to describe something I understood.
So...
Listening to a podcast this morning, Guy Relford said, let me show my age with this.
Not in the Permit and Sturgeon classes.Torpedoes are in the front
Listening to a podcast this morning, Guy Relford said, let me show my age with this.
Then went on to describe something I understood.
So...
Not in the Permit and Sturgeon classes.
I have kept some from my early purchases of Pro Audio Yamaha equipment. I ran a sound reinforcement company for over twenty five years.Believe it or not, in the 70's and very early 80's, manuals for Japanese electronic products were full of the "F" word.
Mostly in Pro Audio, but some consumer products, whenever the instructions called for you to insert a connector, or to plug something in, the manual would casually instruct you to "f*** the balanced line output into the return", or similar.
I have several Yamaha Pro Audio manuals from this period that are just a scream to read.
Rising market position and better translators brought this to a screeching halt in '82.
Wayno is known for this. (which see)I like how some cartoonists put easter eggs in their comics. Let's see, a pipe on the window sill, a stuffed rabbit OD'd on Spice, and a stick of dynamite about to light the place up like 4th of July.
I think there was an episode of "Evening Shade" where the two town idiots had an idea to build a cardboard trailer park on the outskirts of town to draw tornadoes away from town.
I wonder if this was left over from the post World War II Reconstruction. One of the books I read about rebuilding Japan noted that just like Germany it was pretty much a mess.Believe it or not, in the 70's and very early 80's, manuals for Japanese electronic products were full of the "F" word.
Mostly in Pro Audio, but some consumer products, whenever the instructions called for you to insert a connector, or to plug something in, the manual would casually instruct you to "f*** the balanced line output into the return", or similar.
I have several Yamaha Pro Audio manuals from this period that are just a scream to read.
Rising market position and better translators brought this to a screeching halt in '82.