here's a thought - I dont know, tho
A. Maybe the bits are stored on a carrier wave? Like a T1, per se.
B. Maybe the bits arent recorded as waves. Just magnetic blips.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Stainless Steel Rat" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "MD-L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, June 06, 2001 8:28 PM
Subject: Re: MD: DCC?


>
> * Peter Jaques <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  on Wed, 06 Jun 2001
> | i'm not saying that PCM represents an audio frequency of 1411200Hz, i'm
> | saying that in order to represent 22.05kHz, the analog square wave put
on
> | tape is 1411200Hz. the square wave is the bits themselves.
>
> You are mistaken if you believe that there is a 1,411,200Hz square wave
> stored on a DAT.  All that is there is ones and zeros, which do form a
> square wave if you treated it as something audible (which it isn't) with
an
> effective frequency some twice that (~2,862,311.5Hz if I did the math
> right).
> --
> Rat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>    \ When not in use, Happy Fun Ball should
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> Minion of Nathan - Nathan says Hi! \ returned to its special container and
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