Nice 😉He be speakin' Strine.
I've never barbequed a prawn in my life, I'd rather 1000 island dressing lol.
Aus would be 'bybie'.
We call them prawns, and never shrimps.
Calling them shrimps was an Americanisation so the Yanks had any hope of understanding.
We just laugh (mockingly) when we hear Yanks saying it.
Dan.
we know them by either names, but ironically we get many more laughs in our culture from both from your tourism media campaigns that created that silly phrase in the 1st place. see my link above and we get to enjoy other sayings like 'gigantic shrimp'. BTW I meant Bybee not BBQ... whooosh
Poms can't do Aus accent either.
Dan.
Ah but lads who's language do you butcher with your colloquial twangs😛
Yes we can, we get practice at any bar in london with the ubiquitious gap year barmen from down under 😛
You guys don't say that too do... I mean hey! that's my cousin you're talking about. 😛from down under 😛
Good prawns are great, but I agree that yabbies can be sweeter.I've never got this thing in Oz about prawns - tasteless nothings to me! Yabbies, freshwater crayfish, are the go for flavour - this is what I did in my very young days, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yupHU1_VWNI, and in the same area - my childhood stamping grounds. I have memories of a bucket full to the brim with these, superb eating ...
One of the best Easters I have had was camped on a SW WA property dam wall with workmates with half a dozen Yabbie traps set continually.
To die for is fresh cooked Yabbie, on fresh country bakery Vienna bread with brie, avocado, lemon juice and S&P.....multiple orgasmic !.
Dan.
Yabbie - Crawdad - Crayfish - Crawfish - Mudbugs
They all are what they eat. The local cold Atlantic waters tend to increase the iodine content in some of the shellfish, tastes totally different than anywhere else.
well no results from the Randi/ars technica test on ethernet cables but they took and audioquest apart
Gallery: We tear apart a $340 audiophile Ethernet cable and look inside | Ars Technica
Which annoyed Michael Lavorgna Cable Porn: Ars Technica Destroys a $340 Cable. On Purpose. | AudioStream who just threw away any minimal shred of integrity he had
The use of cheap masking tape in the vodka cable does seem very high end!
Gallery: We tear apart a $340 audiophile Ethernet cable and look inside | Ars Technica
Which annoyed Michael Lavorgna Cable Porn: Ars Technica Destroys a $340 Cable. On Purpose. | AudioStream who just threw away any minimal shred of integrity he had
The use of cheap masking tape in the vodka cable does seem very high end!
well no results from the Randi/ars technica test on ethernet cables but they took and audioquest apart
This Ethernet cable thing fascinates me, it's sort of like the two bit perfect copies that sound dramatically different. Ethernet coms is totally chopped up and packetized I don't see how one could even formulate an argument for the cable mattering. There is no sampling clock recovery involved since the audio stream is interleaved with everything else you are doing on your network.
I think we should start a rumor that printing pictures of yourself in the freezer while listening is the latest and greatest tweak.
We now can scan and 3D-print our heads - that would make for really realistic 3D listening enhancement, with or without the freezer!
How would you want to actually hear the people sitting behind you in the virtual theater!
Jan
How would you want to actually hear the people sitting behind you in the virtual theater!
Jan
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as in upping pwb by putting the printer in the freezer?
The thing with ethernet is its really easy to look at a protocol level to see if there are any retries and packet corruptions. Or do the flooby dust brigade go 'ah but shroedingers cat'?
The thing with ethernet is its really easy to look at a protocol level to see if there are any retries and packet corruptions. Or do the flooby dust brigade go 'ah but shroedingers cat'?
Or do the flooby dust brigade go 'ah but shroedingers cat'?
Excellent the same could be said for the bit perfect files, they always match when you look at them but...
I particularly like the idea of "directional" ethernet cables, with the arrow pointing "in the direction of the flow of music". This betrays a complete lack of understanding of the nature of ethernet data communications.
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