KeithR
Second Unit
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2001
- Messages
- 258
Tubes rule!
If we are to accept the opinion put forth by Chung (and Jaleel, where ever he is these days), wouldn't any conclusions drawn without such tests be meaningless?
I think you totally misunderstood my opinion or position. It is only when an extraordinary claim is made (e.g. this piece of 12-ga cable sounds 10 times better than the other piece of 12-ga cable even though the measurements are the same), then I would ask if one has done a DBT to back up that extraordinary claim. Otherwise it is an opinion that is not likely to be shared.
It might have been. In the Unites States, patent applications are not available to the public until the patent issues.
Larry B: I'm disappointed. You should know that due to the American Inventors Protection Act, all patent applications must be published 18 months after they have been filed.
I'm telling Allan...
[Thus ends our patent law lesson for today...]
patent applications must be published 18 months after they have been filed. [emphasis added]
Not true. The application is not published if one opts not to file outside the United States.
Now who's Allan going to hear about...
Larry
Edit:
1. Your point is still well taken.
2. Returning to my original point: As the applications are always secret for at least 18 months, one can not know if an application was filed recently.