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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits

It's just a load of cut and paste 'stolen' together from old appnotes,
datasheets, etc. No source references.

But here it is anyway...

Andy.
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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits

Andy Cap wrote:
It's just a load of cut and paste 'stolen' together from old appnotes,
datasheets, etc. No source references.

But here it is anyway...

Andy.

In these days of free storage, do you have a link for all of this in one
piece ?

donald
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StickThatInYourPipeAndSmokeIt wrote:
On Fri, 02 May 2008 05:48:50 -0700, donald



This is USENET, you idiot!



If you live in a pushbutton world where you want it all to happen in
one button press, you'll need to kill yourself, and get re-incarnated
in about ten years. Right now, there are steps required.


Dude - it you who is in the timwarp. Free online storage of large size is
available NOW.


Also, "in these days of free storage" one is still NOT permitted to
"store" the works of others, and one certainly does not have the legal
right to make said Other Owned IP materials available to others.



Well you are not 'permitted' to distribute it on USENET either !

geoff


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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits

Thank You!

"Andy Cap" wrote in message
...
It's just a load of cut and paste 'stolen' together from old appnotes,
datasheets, etc. No source references.

But here it is anyway...

Andy.


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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits

Could someone possibly just put the entire archive of this on a web site
somewhere? Files 1 and 2 of the 14 have already scrolled off my news server.




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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits - torrent help?

I'd be happy to make a bittorrent out of it. I'm new to this stuff and while
I have no problem downloading torrents, I have not been able to upload the
torrents and configure a tracker. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Oppie

"Joel Koltner" wrote in message
...
Could someone possibly just put the entire archive of this on a web site
somewhere? Files 1 and 2 of the 14 have already scrolled off my news
server.


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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits - torrent help?

Well, I just created a torrent file and re-used a tracker. We'll see if this
works. watch www.thepiratebay.org
Graf-Encyclopedia of electronic circuits [6 volumes]

If you don't have it already, get the bittorrent client from
www.bittorrent.com
Can also check www.youtorrent.com to see if the files pop up on any other
servers.

"Oppie" wrote in message news:vNISj.15$ch1.4@trndny09...
I'd be happy to make a bittorrent out of it. I'm new to this stuff and
while I have no problem downloading torrents, I have not been able to
upload the torrents and configure a tracker. Any help would be greatly
appreciated.
Oppie

"Joel Koltner" wrote in message
...
Could someone possibly just put the entire archive of this on a web site
somewhere? Files 1 and 2 of the 14 have already scrolled off my news
server.


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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits - torrent help?

Messed the last one up...
Try http://www.mininova.org/get/1377069


"Oppie" wrote in message
news:vNISj.15$ch1.4@trndny09...
I'd be happy to make a bittorrent out of it. I'm new to this stuff and
while I have no problem downloading torrents, I have not been able to
upload the torrents and configure a tracker. Any help would be greatly
appreciated.
Oppie

"Joel Koltner" wrote in message
...
Could someone possibly just put the entire archive of this on a web site
somewhere? Files 1 and 2 of the 14 have already scrolled off my news
server.


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wrote in message
...
They do not "scroll off" idiot.


It's a figure or speech, Prong Boy. It means that it's no longer available
(or didn't show up in the first place) from the news server I use...


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wrote in message
...
I'd bet it IS still on the server, dip****, and your retarded guess at
what it by calling it "scrolling" is about as far off as it gets.


Great... then the burden of proof is on you to demonstrate it really is still
there. Let me know what you find...

Meanwhile, I'm happy with the BitTorrent copy that Oppie provided.




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fwiw- the verizon server that I use usually has pretty good retention. All
the same, I went looking for the originals and came up empty on any server I
tried. This was almost 2 weeks after they had been posted. Was very happy
when Andy re-posted them to abse on 5/2. That was the copy the torrent was
made from.
Too much petty bickering going on.

"Joel Koltner" wrote in message
...
wrote in message
...
I'd bet it IS still on the server, dip****, and your retarded guess at
what it by calling it "scrolling" is about as far off as it gets.


Great... then the burden of proof is on you to demonstrate it really is
still there. Let me know what you find...

Meanwhile, I'm happy with the BitTorrent copy that Oppie provided.


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"Andy Cap" wrote in message

It's just a load of cut and paste 'stolen' together from old appnotes,
datasheets, etc. No source references.

But here it is anyway...

Andy.


Much thanks.

Why the Arabic writing on the cover? Is it the IED Edition?

First sentence of first chapter: "The circuit has a built-in self-arming
feature." That could be useful.


--

Reply in group, but if emailing add another
zero, and remove the last word.


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"Andy Cap" wrote in message
...
It's just a load of cut and paste 'stolen' together from old appnotes,
datasheets, etc. No source references.

But here it is anyway...

Andy.


Hi Andy ... At the risk of sounding ignorant, how can I read this? Thank
you.

Cordially,
west


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flipper wrote in
:
On 02 May 2008 08:02:15 GMT, Andy Cap wrote:
No source references.


There's a source reference for each and every one in the "Source"
section.


Quite right. I never read that far. My apologies then to the book-maker,
I thought it was just the Nazir Matni guy that pasted toghether this
stuff.

Andy.
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"Andy Cap" wrote in message
...
flipper wrote in
:
On 02 May 2008 08:02:15 GMT, Andy Cap wrote:
No source references.


There's a source reference for each and every one in the "Source"
section.


Quite right. I never read that far. My apologies then to the book-maker,
I thought it was just the Nazir Matni guy that pasted toghether this
stuff.

Andy.


Well, I for one thank you very much for posting this stuff, whoever put it
together. It's wonderful.

Dave




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"flipper" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 3 May 2008 08:59:52 -0500, "Dave" wrote:


"Andy Cap" wrote in message
. ..
flipper wrote in
:
On 02 May 2008 08:02:15 GMT, Andy Cap wrote:
No source references.

There's a source reference for each and every one in the "Source"
section.

Quite right. I never read that far. My apologies then to the book-maker,
I thought it was just the Nazir Matni guy that pasted toghether this
stuff.

Andy.


Well, I for one thank you very much for posting this stuff, whoever put it
together. It's wonderful.

Dave


Btw, I did a google on those books and looked at some (reader)
reviews. Most of them commented on the lack of circuit descriptions,,
missing part values, "full of (circuit) errors" and (some) "circuits
didn't work."

The first two are not really fair complaints, because that's not what
the books are for, but keep it in mind. (In fact, he explains the lack
of text is to leave more room for circuits)

Who knows about the last two. After all, he didn't create the
circuits, just reprinted them from other sources. Write a letter to
National Semiconductor.

They're not 'circuit cookbooks'. They're more a collection of 'circuit
ideas'.


Hey Flipper,

The "circuit ideas" works for me. That is in fact what I am using them for.
The first thing I ever built was a transistor tester from an article in
(June? 1976?) Popular Electronics that was full of errors which I sat down
and figured out how to fix. Since then, I don't trust or expect perfection
from any schematic or article. Hell, half the time you can't get some of
the parts they call for, and the rest of the time you want the circuit to do
something slightly different anyway.

BTW, any ideas on what all that stuff is following the files for Volume 6?
(Files 7/14 through 14/14.) Someone mentioned recovery files, but the six
volumes came through just fine with nothing more than a few half-hours worth
of point and click, followed by the Combine and Decode function under the
Message menu. And I was honestly wondering if the Combine and Decode
function was what I needed to somehow use when you pointed me in that
direction. Thanks again for that. Once you explained it it made perfect
sense.

Dave


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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits


"flipper" wrote in message
news
On Sat, 3 May 2008 16:09:36 -0500, "Dave" wrote:


"flipper" wrote in message
. ..
On Sat, 3 May 2008 08:59:52 -0500, "Dave" wrote:


"Andy Cap" wrote in message
3...
flipper wrote in
:
On 02 May 2008 08:02:15 GMT, Andy Cap wrote:
No source references.

There's a source reference for each and every one in the "Source"
section.

Quite right. I never read that far. My apologies then to the
book-maker,
I thought it was just the Nazir Matni guy that pasted toghether this
stuff.

Andy.

Well, I for one thank you very much for posting this stuff, whoever put
it
together. It's wonderful.

Dave


Btw, I did a google on those books and looked at some (reader)
reviews. Most of them commented on the lack of circuit descriptions,,
missing part values, "full of (circuit) errors" and (some) "circuits
didn't work."

The first two are not really fair complaints, because that's not what
the books are for, but keep it in mind. (In fact, he explains the lack
of text is to leave more room for circuits)

Who knows about the last two. After all, he didn't create the
circuits, just reprinted them from other sources. Write a letter to
National Semiconductor.

They're not 'circuit cookbooks'. They're more a collection of 'circuit
ideas'.


Hey Flipper,

The "circuit ideas" works for me. That is in fact what I am using them
for.
The first thing I ever built was a transistor tester from an article in
(June? 1976?) Popular Electronics that was full of errors which I sat
down
and figured out how to fix. Since then, I don't trust or expect
perfection
from any schematic or article. Hell, half the time you can't get some of
the parts they call for, and the rest of the time you want the circuit to
do
something slightly different anyway.


Yeah, that's what I use 'collections' for as well and I probably
wouldn't have thought to mention it before seeing those reviews where
they obviously expected 'cookbook' circuits.


BTW, any ideas on what all that stuff is following the files for Volume 6?
(Files 7/14 through 14/14.) Someone mentioned recovery files,


Right, they're recovery files.

If there's a 'part' missing/scrambled then the 'combine and decode'
file will be corrupt. Now, there's a couple of ways to deal with that
eventuality. One would be to request the missing/scrambled part to be
re-posted, and it used to be commonly done, but you can see that could
become a real PITA for the poster.

PAR (Parity ARchive) runs an error correcting algorithm across the
entire file (or file set) creating the PAR files which can then be
used to not only check the validity of the original file (or file set)
but reconstruct missing parts, with the degree of reconstruction
possible depending on how many PARs were created.

You need a PAR program, like smartpar or quickpar, to use (and create)
the PAR files.

Btw, the numbers in the PAR file name indicates how many 'parts' they
contain so, for example, if you have missing/corrupted parts the PAR
program will, after scanning them, say something like "x parts needed"
and you only need to download enough of the PARs to fill that need.
And you don't need to start at '1' and download in sequence. You could
download just any one, or combination of, PAR file(s) that has enough
parts.

The 'first' PAR file, the smallest one, has no 'parts' but is all
that's needed to do the scan so what I usually do is download all the
parts and the first, 'no parts', PAR to run a check and see if any
correction is needed before wasting time downloading them all.

Might be worth mentioning there's another one, SFV (Simple File
Verification) that also needs it's own little program. It will verify
the integrity of a file set but has no correction capability and isn't
terribly useful anymore since PAR accomplished that, plus correction.
But some folks still post SFVs with the file set anyway.

RAR is a file (or file set) compressor similar to ZIP. They both can
break the archive into multiple files so you'd download all the RARs
(ZIPs), save them to disk, and then use WinRAR (or WinZIP if ZIP
files) to decode the entire archive. Or, if one or more of the RAR/ZIP
files were corrupt you'd download PARs to fix those so you have a
complete set to then be decoded by WinRAR/WinZIP.


but the six
volumes came through just fine with nothing more than a few half-hours
worth
of point and click, followed by the Combine and Decode function under the
Message menu.


Well, as I mentioned, if you do much downloading that'll get tiresome
real quick but a decent (binary) news reader will automatically
combine the messages into one for the message list and then just
clicking on that 'combined' message will download the whole ball of
wax while you're off doing something more amusing..

NZBs automate the process even more by being a 'one file' (the NZB
file) click for an entire file set. Like, say, a music collection
(album). So rather than having to select each song, and the PARs,
you'd just click on "Mr Bs Music Collection.nzb" and the whole thing
is downloaded while you're off doing something more amusing.

You need an NZB program to use those.

And I was honestly wondering if the Combine and Decode
function was what I needed to somehow use when you pointed me in that
direction.


I believe you.

Thanks again for that. Once you explained it it made perfect
sense.


Glad I could help.


Dave


Okay, so I will eventually need some different software, if I'm going to be
doing much downloading. Much to learn. Question, if you don't mind...
alt.binaries.e-book.technical there are some new files just posted, and
among them is a three part file for a world map of time zones that is
apparently a pdf when decoded (it has some information at the beginning of
each of the three posts indicating start, length and the fact that it is a
pdf, among other stuff) that the combine/decode function apparently doesn't
know how to handle. Any idea on how I can decode this three-part file? It
is in the same format as other stuff around it, all posted by Ikeaboy, if
you are interested in seeing what I am talking about. I would love some
help with dealing with this type of file too, if you don't mind. And if
not, I'll understand. Thought I would ask though.

Thanks again,

Dave


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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits


"flipper" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 4 May 2008 09:21:50 -0500, "Dave" wrote:


"flipper" wrote in message
news
On Sat, 3 May 2008 16:09:36 -0500, "Dave" wrote:


"flipper" wrote in message
m...
On Sat, 3 May 2008 08:59:52 -0500, "Dave" wrote:


"Andy Cap" wrote in message
. 133...
flipper wrote in
:
On 02 May 2008 08:02:15 GMT, Andy Cap wrote:
No source references.

There's a source reference for each and every one in the "Source"
section.

Quite right. I never read that far. My apologies then to the
book-maker,
I thought it was just the Nazir Matni guy that pasted toghether this
stuff.

Andy.

Well, I for one thank you very much for posting this stuff, whoever
put
it
together. It's wonderful.

Dave


Btw, I did a google on those books and looked at some (reader)
reviews. Most of them commented on the lack of circuit descriptions,,
missing part values, "full of (circuit) errors" and (some) "circuits
didn't work."

The first two are not really fair complaints, because that's not what
the books are for, but keep it in mind. (In fact, he explains the lack
of text is to leave more room for circuits)

Who knows about the last two. After all, he didn't create the
circuits, just reprinted them from other sources. Write a letter to
National Semiconductor.

They're not 'circuit cookbooks'. They're more a collection of 'circuit
ideas'.

Hey Flipper,

The "circuit ideas" works for me. That is in fact what I am using them
for.
The first thing I ever built was a transistor tester from an article in
(June? 1976?) Popular Electronics that was full of errors which I sat
down
and figured out how to fix. Since then, I don't trust or expect
perfection
from any schematic or article. Hell, half the time you can't get some
of
the parts they call for, and the rest of the time you want the circuit
to
do
something slightly different anyway.

Yeah, that's what I use 'collections' for as well and I probably
wouldn't have thought to mention it before seeing those reviews where
they obviously expected 'cookbook' circuits.


BTW, any ideas on what all that stuff is following the files for Volume
6?
(Files 7/14 through 14/14.) Someone mentioned recovery files,

Right, they're recovery files.

If there's a 'part' missing/scrambled then the 'combine and decode'
file will be corrupt. Now, there's a couple of ways to deal with that
eventuality. One would be to request the missing/scrambled part to be
re-posted, and it used to be commonly done, but you can see that could
become a real PITA for the poster.

PAR (Parity ARchive) runs an error correcting algorithm across the
entire file (or file set) creating the PAR files which can then be
used to not only check the validity of the original file (or file set)
but reconstruct missing parts, with the degree of reconstruction
possible depending on how many PARs were created.

You need a PAR program, like smartpar or quickpar, to use (and create)
the PAR files.

Btw, the numbers in the PAR file name indicates how many 'parts' they
contain so, for example, if you have missing/corrupted parts the PAR
program will, after scanning them, say something like "x parts needed"
and you only need to download enough of the PARs to fill that need.
And you don't need to start at '1' and download in sequence. You could
download just any one, or combination of, PAR file(s) that has enough
parts.

The 'first' PAR file, the smallest one, has no 'parts' but is all
that's needed to do the scan so what I usually do is download all the
parts and the first, 'no parts', PAR to run a check and see if any
correction is needed before wasting time downloading them all.

Might be worth mentioning there's another one, SFV (Simple File
Verification) that also needs it's own little program. It will verify
the integrity of a file set but has no correction capability and isn't
terribly useful anymore since PAR accomplished that, plus correction.
But some folks still post SFVs with the file set anyway.

RAR is a file (or file set) compressor similar to ZIP. They both can
break the archive into multiple files so you'd download all the RARs
(ZIPs), save them to disk, and then use WinRAR (or WinZIP if ZIP
files) to decode the entire archive. Or, if one or more of the RAR/ZIP
files were corrupt you'd download PARs to fix those so you have a
complete set to then be decoded by WinRAR/WinZIP.


but the six
volumes came through just fine with nothing more than a few half-hours
worth
of point and click, followed by the Combine and Decode function under
the
Message menu.

Well, as I mentioned, if you do much downloading that'll get tiresome
real quick but a decent (binary) news reader will automatically
combine the messages into one for the message list and then just
clicking on that 'combined' message will download the whole ball of
wax while you're off doing something more amusing..

NZBs automate the process even more by being a 'one file' (the NZB
file) click for an entire file set. Like, say, a music collection
(album). So rather than having to select each song, and the PARs,
you'd just click on "Mr Bs Music Collection.nzb" and the whole thing
is downloaded while you're off doing something more amusing.

You need an NZB program to use those.

And I was honestly wondering if the Combine and Decode
function was what I needed to somehow use when you pointed me in that
direction.

I believe you.

Thanks again for that. Once you explained it it made perfect
sense.

Glad I could help.


Dave


Okay, so I will eventually need some different software, if I'm going to
be
doing much downloading. Much to learn. Question, if you don't mind...
alt.binaries.e-book.technical there are some new files just posted, and
among them is a three part file for a world map of time zones that is
apparently a pdf when decoded (it has some information at the beginning of
each of the three posts indicating start, length and the fact that it is a
pdf, among other stuff) that the combine/decode function apparently
doesn't
know how to handle. Any idea on how I can decode this three-part file?
It
is in the same format as other stuff around it, all posted by Ikeaboy, if
you are interested in seeing what I am talking about. I would love some
help with dealing with this type of file too, if you don't mind. And if
not, I'll understand. Thought I would ask though.


Would have helped if you had posted the file name but I presume you
mean this one.

"Maps Of The World - Time Zones.pdf" yEnc

The yEnc on the end of the name explains it. It was posted using the
yEnc protocol and, as I think I mentioned in one of the earlier posts,
Outlook Express knows nothing about yEnc.

As mentioned before, USENET was originally intended for text only and
some 'tricks' have to be played to get binaries into a form that looks
like text. The original means to do so was uuencode (basically, it
chops up 8 bit bytes and maps the pieces to an ASCII character.
Decoding is the reverse), which Outlook supports. Outlook also
supports MIME. YEnc is a newer method that is more efficient than
uuencode, which is why it's become rather popular, and almost
everything supports it except, of course, Outlook Express.

There's a 3'rd party 'run time' decoder for Outlook Express that used
to be free and now costs money but I don't see a really good reason
for burning cash just to make OE an only slightly less crappy binary
reader, especially when Xnews is free.

http://xnews.newsguy.com/

I don't use that one (I use Forte Agent, which isn't freeware) but
hear it's not the most user friendly... but then, it costs nothing to
try and gets the job done. If you don't like it, nuke it and no skin
lost.

If you're inextricably married to Outlook Express there's still a
(free) way to do it and that's to "combine and decode" like you would
a 'normal' message set except "save as" TEXT to disk. In other words,
you save it 'just as it is' (text) in the (combined) messages with NO
decoding (because OE will screw it up if allowed to attempt the
decode). Then use this thing

http://www.yenc32.com/oeusers.php

to decode the file full of binary gibberish text you just saved. The
decoder will create a second file that's 'the real thing' and, when
it's done, you can delete the binary gibberish text file.

Or use OE for text, if you like it, and Xnews for just the binaries.




Thanks again,

Dave


Hello Flipper,

Yes, that's the file. Sorry I didn't name it. I had no idea that group
filled up so fast.

If I created an nzb file out of those three parts, would Grabit help me
decode them? Sorry if that is a stupid question, I just really don't know.

Thanks,

Dave


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Wes Wes is offline
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Default Graf - Encyclopedia of Electronic Circuits


"flipper" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 4 May 2008 09:21:50 -0500, "Dave" wrote:


snip

Would have helped if you had posted the file name but I presume you
mean this one.

"Maps Of The World - Time Zones.pdf" yEnc

The yEnc on the end of the name explains it. It was posted using the
yEnc protocol and, as I think I mentioned in one of the earlier posts,
Outlook Express knows nothing about yEnc.

As mentioned before, USENET was originally intended for text only and
some 'tricks' have to be played to get binaries into a form that looks
like text. The original means to do so was uuencode (basically, it
chops up 8 bit bytes and maps the pieces to an ASCII character.
Decoding is the reverse), which Outlook supports. Outlook also
supports MIME. YEnc is a newer method that is more efficient than
uuencode, which is why it's become rather popular, and almost
everything supports it except, of course, Outlook Express.

There's a 3'rd party 'run time' decoder for Outlook Express that used
to be free and now costs money but I don't see a really good reason
for burning cash just to make OE an only slightly less crappy binary
reader, especially when Xnews is free.

http://xnews.newsguy.com/

I don't use that one (I use Forte Agent, which isn't freeware) but
hear it's not the most user friendly... but then, it costs nothing to
try and gets the job done. If you don't like it, nuke it and no skin
lost.

If you're inextricably married to Outlook Express there's still a
(free) way to do it and that's to "combine and decode" like you would
a 'normal' message set except "save as" TEXT to disk. In other words,
you save it 'just as it is' (text) in the (combined) messages with NO
decoding (because OE will screw it up if allowed to attempt the
decode). Then use this thing

http://www.yenc32.com/oeusers.php

to decode the file full of binary gibberish text you just saved. The
decoder will create a second file that's 'the real thing' and, when
it's done, you can delete the binary gibberish text file.

Or use OE for text, if you like it, and Xnews for just the binaries.


I found the quickest way to use OE and Yenc32 is to drag and drop the
downloaded OE messages in to a Yenc32 decode directory. Then select all the
save files and use the Yenc32 right click menu item to decode them. The
decoder can handle nws files fine, no need to make them text. the Set up
options of Yenc32 can delete the original files automatically on a
successful decode.

Wes.


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"flipper" wrote in message
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On Sat, 3 May 2008 16:09:36 -0500, "Dave" wrote:

..BTW, any ideas on what all that stuff is following the files for Volume
6?
(Files 7/14 through 14/14.) Someone mentioned recovery files,


Right, they're recovery files.

If there's a 'part' missing/scrambled then the 'combine and decode'
file will be corrupt. Now, there's a couple of ways to deal with that
eventuality. One would be to request the missing/scrambled part to be
re-posted, and it used to be commonly done, but you can see that could
become a real PITA for the poster.

PAR (Parity ARchive) runs an error correcting algorithm across the
entire file (or file set) creating the PAR files which can then be
used to not only check the validity of the original file (or file set)
but reconstruct missing parts, with the degree of reconstruction
possible depending on how many PARs were created.

You need a PAR program, like smartpar or quickpar, to use (and create)
the PAR files.

Btw, the numbers in the PAR file name indicates how many 'parts' they
contain so, for example, if you have missing/corrupted parts the PAR
program will, after scanning them, say something like "x parts needed"
and you only need to download enough of the PARs to fill that need.
And you don't need to start at '1' and download in sequence. You could
download just any one, or combination of, PAR file(s) that has enough
parts.

The 'first' PAR file, the smallest one, has no 'parts' but is all
that's needed to do the scan so what I usually do is download all the
parts and the first, 'no parts', PAR to run a check and see if any
correction is needed before wasting time downloading them all.

Might be worth mentioning there's another one, SFV (Simple File
Verification) that also needs it's own little program. It will verify
the integrity of a file set but has no correction capability and isn't
terribly useful anymore since PAR accomplished that, plus correction.
But some folks still post SFVs with the file set anyway.

RAR is a file (or file set) compressor similar to ZIP. They both can
break the archive into multiple files so you'd download all the RARs
(ZIPs), save them to disk, and then use WinRAR (or WinZIP if ZIP
files) to decode the entire archive. Or, if one or more of the RAR/ZIP
files were corrupt you'd download PARs to fix those so you have a
complete set to then be decoded by WinRAR/WinZIP.


but the six
volumes came through just fine with nothing more than a few half-hours
worth
of point and click, followed by the Combine and Decode function under the
Message menu.


Well, as I mentioned, if you do much downloading that'll get tiresome
real quick but a decent (binary) news reader will automatically
combine the messages into one for the message list and then just
clicking on that 'combined' message will download the whole ball of
wax while you're off doing something more amusing..

NZBs automate the process even more by being a 'one file' (the NZB
file) click for an entire file set. Like, say, a music collection
(album). So rather than having to select each song, and the PARs,
you'd just click on "Mr Bs Music Collection.nzb" and the whole thing
is downloaded while you're off doing something more amusing.

You need an NZB program to use those.

And I was honestly wondering if the Combine and Decode
function was what I needed to somehow use when you pointed me in that
direction.


I believe you.

Thanks again for that. Once you explained it it made perfect
sense.


Glad I could help.


Dave


To decode the par files, use quickpar
http://www.download.com/QuickPar/300...dlPid=10521463

On the combined and decoded files, click on the PAR2 file and it should open
the rest of the PAR records then tell you if the original records can be
corrected or what. Handy tool on Usenet where some parts can get corrupted
or missed.



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