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Leon

Gold Meritorious Patron
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

Good stuff - FoTi. Those are your abilities. In the CofS - well that is the place you o to so that you don't ever go OT. Don't worry about them. It's out wthics there to be OT. You do your thing. OT is real - It's the bullshit that is all fantasy.
 

FoTi

Crusader
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

Good stuff - FoTi. Those are your abilities. In the CofS - well that is the place you o to so that you don't ever go OT. Don't worry about them. It's out wthics there to be OT. You do your thing. OT is real - It's the bullshit that is all fantasy.

Thanks Leon.

OT abilities make life more pleasurable and more fun. :happydance:
 

RogerB

Crusader
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

From this morning's reading . . .

There is much more on this and many links to interviews giving various insights into the man and his time and the times he created.

Rather wonderful stuff here:
http://www.marketwatch.com/Story/story/print?guid=0C870E5E-F032-11E0-9CD6-002128040CF6
Oct. 7, 2011, 12:01 a.m. EDT
12 lessons for us all from the life of Steve Jobs
Commentary: What Apple co-founder’s achievements tell the rest of us
By Brett Arends, MarketWatch

BOSTON (MarketWatch) — Are there any life lessons for the rest of us from the career, and legacy, of Steve Jobs?
The death of the Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) co-founder has dominated the news from Cupertino, Calif., to Kuala Lumpur. Many are focusing on the way his products and services changed our world. Others are talking about Jobs, the man.
But this was the most successful business leader of his era, and one of the greats. Few have achieved so much, so quickly, and publicly. It got me thinking: What are the lessons we can all take away? What do his extraordinary achievements tell the rest of us?
Here are 12 lessons from the life of Jobs:
1. Yes, you can make a difference
Anyone trying to achieve real change — in life, in a company or in any organization — probably feels the urge to give up half a dozen times a day. The naysayers and seat-polishers will do everything to slow you down. No one is suggesting that what Apple achieved was the result of Jobs alone, but his career is proof of just how much one individual can change things.
2. You need a vision
It’s not enough to conduct opinion polls and customer surveys, and rely on consultants’ projections. Those are all based on the conventional wisdom and the world as it is today. Jobs imagined things — most obviously the iPod, and the iTunes services — that didn’t yet exist and for which the market was uncertain. While his competitors were still building the products of yesterday, he was imagining, and building, those of tomorrow.
3. It’s not about you
It’s horrifying how many business decisions are still made on the assumption that “well, we have to do something with XYZ division, so let’s give them this project” or “Buggins has seniority so he’s in charge.” Do you think the customer cares about Buggins or XYZ division? Jobs built Apple into a streamlined operation, focused on the output, nothing else.
4. Focus, focus, focus
Hard to believe, but mediocre managers everywhere like to keep their staff “busy” because they think that’s “productive.” It isn’t. (Ask them what their top priority is, and they’ll name two things. Or four. Or 16.) Apple sure was “busy, busy, busy” when Jobs arrived. And it was going bust. One of the first things he did was axe about 90% of their activities and focus — first on the iMac, then on the iPod.
5. ‘OK’ is not OK
Look at the way Apple’s competitors keep putting out mediocre or unfinished products and thinking they’ll get away with it. Are they for real? The days when you could get by with second best are so over. Jobs was famous for a fanatical perfectionism. It was a core element of Apple’s success.
6. It’s not about the money
Steve Jobs’ life was a thumping rebuttal to all those who are obsessed with cash. The guy had billions: Far more than he could ever spend, even if he had lived to 100. Yet he kept working, and striving to achieve greater things. Money? Bah. Something to think about the next time a CEO demands another $20 million a year as an incentive to show up.
7. It ain’t over till it’s over
Fifteen years ago Steve Jobs appeared to be a has-been in Silicon Valley. And Apple was circling the drain: The company was plagued with losses, executive firings, reorganizations, desperate asset sales and research cuts. Apple stock hit a low of $3.23 in 1996, and hardly anyone wanted it even at that price.
8. Give people what they really want
Sound obvious, right? But most companies don’t do it. They simply produce what they’ve always produced, or what’s comfortable, or what Buggins thinks people want. For years the computer industry churned out ugly, clunky beige products with complicated operating systems. They all did it, and they all assumed that’s what people wanted. Turns out it wasn’t at all.
9. Destroy your own products — before someone else does
Jobs made sure that Apple kept innovating, and rendering its own products out of date. Creative destruction came from within! That’s why Apple is a $354 billion company, and, say, Palm has vanished from the Earth, even though a 2004 iPod is just as out of date as a 2004 Treo. How rare is this? Jobs knew full well his $500 iPad threatens to cannibalize sales of $1,000 laptops. But he moved forward nonetheless. Most companies wouldn’t.
10. We are all spin-doctors now
Critics point out that a lot of what Jobs achieved at Apple was put down to hype and hustle. But that was the point. And Jobs was a master at it — the product teasers, the showmanship on stage, even down to the black turtlenecks. Truth be told, we live in a superficial age of infinite media. We are all in the spin business. Deal with it.
11. Most people don’t know what they’re doing
It takes nothing away from Steve Jobs to point out that he couldn’t have done it without his competitors. Microsoft, Palm, Nokia, Dell, HP — the list goes on. They missed opportunities, stayed complacent, failed to innovate and generally mishandled the way their industry changed. It’s normal to assume that the people around us — and in power — know what they are doing. As Jobs proved, often times they don’t.
12. Your time is precious — don’t waste it
Steve Jobs was just 56 when he died — a comparatively young man — and yet during his short spell on Earth he revolutionized the way we live, several times over. What are we doing with our time? It is the resource we waste the most — and it’s the one we cannot buy. Make the most of your short spell on this planet. Make each day and hour count.

Copyright © 2011 MarketWatch, Inc. All rights reserved.
 

lkwdblds

Crusader
Re: Physical Universe

I understand the bread theory, with expanding space, but that isn't really what I was talking about. What I meant was the idea that there was actually more universe stuff being created.

The coin thing was really interesting. My coin purse was empty. I was on the third floor, in my apartment. I looked out the window at the gas station next door and just had the thought that I didn't want to have to go there to get change for the laundry. When I picked up my coin purse suddenly the money for the next load was in it. It was a surprise. I wondered if maybe I was mistaken and maybe I just didn't see the coins in there before. I went downstairs and used the coins in the machine and my coin purse was again empty. I went back upstairs and about an hour later I had to go back downstairs and do another load. I was still wondering if this had really happened. Then I wondered if maybe it might happen again. So, my coin purse was laying in the same place it was when this happened before and I stood in the same spot as before and looked out the window at the gas station next door and had the same thought.....that I didn't want to have to go there to get change. I reached out and picked up the coin purse and sure enough....there was the change to finish my laundry. I got so excited that I ran down the hall and knocked on the Reg's door....(he lived several doors down the hall from me). I told him what had just happened and I thought he would be happy about this because he always was collecting money....but no :no: He got really pissed at me and yelled at me and told me I was out ethics. I suddenly felt horrible....like I'd committed some mortal sin. I caved in and went away with my tail between my legs like a dog that had been scolded. I felt really bad. It never happened again. I couldn't understand....if the point of Scientology was to become more OT, why was something like this so wrong? It baffled me and I didn't talk about it for a long time. I was afraid to say anything about it to anybody.

I also had another thing happen a couple of years prior to this, not involving money, but instead the control of a physical universe object....a car....and again it was a thought that I didn't want people to go off and leave me...I wanted them to wait for me. Their car quit running right in the middle of the street and they couldn't get it started until I came along and got in the car and told them they could now start the car and it started right up. It was like the car was waiting for me. I thought it was funny. This happened after I'd had a couple hundred hours of auditing at ASHO. Again it made the people I was with mad and I got slammed with shit flows which made me feel wrong and introverted. I learned it was just not okay to do these kind of things and especially don't tell anyone about it when it happens.

I don't really know how these things actually happened....they just did....they seemed to be just a postulate manifasting....a wish of mine. It was magical and fun for me, but really seemed to upset and rattle others. I would like to live magical like that all the time....it was so light and easy...but the cave in afterward was awful.

I don't think these things would have happened had I not had the auditing that I had, and not been around people where I thought this kind of thing would be acceptable, since I thought this was the goal of Scientology. I soon learned that even though this was the purported goal of Scientology.....this kind of thing was not socially acceptable unless one had a Scientology cert saying that one had completed the OT Levels....then it would be okay and it would serve as proof to others that Scientology worked and others would look up to that. It seemed that one was not allowed to have abilities in Scientology unless they had paid the money and done the level that was supposed to give them those abilities....kind of like you had to pay the money and do the services to get the license from Scientology in the form of a cert so that you could use your abilities without being reprimanded. :blink::wacko:

Harry Rickard had OT abilities and demonstrated it to many people. I used to call him when my neck was out and he would ajust my neck from across town and I would send him a check for $10. Saved me from having to drive to an appointment. I could feel all the stuff shifting around in my neck when he did it. People used to call him for help with their animals that were sick and he would do stuff with them clear across country. He was a chiropractor by trade, but did a lot of his work without laying a hand on a person. Did you know him?

There's probably a lot of people out there that won't come forward with their abilities or experiences because they don't want to be put down or made fun of, so they just keep quiet about it. Nobody likes to be belittled.

FoTi, I just can't believe that Org people put you down for revealing to them that you had just experienced OT abilities. I was around then, I wish I would have known you. I would have validated the hell out of you and your abilities. The reason you gave about not having your cert is so narrow minded.

In Roger's posting about Steve Jobs, he mentions Jobs pressing on with a $500 dollar product even though it would jeopardize the marketability and sales potential of a $1,000 product by making it somewhat obsolete. Obviously, Jobs thought outside the box and went for the best possible product at a price which was affordable to the greater mass of the public.

Your line about having trouble grasping the concept that new universe "stuff" is still being created isn't that difficult to conceive of. Your story about the coins gives a possible instance of where that happened. When being record pictures of their past and do it automatically, it is entirely possible that these pictures represent a continuous creating of new matter

Your story about the coins appearing and reappearing was inspiring. I had an experience last night with a thermos bottle which seemed a little similar. About 4 days ago I looked for my thermos bottle so as to fill it with ionized water prior to driving somewhere. I could not find it. 3 days went by without finding it and figured I had left it in a restaurant. It costs only $9 so no big deal. I have a 42" by 27" oval coffee table in front of my couch. Underneath it's glass top, I had left a pair of socks and shoes plus a pair of house slipper plus some old magazines and newspapers. Over the last 2 days, I had picked up all these things from under the table and stored them elsewhere but did not become aware of any themos being there.

Last night, I was sitting on the sofa and pulled the sofa closer to me to set down a cup of coffee and I heard a sound of something falling. I looked down under the coffee table and there was the thermos, laying on its side, having just toppled over.

I COULDN'T BELIEVE IT! I had looked around my house for the last 3 days trying to find it and had tidied up a little under the coffee table only a day earlier and hadn't notice it. BTW, I don't attribute this to OT abilities but simply to becomiing older and less observant. Even so, it seems unbelievable that I missed seeing it when tidying up under the table. Your incident with the coins is completely different. There is no other explanation other than that you willed the coins to materialize.
Lakey
 
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lkwdblds

Crusader
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

Steve Jobs - Obviously, he was a genius and also a seer of sorts. He had the abilitiy to look ahead in time anywhere from 5 to 20 years to gauge where the market was heading and what people wanted to buy. Also, he had great marketing savy and ccould actually determine and even dictate the products which the people would want the most before he had them designed and manufactured.

He is in a league with Thomas Edison and perhaps Henry Ford. Of all people who have lived, he did more to change and vastly improve the products which the public uses for business, communications and recreation. Perhaps Edison was equal to him in this regard. I can't think of another person in history was was a visionary to the degree that Jobs was. What an incredible man! What an incredible life!!
Lakey
 

Ted

Gold Meritorious Patron
Re: Physical Universe

[...] About 4 days ago I looked for my thermos bottle so as to fill it with ionized water prior to driving somewhere. I could not find it. 3 days went by without finding it and figured I had left it in a restaurant. It costs only $9 so no big deal. I have a 42" by 27" oval coffee table in front of my couch. Underneath it's glass top, I had left a pair of socks and shoes plus a pair of house slipper plus some old magazines and newspapers. Over the last 2 days, I had picked up all these things from under the table and stored them elsewhere but did not become aware of any themos being there.

Last night, I was sitting on the sofa and pulled the sofa closer to me to set down a cup of coffee and I heard a sound of something falling. I looked down under the coffee table and there was the thermos, laying on its side, having just toppled over.

I COULDN'T BELIEVE IT! I had looked around my house for the last 3 days trying to find it and had tidied up a little under the coffee table only a day earlier and hadn't notice it. BTW, I don't attribute this to OT abilities but simply to becomiing older and less observant. Even so, it seems unbelievable that I missed seeing it when tidying up under the table. Your incident with the coins is completely different. There is no other explanation other than that you willed the coins to materialize.
Lakey


This ties into an article that I have been meaning to write concerning perception. While you mention the downside of perception, perhaps due to getting older, I don't know, there is another side: All auditing should lead to a change in perception for the pc/client. If the pc/client does not have a change of perception regarding person, place, thing, time, situation, etc. being addressed, there will be no real change of condition because his relationship to "it" will not have changed. You will note that in the Hubbard system, perception is the awareness characteristic of Department 3, Ethics.

When a person goes Clear, for example, and they tell of how all the traffic lights turned green for them, it is not because they turned the lights green, they are just having a change of perception. The lights are on a timer. They will turn green, yellow, and red at a predetermined pace. But, the person who perceives green all down the road is setup to take advantage of it.

How about money? Get enough auditing on money and I have seen a person's flows open up. Why? There's a lot of money out there. Maybe too much of it when compared to the value of property and production in the world. But economists can figure on that one. As for the individual, a change of perception on money can result in more money coming in. Or negatively, a change of perception, as in a block, can result in the flows tightening up.

Steve Jobs, apparently, was no different than any other human being except for his perception and how he used it. You could say there is also Dynamics or endowment of life force, purpose, intent, resources, etc. But this missive is about perception. Jobs had tremendous marketing perception where others did not.

Objective processes work directly on perception.

Creative process work on perception. If a pc/client can mentally/spiritually, mock up, he is then open to perceive that which already exists in the physical universe. "Mock up a way to waste money." In the case of a scientist/engineer/architect, he/she first gets the idea, a perception, then goes about bringing together the resources to make the mockup appear in the physical universe (a series of perceptions).

The recently posted lectures by John Mac reveal how his perception was different than most other people's. And by having different perceptions he got unique results in his own auditing and on that of his pc's.

Belief and perception go hand in hand. Casey Stengel, the NY Yankees manager of years gone by, once remarked that, "Good pitching will always stop good hitting, and vice versa." So it is will belief and perception: A strongly held belief can block perception, and processes aimed at perception can alter a belief.

Perhaps I will expand on this later.

:thumbsup:
 
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Hatshepsut

Crusader
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

NO....but all the lights really DID turn green!! These are the lights by your house on the main drag exiting the cinemas. I was used to their timing as I lived there for years. But that timing became exceptionally advantageous.! :happydance::happydance::happydance:
 
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Hatshepsut

Crusader
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

Adios Steve

pixar-blogbanner-01.jpg


A touching moment ____ Steve Jobs joined the Pixar team at the 82nd Academy Awards. Winners choose winners.

150776-john-lassiter-l-chief-creative-officer-at-pixar-and-walt-disney-animat.jpg

Steve Jobs with Pixar crew

Remember when....Disney buys Pixar for $7.4 billion in stock with stipulation that Jobs is CEO

http://articles.sfgate.com/2006-01-...-s-shares-pixar-animation-studios-then-disney

http://croghadl.wordpress.com/

http://www.insidethemagic.net/2011/...r-and-disneys-largest-shareholder-dies-at-56/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJ4Nnr0MXKY&feature=player_embedded
 
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Hatshepsut

Crusader
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

I finished the fifth McMaster's tape a few days ago. About 3/4 through it I got really impressed. Thanks Ed! :coolwink:

21lkf2c.gif
 

FoTi

Crusader
Re: Physical Universe

FoTi, I just can't believe that Org people put you down for revealing to them that you had just experienced OT abilities. I was around then, I wish I would have known you. I would have validated the hell out of you and your abilities. The reason you gave about not having your cert is so narrow minded.

In Roger's posting about Steve Jobs, he mentions Jobs pressing on with a $500 dollar product even though it would jeopardize the marketability and sales potential of a $1,000 product by making it somewhat obsolete. Obviously, Jobs thought outside the box and went for the best possible product at a price which was affordable to the greater mass of the public.

Your line about having trouble grasping the concept that new universe "stuff" is still being created isn't that difficult to conceive of. Your story about the coins gives a possible instance of where that happened. When being record pictures of their past and do it automatically, it is entirely possible that these pictures represent a continuous creating of new matter

Your story about the coins appearing and reappearing was inspiring. I had an experience last night with a thermos bottle which seemed a little similar. About 4 days ago I looked for my thermos bottle so as to fill it with ionized water prior to driving somewhere. I could not find it. 3 days went by without finding it and figured I had left it in a restaurant. It costs only $9 so no big deal. I have a 42" by 27" oval coffee table in front of my couch. Underneath it's glass top, I had left a pair of socks and shoes plus a pair of house slipper plus some old magazines and newspapers. Over the last 2 days, I had picked up all these things from under the table and stored them elsewhere but did not become aware of any themos being there.

Last night, I was sitting on the sofa and pulled the sofa closer to me to set down a cup of coffee and I heard a sound of something falling. I looked down under the coffee table and there was the thermos, laying on its side, having just toppled over.

I COULDN'T BELIEVE IT! I had looked around my house for the last 3 days trying to find it and had tidied up a little under the coffee table only a day earlier and hadn't notice it. BTW, I don't attribute this to OT abilities but simply to becomiing older and less observant. Even so, it seems unbelievable that I missed seeing it when tidying up under the table. Your incident with the coins is completely different. There is no other explanation other than that you willed the coins to materialize.
Lakey

I couldn't believe that org staff would do that either, but I sure learned quick.

I wasn't having trouble grasping the physical universe expanding. My question was to Mark...I understood him to say that the PU is fixed so it doesn't or can't expand in regards to having more stuff....I asked him then how come things can just appear that weren't there before? It was just a question in regard to his statement.

I wasn't aware of willing any coins to materialize. What I was aware of was the thought that I didn't want to have to go downstairs and go over to the gas station next door to get change for the laundry. Then the money just appeared in the coin purse.....twice. I didn't think...I want coins to appear in my coin purse....it just sort of came about as a result of my not wanting to have to go get change. And I wondered....did I do that or did someone or something else?

I don't know what Steve Jobs had to do with this.....I don't get the connection.

I'm glad you found your thermos. I've had stuff like that happen quite a few times myself.....it's like stuff hides or something and then I suddenly find it. I've also noticed that sometimes I will be trying to do something and it seems as if something keeps interfering and goofing it up until I get mad and yell at the phenomena to stop it and then it suddenly stops. :confused2:

Life is strange sometimes. I wish I had more answers.
 
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Hatshepsut

Crusader
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

Originally posted by FoTi

.....Then the money just appeared in the coin purse.....twice. I didn't think...I want coins to appear in my coin purse....it just sort of came about as a result of my not wanting to have to go get change. And I wondered....did I do that or did someone or something else?

I confess...I did it.
 

FoTi

Crusader
Re: Physical Universe

This ties into an article that I have been meaning to write concerning perception. While you mention the downside of perception, perhaps due to getting older, I don't know, there is another side: All auditing should lead to a change in perception for the pc/client. If the pc/client does not have a change of perception regarding person, place, thing, time, situation, etc. being addressed, there will be no real change of condition because his relationship to "it" will not have changed. You will note that in the Hubbard system, perception is the awareness characteristic of Department 3, Ethics.

When a person goes Clear, for example, and they tell of how all the traffic lights turned green for them, it is not because they turned the lights green, they are just having a change of perception. The lights are on a timer. They will turn green, yellow, and red at a predetermined pace. But, the person who perceives green all down the road is setup to take advantage of it.

How about money? Get enough auditing on money and I have seen a person's flows open up. Why? There's a lot of money out there. Maybe to much of it when compared to the value of property and production in the world. But economists can figure on that one. As for the individual, a change of perception on money can result in more money coming in. Or negatively, a change of perception, as in a block, can result in the flows tightening up.

Steve Jobs, apparently, was no different than any other human being except for his perception and how he used it. You could say there is also Dynamics or endowment of life force, purpose, intent, resources, etc. But this missive is about perception. Jobs had tremendous marketing perception where others did not.

Objective processes work directly on perception.

Creative process work on perception. If a pc/client can mentally/spiritually, mock up, he is then open to perceive that which already exists in the physical universe. "Mock up a way to waste money." In the case of a scientist/engineer/architect, he/she first gets the idea, a perception, then goes about bringing together the resources to make the mockup appear in the physical universe (a series of perceptions).

The recently posted lectures by John Mac reveal how his perception was different than most other people's. And by having different perceptions he got unique results in his own auditing and on that of his pc's.

Belief and perception go hand in hand. Casey Stengel, the NY Yankees manager of years gone by, once remarked that, "Good pitching will always stop good hitting, and vice versa." So it is will belief and perception: A strongly held belief can block perception, and processes aimed at perception can alter a belief.

Perhaps I will expand on this later.

:thumbsup:

I would appreciate an article on perception.
 

Hatshepsut

Crusader
Re: the 1970s

I was freely associating with the rain coming today in SoCal, and the Sci establishments around Mac Arthur's Park in the 1970s, and the dreams we had at that time. Jimmy Webb's song says it all.


[video=youtube;su3JdzUUuH4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=su3JdzUUuH4[/video]

I was a big fan of the Webb Sessions in the early 70s. I liked the way Richard sang Jimmy's 'Didn't We'.
And of course another chance to plug my man Russell Crowe who wrote a song about Richard Harris and his love for rugby. There was an unveiling back a few yrs ago of a statue placed in tribute to Mr. Harris in Kilkee, County Clare, Ireland where it was performed live.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4m0Wc-Oivpw&feature=player_detailpage

10683818.jpg
In Ireland for the tribute​

Russell of course played alongside the icon in the making of Gladiator
Of course Crowe is no stranger to rugby himself
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Feuds
 
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Leon

Gold Meritorious Patron
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

Well.

I have just listened to this sixth lecture, this one:

http://dl.dropbox.com/u/43776862/Amb...cesses 1.mp3

and I hope we will now no longer hear any more crap on this board about how "Ron stole the Power Processes from John Macmaster who really developed them". Here you have it all in his own voice.

Thank you =Carmelo. BIG thank you indeed.

I know you mentioned that you would get it onto disc for guys - I would LOVE to have these talks in CD or DVD or whatever it is called. MP3. I live in New Zealand. How many US $$ should I send you and please PM me your addy - or email me direct: [email protected] - and then post me a copy please.

Thank you.
 
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

Well.

I have just listened to this sixth lecture, this one:

http://dl.dropbox.com/u/43776862/Amb...cesses 1.mp3

and I hope we will now no longer hear any more crap on this board about how "Ron stole the Power Processes from John Macmaster who really developed them". Here you have it all in his own voice.

Thank you =Carmelo. BIG thank you indeed.

I know you mentioned that you would get it onto disc for guys - I would LOVE to have these talks in CD or DVD or whatever it is called. MP3. I live in New Zealand. How many US $$ should I send you and please PM me your addy - or email me direct: [email protected] - and then post me a copy please.

Thank you.

The easiest thing for you to do is to simply download the mp3s yourself and then burn them to disk. If you can't then ask some young person.


Mark A. Baker
 

Leon

Gold Meritorious Patron
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

The easiest thing for you to do is to simply download the mp3s yourself and then burn them to disk. If you can't then ask some young person.


Mark A. Baker

Some advice on this would be appreciated.
 
Re: The old days - Aboard the Apollo - 1973

Some advice on this would be appreciated.

Not sure what to tell you. The process is fairly straightforward.

1. Download to your computer the files to be copied.

2. Using cd burner software create an image of the files you want on the disk. This is normally just a simple process of 'drag & drop' from the list of files on the computer to the appropriate screen in the burning software.

3. Once all files desired have been selected for the burning process press the 'burn' button in the burning application.

4. You will have to add a burnable cd/dvd to the burner drive, the software will normally prompt for this.



Be certain the disk you have is large enough to hold the contents. As the McMaster files are all audio they are 'relatively' small and would all fit easitly together on a single CD. Depending upon what other materials you might wish to include on your disk you might need a larger disksize.

Typically up to 650 Megabytes per CD.

Anything up to 2 Gigabyte for a standard DVD. That is a LOT of data. Even at that there may well be DVDs which can hold more than 2 gigs of data.

I'm assuming you are using windoze. Same process holds on other systems, specific software choices vary. Check to see if you have burner software, many computers come with it equipped.

If in doubt do a google search. Also, this is VERY common practice among younger people so a family member or friend might be willing to help. Typically it is no trouble at all to anyone who has done it before.

It takes about 2 minutes to set up a burn. Very quick, drag & drop. Very simple. Allowing that you haven't done it before it will take you longer but only because of the lack of certainty.

The burn itself takes longer depending on the quantity of information being burned and the speed of your burner. A rough estimate is 15-30 minutes for the McMaster mp3s alone. That is likely to be high. Some burners could do them in less than 5. More data, longer burn.

Can also store on flash drives and play on mp3 players, ipods, etc.. Again, transfer via 'drag & drop' in which no 'burning' is required.


Mark A. Baker
 
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