hey everbody

i made a new video. it's about how stereo sound works on vinyl records.

please provide me with positive reinforcement for holding back on chastising the youngins for continuing to call records "vinyls"

also please never ever do that you heathens

anyway, here's the linky-dink (i'm giving you, like, 10 minutes early access!)

https://youtu.be/3DdUvoc7tJ4

How do vinyl records hold stereo sound?

YouTube
@TechConnectify as some one getting into records for the first time since childhood, I’ll be calling them “vinyls”, “records”, and “vinyl records” with wild variability.

@RC The last two are perfectly acceptable! And you may refer to your collection as "vinyl" without my daggers of judgment.

But if you choose to call an individual record a "vinyl" I must insist that all of your clothing items now be called, simply, "a cotton," "a denim," "a polyester blend," etc.

@TechConnectify I get the irritation. I cannot stand people calling a single analog number randomizer made of plastic, wood, bone, or similar material “a dice”. It’s a die and I feel personally attacked as a game designer that “a dice” is becoming more accepted.

But, language evolves…. I’ll still be calling a die a die in any ruleset I write though.

@RC I would like the... record... to state that I am similarly irritated with die/dice. I knew that from a very early age and am not sure how that got lost.

@TechConnectify @RC

In french I still get irritated by the words
"key" -> "Clef"
and "wrench" -> "Clé"
Both are pronounced "clay"
But people were miss-spelling "clef" so much that it became accepted that a key is "clé" and a wrench is also "clé"
So the word change out of ignorance... Is that progress?