Posted by Anthony Kendall on 28/02/2021 10:05:46:
Posted by Stuart Bridger on 27/02/2021 21:00:23:
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Posted by James Hall 3 on 27/02/2021 18:27:46:
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I apologise if I may have overreacted to seeing incorrect statements regarding digital signals but teaching digcomms to half a generation of undergraduates (most of whom have achieved good degrees and gone on to successful careers in R&D and industry) has made me particularly sensitive to any misconceptions of this sort.
I think some might interpret this as willy-waving.
Now then, let's not have pistols at dawn over the difference between Analogue and Digital Signals! This is a jokey thread about highly dubious USB cables, not an advanced class in telecommunications theory.
I know what James meant, and I know what Andrew meant and feel the difference is semantic. A slight twist in what's understood by 'analogue' has led to unecessary trouble at t-mill.
For what it's worth (not much!), I suggest a digital signal is a digitally modulated analogue carrier. The carrier, another word we could start a row about, could be light, radio waves, or on/off keying of a DC voltage. In my book good old Audio Shift Frequency Keyed radioteletype once ubiquitous on short-wave radio is a digital signal, but it's sent by alternating two audio tones and applying them to modulate an RF carrier, also analogue. The receiver is analogue up to the point the two tones are converted into binary HIGH/LOW, at which point the signal is pure digital.
I'd be amazed if anyone disagreed that the charactistic of analogue modulation is information represented by continually varying values, whereas digital is information represented by a stream of HIGH/LOW transitions, however HIGH and LOW are defined.
Dave