grouchyturtle
Contributor
Do they have a website, not having much luck with google?jptrealty:1) Oroboros (its the new do anything unit, its very complex though)
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Do they have a website, not having much luck with google?jptrealty:1) Oroboros (its the new do anything unit, its very complex though)
That's probably because the name is misspelled.grunzster:Do they have a website, not having much luck with google?
grunzster:Thanks. What's funny is how many other sites and message boards I found with the same wrong spelling!
oxyhacker:Hey if your average RBist can't even manage to spell "Drager", what chance to they have with Ouroboros?
When it comes to names, KISS has the right idea.
BigJetDriver69:Vance,
What chance does the average RBist have if the premier Oxyhacker himself can't spell it either?
If you use the spelling with just the "a", to be correct it should have the umlaut over it, which I note in passing that neither you nor I seem to have in our special character files!
Interestingly, the factory seems to use both that spelling and the (I assume) Anglicised version of "Draeger" interchangeably, judging by their web-site and their press releases.
The company web-site is listed as:
www.draeger.com
Cheers!
Rob
You gotta be kidding. All that for two little dots ... :11:padiscubapro:... or use the numberic keypad (cant use regular numbers, and dont forget to hit
numlock), while holding down the alt key type in 228 and y64 w533 get
ä
BigJetDriver69:Vance,
What chance does the average RBist have if the premier Oxyhacker himself can't spell it either?
oxyhacker:That was the joke, son.
Anyhow, we used up all our umlauts early this month, and were flat out when I made that post.
It's actually perfectly correct, in terms of German grammar, to spell it Dräger or Draeger. An umlaut over a vowel implies an e after that vowel; it's just that German-language purists (grammar Nazis!!! yes, I just went there) don't like it when people don't use umlauts.BigJetDriver69:Interestingly, the factory seems to use both that spelling and the (I assume) Anglicised version of "Draeger" interchangeably, judging by their web-site and their press releases.