Yeah, because you were born with a penis. It was natural for you to be attracted to a girl. No choices needed.A direct answer to your question: No. I did not.
I found myself attracted to the opposite sex well before I had any clue what sexuality even was.
So it is settled then. You are using "IN" the same way I am using "THROUGH" Now you can stop arguing about it.I don't make definitions. I leave it to the language scholars and etymologists.
in - expressing the situation of something that is or appears to be enclosed or surrounded by something else.
positioned inside or within the limits of something, or contained, surrounded, or enclosed by something: There's a cup in the cabinet. There are nerves in bone. There are wires in my walls. There is a gun in my holster. There is a round in the chamber.
Holy jumping dog shit!!! Rob, do you know what an analog sine wave looks like? Do you know what a digital sine wave looks like?You suggested a mass-produced VHS recording will sound better than a soundtrack from a DVD. The VHS format has audio bandwidth of roughly 100Hz-10KHz. That's assuming your playback machine has identical azimuth alignment to the duplicating machine.
The audio on a DVD is anywhere from 44.1/16 to 96/24. This puts the FR at anywhere form 20Hz to 20KHz, all the way to ~$8KHz.
So, you tell us: How does the audio of a VHS tape of a movie outperform the DVD of the same movie?
For a bonus: Tell us about the square waveform digital sound you think comes out of a speaker when listening to the audio from a DVD.
Show us your data that indicates a digitally-master soundtrack will sound better when recorded onto an analog recording medium, be it a vinyl LP, a cassette, a VHS tape, or any tape all the up to 1/2" studio.
Explain how the dub will be better than the master.
Says the guy who tried to make a German joke out of the use of "germane" in a post.
I joke from Smokey and the Bandit. Glad you got it.