![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| | |||||||
| Notices |
| Chit-Chat Relax for a bit and have a general conversation (off topic is allowed!) with other members. Please be polite and respect your fellow members. |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| | (permalink (permalink)) |
| Hey, Mike! Welcome aboard, although I am quite new around here myself. If you take a look at my post count, you can see that I quickly became addicted to this place!... Is there a way to rewind that post count from time to time? This is getting embarrassing :P:lol: I have visited Liverpool about 2 years ago, and what I remember the most is all the girls getting in and out of pubs on Mathew Street nearly half naked in the middle of october
__________________ Time is nature\'s way of keeping everything from happening at once. http://membres.lycos.fr/jrainville/ | |
| | |
| | (permalink (permalink)) |
| Hello and welcome to the forum. I also did GCSE Electronics at school when I was your age! I learnt quite a bit, but what I found was that the Electronics class seemed to attract "drop-outs" who felt that a)Electronics would be an easy subject and b)They'd get to blow stuff up. Consequently not a lesson went by without some prat acting the idiot, Electronics components and systems being destroyed or even test equipment being destroyed. I found that A-Level was much better because by that time the drop-outs had already...well... dropped out and so the ones left were a bunch genuinely interested in Electronics and who really wanted to learn. Still, GCSE Electronics was fun and I'd advise you to stick at it. Maybe if you struggle with your homework, you can post your questions here! Welcome to the forum. Brian | |
| | |
| | (permalink (permalink)) | |||
| Thanks for the welcome Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
| ||||
| | |
| | (permalink (permalink)) |
| Hi Mike
__________________ Angry!? I'm absolutely electrolytic! Will have to make do with myspace now I guess... | |
| | |
| | (permalink (permalink)) | |
| Quote:
GCSE is a UK examination, taken around 16 years of age (at the end of year 11), and stands for "General Certificate of Secondary Education". | ||
| | |