I will assume that you dont know how to make a standard patch cable. In a Normal Patch Cable You would put "WO,O,WG,B,WB,G,WBr,Br" on both ends. on a crossover cable, you would put the above on one end, and switch the green and orange on the other end. "WG,G,WO,B,WB,O,WBr,Br" note: WO = White/Orange, WG = White/Green, WB = White/Blue, WBr = White Brown, O = Orange, G = Green, B = Blue, Br = Brown.
It is referring to internet wifi speeds. B - 11 MBIT/S G - 56 MBIT/S A - 56 MBIT/S N - 100 MBIT/S So if it is Wi-Fi B/G, your wireless card can only connect to a B/G network, meaning the speeds above are the fastest you would get even if you had faster broadband unless you upgraded your card.
If you are looking for the flasher relay, it is in the passenger compartment relay box located just above the fuse box on the driver's side. It is easy to access by popping out the plastic piece that holds the dash light dimmer switch. there web site is supposed 2 b FREE------ www.hmaservice.com Ther should be a button with a red triangle logo on it right above the radio of your accent, that button activates the flacher.
A./2
Pablo Picasso had two sisters, Lola (b. 1884) and Conchita (b. 1887). Conchita died at the age of 7 from diptheria.
semitone. B to C and E to F are semitones
c flat. the semitone above b flat is b, with is equal to c flat. So the diatonic semitone is c flat because it has to be a different note name.
"A" is a musical note. A tone above "A" would be the note "B."
An augmented seventh is a musical interval spanning seven note names and 12 semitones - for example, C to B sharp.
A whole step consists of two half steps, the smallest note division excluding semitones, so one half step brings the pitch to an "A" and the second up to "B flat"
B
B
B (B natural).
C natural
g g# a b flat b c c# d e flat e f f# g All chromatics go up in semitones until you reach the first (tonic) note again.
The following sequence of whole (w) and half (h) steps produces a major scale:W W H W W W HSo, starting on D for example, go up a whole step to E, another whole step to F#, then a half step to G, and so on...eventually you get D E F# G A B C# DAnother way of referring to the notes is by their distance from the root; the interval.root, major second, major third, perfect fourth, perfect fifth, major sixth, major seventh, octave
The default setting is for A major at 440Hz but there is a transpose function which will allow you to flatten it by 2 semitones so it will display correctly for a trumpet.