Clark is an English languagesurname, ultimately derived from the Latinclericus meaning "scribe", "secretary" or a scholar within a religious order, referring to someone who was educated. Clark evolved from "clerk". First records of the name are found in 12th century England. The name has many variants.
Clark is the twenty-seventh most common surname in the United Kingdom, including placing fourteenth in Scotland. Clark is also an occasional given name, as in the case of Clark Gable.
According to the 1990 United States Census, Clark was the twenty-first most frequently encountered surname, accounting for 0.23% of the population. Notable people with the surname include:
Abraham Clark (1725–1794), American politician and Revolutionary War figure
Clark is the official team mascot of Major League Baseball's Chicago Cubs. He was announced on January 13, 2014 as the first official mascot in the modern history of the Cubs franchise. He was introduced that day at the Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center's pediatric developmental center along with some of the Cubs' top prospects such as number one draft pickKris Bryant and Albert Almora, Jorge Soler, Mike Olt and Eric Jokisch. Over a dozen Cubs prospects were attending the Cubs' Rookie Development Program that week. The Cubs become the 27th team in Major League Baseball to have a mascot, leaving the Los Angeles Angels, Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees as the remaining franchises without mascots. According to the Cubs' press release, Clark is a response to fan demands (expressed via surveys and interviews) for more kid-friendly elements at Wrigley Field Cubs games to keep pace with games in other cities that have more to offer youth fans.
Description
He is a "young, friendly Cub" who will wear a backwards baseball cap and greet fans entering Wrigley Field, which is located at the corner of Clark Street (for which he is named) and Addison Street. North Clark Street borders the third base side of Wrigley Field. According to the Cubs, the fictional character Clark is descended from Joa, the franchise's original live Bears mascot in 1916.
Continuous Performance (Fast Eddie Clarke) - In The Morning
Have you ever seen the likes of you and me?
Taking it easy and rolling 'round
In the morning came the sunrise in the city
You're gonna look at me
You're gonna see me
Oh woman take me...
I can talk all night long about my life and myself
I've been many places, I can't even tell
Sunshine falling rain on the people looking at the sky
When I see you, I see you with my own eyes
Everytime you're going home all alone, driving your car
Mind your own business, don't go too far
Time keeps playing just the same, you don't notice
You don't notice what's coming on, what's coming on...
There's no way I can get another day added on to my time
I've been thinking too hard all the while
It could've been better, I could've seen myself much more clear
But you know what it's like when you run out of time an...
published: 06 Feb 2018
Scientific Invention of Cochlear Implants Helps Those with Hearing Loss
In the 1960s and 70s, scientists and the medical community believed a solution to hearing loss was simply not possible. Dr. Graeme Clark was determined to overcome this skepticism, and after much effort, he discovered a multichannel electric frequency, which allowed his patient, Rod Saunders, to "hear sounds that were different." Saunders eventually became the first person to receive a multichannel cochlear implant. Since Dr. Clark's revolutionary scientific discovery and invention of the first multi-channel cochlear implant, Cochlear has helped more than 250,000 people discover sound. Watch the video to learn more about cochlear implant history.
To learn more about Cochlear implants visit: http://www.cochlear.com/wps/wcm/connect/sea/home
published: 16 Apr 2015
General aviation headset testing for ham radio
This video shows a further step towards getting an aircraft headset with boom mic to work with a ham radio rig. The benefits of these headsets are the strong fit over the ears that provides a very quiet listening environment, rated at -24dB passive noise reducing design. Aircraft cockpits are noisy and loud, so the mono headphones need to be well-fitting to the pilot, including glasses!
The mics are 'carbon-equivalent' electret/dynamic mics that are intentionally 'deaf' to sounds other than in close proximity to the mic. For ham radio rigs, these can pose a problem: the aviation standard is 400 mV output into roughly 500 Ohm loads.
In an earlier video, I experimented with my Elecraft MH3 PTT mic with elecret microphone with 3v DC bias. The output appears small - less than 10mV , and n...
published: 27 Sep 2014
DEAF - Studio VLOG (Drums)
DEAF - Studio VLOG (Drums)
Deaf Upcoming Single's Drum VLOG is here! Recording session, bloopers and funny moments... If you want to see and share our experience just subscribe and be a part of our #deafsquad !
Çıkacak ilk teklimizin davul VLOG'u sizlerle! Kayıt aşamaları, hazırlıklar ve eğlenceli dakikalar... Daha fazlası için kanala abone olmayi unutmayin ve #deafsquad ' a katılın !
Video Edited by Yunus Emre KAYIR /Instagram: @yemrekayir
Facebook.com/banddeaf
Instagram.com/deafbandofficial
Twitter.com/banddeaf
Have you ever seen the likes of you and me?
Taking it easy and rolling 'round
In the morning came the sunrise in the city
You're gonna look at me
You're gonna s...
Have you ever seen the likes of you and me?
Taking it easy and rolling 'round
In the morning came the sunrise in the city
You're gonna look at me
You're gonna see me
Oh woman take me...
I can talk all night long about my life and myself
I've been many places, I can't even tell
Sunshine falling rain on the people looking at the sky
When I see you, I see you with my own eyes
Everytime you're going home all alone, driving your car
Mind your own business, don't go too far
Time keeps playing just the same, you don't notice
You don't notice what's coming on, what's coming on...
There's no way I can get another day added on to my time
I've been thinking too hard all the while
It could've been better, I could've seen myself much more clear
But you know what it's like when you run out of time and you say...
Have you ever seen the likes of you and me?
Taking it easy and rolling 'round
In the morning came the sunrise in the city
You're gonna look at me
You're gonna see me
Oh woman take me...
I can talk all night long about my life and myself
I've been many places, I can't even tell
Sunshine falling rain on the people looking at the sky
When I see you, I see you with my own eyes
Everytime you're going home all alone, driving your car
Mind your own business, don't go too far
Time keeps playing just the same, you don't notice
You don't notice what's coming on, what's coming on...
There's no way I can get another day added on to my time
I've been thinking too hard all the while
It could've been better, I could've seen myself much more clear
But you know what it's like when you run out of time and you say...
In the 1960s and 70s, scientists and the medical community believed a solution to hearing loss was simply not possible. Dr. Graeme Clark was determined to overc...
In the 1960s and 70s, scientists and the medical community believed a solution to hearing loss was simply not possible. Dr. Graeme Clark was determined to overcome this skepticism, and after much effort, he discovered a multichannel electric frequency, which allowed his patient, Rod Saunders, to "hear sounds that were different." Saunders eventually became the first person to receive a multichannel cochlear implant. Since Dr. Clark's revolutionary scientific discovery and invention of the first multi-channel cochlear implant, Cochlear has helped more than 250,000 people discover sound. Watch the video to learn more about cochlear implant history.
To learn more about Cochlear implants visit: http://www.cochlear.com/wps/wcm/connect/sea/home
In the 1960s and 70s, scientists and the medical community believed a solution to hearing loss was simply not possible. Dr. Graeme Clark was determined to overcome this skepticism, and after much effort, he discovered a multichannel electric frequency, which allowed his patient, Rod Saunders, to "hear sounds that were different." Saunders eventually became the first person to receive a multichannel cochlear implant. Since Dr. Clark's revolutionary scientific discovery and invention of the first multi-channel cochlear implant, Cochlear has helped more than 250,000 people discover sound. Watch the video to learn more about cochlear implant history.
To learn more about Cochlear implants visit: http://www.cochlear.com/wps/wcm/connect/sea/home
This video shows a further step towards getting an aircraft headset with boom mic to work with a ham radio rig. The benefits of these headsets are the strong fi...
This video shows a further step towards getting an aircraft headset with boom mic to work with a ham radio rig. The benefits of these headsets are the strong fit over the ears that provides a very quiet listening environment, rated at -24dB passive noise reducing design. Aircraft cockpits are noisy and loud, so the mono headphones need to be well-fitting to the pilot, including glasses!
The mics are 'carbon-equivalent' electret/dynamic mics that are intentionally 'deaf' to sounds other than in close proximity to the mic. For ham radio rigs, these can pose a problem: the aviation standard is 400 mV output into roughly 500 Ohm loads.
In an earlier video, I experimented with my Elecraft MH3 PTT mic with elecret microphone with 3v DC bias. The output appears small - less than 10mV , and needs a simple one-transistor pre-amp to show a signal on my oscilloscope. That tells me that I need to attenuate the aviation mic to a similar level.
In this video clip, I make use of John Raydo's K0IZ circuit to match impedance and attenuation to the 20-40mV range for the mic.
The true test will be to plug this circuit into the rig and see if the rig pre-amp can create a usable and clear audio on VOX and try a QSO and get an audio report back! Watch this space.
This video shows a further step towards getting an aircraft headset with boom mic to work with a ham radio rig. The benefits of these headsets are the strong fit over the ears that provides a very quiet listening environment, rated at -24dB passive noise reducing design. Aircraft cockpits are noisy and loud, so the mono headphones need to be well-fitting to the pilot, including glasses!
The mics are 'carbon-equivalent' electret/dynamic mics that are intentionally 'deaf' to sounds other than in close proximity to the mic. For ham radio rigs, these can pose a problem: the aviation standard is 400 mV output into roughly 500 Ohm loads.
In an earlier video, I experimented with my Elecraft MH3 PTT mic with elecret microphone with 3v DC bias. The output appears small - less than 10mV , and needs a simple one-transistor pre-amp to show a signal on my oscilloscope. That tells me that I need to attenuate the aviation mic to a similar level.
In this video clip, I make use of John Raydo's K0IZ circuit to match impedance and attenuation to the 20-40mV range for the mic.
The true test will be to plug this circuit into the rig and see if the rig pre-amp can create a usable and clear audio on VOX and try a QSO and get an audio report back! Watch this space.
DEAF - Studio VLOG (Drums)
Deaf Upcoming Single's Drum VLOG is here! Recording session, bloopers and funny moments... If you want to see and share our experien...
DEAF - Studio VLOG (Drums)
Deaf Upcoming Single's Drum VLOG is here! Recording session, bloopers and funny moments... If you want to see and share our experience just subscribe and be a part of our #deafsquad !
Çıkacak ilk teklimizin davul VLOG'u sizlerle! Kayıt aşamaları, hazırlıklar ve eğlenceli dakikalar... Daha fazlası için kanala abone olmayi unutmayin ve #deafsquad ' a katılın !
Video Edited by Yunus Emre KAYIR /Instagram: @yemrekayir
Facebook.com/banddeaf
Instagram.com/deafbandofficial
Twitter.com/banddeaf
DEAF - Studio VLOG (Drums)
Deaf Upcoming Single's Drum VLOG is here! Recording session, bloopers and funny moments... If you want to see and share our experience just subscribe and be a part of our #deafsquad !
Çıkacak ilk teklimizin davul VLOG'u sizlerle! Kayıt aşamaları, hazırlıklar ve eğlenceli dakikalar... Daha fazlası için kanala abone olmayi unutmayin ve #deafsquad ' a katılın !
Video Edited by Yunus Emre KAYIR /Instagram: @yemrekayir
Facebook.com/banddeaf
Instagram.com/deafbandofficial
Twitter.com/banddeaf
Have you ever seen the likes of you and me?
Taking it easy and rolling 'round
In the morning came the sunrise in the city
You're gonna look at me
You're gonna see me
Oh woman take me...
I can talk all night long about my life and myself
I've been many places, I can't even tell
Sunshine falling rain on the people looking at the sky
When I see you, I see you with my own eyes
Everytime you're going home all alone, driving your car
Mind your own business, don't go too far
Time keeps playing just the same, you don't notice
You don't notice what's coming on, what's coming on...
There's no way I can get another day added on to my time
I've been thinking too hard all the while
It could've been better, I could've seen myself much more clear
But you know what it's like when you run out of time and you say...
In the 1960s and 70s, scientists and the medical community believed a solution to hearing loss was simply not possible. Dr. Graeme Clark was determined to overcome this skepticism, and after much effort, he discovered a multichannel electric frequency, which allowed his patient, Rod Saunders, to "hear sounds that were different." Saunders eventually became the first person to receive a multichannel cochlear implant. Since Dr. Clark's revolutionary scientific discovery and invention of the first multi-channel cochlear implant, Cochlear has helped more than 250,000 people discover sound. Watch the video to learn more about cochlear implant history.
To learn more about Cochlear implants visit: http://www.cochlear.com/wps/wcm/connect/sea/home
This video shows a further step towards getting an aircraft headset with boom mic to work with a ham radio rig. The benefits of these headsets are the strong fit over the ears that provides a very quiet listening environment, rated at -24dB passive noise reducing design. Aircraft cockpits are noisy and loud, so the mono headphones need to be well-fitting to the pilot, including glasses!
The mics are 'carbon-equivalent' electret/dynamic mics that are intentionally 'deaf' to sounds other than in close proximity to the mic. For ham radio rigs, these can pose a problem: the aviation standard is 400 mV output into roughly 500 Ohm loads.
In an earlier video, I experimented with my Elecraft MH3 PTT mic with elecret microphone with 3v DC bias. The output appears small - less than 10mV , and needs a simple one-transistor pre-amp to show a signal on my oscilloscope. That tells me that I need to attenuate the aviation mic to a similar level.
In this video clip, I make use of John Raydo's K0IZ circuit to match impedance and attenuation to the 20-40mV range for the mic.
The true test will be to plug this circuit into the rig and see if the rig pre-amp can create a usable and clear audio on VOX and try a QSO and get an audio report back! Watch this space.
DEAF - Studio VLOG (Drums)
Deaf Upcoming Single's Drum VLOG is here! Recording session, bloopers and funny moments... If you want to see and share our experience just subscribe and be a part of our #deafsquad !
Çıkacak ilk teklimizin davul VLOG'u sizlerle! Kayıt aşamaları, hazırlıklar ve eğlenceli dakikalar... Daha fazlası için kanala abone olmayi unutmayin ve #deafsquad ' a katılın !
Video Edited by Yunus Emre KAYIR /Instagram: @yemrekayir
Facebook.com/banddeaf
Instagram.com/deafbandofficial
Twitter.com/banddeaf
Clark is an English languagesurname, ultimately derived from the Latinclericus meaning "scribe", "secretary" or a scholar within a religious order, referring to someone who was educated. Clark evolved from "clerk". First records of the name are found in 12th century England. The name has many variants.
Clark is the twenty-seventh most common surname in the United Kingdom, including placing fourteenth in Scotland. Clark is also an occasional given name, as in the case of Clark Gable.
According to the 1990 United States Census, Clark was the twenty-first most frequently encountered surname, accounting for 0.23% of the population. Notable people with the surname include:
Abraham Clark (1725–1794), American politician and Revolutionary War figure