@Austin_Dern channel z is the cross product of channel x and channel y
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@Felthry Yeah, that's the stronger joke. Thank you.
@Austin_Dern i don't think i get the original joke
what're channel x, channel y, and channel z?
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@Austin_Dern ooh, you don't usually talk about x y and z for complex numbers like that, that's more commonly a b and c, i think
or in specific contexts it can be other things, like R, X, and Z when dealing with electrical impedances, or ω, σ, and s in the context of the Laplace transform
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