Path: csiph.com!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: Christian Zietz Newsgroups: sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.design,alt.engineering.electrical,de.sci.electronics Subject: Re: DIN standards for reading? Date: Wed, 18 Nov 2015 08:27:18 +0100 Lines: 17 Message-ID: References: <0001HW.1BFC2F190003E5CE11EAA03CF@news.eternal-september.org> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Trace: individual.net 7fSROsyGlVY5ouhQpn44iA/Hwd8xKbPDG83u2WfrgYG4TWag== Cancel-Lock: sha1:I2VGkBnxz6X8BLIRJ8TgATBjwk8= User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.0; WOW64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.3.0 In-Reply-To: Xref: csiph.com sci.electronics.components:5842 sci.electronics.design:385403 alt.engineering.electrical:16661 de.sci.electronics:196225 Sebastian Suchanek schrieb: > That depends on your definition of "freely available". At university > libraries in Germany (at least at universities with technical > faculties), you usually have the possibility to read all DIN standards > including VDE standards at one or more computer. Sometimes you also have > the possibility to print them on paper for a fee. (DIN, not VDE.) Some libraries also have paid for the subscription to the online database (Perinorm), so that their users can download these standards as PDF files from a website. There's no need then to print them at library. Christian -- Christian Zietz - CHZ-Soft - czietz (at) gmx.net WWW: http://www.chzsoft.de/ PGP/GnuPG-Key-ID: 0x52CB97F66DA025CA / 0x6DA025CA