A woman in love has her heart like a differential amplifier; all of her boyfriend's good qualities are amplified as differential-mode signals, while his shortcomings are suppressed as common-mode signals.
A man's heart is like a transistor amplifier. When you're in love, it's like a common base, where your efforts will always be rewarded hundreds of times over. But after marriage, it becomes like a common collector, where your efforts often don't yield an equivalent output. Perhaps after the seven-year itch, some heartless men will become like common emitters. At this point, the output, although amplified a lot, is reversed and completely different from your expectations.
(The editor thinks this must have been written by a girl...)
Unrequited love is like a diode, always flowing in one direction only. Unless you're lucky enough to have the diode break down in the opposite direction when you confess, you'll just keep giving without any return. Don't complain, it's your own fault for choosing a diode.
If you love a man, marry him. A man's love is like an insulated-gate field-effect transistor; it's generally untestable. So, never use your best friends or anyone else to test him. A man's defenses are like that transistor, as a circuit breaker might describe it—it breaks easily, and even if it does, you won't know when it happened. Just like you don't know when a man's heart will change.
Betrayal in love is like a diode used to eliminate crosstalk distortion. When you first find out, you can't understand why that person stole your lover. But later you realize that alternating current and direct current are different. So, whether you are a man or a woman, before you get married, don't introduce the person you want to entrust your life to to your best friends, because often, the problem lies there.
Love is like a power amplifier. Low-distortion amplifiers have long, stable current cycles but lack passion; high-distortion amplifiers have small conduction angles and are only suitable for high frequencies, not our low-frequency needs. Therefore, we have to compromise and use a Class AB amplifier. So, in the end, we might spend our lives with economical, practical men and simple, convenient women.
Love is like an electric bridge; it requires communication. When communication fails, find a way to communicate. Face-to-face is always better than back-to-back. The root cause of failed relationships is often not a lack of understanding, but rather misunderstanding. Only through communication can you truly understand what the other person needs.
Love triangles are like transistors, always making the circuit look different. Love triangles can also make life more exciting. But after all, life isn't a circuit, so it's best not to make it too dramatic.
Love is like a transistor; the higher the amplification factor, the more unstable it is.
Analog electronics, like love, is hard to understand. However, the difference is that with analog electronics, not understanding it only results in failing a course and losing a scholarship; with love, you lose someone. If you master analog electronics, you can get a high score, but if you try to understand love perfectly, you might end up becoming a monk. Sometimes, being a little careless isn't so bad.
Life is like a PN junction; no matter how you build it, there will always be capacitance. Life will also have its ups and downs. If you hope for a smooth and successful life, a sweet and loving relationship, and a happy marriage, sorry, that's like eliminating the capacitance of a PN junction—a global challenge.
Love is like a PN junction that binds men and women together. The teacher said that PN junctions changed the world. Similarly, love creates its own miracles in this world. Love is a product of civilization, just as a PN junction is. Love requires a man and a woman, and a PN junction requires two different semiconductors. Humanity cannot exist without love, just as this era cannot exist without PN junctions. PN junctions dominate the electronic world, and love dominates our civilized history.
Life is like an amplifier. No matter how powerful you are, you still need a ground terminal. So, in this life, you must have a place to settle down. Always drifting around may seem carefree, but it's not so comfortable. Dying far from home is always a somewhat desolate thing, unless you dedicate yourself to your dreams.
Life is like the bipolar integrated operational amplifier F007; though classic, it will eventually be replaced by something better. Just like historical figures and past lives, though fascinating, they can only be used as teaching materials for future generations. The Yangtze River flows on, the new waves pushing the old ones aside, the old waves dying in textbooks.
Life is like an integrated operational amplifier; there are always some people who come to provide the driving force for social progress, just like those electrical sources.
Life is like an integrated operational amplifier; it's always hard to find the direction of the current, just like you'll always feel lost. We always say to focus on the process, but most of the time, those who use integrated operational amplifiers only care about the result.
Life is like an insulated-gate field-effect transistor. Even if you use it very carefully, you still don't know when it will break down due to unexpected factors.
Life is like the output characteristic curve of a transistor. The rewards for your efforts are only noticeable in the small, prominent area of the saturation region. Most people live in the amplification region. Once the base current is constant, due to the huge Earl's voltage, even with your efforts, the fluctuations are small, and you can only slowly advance a limited distance within that small range. When time eventually brings you to the breakdown region, it seems like you've ascended, and indeed you have—directly to heaven. So, when you feel wronged, look at your feet; there are many lower voltage lines below. Some people haven't even passed the forward voltage. When you don't have a house, think of the people of Africa who can't even afford water.
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