Yes, if they both are documented to play Microcassette™ tapes.
That would be the RCA RP3538 Micro Cassette Recorder.
The price of the Boss Micro BR digital recorder is $290.50 but it can bought at amazon at a discount of $90.51. At musiciansfriend it is priced at $249.99.
Here are almost all French appliance names that start with "M": "machine à laver" (washing machine) "magnétophone" (tape recorder) "magnétoscope" (VCR) "mixer" (mixer, the kitchen appliance) "moulin à café" (coffee grinder) "machine à pain" (bread maker or bread machine) "micro-ondes" or "four micro-ondes" (microwave oven) "mini four" (countertop oven)
A digital voice recorder can help a college student by recording lectures and seminars. This allows the student to re-listen to the class at a later point and potentially take much better notes. Having an audio recording of a class makes revision for exams easier than books alone.
A mini cassette was used in transcriber machines. It is a bit longer in length than the micro cassette, but the same height. The reason I know this is because I have transcribed from both sides for doctor's office, beginning back in the 1990s. The mini was never used for very long. Kind of like the beta and the VHS tapes for video recording. VHS won out over beta.
They actually haven't stopped making cassette players but the market has dried up. The easiest way to buy one would be online. Micro cassette are still being produced for hand held recorders.
yes
microinstruction: An instruction that controls data flow and instruction-execution sequencing in a processor at a more fundamental level than machine instructions. Note: A series of microinstructions is necessary to perform an individual machine instruction.a micro instruction specifies one or more micro oprations for the system.
I am having the same problem - I got the 'stuck' tape out with a pair of tweezers, but the grinding and error 'E 13' continues to be displayed. I did however find this: http://www.carforums.net/showthread.php?t=11337 E13 : Tape Communication Error Cause(s): The micro-processor is reading the speed pulses from the tape deck either too fast or too slow. Correction(s): It the tape player is still playing a cassette, try a new cassette. If there is still an error, service the unit at a Service Center. Looks like the only thing for us is to bring it to a dealer :-( - or get a new system.
a teleporting machine a micro freeze that freezes instead of melting
Micro-operations are detailed low-level instructions used in some designs of computer central processing units. They mainly implement complex machine instructions.
Yes You can put it in as long as it is micro =D