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Videos (354) | Sift Talk (21) | Blogs (32) | Comments (1000) |
Videos (354) | Sift Talk (21) | Blogs (32) | Comments (1000) |
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Can This Change Everything for DJs
*quality scratching
ant (Member Profile)
Congratulations! Your video, Blue Grass Dog: Dog scratching at glass door..., has reached the #1 spot in the current Top 15 New Videos listing. This is a very difficult thing to accomplish but you managed to pull it off. For your contribution you have been awarded 2 Power Points.
This achievement has earned you your "Golden One" Level 70 Badge!
ant (Member Profile)
Your video, Blue Grass Dog: Dog scratching at glass door..., has made it into the Top 15 New Videos listing. Congratulations on your achievement. For your contribution you have been awarded 1 Power Point.
Introducing the Compact Disk
I took that as scratch-proof within normal operation. Records are read by the same thing that tends to damage them, whereas lasers don't make any physical contact.
scratch proof my ass
Introducing the Compact Disk
It's funny how he talks about the dynamic range of CDs, when producers decided pretty quickly that range was for pussies and What We Needed Was MOAR LOUDNESS!!
Regarding the scratch proof thing, apparently, the original spec for the CD was very fault tolerant. You could actually burn a cigarette hole through it and it would still play. However, it only held 60 minutes of music and the head of audio at Phillips demanded that it could hold 74m for one of Beethovens symphonies (I forget which one).
That story is probably apocryphal though.
Introducing the Compact Disk
Scratch-proof, hah!
Introducing the Compact Disk
scratch proof my ass
Shep Smith Shuts Down Sean Hannity's Lies And Propaganda
3 of the countries that I pay for cable tv service all carry fox news. MSNBC is no where to be found on the channel listing except for in america. Hell even in america in a number of hotels that I've stayed in through out the midwest you can't find MSNBC.
Conservative talk radio dominates the AM radio networks from coast to coast. The right wing propaganda machine is finely tuned and a force that the left hasn't scratched the surface on trying to counter.
I don't know what it all means, but fox is doing a great job of dragging this country around by the nose.
Just Loading A Rock Onto A Truck
I love that there was enough foresight involved to put a pallet in the box so it wouldn't get scratched, but not enough to notice that the rock outweighs the truck.
b4rringt0n (Member Profile)
Your video, Learning Metallica One from scratch for 1 year, has made it into the Top 15 New Videos listing. Congratulations on your achievement. For your contribution you have been awarded 1 Power Point.
He's trying to watch the Game
awww I just wanna run right over and scratch its belly.
Cat Reacts to Emergency Warning Alert System
This is a pretty good analog to how Hawaii reacted to their (false alarm) ballistic missile warning... although the cats missed the final step of scratching the eyes out of the people responsible for it...
Incredible Low-Transition Takeoff F-18 Super Hornet
Everything is all shock and awe until someone gets a scratched cornea.
Kinetic Spinning Ring Box
Make them?
If you want to cook an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe.
What if you don't have all the cool tools?
Perception of programming versus the reality
This is so true...
Programming without the internet was tough. I remember my early years of programming in ASM and C/C++. The only internet access was via BBSes and Trumpet Winsock. Your only source of real help was from Usenet groups and questionable help files. There was no such thing as Intelli-sense (as we know it now) or auto-complete; you pretty much had to memorize the parameters for all Win32 API calls and the STL for C++ was brutal to use. Programming nowadays is relatively easy in comparison - pretty much anyone can code thanks to the internet and fantastic online resources. Heck, my 7 yr old daughter is learning to write code using a Scratch-derived visual programming language and Cosmo (look it up, it's awesome). I started "coding" at 8 by typing out programs from an adventure game programming book, in BASIC (think old Infocom games, like Wishbringer/Zork, etc).
The challenge in today's programming environment is the rapid pace of change. It's so f'n hard to keep up with every new toolkit, platform, library, programming language enhancements, etc.