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rockefeller center

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Everything posted by rockefeller center

  1. http://blog.wired.com/monkeybites/2008/03/...ri-windows.html Microsoft (what about the fishy Office Open XML ISO standardization, etc.), Apple (manufacturer of control freak hardware and software)? No, thanks.
  2. One of my favorite songs. Thanks for that link.
  3. Off-topic: Aphex Twin "Meltphace 6" -> "vordhosbn" -> http://youtube.com/watch?v=NXNVe_-7zts Insane drum-programming...
  4. Jarrett: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1VCor3t8T4
  5. http://forums.invisionpower.com/index.php?showtopic=228742 http://forums.invisionpower.com/index.php?showtopic=234194
  6. The browser is not "connected to the board" because HTTP is a stateless protocol. When you navigate to an organissimo-page your browser sends an HTTP-request which the web server hopefully receives. Upon receiving a request the server generates an HTTP-object which may include a "Set Cookie"-header and is sent back to your browser (HTTP-response). If your browser allows a cookie to be set it will be stored on your computer and will be included on subsequent HTTP-request that are sent to that server (unless the cookie expired or was deleted). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP#HTTP_session_state http://wp.netscape.com/newsref/std/cookie_spec.html So, something's deleting our cookies or they're expiring? MG No, I didn't suggest that they're expiring (if this would be the case more users around here would have that problem). This was a general response to your HTTP-"theory". Check your cookie settings. Firefox: Edit | Preferences | Privacy Opera: Preferences | Advanced | Cookies IE6 (probably similar in IE7): Tools | Internet Options | Privacy
  7. The browser is not "connected to the board" because HTTP is a stateless protocol. When you navigate to an organissimo-page your browser sends an HTTP-request which the web server hopefully receives. Upon receiving a request the server generates an HTTP-object which may include a "Set Cookie"-header and is sent back to your browser (HTTP-response). If your browser allows a cookie to be set it will be stored on your computer and will be included on subsequent HTTP-request that are sent to that server (unless the cookie expired or was deleted). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP#HTTP_session_state http://wp.netscape.com/newsref/std/cookie_spec.html
  8. Firefox? The posts are all there in the html-code but aren't displayed in Firefox (2.0.0.12). Opera and IE6 render that page correctly though. There must be some error in the generated html. Well, who cares...
  9. It means 130 unhappy customers not 1300.
  10. http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/1...e?currentPage=4
  11. http://www.kloonigames.com/crayon/ http://www.playflipside.com/default.php
  12. I usually post thumbnails w/image size infos to not waste those people's bandwidth/screen space that don't want so see the images. I'm taking full advantage of thumbnails.
  13. Cool, thanks! Donaldsonography...
  14. Ask Ed Freeman. http://www.edfreeman.com/ef8.html
  15. http://www.binkie.net/wrdisc/
  16. Montreux '72. Cool show which is probably still available commercially.
  17. WR at that show w/Alphonso J., Alex A. and Chester T. http://youtube.com/watch?v=kN_TTlJlcC8
  18. For the use-cases you've described in this thread I'd go with Audacity.
  19. Explained here: http://audacity.sourceforge.net/help/faq?s...&i=lame-mp3 I guess virtually all file-formats are supported; it depends on the libraries available on your machine. Audacity documentation (online, HTML- and PDF-downloads): http://audacity.sourceforge.net/help/documentation
  20. * Highlight track * File -> Export Selection. Is this correct? Wouldn't I have to separate the tracks first before exporting them? Also, it doesn't give options to export in either aiff or mp3. O.K., to be more clear here's a walkthrough: 1. Highlight song/piece 2. Select Tracks | Add Label At Selection: A label track appears; type the name of the song/piece in text-box. Later, in the export-process, this text info can be used for tagging. Adjoining songs can be selected easily: selection snaps-in when entering a label-track's region. 3. Reapeat steps 1&2 until all songs/pieces labeled Click to enlarge. Exporting the labeled tracks: 1. Select File | Export Multiple The next steps should be self-explanatory (file format, destination, ...). Your label names will be used as song names unless you choose file names to be "numbered consecutively".
  21. * Highlight track * File -> Export Selection.
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