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zkom

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Posts posted by zkom

  1. Am I able to post about an electro release before @dcom? :emotawesomepm9:

    a2170855372_10.jpg

    Out yesterday, September 2nd

    Quote
    Danger! Danger! High Voltage! King of bad-ass electro-funk Gary Gritness returns to Hypercolour with an electrifying release of super slick, powered up, body poppin’ jams!

    Plugging into the mainline, Gritness lets rip with four bustling joints on the ‘Power Charge’ EP. Frenetic drum machine patterns, feverish bass lines and quick fingered keyboard riffs are laced across every track here, all designed to blow the circuits of your mind!

    Available from Bandcamp https://hypercolour.co.uk/album/power-charge-ep

    • Like 1
  2. Continuing from the other thread. What stuff do you guys put in all the awesome pockets of the cargo pants/trousers/shorts?

    For me it's:

    • Front up left: phone
    • Front up right: keys
    • Front down right: wallet (yeah, I carry a separate wallet, because I don't want to lose my cards, cash AND the phone at the same time)
    • Front down left: anything extra depending on where I am and what I'm doing, might be a passport, pocket knife, screw drivers, handkerchief, pocket camera, etc
    • Back pockets are for short term storage for small items only, like museum or cloakroom tickets, public transport tokens, etc
  3. 2 minutes ago, ignatius said:

    the 90s are coming back in some ways. this summer when i traveled thru atlanta airport lot's of younger girls wearing oversized sweatshirts w/tennis skirts and shelltop adidas. felt like i was right back in miami in the early 90s. also, there's more baggy style jeans around on skaters and BMX kids.  breaks and gabber are popping up in LA more.

    I saw young people wearing crop tops with baggy or cargo trousers everywhere in Helsinki this summer. Something like Gwen Stefani or Mel B back in the mid 90s. Looks very nostalgic. I'm not disapproving.

    • Like 1
  4. On 8/24/2022 at 3:58 AM, luke viia said:

    Never thought I'd be a chinos guy, but am trying to outgrow my lifelong denim habit, and I gotta say: these new pants give me a fucking nice leg. 

    As a person who has had a habit of wearing cargo pants occasionally since the 90s the zoomer trend of wearing them is pretty funny. Sometime ago I overheard a young girl in metro going on about how brilliant the cargo pants are because you can put so much stuff in the pockets.

    Spoiler

    12bqggozr0771.jpg?width=479&format=pjpg&

     

  5. An audio frequency causing trouble with a high precision electro-mechanical device like a hard drive sounds entirely plausible. And bass frequencies being the culprit sounds about right because their absolute amplitude is higher in music in general and they travel better in solids like in the laptop case and the components inside.

    The part about removing the frequency is very vague but I would assume it's some kind of band-stop filter in the audio device's firmware. If it's in the Windows driver level or in the windows audio pipeline it should be possible to cause the crash by installing Linux and playing the song there.

    Most resonance problems I've come across at work though have been due to electro-magnetic resonance.

    • Like 1
  6. 12 hours ago, prdctvsm said:

    431326022294474613dfb39b73c9d3401964aba2

    Tourists with cameras were already a problem before TikTok or Instagram but they've certainly made it worse.. I've seen things like tourists shoving their SLR cameras in random kids' faces in railway stations without asking a permission. I guess because in their thinking "poor foreigners" are so photogenic or some shit and they think you don't need to ask them or their parents for permission. It's just fucked. They would never do the same thing back in their home country. Just start snapping close up photos of random children in public places in the US or Europe and see how it goes.

    Actually I myself might be in a Japanese tourist guidebook for Mongolia because I accidentally walked in the frame when their photographer was taking photos and then the writer and the photographers just fucked off.

    • Farnsworth 1
    • Big Brain 1
  7. 2 minutes ago, xox said:

    It’s weird to see how much some ppl idealize him but it’s equally weird how some are pissed by him 

    I haven't really paid much attention to him, read his stuff or watched videos or anything because luckily I almost never come across this stuff IRL, but what little I have seen he seems like a comedy character, like no way he's really like that. Like he's doing a comedy bit. It's all a show. ykwim? I find it hard to believe that some people actually take him seriously.

    • Like 3
  8. On 8/20/2022 at 3:41 AM, exitonly said:

    listened to the whole thing. the guy unwittingly described the gantz graf video, honed in on the out of phase mod techniques, karplus tones and how ae likes to play hide the salami with their melodies. seemed like a good all first try at analyzing a track. there is part of me that wishes he’d been given a differently track but it would be hard to say which

    There's probably a lot of stuff going on in "1 1 is" to modulate and phase the components in and out but one method you can clearly see if you just look at the spectrogram. There is a band-stop filter or EQ or something similar that cuts off frequencies and it's being modulated with an LFO. Also there's a 180 degree phase difference in the LFO between the left and the right channel.

    2lce312vtg721.jpg

    • Like 4
    • Thanks 2
    • Farnsworth 2
    • Big Brain 1
  9. 1 hour ago, prdctvsm said:

    439.png

    Relating to this: my friend was recently on a bar terrace drinking beer when some unknown woman started to play a Jordan Peterson video very loudly on her phone and just stared at my friend like a lunatic. lol

    • Haha 1
    • Burger 1
  10. On 7/22/2022 at 11:26 PM, neurone said:

    can't find out if this tax applies for artists selling from these countries, or for  buyers from these countries.

    in anyway, it seem not fair.

    but international web  economic buisness and laws is something I know nothing about.

     

    I need to pay the Finnish VAT every time I buy anything on Bandcamp.

    Kind of related to that I would rather people just download my stuff for free because in theory at least I should report all the sales as income and it's just too much hassle for the (potential) money I would be getting. Yeah, I could deduct all the expenses like software etc and pay zero taxes (because lol at the thought of making actual net profit from my music) but god forbid finding all the receipts is one big pain in the ass. I think normally no one would care but because I have a VAT registered business unrelated to the Bandcamp someone actually might check my where my revenue is coming from.

    I'm not even going to go into how it would affect my employment benefits if I was getting any and the employment office found out. Just having the music up on sale is a potential problem in that case.

    • Like 1
  11. A Finnish immigrant song recorded in New York in 1930.

    The director of Finnish national public radio tried to destroy all of the copies in the radio archives in the late 1940s because she said she hated it, but the record was so popular that it got released on two different record labels in 1947.

    • Like 2
  12. 13 hours ago, beerwolf said:

    Yeah I understand that. I knew when I finished my travels when I was 32. I started to realise I needed to settle into some sort of normality. Don't get me wrong I've always worked hard, that's how I funded my trips, I'd work 14 hours a day six days a week to save money, I aint funded by mum or dad, so had a good grasp on reality and what needed to be done to achieve what I need to do. To be honest I was burnt out anyway, I was quite happy never seeing an aeroplane (or a temple lol) for at least 10 years. Which I followed through. but I felt trapped like a caged animal. And a caged wild beast goes kind of crazy. My three best friends all moved away, two of them I've known since nursery school. Then bad stuff happened. Self medicating with drugs, alone. Just to feel a burst of adrenaline and escape from the lethargic, heavy fog of life. That's a story for another time. But I overdosed twice. The second I was very close.

    I've met people who have been traveling for most of their lives and they just can't stop. One time I met a woman in her late 60s who had been living in some pretty hardcore places from Haiti to Papua New Guinea. She said when she went to visit her family in Scotland for a Christmas she got very bad anxiety after just a few days and started to cry all the time so she had to leave for Africa.

    I also met a guy in Africa who had resigned or gone awol from the US navy sometime in the 70s and had been traveling in Africa since then. He just said it's impossible to return to US anymore. He had tried it but failed.

    I have also a friend who basically left Germany when the Berlin wall fell and lived around the Balkans and Black Sea area, never returning to Germany but somehow ending up in Japan with wife and kids and seems pretty miserable now that he can't travel anymore so freely.

    So I'm a bit wary what might happen if I travel too much..

    I used to work and save money and then go traveling. The pandemic put a stop on that for a bit. But now that the borders are opening the pandemic has actually made combining work and travel easier because there is much more remote work available in my field so I can travel and work at the same time to some degree. Although it does get a bit hard if you're somewhere with an abysmal internet connection and rolling blackouts and several timezones off from your coworkers..

    • Like 1
  13. On 8/7/2022 at 3:54 PM, beerwolf said:

     

    However before I sold my soul to the company, I spent almost a decade travelling around the world. India, Nepal, Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, Laos, Vietnam, Botswana, Tanzania, New Zealand, Canada and three years in Australia. All I need to do is complete the link from Darwin to Cape Tribulation and I would've backpacked the entire circumference of Oz (also have done the middle bit from Alice Springs down to Adelaide). I was also doing loads of stuff like fishing trips, cycling trips, camping trips in the UK. My life was a total adventure, but now and since 32 nothing much seems to happen. I was talking to my best friend on his annual BBQ pilgrimage to my garden, and he said to me how much he wished he had done all stuff I did back in the day. I told him I wish I'd studied harder and had his fairly relaxed, high flying, very well paid job! Though I wouldn't change it to be honest. 

    I feel like longer trips, like 6+ months, fry my brain somehow and every time it gets harder to return to some vestige of normalcy. Maybe at some point I'm just going to be stuck on an orbit around the globe and never land back to normal life.

  14. I was around the Nordics, Germany and the Baltics in July and basically the only place where people were wearing masks anymore was the German public transport where it was mandatory. Also in Germany as soon as the people got off the vehicle most of them took the masks off which was a bit silly because there can be hundreds or thousands of people at the station but then if you're the only passenger in a local bus the driver ogles at you for not wearing a mask. (I did it by accident once because I didn't remember the rule coming from Denmark).

    Anyway, I don't know what's my point. No masks in Northern Europe I guess. I don't know how the rest of Europe currently is.

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