| Recording Drums [message #69919] |
Mon, 03 July 2006 10:53  |
brandon[2]
Messages: 380 Registered: June 2006
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Senior Member |
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ir societies, which is admirable.
Meanwhile, back to the original topic: picture 100,000 dead Iraqis
(conservative estimate). Picture them all together in a pile. What do you
think . . . would it fill a football stadium, like a big bowl of brown rice?
I don't know, but now tell me how many
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| Re: Recording Drums [message #69924 is a reply to message #69919] |
Mon, 03 July 2006 11:39   |
rick
 Messages: 1976 Registered: February 2006
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Senior Member |
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in the
>> city. However, in the middle of dinner he felt a stirring between his
>> legs that continued to the point of being extremely painful. To release
>> the
>> pressure, Jack unzipped his fly andimmediately his penis sprung from his
>> pants, went to the top of the table, grabbed a roll, then returned to
>> his
>> pants.
>>
>> His girl friend was stunned at first, but then with a sly smile on her
>> face said: "Jack, that was incredible. Can you do that again?"
>>
>> Jack, with his eyes watering, replied: "I think I can, but I'm not sure
>> that I can fit another roll up my ass."
>>
>> :)
>>
>> "rick" <Report message to a moderator
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| Re: Recording Drums [message #69925 is a reply to message #69919] |
Mon, 03 July 2006 11:53   |
Neil
Messages: 1645 Registered: April 2006
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Senior Member |
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_blank">parnell68@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>> news:f093e2hhl6uklcm5lqiuvgrv7b8l0pd3ca@4ax.com...
>> > An elephant is walking through the jungle when he comes across a
>> > naked man
>> > standing in a clearing.
>> >
>> > The elephant slowly looks the man up and down and says,
>> >
>> > "How the hell do ya feed yourself with that?"
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>
>"Sarah" <sarahjane@sarahtonin.com> wrote:
>The problem with blind faith is that one risks being blinded by faith.
>(Speaking from personal experience).
Faith in God is not blind. What is blind is the choice to call God
unknowable. That is a choice to remain blind, and its source is
solely and admittedly, human. Your assumption is that all views are
human at the source.
I disagree emphatically.
Everything prodeeds from one's assumptions. Even considering
that the creator cared enough to send his son to die for us,
changes the whole world. Scary huh?
>Perhaps the only thing "God" ever said to us was "Survive!" and then left
it
>up to us to figure out that cooperation works better than competition.
If God is in quotes for you, then why would "god's" opinion
matter? Well it doesn't of course. Survive, don't survive, bake
cookies, bake Jews, who is to say no? Why should anyone care if
they do?
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| Re: Recording Drums [message #69926 is a reply to message #69924] |
Mon, 03 July 2006 11:59   |
Rich[3]
Messages: 132 Registered: January 2006
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Senior Member |
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All is permitted.
This is not God's plan for us.
>The
>"Golden Rule" is not simply a nice idea, it's a very practical and effective
>way to live peacefully with our fellow humans.
And the greedy dirtbag says "the one with the gold makes the
rules".
And you disapprove. With only "god" (otherwise known as Sarah's
opinion) to rebut him, why should he care?
>As far as speculating on the afterlife, I just don't care. I'm fine with
>the mystery, in fact, I like a good mystery. Sure, it can be fun to say
>"what if this . . . " or "what if that . . . " but let's be honest here
--
>none of us will know until the time comes, and maybe not even then. And
I'm
>sorry, but "because the bible tells me so" doesn't work for me. It's just
>stuff that was written by the brighter members of some fairly backward human
>societies thousands of years ago who may or may not have been inspired by
a
>supreme being.
And you cannot see that this is merely your view, not fact.
It is an assertion that there are no miracles, that God does not
care if we have a we to know Him or not, that things proceeded
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| Re: Recording Drums [message #69929 is a reply to message #69926] |
Mon, 03 July 2006 12:54   |
rick
 Messages: 1976 Registered: February 2006
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Senior Member |
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ro@ameritech.net" target="_blank">jjdpro@ameritech.net> wrote:
>>
>>What This "gummint" ???
>
>I borrowed that term from the libertarians. It is slang for government.
>
>DC
>Hey Aaron,
A year ago you upgraded to SP2 and mentioned that you didn't have any
problems running PARIS. I've got one computer. My desktop with WinXP SP1
with all security updates and use it for all my business and personal
finance software, databases, PARIS system, sequencers, Word docs, games,
DVD/CD burner and the internet (minimal use for email and product software
updates). I run all programs one at a time. No multi-tasking here.
Did you have any problems with the install over SP1? Did everything work
afterwards? Did it mess with Interloc PACE for PARIS? Any comments would
be appreciated.
Anyone else can chime in. I do have back ups for all my important files and
programs and all my audio is on my D drive. I've got the CD and wish to
upgrade for internet security. Once upgraded, there's no going back, right?
Thanks all,
Wayne Carson
Paris user since 97
Lurker and learner and sometimes I have a questionNo, I am not talking about a politician with a Tele...
For the last 2 days I have been working on an idea for a intonated
nut for guitars and basses.
Want to see something reall scary? Get a good chromatic tuner,
tune all your strings to pitch. Not press down each string at the first
fret and check your tuning again...
Unless you have a very lucky accident, most of the strings will be
out of tune at the first fret. This is why guitars don't play in
tune when changing from open to fretted notes.
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| Re: Recording Drums [message #69941 is a reply to message #69940] |
Tue, 04 July 2006 07:29   |
EK Sound
 Messages: 939 Registered: June 2005
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Senior Member |
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> >
> > Anyone else can chime in. I do have back ups for all my important files
> > and
> > programs and all my audio is on my D drive. I've got the CD and wish to
> > upgrade for internet security. Once upgraded, there's no going back,
> > right?
> >
> > Thanks all,
> > Wayne Carson
> > Paris user since 97
> > Lurker and learner and sometimes I have a questionThere is a guy in town here that has been installing
staggered nuts on Strats and Les Pauls for a few years now.
They improve intonation in the first 6 frets, which is
where most of the problems lay. I will ask my guitar layer
bud if he can point me to some more info. He had it done on
two of his guitars and it made a big difference. Lately
though, he has been playing mostly PRS's and hasn't had the
mod'ed guitars out.
David.
DC wrote:
> No, I am not talking about a politician with a Tele...
>
> For the last 2 days I have been working on an idea for a intonated
> nut for guitars and basses.
>
> Want to see something reall scary? Get a good chromatic tuner,
> tune all your strings to pitch. Not press down each string at the first
> fret and check your tuning again...
>
> Unless you have a very lucky accident, most of the strings will be
> out of tune at the first fret. This is why guitars don't play in
> tune when changing from open to fretted notes. Yes, the bridge
> intonation is vitally important, but the nut being intonatable is
> also very important.
>
> Today I finished installing my first made-from-scratch in
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| Re: Recording Drums [message #69948 is a reply to message #69940] |
Tue, 04 July 2006 08:45   |
LaMont
Messages: 828 Registered: October 2005
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Senior Member |
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t; AA
>>
>> "DC" <dc@spammersinchulavista.org> wrote in message
>> news:44e25d2a$1@linux...
>>>
>>> No, I am not talking about a politician with a Tele...
>>>
>>> For the last 2 days I have been working on an idea for a intonated
>>> nut for guitars and basses.
>>>
>>> Want to see something reall scary? Get a good chromatic tuner,
>>> tune all your strings to pitch. Not press down each string at the first
>>> fret and check your tuning again...
>>>
>>> Unless you have a very lucky accident, most of the strings will be
>>> out of tune at the first fret. This is why guitars don't play in
>>> tune when changing from open to fretted notes. Yes, the bridge
>>> intonation is vitally important, but the nut being intonatable is
>>> also very important.
>>>
>>> Today I finished installing my first made-from-scratch intonatable
>>> nut on my Anderson strat. (and no this is not the same as the
>>> Feiten tuning system).
>>>
>>> I've got to go out for a while, but if several of you are interested,
I
>>> will post the details on how to do this when I get a chance.
>>>
>>> It works. The guitar is more in tune, by far, than ever before.
>>>
>>> DC
>>>
>>
>>
>
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| Re: Recording Drums [message #69972 is a reply to message #69969] |
Wed, 05 July 2006 17:27   |
Rod Lincoln
Messages: 883 Registered: September 2005
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Senior Member |
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t of being able to sit in. And part of the problem is that I have
been doing a flat fee.
Thanks for all the responses though.
Jesse> between people who operate from very different assumptions about the
> nature of reality.
I think reality is pretty cut and dried and is evidenced by the nightly news
bloodletting. I think the differences are defined in terms of who is
justified in killing whom and for what reason. Thing is, I think I'd rather
be dead than be forced to be a mulsim.......and I know my wife would rather
die........and she's mean enough to take quite a few with her.
"Jamie K" <Meta@Dimensional.com> wrote in message news:Report message to a moderator
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