Quarter-notes lol
Quarter-notes lol
I mean this is true but not about the '70s as the original post states. Even by the '60s they had sophisticated stereo audio mixers - they just cost hundreds of thousands of dollars instead of running on people’s phones like today.
You mean quantized, snapped-to-the-grid instrumental music? Sigh.
jewish community fleeing inquisition
I sure wan’t expecting this.
It would have been even more if the Pope could draw a straight line …
Lol at the Photos icon. How does that in any way represent a photo or a camera? I guess it’s an iris shutter but that’s not something you notice too often on a real-life camera.
I mean, it got the case right on every other letter.
You used to could, on Blackberry at least.
deleted by creator
At least it got the last letter kinda wrong.
:(
Unless the enemy has a pointy stick.
Thank god they don’t live as long as fruitcake.
Your “username” is awesome.
You kids today. In my day we used Visual Source Safe and would accidentally leave a critical file checked out when we went on vacation and nobody else could get anything done until we came back.
Having worked for Comcast, I can also say they’d win gold in the “most coders jammed into a one-person office” competition.
Or Las Vegas crowds. It’s pretty wild how the Vegas lobby has completely suppressed the memory of the worst mass shooting in US history.
Borland IDEs
Ugh, you just gave me Turbo Basic flashbacks. My favorite thing was that variable names could be as long as you liked and mixed case, but the compiler only used the first two letters and case insensitive at that. So “BatShitCrazy” and “BALLPARKESTIMATE” actually referenced the same variable.
The double-space between “Excel” and “of” is what hurts me. Such a boss thing to do.
Dude/Dudette, it was just a gag comment. Not only am I not really dismissing a massive body of work just because it uses quantization, as someone who’s spent more than half his life writing software synthesis applications, I’ve literally made a career out of quantization.
That being said, music that is not quantized definitely has a more natural feel to it, although putting that “feel” into sequencing software is surprisingly difficult.