I've always found the Schaum series to be a great and very fast introductory books. I've sampled their Stats, Chem and maybe Math.
The thing I'd like to stress about Math is the importance of graphs. If you don't understand the graphs, there's no point battling with differential equations and multi-variate calculus. Thomas&Finney is a kick ass book on calculus, which will serve you right from high school through college. Too bad I got hold of it only in my final year at college.
why cant we just classify music as waht we like and don't??
and how does this effect musicians??
we'll get more sampling and stupid remixing.
i think this just might hamper creativity.
also, the record industry will (again) make a killing through popular fractals and shoving us with more N'sync crap. (actually intended for preteens!)
I've always found the Schaum series to be a great and very fast introductory books. I've sampled their Stats, Chem and maybe Math.
The thing I'd like to stress about Math is the importance of graphs. If you don't understand the graphs, there's no point battling with differential equations and multi-variate calculus. Thomas&Finney is a kick ass book on calculus, which will serve you right from high school through college. Too bad I got hold of it only in my final year at college.
Only way I'm gonna move to Evolution is when I can get AA fonts. Is it possible to get hold of the source and compile with xft-enabled?
why cant we just classify music as waht we like and don't?? and how does this effect musicians?? we'll get more sampling and stupid remixing. i think this just might hamper creativity. also, the record industry will (again) make a killing through popular fractals and shoving us with more N'sync crap. (actually intended for preteens!)