The default fonts in that package, and the fonts that come with Microsoft proucts, are actually knockoffs of the fonts that came with the original PostScript package.
Looking at the comments,/. readers are worse then the NME - everybody crowns his own King of Electronica [sic].</p>
<p>Let me suggest this: don't listen to them. Instead, go downtown, and try to find some specalized record stores. Hopefuly, with a nice and informative staff, that will let you listen to some samples, and help you find out what you'd like.</p>
<p>I (almost) never buy music online - I prefer to visit the local <a href="http://www.balancecd.com/">shop</a> , chat with the staff, and learn about albums I wouldn't find any other way.</p>
<p><i>Obligatory plug</i>: For some amazing soundscape and ambient works, you should try Tapet's (released by <a href="http://www.factrecords.co.il">Fact Records</a>) latest album, TapetSounds. An amazing album.</p>
Violence leads to more violence
on
Our New Pearl Harbor
·
· Score: 2, Insightful
Or are you not paying attention to what those vermin are preaching in their newspapers, television programs, and mosques?
[...]
They started the fight. It's time to end it.
You know what that remind me of?
When I was in kindergarden, everytime there was a fight, we'd come up to the teacher, crying "He started!". That never helped us back then, and it won't help anybody, a man or a country, now.
Violence triggers more violence. We can trace the ME conflict back to the 19-th century, if we'd like to, when the first Zionists came to Israel.
Ech'ad Ha'am, one of the famous Zionist scholars, wrote in "Truth from Israel", published in 1891 (All the mistakes in the translation are mine:)
"[The Jewish residents] are walking with the Arabs in hostility and cruelty, tresspassing their property, beating them with violence and without need, and even praising such deeds".
Trying to kill each other won't solve the situation. It never did, and it never will. I live in the Middle East. To be precise, I live in Jerusalem. My dad was shot by an Egyptian soldier, and died from his wounds.
So I'm having a damn good seat in the middle of the conflict, and believe me, I don't care who started it. Justice won't do any good, and won't bring anybody back from the dead. We can only try and improve our future.
I lost a father, and that hurts. I don't want nobody else to lose a father as well, and I don't care wether he's "evil" or not, wether he got "god" by his side or not, wether he lives west or east of the border... Nobody.
The problem with the vinyl record is that it's much more complicated to use then modern music media.
When you'd like to play a CD, you just snap it in the tray, and press the play button.
When I'd like to listen to a record, I need to take it slowly out of it's package, put it gentley on the turntable, and gently lower the needle into the groove.
But in return, I get a magnificent sound. Without DACs to distort it in the transport from the plastic to my ears.
Wear and tear is almost non-existent, when handled propely. Damn it - I got 30 years old records that sound better then five years old CDs!
The default fonts in that package, and the fonts that come with Microsoft proucts, are actually knockoffs of the fonts that came with the original PostScript package.
Looking at the comments, /. readers are worse then the NME - everybody crowns his own King of Electronica [sic].</p>
<p>Let me suggest this: don't listen to them. Instead, go downtown, and try to find some specalized record stores. Hopefuly, with a nice and informative staff, that will let you listen to some samples, and help you find out what you'd like.</p>
<p>I (almost) never buy music online - I prefer to visit the local <a href="http://www.balancecd.com/">shop</a> , chat with the staff, and learn about albums I wouldn't find any other way.</p>
<p><i>Obligatory plug</i>: For some amazing soundscape and ambient works, you should try Tapet's (released by <a href="http://www.factrecords.co.il">Fact Records</a>) latest album, TapetSounds. An amazing album.</p>
You know what that remind me of?
When I was in kindergarden, everytime there was a fight, we'd come up to the teacher, crying "He started!". That never helped us back then, and it won't help anybody, a man or a country, now.
Violence triggers more violence. We can trace the ME conflict back to the 19-th century, if we'd like to, when the first Zionists came to Israel.
Ech'ad Ha'am, one of the famous Zionist scholars, wrote in "Truth from Israel", published in 1891 (All the mistakes in the translation are mine:) "[The Jewish residents] are walking with the Arabs in hostility and cruelty, tresspassing their property, beating them with violence and without need, and even praising such deeds".
Trying to kill each other won't solve the situation. It never did, and it never will. I live in the Middle East. To be precise, I live in Jerusalem. My dad was shot by an Egyptian soldier, and died from his wounds.
So I'm having a damn good seat in the middle of the conflict, and believe me, I don't care who started it. Justice won't do any good, and won't bring anybody back from the dead. We can only try and improve our future.
I lost a father, and that hurts. I don't want nobody else to lose a father as well, and I don't care wether he's "evil" or not, wether he got "god" by his side or not, wether he lives west or east of the border... Nobody.
The problem with the vinyl record is that it's much more complicated to use then modern music media.
When you'd like to play a CD, you just snap it in the tray, and press the play button.
When I'd like to listen to a record, I need to take it slowly out of it's package, put it gentley on the turntable, and gently lower the needle into the groove.
But in return, I get a magnificent sound. Without DACs to distort it in the transport from the plastic to my ears.
Wear and tear is almost non-existent, when handled propely. Damn it - I got 30 years old records that sound better then five years old CDs!
You could learn from the best admin around, the B.O.F.H.. He always seems (Unlike some other ITs) to find the easiest way around!