...virtual analog synthesis. A soft-synth designed around one of these cpus would probably sound more like a real Moog, Prophet V, etc. than any VST currently available. Virutal analogue filters and effects would also benefit.
The idea behind deejaying a party is forming an intimate relationship with the dancers. A DJ watches the crowds reactions to the music and feeds off of their energy, and then lifts the crowd even higher until an ecstatic state of union between the DJ, music, and dancers occurs. Letting computers take control of the dancefloor takes away from the true shamanistic act of deejaying. Computers can't feel love. Computers can't appreciate the unified vibration that carries the dance into higher planes of exsistance. Giving computer control of the party takes away everything we as humans put into it. Computers may be used to make the music....but remember, there is a beating heart on the other side of that vinyl groove.
A useful and interesting application for a massively parallel supercomputer such as this would be to run a simulation of the WTC attack and possibly pinpoint where the black box recorders are, and if they survived.
Relax, it'll be nearly a decade before you can afford one of these without having to take out a second mortgage on you house. By then i'm sure a better GUI will exist.
This car is a plug in car - it doesn't generate it's own electricity.
The summary and article that I read talked about a hybrid vehicle with a gas engine.
...virtual analog synthesis. A soft-synth designed around one of these cpus would probably sound more like a real Moog, Prophet V, etc. than any VST currently available. Virutal analogue filters and effects would also benefit.
Seriously. I'm sure that there are bunches of folks who'd just love to see the artwork again (or for the first time.) You should share them.
Oh that is because God is going to save all of the righteous at the very moment our atmosphere burns away....following 7 years of no fossil fuels.
The idea behind deejaying a party is forming an intimate relationship with the dancers. A DJ watches the crowds reactions to the music and feeds off of their energy, and then lifts the crowd even higher until an ecstatic state of union between the DJ, music, and dancers occurs. Letting computers take control of the dancefloor takes away from the true shamanistic act of deejaying. Computers can't feel love. Computers can't appreciate the unified vibration that carries the dance into higher planes of exsistance. Giving computer control of the party takes away everything we as humans put into it. Computers may be used to make the music....but remember, there is a beating heart on the other side of that vinyl groove.
A useful and interesting application for a massively parallel supercomputer such as this would be to run a simulation of the WTC attack and possibly pinpoint where the black box recorders are, and if they survived.
*crosses his fingers*
Relax, it'll be nearly a decade before you can afford one of these without having to take out a second mortgage on you house. By then i'm sure a better GUI will exist.
It's hard to beleive that the same corporation that backs Linux and the Open Source movement would also be behind something as heinous as CPRM.