phil92
Experienced
But I can't listen to something I can't hear...
but you won't hear anything if you don't listen
that's the Chucklehead's dilemma
But I can't listen to something I can't hear...
Pfffft.I'll be 49 in May, so...
What?And I suspect that there are many on this forum with similar...
electric boogaloo 6 in 5d!THE CHUGGENING 2 - ELECTRIC GUITAR BOOGALOO!
Is this like the time when I had high fever (read unusually high body temperature) and ask my parents to give me the math books because I wanted to do some exercises?That is your "Ancient Chinese Secret".
I was simply describing that the temperature had longer-term and shorter-term changes, to give Dave a bit more insight into some of the details of what is happening, as he seemed to already grok that temperature changed over time.
Get off my lawn.I'll be 49 in May, so...
Not quite - What he did was discover a new algorithm for talent BIAS that effectively neutralizes the bias, thereby make everyone sound -and feel - like a rock god.The "talent" block is finally becoming a reality... We've been waiting for this...
Uphill.Get off my lawn.
Why?!Feed mayonnaise directly to the tuna fish?
Isn't that the stuff they call alcohol?Not quite - What he did was discover a new algorithm for talent BIAS that effectively neutralizes the bias, thereby make everyone sound -and feel - like a rock god.
That's a line from the movie Night Shift with Michael Keaton. Keaton's character has a voice recorder that he uses to record his "big ideas". That was one of the ideas. "This is Bill, idea: feed mayonnaise directly to the tuna fish". Or something like that.Why?!
Bill: What if you mix the mayonnaise in the can, WITH the tunafish? Or... hold it! Chuck! I got it! Take LIVE tuna fish, and FEED 'em mayonnaise! Oh this is great.That's a line from the movie Night Shift with Michael Keaton. Keaton's character has a voice recorder that he uses to record his "big ideas". That was one of the ideas. "This is Bill, idea: feed mayonnaise directly to the tuna fish". Or something like that.
Back when movies weren't all either about superheroes or remakes and Hollywood actors weren't completely up their own behinds (only partially).
How is speaker compression due to voice coil heating different from say any other limiter or compressor? Is it only a 100-200 millisecond effect? Does it create a throbby oscillation as the voice coil recovers? Maybe like a tremolo effect? I never really played with it.