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celestial-light
recommend me something very similar to angantyr ? asking you because your charts are full of black metal bands and we have angantyr as a strong common band, so figured you might know of some very similar bands (am not usually into BM), probably some not so well known ones in that style because some of the well known bands that are supposedly like angantyr according to many people couldnt quite click with me..
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Willensmacht
lol did my what saga just come back to you? hehe. Yeah, it was pretty heartbreaking... Stupid uTorrent glitch. I only listened to Wir sind Helden when I lived there and "Ist das so" was on the radio. But on the topic of German top 40, here is one I've always dug: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9VOo112F7M
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Willensmacht
I can't recall your What nick but I remember you. You're studying in MA. :) Yeah, that was an unfortunate situation. I had downloaded about two hundred freelech torrents and gaining a few gigabytes a day when a seedbox glitch forced me to go from uTorrent to Deluge. Then Deluge redownloaded all 200+ torrents overnight, just as What simultaneously ended the freelech period. I've had your library radio on for the past two hours while doing other stuff. I've noticed every once in a while, all the tech trash is broken up by something like...A Suffusion of Yellow, which sounds like Nintendo gone metal. Betrays a quirky side. :P Are you German?
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Willensmacht
Thanks for the add. Going through your library radio now, some cool bands. Vektor is cool. If you like technical stuff, check out Pavor, it'll blow you away. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ms3rkheJbBE
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Defiler
I'm just getting started with the neofolk myself; Ulver and "Whom the Moon.." led me there. I want to know about the band that matches the description you gave when you find it though! Neofolk awaits its "Nightwish", in a manner of speaking. So far Hexvessel and :Of the Wand & the Moon: are my favorites. Some others to check out: -- Will o' the Wisp: http://eternalwarfare.bandcamp.com/album/will-o-the-wisp (acoustic goodness) -- Les Discrets: http://www.last.fm/music/Les+Discrets (not neofolk but they come to mind anyway; just got their album) -- Syven: http://koti.mbnet.fi/atolonen/syven/syven.php (The 'USB Stick' edition of their latest EP includes FLAC versions of their previous album as well as all of Nest's albums) -- Velnias: http://velnias.bandcamp.com/album/runeeater (again not neofolk but just want to make sure you know about them)
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ItaloMegadeth
Good taste! Do you know where I can find the link to download the album'' Bestial Thrashing Bulldozer''?
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Liag247
Hej, I'm finally (kind of) done with the translation: http://ge.tt/1cUe3wP/v/0 Feel free to look it over and give me some critique, if you have a bit of spare time. That next-to-last paragraph is probably the hardest thing I have ever translated, and it shows. It's rather literal at times, as I felt preserving the feeling of using mostly old Germanic words was more important than adhering to silly things like common English sentence structure. Now on to actually making a video.
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Liag247
Hi again, I translated a small part of Braadödha Vindh for a very-under-construction list of bands I consider interesting in a mythologic-/historical sense on RYM: http://rateyourmusic.com/list/Riagu/alternative_myth_and_history/ It would be nice if you read the Sigrblot part and see what you think of my translation, and if you have any suggestions for the style. I'm considering translating the two Weltenfeind tracks for a couple of videos, so any input is appreciated. Also going to add an entry for Arckanum soon, but translating his broken tongue into something meaningful can be quite the challenge for a layman like me.
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Liag247
I don't know as much about linguistics as I'd like to, really. The basic Finnish I do know is mostly from being there a few times and from Finnish music. I kind of actually like how logical it is, though. That article was fun reading. What is the "something somewhere" you're referring to, by the way? I can think of lots of things.
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Highhopes4ever
hellow my friend, I hope you are having a good time! I wish you all the best for the new year 2011 xx
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ISoS
I think you've got the differences between mathematica and matlab on point. They make all the engineers at Lowell take Matlab classes too, I think Mechanical and Electrical especially. Mathematica is pretty much just candy for mathematicians that don't necessarily want to deal with the hassles of raw coding. I'm wondering if starting with Matlab helps with people going into LabView, because essentially with Matlab and C you learn what's going on behind the scenes with LabView. From what I've heard LabView type programs are pretty widely used in industry for engineering stuff. I'll have to check out that other program you mentioned, I'm all programmed out this year, I learned 3 different programming languages, basically. Then they also wanted me to learn LaTeX to do my senior math project in, which is a program that is used heavily in publishing mathematics. So I'll have to learn that one eventually, blah haha
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ISoS
Yeah, I think that's why a lot of places prefer LabView for that kind of thing. It's pretty good for modeling stuff I think. You can design an interface that actually looks like an instrument panel too. Now, I really like Mathematica, but it does have it's limitations. You might like it, because the programming abilities are based off of C, so that's nice. I like it because you can make it look like the math we do by hand. You might like Matlab a little more though, that's a bit more like a computer language. Neither of the systems are all that great with Set Theory or Abstract Algebra. There's a freeware system called Sage that looks pretty good for that stuff, so you might want to check that out in the future.
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