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Splinter Cell Conviction: Blessthefall

Saturday, October 29th, 2011

bit.ly Download the song for free! Click the above link! Splinter Cell Conviction: Blessthefall Bless The Fall’s “To Hell And Back” soundtracks Ubisoft’s latest entry into the adventures of Sam Fisher, Splinter Cell: Conviction Click here to visit Blessthefall’s Official Channel: www.youtube.com – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - Follow Machinima on Twitter! Machinima twitter.com Inside Gaming twitter.com Machinima Respawn twitter.com Machinima Entertainment, Technology, Culture twitter.com FOR MORE MACHINIMA, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com TAGS: yt:quality=high Splinter Cell Conviction Ubisoft Montreal Entertainment Software Maxime Béland LEAD Microsoft Windows PC Computer Xbox 360 X360 Xbox360 stealth action video game Double Agent Sam Fisher fischer tom clancy clancey UPC 008888523840 008888683841 008888220015 Blessthefall “To Hell And Back” “Bless the Fall” music montage song track title album cd disc download iTunes high quality recording gameplay footage

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Q&A: How To Get Music From Computer To Cell Phone?

Friday, September 9th, 2011

Question by Swimmer Me: How To Get Music From Computer To Cell Phone?
I have the samsung reality from Verizon, and I want to get music from my computer to my phone. I have songs on itunes, or windows media player.
I do not have bluetooth, or a card

Best answer:

Answer by Ian
bluetooth

Give your answer to this question below!

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How do I get my cell phone/mp3 player to recognize downloaded music from my computer on an sd card?

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

Question by citygirl67@sbcglobal.net: How do I get my cell phone/mp3 player to recognize downloaded music from my computer on an sd card?
I’ve downloaded music from computer to card, but it won’t play on my cell…I’ve reformatted the card 3 times, downloading both wma’s AND mp3…What am I doing wrong? I have a Samsung Trace phone.

Best answer:

Answer by Aaron T
I had the same problem trying to get cell phones to recognize files added to an SD card from my computer. Instead of dragging and dropping the mp3 files, try adding the mp3 files to the SD card through Windows Media Player 11 (using the “Sync” feature) – this worked for my Motorola Q9c.

If that doesn’t work, you may need to contact your cell phone company. It seems like some companies only allow their phones to recognize mp3 files that have been added using specific software (which might cost extra). I never was successful at getting the mp3 player on my old Verizon phone to work.

Good luck!.

Give your answer to this question below!

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Turn Ordinary Cell Phones into Beautiful Noisemakers

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010

In your pocket, or perhaps orphaned in your closet, is a sophisticated piece of electronics going to waste. So, whether you’re suffering from iPhone envy or simply want to put toxic used electronics to useful musical applications, the cell phone noisemaking project at GetLoFi could help make a happier, noisier world.

The ingredients:

  • Software running on the Java virtual machine (good, old-fashioned J2ME)
  • A hack for proper input and output (from the various headset connectors)
  • Sequenced MIDI files

The result: otherwise silent, ordinary cellphones become living musical creatures. Install files, plus information on how to make the circuit for I/O, went up on GetLoFi early in October, but thanks to Michael Una for pointing this my way over dinner recently.

Everything you need:
MIDI Loop Sequencer aka Cell Phone Noisemaker


AudioProFeeds-1

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Free Generative MIDI with Cellular Automata, Built in AIR

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Cellular AutoMidi is a generative music making app, making use of a modified version of the ever-popular Cellular Automata algorithm – a simple evolutionary model on a grid that works nicely for sequencers. (See, among many others, Lazyfish’s legendary NEWSCHOOL for Reaktor, and Audio Damage’s Automaton.)

Cellular Automata is nothing new, but here, you get to see it as an AIR/Flash app, which means a modular CA-based creation you can drop anywhere. (More on the cross-platform details after the jump.) And hey, if we can have countless step sequencers, why not countless cellular automata step sequencers? The project is developed by Leeds, England-based Flash developer Lawrie Cape.

It also deserves special mention for some nice sounds made with NI’s Massive synth, using FL Studio as host; see the video.

Cellular AutoMidi – Generative Audio Flash AIR App from Lawrie Cape on Vimeo.

Lawrie writes:

Each cell can be alive or dead. Once in a generation, each cell looks at it’s surrounding cells, and dies if it is lonely or overcrowded. If a dead cell has an optimum amount of neighbors, it will come to life! Each generation, all the cells which have come to life will sound a note. The notes are assigned based on the cell’s y position, and are all in the pentatonic scale.

There’s a few controls at the bottom which change how things work too.

Start/Stop – Starts/Stops the automation.
Load – Loads a pattern from the text box.
Export – Exports the current pattern to the clipboard. You can send it to friends, or save it for later, then load in with the load button.
Clear down – Stop and clear the current pattern.
Law Mode – An error when coding the cell rules gave this other odd mode.
Skip Audio – Just show the cell animations.
Sing Dead – Instead of singing the recently revived notes, sing for the recently deceased.
Note duration – Alter the system speed.
Also, along the top there are banks of preset systems. Click play to start a saved pattern, and click assign to assign the pattern currently displayed to that button. You can also trigger each pattern with the keyboard keys 1-8.

When you press Export, your pattern is automatically copied to the clipboard, so you can save it, or share it with people. Here’s a pattern I made – you can load it by pasting it into the load box, and pressing Load!

I’ve written a post about it on my blog here – http://www.lawriecape.co.uk/theblog/index.php/archives/735

And you can download the app there too.

What about MIDI function on different operating systems (Mac, Windows, Linux)?

Flash Midi Server is Processing based, but I’ve packaged it as Win and Mac apps in the Google Code download at – http://code.google.com/p/flash-midi-server/downloads/list
In the next couple of days, I’ll put together and test a Linux version, and hopefully release the Processing source code too – although as my first Processing project, I’m sure the code is pretty ropey.

So, give it a try, and maybe someone with some Processing MIDI skills can recommend some tweaks to MIDI operation. I think this will be particularly welcome on Linux, where the toolset is a bit leaner.

If you use it, let us know what you think or what you create!

See the original post here:
Free Generative MIDI with Cellular Automata, Built in AIR

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