Watch for reasonable added business potentials.
14 20 30 37 44 & 44
Romance is about to blossom.
20 28 30 33 35 & 6
You will be unusually successful in business.
5 8 19 21 38 & 17
The near future holds a fine gift of contentment.
11 15 16 20 21 & 25
Whatever you think, don't never, unless you will.
1960 Chan 7 12 PM
Monday, April 27, 2009
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Entrada - Stephen Scott and The Bowed Piano Ensemble
In the late 70's I discovered Stephen Scott from his LP on New Albion Records called "New Music for Bowed Piano". Mr. Scott is Professor of Music at Colorado College. This video is from a performance at Packard Hall, The Colorado College, September, 1999 and was composed as a salute to The Visual Music Festival. Enjoy.
The biggest little choo choo
A most amazing model railroad layout, in fact, the biggest in the world. Saved here mostly for my own enjoyement.
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Ohrwurms
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
Earworm, a calque of the German Ohrwurm, is a term for a portion of a song or other musical material that becomes stuck in a person's head or repeats compulsively within one's mind. Use of the English translation was popularized by James Kellaris and Daniel Levitin. Kellaris' studies demonstrated that different people have varying susceptibilities to earworms, but that almost everybody has been afflicted with one at some time or another. A more scientific term for the phenomenon, involuntary musical imagery, was suggested by the neurologist Oliver Sacks in 2007.
There have been claims "that earworms may be songs or tunes that become stuck in the phonological loop, the part of the brain that rehearses verbal information in Baddeley's model of working memory. This usually happens when a person sings the song or hums the tune once and then repeats it in his or her mind." However, this information is not supported by any scientifically published information and was presented only as a guess of an unknown author.
A "repetune" is a song or other musical piece stuck in one's mind. Wanted Words, a feature on CBC Radio One's This Morning hosted by Jane Farrow, also once asked listeners to invent a word for this phenomenon. Submitted entries included "aneurhythm" and "humbug".
Medications that are used to treat Obsessive-compulsive disorder or anxiety can alleviate the symptoms of earworms.
Earworm, a calque of the German Ohrwurm, is a term for a portion of a song or other musical material that becomes stuck in a person's head or repeats compulsively within one's mind. Use of the English translation was popularized by James Kellaris and Daniel Levitin. Kellaris' studies demonstrated that different people have varying susceptibilities to earworms, but that almost everybody has been afflicted with one at some time or another. A more scientific term for the phenomenon, involuntary musical imagery, was suggested by the neurologist Oliver Sacks in 2007.
There have been claims "that earworms may be songs or tunes that become stuck in the phonological loop, the part of the brain that rehearses verbal information in Baddeley's model of working memory. This usually happens when a person sings the song or hums the tune once and then repeats it in his or her mind." However, this information is not supported by any scientifically published information and was presented only as a guess of an unknown author.
A "repetune" is a song or other musical piece stuck in one's mind. Wanted Words, a feature on CBC Radio One's This Morning hosted by Jane Farrow, also once asked listeners to invent a word for this phenomenon. Submitted entries included "aneurhythm" and "humbug".
Medications that are used to treat Obsessive-compulsive disorder or anxiety can alleviate the symptoms of earworms.
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Stupid cell phone user's
I don't give out my cell phone number. Without looking it up I don't even KNOW my cell phone number. Call forwarding on my land line allows me to only have to remember one number for everything. I've had my cell phone number for about two years. I have NEVER sent a text message on it. Nor have I ever received one. Not surprising since nobody knows the number. Anyway, today I received my first text message, ever, and it was from somebody I don't even know. And the poignant message they sent me was: "Don't Text me anymore!" Dear, whoever you are at 6265135639, please don't text ME anymore!
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