Base-8 positional notation, using digits 0–7
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The kaiju tattooer is in the house! You know his work, not you get to know his story! Octal does a reveal all to tell us who he really is and where he has come from!On instagram @octeeltattooCommercials brought to you by Chicken Burger DiscoOn instagram @chickenburgerdiscoSponsors:Empire BlistersAre you looking for blisters? Look no further than Empire Blisters! For all of your blister needs, they've got you covered. With over 19 different types of blisters and bundle deals you can't go wrong! Use code: TOYSONTAP10 to get 10% off. If you are apart of the Patreon you are able to get 20% off!If you want to become a sponsor of Toys on Tap Podcast send an email to toysontappodcast@gmail.comPatreon:To support the show you can join the Toys on Tap Patreon. Go to patreon.com/toysontapThank you to our supporters:DKE Toys @dketoysEric Nichols @massiveminihorseDimension X Toys @dimensionxtoysBootleg Toy Co @bootlegtoycoPocket Salsa @pocket_salsaDirty Yetti @dirtyyettiDan Overdorff @dan_overdorff_artZimot Co @zimotcoBarbarian Rage @Barbarian_rageManny Cartoon Studios @MannycartoonstudiosPickmans Vinyls @pickmansvinylsShaun C DowneyBrandon Barker @manormonsterRichie Manic @richiemanicRecollection Toys @recollectiontoysRubber City Toys @rubbercitytoysRate and Review:The best way to support the podcast is to rate and review
We take another deep dive into a technical topic, this time something you use every day - operating systems, specifically on desktop computers like PCs, Macs, and soon the Steam Deck.
The eighth installment in the Lyssna Records catalog, "Searching" EP, comes from Icelandic producer Ohm. For this occasion, Ohm teamed up with friends and long-time collaborators "Octal Industries" and "TM Shuffle" to create a beautiful and ominous six-track EP. Our premiere for today, "Zona 1," sees Ohm joining forces with another producer from Iceland, Octal Industries. Icelandic connection worked like a charm in this case and delivered a beautiful groovy deep house endeavor. Even though the most prominent part of "Zona 1" is the groove, the real beauty is happening in the background, where lush pads serve as a foundation for two sequences that marvelously blend and create a wonderful "cosmic summer" atmosphere. Zona 1 and the rest of the Searching EP are coming out on February 25th via Stockholm-based Lyssna Records. https://soundcloud.com/ohm-599575574 https://soundcloud.com/octalindustries https://soundcloud.com/lyssna-records Ohm on FB: https://www.facebook.com/ohmiceland/ Octal Industries on FB: https://www.facebook.com/yetanothertechnomusician Lyssna Records on FB: https://www.facebook.com/lyssnarecords www.itsdelayed.com www.instagram.com/_itsdelayed_ www.facebook.com/itsdelayed https://t.me/itsdelayed
We're continuing our anime-themed Octal FM series! Sefran has watched anime for most of his life, but Jalada has watched almost none. We're changing that. This time, we've both been to see a new film that was screened in the UK; Belle, or Ryū to Sobakasu no Hime.
Two Xbox 360 modding extraordinaire guests in a row?! This time around we have Octal joining us, an important figurehead in the Xbox 360 modding scene who has pushed RGH related developments forward in massive ways the last few years. We talk about what got him into electronics repair, the recent Right to Repair legislation, RGH3, backwards compatibility on Xbox One/Series, and more!
TRACKLIST : Lazy Luke - Wherein Simon Spe - Phased Ohm & Octal industries - Same High Sam - Colina dub Heavenchord - Concrete dub Devotion Island - D667 Merv - Remain Heavenchord - Spacechord Aura Fresh - News from the universe Alessandro Crimi - Cycling along Venice Beach Mitri - Full moon Basicnoise - Corona loops
@octalindustries is the solo project of Jónas Thor Gudmundsson. The project was originally founded in 2003 by Jonas and Mike Sickinger, the founder of the Octal label. The debut release of their collaboration was the Automatik EP on the Transistor Rhythm output. Couple of years later they joined their friend Deep Chord for a shared 12“ release, which today is a quite a valuable gem for dub techno lovers. The three of them joined hands together later that year to create a 3x12“ release undir the pseudonym Spectral Network. The release was quite limited (111 copies) and was considered one of the most interesting 12“ releases that year by many critics. After the release of the Spectral Network eps the duo went for hiatus as other projects took over, also as opportunity for musical collaborations became harder as the Atlantic Ocean divides them. Jonas continued working on other projects as @ruxpin – producing numerous releases along the way. In 2011 the duo was asked by the French independent label @entropy-records to do some releases. As Michael was unable to participate, Jonas went on solo and worked on a full-length release, which later became Meeting of the Waves LP. Another remix followed for G.R.I.T. which was hailed by dubtechnoblog.com as the best remix of the year 2012. In more recent years, Octal Industries has been working on numerous collaborations with artists such as fellow Icelander @ohm-599575574 - and fruits of their work has been released on labels such as @thule-records, Rawax, @luckofaccess, @allinnrecords and many more. Octal Industries also released works independently in 2019 an EP entitled Julia Sets on @kontaktrecordscph, which featured a remix from the Detroit legend @mikehuckaby – and his second full-length album Our Seasons, which was released on Vertex in December 2019. Octal Industries, although being Icelandic in origin, works and resides in Tallinn, Estonia. Stay Rave with #R13! Tracklist: 01 Federsen - Ghanja Dub (Vade Mecum) 02 Yotam Avni - Avka (Stroboscopic Artefacts) 03 Waage - XoS27 (Unreleased) 04 Octal Industries - Spectrum (Unreleased) 05 Exos - Lag11 Minifunk (Unreleased) 06 NonniMal - Skjуla (Thule Records) 07 Altitude - Simplicity (Obscure Components) 08 Malin Genie & Selidos - Come The Morning (Berg Audio) 09 Traumer - Burning (Berg Audio) 10 Ohm & Octal Industries - Drama Chord (Exos Remix) (Rawax) 11 Ozy - Pull The Strings (Force Inc) 12 Lakefkt - Oceania (Ohm Series 003) 13 Oculus - Morph (AE Recordings) 14 Ohm & Octal Industries - Hobart (Unreleased) 15 Exos - Attfalt (Octal Industries Remix) 16 Oxun - Forward (Unreleased) 17 NonniMal - Ronja (Thule Records) 18 Exos - Svali (Waage Remix) (Unreleased) 19 Andre Kronert - Triton (Berg Audio) 20 Octal Industries - Wildfire (Kontakt)
Sound-bytes are our shorter episodes about what we've been up to recently. Sefran has watched the new Neon Genesis Evangelion film; Evangelion: 3.0+1.01 Thrice Upon a Time. But what did he think?
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In this episode, we learn how Andrew completely ignored Nick's advice from last episode. What changes happened to Andrews bike stable? We also teach Andrew more about pro racing. Is there a word he cannot pronounce correctly? Listen to find out! Gear Omne Air Spin The helmet that inspires the will for more. Whether on the morning commute or a long weekend ride, the Omne Air SPIN pushes you to go farther. Optimal liner density and thicker core protection zones provide ideal all-round protection for everyday use. The ventilation channels and low weight - inspired by our award-winning road cycling helmets the Octal and the Ventral - deliver optimum comfort and functionality on longer rides. It incorporates SPIN, POC's patent-pending silicone pad technology. And by taking a whole helmet approach to the creation of the Omne Air SPIN it delivers superior levels of comfort, fit and performance. Check Out The Helmet Bontrager Pro Quick Cleat Saddle Bag Since it's not the most exciting piece of gear we use, Nick discusses his saddle bag preference. The Bontrager Pro Quick Cleat Seat Pack is for riders on-the-go. The Quick Cleat attachment system makes it easy to switch packs from bike to bike or take your essentials with you after rides end. Built with durable nylon to handle road grime from awesome adventures, its lightweight construction cradles your essentials through your favorite rides. Bontrager Pro Quick Cleat Saddle Bag Advice Stretching is quite important for performance and recovery. Here is a list of some of our favorite video routines. Dream Bike 1991 Greg Lemond Team Z - Pro Caliber More About The bike
In this episode, we learn how Andrew completely ignored Nick's advice from last episode. What changes happened to Andrews bike stable? We also teach Andrew more about pro racing. Is there a word he cannot pronounce correctly? Listen to find out! Gear Omne Air Spin The helmet that inspires the will for more. Whether on the morning commute or a long weekend ride, the Omne Air SPIN pushes you to go farther. Optimal liner density and thicker core protection zones provide ideal all-round protection for everyday use. The ventilation channels and low weight - inspired by our award-winning road cycling helmets the Octal and the Ventral - deliver optimum comfort and functionality on longer rides. It incorporates SPIN, POC’s patent-pending silicone pad technology. And by taking a whole helmet approach to the creation of the Omne Air SPIN it delivers superior levels of comfort, fit and performance. Check Out The Helmet Bontrager Pro Quick Cleat Saddle Bag Since it's not the most exciting piece of gear we use, Nick discusses his saddle bag preference. The Bontrager Pro Quick Cleat Seat Pack is for riders on-the-go. The Quick Cleat attachment system makes it easy to switch packs from bike to bike or take your essentials with you after rides end. Built with durable nylon to handle road grime from awesome adventures, its lightweight construction cradles your essentials through your favorite rides. Bontrager Pro Quick Cleat Saddle Bag Advice Stretching is quite important for performance and recovery. Here is a list of some of our favorite video routines. Dream Bike 1991 Greg Lemond Team Z - Pro Caliber More About The bike
Scanner School - Everything you wanted to know about the Scanner Radio Hobby
Free SDR Course! Our new free course will introduce you to Software Defined Radios. "The Ultimate Beginner's Guide to Software Defined Radio: Everything you need to know to get started with SDR in an afternoon" is now open for enrollment. Register now at https://courses.scannerschool.com --------------------------------------------------------------- Today we talk about several different numbering schemes. Two of which we find in the scanner radio environment. What You Need To Know Decimal system can be thought of as human-readable digits. These are easy to use to read and compute. They are also easy to convert from one form to another. While decimal works well with humans, it is not the case with computers. Binary language is used for them. It has two bits 0 and 1. Octal is a 8 bit system. This is how we save a little bit of room in a system. 0-7 make up 8 bits. Hexadecimal (Hex) is a 16 base system with values from 0 – F. There are no numerical symbols that represent values greater than nine, so letters taken from the English alphabet are used, Hexadecimal A = decimal 10, and F = decimal 15. I stick to decimal format when I program talk groups into my scanners. When you look at Radio Reference, Trunk SysIDs and WACN are in Hex. RFSS and Site ID’s are shown in Decimal with Hex in parenthesis. Talk groups on Radio Reference have a column for Dec and a column for Hex. All session notes with links to the items we talked about can be found on our website at www.scannerschool.com/session175 --------------------------------------------------------------- Would you like 1 on 1 help? If you need help with your scanner and are looking for some one on one tutoring, I'd love to help you out. Visit www.scannerschool.com/consulting to book your one hour appointment today! Help support Scanner School You can help support Scanner School by visiting our support page at www.scannerschool.com/support
This week, Dr. Doug talks Joe Biden, Bad Octal, Bad, North Korea Zinc Group, PhP, NMP, the Mafia, and the show Wrap Ups for the week! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/swn for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/swn112
PHP Internals News: Episode 70: Explicit Octal Literal London, UK Thursday, November 12th 2020, 09:33 GMT In this episode of "PHP Internals News" I talk with George Peter Banyard (Website, Twitter, GitHub, GitLab) about an RFC that he has proposed to add an Explicit Octal Literal to PHP. The RSS feed for this podcast is https://derickrethans.nl/feed-phpinternalsnews.xml, you can download this episode's MP3 file, and it's available on Spotify and iTunes. There is a dedicated website: https://phpinternals.news Transcript Derick Rethans 0:15 Hi, I'm Derick, and this is PHP internals news, a weekly podcast dedicated to demystifying the development of the PHP language. Derick Rethans 0:24 This is Episode 70. Today I'm talking with George Peter Banyard, about a new RFC that he's just proposed for PHP 8.1, which is titled explicit octal literal. Hello George, would you please introduce yourself? George Peter Banyard 0:38 Hello Derick, I'm George Peter Banyard, I'm a student at Imperial College London, and I contribute to PHP in my free time. Derick Rethans 0:46 Excellent, and the contribution that you're currently have up is titled: explicit octal literal. What is the problem that this is trying to solve? George Peter Banyard 0:56 Currently in PHP, we have four types of integer literals. So decimal numbers, hexadecimal, binary, and octal. Decimal is just your normal decimal numbers; hexadecimal starts with 0x, and then hexadecimal characters so, null to nine and A to F, and then binary starts with 0b, and then it's only zeros and ones. However, octal notation is just a decimal, something which looks like a decimal number, which was a leading zero, which doesn't really look that much different than a decimal number, but it comes from the days from C and everything which just uses like a zero as a prefix. Derick Rethans 1:48 But I have seen is people using like array keys for the, for the month names right and they use 01, 02, 03, you get 07, and 08 and 09, and then they look at the arrays. They notice that they actually had the zeroth element in there but no, but no eight or nine. That's something that is that PHP no longer does I believe. No, it's mostly that the parser doesn't pick it up anymore. Instead of silently ignoring the eight, it'll just give you an error. You've mentioned that there's these four types of numbers with octal being the one started with zero. But what's the problem with is that a moment? George Peter Banyard 2:31 Sometimes when you want to use, which looks like decimal number. So, for example, you're trying to order months, and use like the full two digits for the month number, instead of just one, you use 01, as an array key. When you get to array, it will parse error because it can't pass 08 as an octal number, which is very confusing, because it. Most people don't deal with octal numbers that often, and you would expect everything to be decimal. Because numeric strings are always decimal, but not integers literals. So, the proposal is to add an explicit octal notation, which would be 0o. So python does that, JavaScript has it, Rust also has it, to allow like a by more explicit to say oh I'm dealing with an octal number here. This is intended. Derick Rethans 3:33 Beyond having the 0b for binary, and the 0x for hexadecimal, the addition of 0o for octal is the plan to add. And is that it? George Peter Banyard 3:45 That's more or less the proposal. It's non-BC, because the parser before would just parse or if you had 0o, so there's no PC very possible numeric strings are not affected because since PHP 7.0 hexadecimal strings are not handled anymore as numeric strings. Numeric strings will always be decimal integers, literals will have your four different variants, and maybe a future proposal is to deprecate the implicit octal notation to always make a decimal, even if you have leading zeros. Derick Rethans 4:21 At the moment, if I do as a string literal 014, and do an echo that I get 12. George Peter Banyard 4:27 Because then it's interpreted as an octal. The most bizarre example is if you do var_dump string of 014 double equal to 014, you will get false, because one is interpreted as well 14, like the numeric string is interpreted as 14, whereas the octal number, which says 014 as an integer literal is interpreted as an octal number, which is 12, which is slightly confusing for most people, because that also if you because PHP, most, we all deal with like HTTP requests, and I GET and POST a data, which everything is in strings because it's a text protocol. And if you get user output, which is like I don't know, naught 14 and you're, are you intending to compare munz numbers which are or. 01201, and then you get to array, well then you just fail. Derick Rethans 5:22 Of course, removing that support means a BC breaking change, which phones happen until PHP nine, of course, which might be a while away from now let's say that. George Peter Banyard 5:31 Probably five years, if we're going through the timelines from PHP seven to PHP 8, but to be able to deprecated and remove it. Well, you need to add support for something else. So that's more the long term plan. Derick Rethans 5:46 And your proposal is basically to make it equivalent to binary and hexadecimal numbers, so that it is less confusing in general. George Peter Banyard 5:55 Yes, that's why the RFC is very short. Derick Rethans 5:58 What are octal numbers actually used for? George Peter Banyard 6:02 The only practical use case that I've seen is for Linux permissions, so chmod. Execute read and write, are those who permissions which chmod will use an octal number. Derick Rethans 6:15 In a different order though but George Peter Banyard 6:17 Yes, I don't know chmod though on top of my heart. Derick Rethans 6:20 Is it only Linux permissions that you can think of? Is there anything else? I can't either so I'm asking you. George Peter Banyard 6:25 No, I can't. That's why I find it very odd that like the leading zero just makes it octal instead of anything else. I mean it has precedence because many other languages do that like C, Java, I don't know, many any language I suppose was just picked it up from. I think C. But when I looked into the history, weirdly enough before C. They had a prefix for like binary, octal, and dec, and hexadecimal. But then the one for octal just got dropped, for some reason. Derick Rethans 6:57 Maybe because the zero and the "o" next each other look very the same. We've already touched on whether there are BC breaks or not, BC standing for backwards compatibility. And, there shouldn't be any because it's something that a parser currently doesn't understand. But do other build-in extensions need to be modified for example? George Peter Banyard 7:18 We have two extensions, which one which deals with numbers, so which is GMP, which is arbitrary precision arithmetic. And then there's the filter extension to filter octal, which filters data and tells you if it's valid or not and it gives you back a, like a correct integer or something like that, which is the filter extension, which has an octal filter. Both of these extensions have been modified to support like the prefix notation, and interpreted as a valid octal number. And then we have like the function which is oct2dec, which is basically octal to decimal, which which weirdly enough already supported like the octal prefix. Derick Rethans 7:59 But that accepts strings, I suppose? George Peter Banyard 8:01 Yes that that accepts strings. Derick Rethans 8:04 And it already supported the 0o prefix? George Peter Banyard 8:07 Yes, which is very on point for PHP I feel. Some things are just supported randomly in one side but not everywhere else. Derick Rethans 8:15 It's a surprise for me that is what I can say. So, yeah, you mentioned as a short RFC, you think there will be any extensions to this in the future? You already mentioned having it maybe deprecating the current just zero prefix? George Peter Banyard 8:31 So one other possible future scope is with the prefix to reintroduce octal, binary, and hexadecimal numbers. As with the prefixes as numeric strings. If you type, 0xAABBCC in, and you have that as a string, which could be useful if you get like colorus back from, from a webform, that would be automatically converted into an integer, or not automatically converted if you do like if you compare it to numbers, or if you cast it to an integer, because currently if you get 0x, something and you cast it to an integer, you will get zero. So that way you need to use like a function like hex2dec, or oct2dec, or bin2dec to convert from a string, or to another string and then cast that. Or it may be cast directly to an integer, I'm not exactly sure. But that's also debatable if it's something we want to add. Derick Rethans 9:37 Is it actually possible to do, for example with hexadecimal numbers, do like if you have inside a string. Can you do xAA, does that actually work? George Peter Banyard 9:48 I didn't think so. Derick Rethans 9:49 That actually works. You can do var_dump("x6A") and it gives you the letter J. George Peter Banyard 9:55 The more, you know. Derick Rethans 9:56 But it doesn't work for binary, or octal. Only for hexadecimal with x. So I guess that's something that could be added to string interpolation at some point. George Peter Banyard 10:07 PHP is so weird sometimes. Derick Rethans 10:10 Yes, I mean PHP does things in its own way, however, making this kind of small changes to it, just end up improving the language step by step and that is of course the way forward. Right. George Peter Banyard 10:23 Yeah. Derick Rethans 10:25 And I'm looking forward to more of these small incremental changes in the future as well. George Peter Banyard 10:30 Seems like a good plan. Derick Rethans 10:32 Are you planning any more? George Peter Banyard 10:34 Well, so I went through some of the old RFCs, most notably the one about when the whole scalar type thing was going on. We had like strict types and then we had like the coercive types. One which was by Dmitri, Zeev, pretty sure Stas, and um forgot, forgetting somebody else. But some of them, some of the ideas they had, which was making some of the type juggling more strict, so float to integer conversions. Currently, even if the floating number has like decimal part, it will just truncate it to an integer, and it won't emit any warning and it will just like pass without any issue, I think that may be is kind of unexpected. I made the other warning to that to possibly make it a type error in the future. Derick Rethans 11:24 You mean upon a cast? George Peter Banyard 11:26 If you've type hint function as accepting only integers, so if you say foo(int $bar), and you pass it the float. And you would like in normal mode, it will truncate, and it will just pass an integer. Derick Rethans 11:40 Because it's just typed. George Peter Banyard 11:42 Yes, and we've had multiple reports of people being very confused about why it's just truncating the numbers, because it's not even rounding up. If you had like if you have like 0.9 it won't round up to one it will just truncate to zero, which a lot of people are confused by. Derick Rethans 11:58 In strict mode doesn't do that? George Peter Banyard 11:59 Yeah, because strict mode is very strict and will only allow you to pass explicitly what's been what you've requested, with the exception of the normal integer to float conversion which is lossless. Derick Rethans 12:12 That's lossless up to a certain point yes. George Peter Banyard 12:14 To a certain point like your integer doesn't fit, then it goes overflow to a float. Derick Rethans 12:19 All right. George thank you very much for taking your time this afternoon to talk to me. George Peter Banyard 12:23 Thank you for having me. Derick Rethans 12:26 Thanks for listening to this installment of PHP internals news, the weekly podcast dedicated to demystifying the development of the PHP language. I maintain a Patreon account for supporters of this podcast, as well as the Xdebug debugging tool. You can sign up for Patreon at https://drck.me/patreon. If you have comments or suggestions, feel free to email them to derick@phpinternals.news. Thank you for listening, and I'll see you next week. Show Notes RFC: Explicit octal integer literal notation Credits Music: Chipper Doodle v2 — Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) — Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
My special guest on this episode of the Treasury Career Corner podcast is Gary Slawther, Interim Group Treasurer at Eddie Stobart Logistics Limited. Gary is a highly experienced, technically strong, strategic treasurer with proven expertise in developing financing strategies, structures, and effective management in all areas of financial risk. Working as a member of senior management teams, Gary often reports directly to the CFO or CEO and prioritises knowing the detail of the business and operations. Having this level of understanding of the business enables him to accurately assess the real financial risks, the financing requirements, and how strategy is to be executed. Gathering such knowledge requires communication with fellow team members and being close to the operations. Gary has had an incredible career journey and worked with a variety of organisations including OCTAL, Arabtec, and many more. He is currently the Interim Group Treasurer for Eddie Stobart Logistics Limited, where he assists in delivering DBay's post-investment recovery plan for the business focusing, among several things, on bank relationships, facility compliance, information provision and driving the working capital culture of the group. On the podcast we discussed… How Gary got started in treasury and how he built his successful career Why you need to think of treasury in the context of business Why you shouldn’t be afraid to ask questions Why Gary changed roles throughout his career The truth about why treasurers are hired and how to know whether you’re bringing value to a company Why you should try to learn as much as possible with every role The importance of being independent as a treasurer and understanding ethics Why you should lean on your advisors when you need them The role of ethics within treasury Why you need to be culturally aware as a treasurer and/or group treasurer Gary shares his top tips for a successful career Want to get in touch with Gary? If so, you can connect with him on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/gary-slawther-58a1b111/?originalSubdomain=uk). Are you interested in pursuing a career within Treasury? Whether you’ve recently graduated, or you want to search for new job opportunities to help develop your treasury career, The Treasury Recruitment Company can help you in your search for the perfect job. send us your CV (https://treasuryrecruitment.com/jobs) and let us help you in your next career move! If you’re enjoying the show please rate and review us on whatever podcast app you listen to us on, for Apple Podcasts click here (http://www.treasurycareercorner.com/itunes/)!
Once again, Skip Simmons is fielding guitar amp questions from around the world. Submit your question to Skip here: podcast@fretboardjournal.com or leave us a voicemail or text at 509-557-0848. This episode is sponsored by Grez Guitars. Some of the topics discussed in this episode: 3:11 Making an amp cabinet out of a beehive, a new baffler 8:23 Winding your own power transformer (YouTube) 9:54 Flot-A-Tone Amplifiers 23:11 Octal tubes revisited 26:30 A kit Vibrochamp with an intensity problem 30:02 A one-string b-bender, the Pitch Pilot 31:32 Helping fellow pro amp techs, a motorboating tweed Bassman 38:28 A low-watt 2x12 combo amp? 41:03 Plate dissipation differences for cathode-biased, Class A and Class A/B amps 44:48 Alamo amps 48:01 Megger cables and a 1968 Fender Bandmaster for bass 50:51 "Bumble Bee" capacitors & Mass MOCA 55:42 Itemized invoices 58:45 Powering a pair of speakers with a Fender Blues Jr. IV 1:03:44 The TAVA Big Index Page 1:08:16 A loose tube socket on a homemade 5F2A circuit 1:13:05 How episodes get named
We're continuing our anime-themed Octal FM series! Sefran has watched anime for most of his life, but Jalada has watched almost none. We're changing that. This time, Jalada has been watching Cowboy Bebop.
Space Age Recordings and Fierce Recordings are two British independent record labels that not only released music from Spacemen3, but were the godfathers of the shoegazer and drone-rock scenes which blossomed in the U.K. at the end of the 1980’s with obvious affinity with the sounds of The Velvet Underground, Sonic Youth and Suicide. This episode features also other bands from their catalogue, including a piece from the controversial album ‘LIE: The Love & Terror Cult’ by Charles Manson. The episode features: Angus MacLise, Spacemen 3, Spectrum, Experimental Audio Research, Sonic boom, Octal and Charles Manson.
En este episodio empezamos a ser transformaciones a explicar lo que es el sistema binario octal y hexadecimal ponemos ejemplos en los tres casos y sacamos diferentes resultados si tienes dudas escríbeme a mi correo: andres.d31@anlubel.com/andres.d31@selecint.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/anlubeldev/support
Further reading: EA and Activision's $79bn games-as-a-service growth Emerging Trends in Games-as-a-Service (video) Battle passes are replacing loot boxes, but they're not necessarily a better deal What Fortnite's Battle Pass gets right How GaaS are changing the way we play Call of Duty Mobile - Legends of War soft launch article Artwork Personalization at Netflix
Binary can be challenging. The values tend to have a lot of digits, long sequences of ones or zeros can be difficult to distinguish, and the relative magnitudes of multiple binary values can be difficult to resolve. In this episode, we discuss a couple of the popular methods to quickly represent binary in a more human readable form.
Next up for our winter season of artists from the Icelandic deep techno hive, we welcome Jonas Thor Gudmundsson AKA Ruxpin AKA Octal Industries. This amazing 1 hour of deep, dubby, industrial machine techno sounds is released under his Octal Industries moniker... why? Because it is a live improvised electronics performance of mostly unreleased Octal Industries materials. Now living in Tallin, Estonia, this guy is an absolute legend in our view, having released many strings of mind-bending releases since the late 90's on some magical labels (including Thule Records) and leaving a frothing wake of highly sought after deep/dub techno releases. Since the early days of his career he has collaborated with some of the most talented artists from Iceland including Yagya, Árni Valur Kristinsson and OHM, and also with some from further afield including Rod Modell and Michael Sickinger from the USA. Despite this rich artistic legacy, it is clear from his words below and this live mix before you now, that his musical story is still unravelling with lots more exciting chapters soon to come. "On the 28th of November 2018 I sat down and did a little studio mix - compiled with loops and samples from mostly unreleased tracks from my vault. Some of the songs are my creation and others are collaboration work with my good friend OHM. I don't think the plan is to somehow showcase a current live set, but rather to showcase what listeners might expect with the releases upcoming in 2019. I'm trying to find some middle-ground between dancefloor and home listening. Not sure if that works, but we'll see. There are some interesting releases in the pipeline, mostly done in collaboration with OHM. There will be 12" releases on the legendary Rawax, Luck Of Access (a new label run by Andrey Pushkarev), and also a digital release on Gartenhaus. I have an ambient techno-style LP ready in my archives, which I'll throw out myself digitally (or by other means) when I find a proper gap in the release schedule. I'll also have a track featured on a compilation from Unknown Tribe. Anyway, lots of good things on the horizon and I'm sure that 2019 will be as fruitful as the previous years have been for me." Jonas Thor Gudmundsson, 2018 https://soundcloud.com/octalindustries https://soundcloud.com/ruxpin https://www.discogs.com/artist/510574-J%C3%B3nas-Thor-Gudmundsson
In this episode of Octal FM we discuss and review Celeste, a game about climbing a mountain. Celeste is made by Matt Makes Games and is on Twitter at @celeste_game. Their previous game was Towerfall Ascension. The music is by Lena Raine, @kuraine on Twitter. Intro/Outro music: JACKS - Runaway Fashion
Mike Bohn, KG7TR, has been building his own amateur radio equipment since he first entered the ham radio hobby over 50 years ago. Mike builds around the parts he has on hand creating beautiful vacuum tube transmitters, receivers, and high power amplifiers that rival the look and feel of early Collins radio equipment. We take a deep dive into the construction technique of KG7TR in this QSO Today.
Hey Crowdfinders, this episode is all about you. Well, actually it's all about me, but it could be about you too, if you take me up on the offer and submit, as I am, to the Octal Anthology of pitch packets. I talk to Octal creator Mike Schneider about my pitch, the pitching process, and how you can pitch too. (HINT, it starts by visiting the OCTAL WEBSITE). So listen, learn and enjoy.
En este episodio conocemos base numéricas como la binaria, la octal y la hexadecimal. Encuentra más información en:https://eeymuc.co/14-bases-numericas-binariaoctal-hexadecimal/
En este episodio conocemos base numéricas como la binaria, la octal y la hexadecimal. Encuentra más información en:https://eeymuc.co/14-bases-numericas-binariaoctal-hexadecimal/
So great to talk to Mike Schneider, the innovative anti-artist behind Octal, an anthology of curated pitch packets. It's entertainment, it's educational, it's an opportunity, it's even great design. Jump in to the world of Octal Right now on the Octal Comics Facebook Group or on the Octal Comics Website
Octal unveiled a new process for producing rigid PET film at Interpack that the company believes could help lift its turnover from €400m to €1.1bn in a year.