> Life is like biryani. You move the good stuff towards you & you push the weird shit to the side.  

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May 25, 2025 -- 11:15 PM
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go back to maingo to old version

June 08, 2005 -- 6:30 PM
posted by Par

Shouldn't you at least listen to them before you post?

Man, someone should write something that works like rapidshare without the annoyance. Fuck. I mean, shopping carts proliferate throughout the internet. Is it so hard to adapt them into a queue that would let you download from rapidshare without manually starting your allotted one download??

At least then I wouldn't be so frustrated by the lack of 'rapid' in the share...

June 08, 2005 -- 6:09 PM
posted by nobody knows my face

well... I usually let eric do the regnyouth notifications, but since he's on hiatus I'll take up the duties today. Bear in mind my tastes are somewhat different, and he probably would've never picked the ones I'm about to list:

1. Bear Vs. Shark's brand-new full-length, Terrorhawk. They do sort of an indie/emo thing, and are pretty good... but this is their first album in 2 years so it should be interesting to hear if they've made any changes to their sound. As of yet, I haven't listened to this album, but I'm a fan of their first one.

2. Gorilla Biscuits' album Start Today (password = "kru5ty"). Gorilla Biscuits are one of the most underrated New-York hardcore bands of the late 80s. Now's your chance to catch up with one of the contemporaries of Minor Threat. Whereas Ian Mackaye went on from Minor Threat to form bands like Fugazi, Walter Schreifels left Gorilla Biscuits to form one of the best post-hardcore bands of the 90s, Quicksand. After Quicksand was done, he further continued a successful musical career in the fantastic band Rival Schools (who for some reason share a band name AND album name with an SNK video game entitled "Rival Schools: United By Fate"... I haven't quite figured out what the connection is though...). Currrently, Schreifels is working on a less aggressive pop outfit Walking Concert who is signed to Some Records.

3. Speaking of Quicksand, here's their album Manic Compression: file 1, file 2, password: "kru5ty".

4. And while we're at it, how bout Rival Schools' acclaimed album, United By Fate? file 1, file 2, password: "kru5ty".

5. Here are the collected B-side singles (1993-2001) from the ever-absurd Notwist. If you like what you hear, check out their album Neon Golden which made its appearance in my top-10 list of 2003.

6. And since we're getting into weirder territory here, it'd be a shame if none of you had heard the great Sun Ra. This dude is considered one of the better jazz musicians of his time, and he's disgustingly prolific, having released 100s of album in his career. But he's not just a jazz musician, he's a PERFORMER of the highest caliber. All of his albums have weird science-fiction themes and he tended to make clearly absurd lies about his own identity. Genius has it's price I guess. Here are some of his albums for download:

  • BBC's Songs From Saturn: file 1, file 2, file 3, file 4.
  • Celestial Love: file 1, file 2.
  • Batman And Robin



    I guess that's all for today...


  • June 08, 2005 -- 5:28 PM
    posted by nobody knows my face

    yeah, it's probably 93. It's been a month or so since I wrote that paper and you know how I am with numbers...

    June 08, 2005 -- 3:58 PM
    posted by Al

    Tay I don't think the date thing really matters for that LambdaMoo thing does it? I found a source that said 93 but I don't think it really matters. 93, 94 either date is way too early for the majority of people to have internet access.

    -Strictly for my ninjas

    June 08, 2005 -- 3:56 PM
    posted by Al

    Interesting reading on that LambdaMoo virtual-rape case. More interesting that it happened in 1993 before the vast majority of north americans had even entered the internet. We are dealing with these issues now only because they effect more of us. It will be interesting to see what else developes. I'm kind of scared though. Can we handle it? Or have we gone too far?

    -Strictly for my ninjas

    June 08, 2005 -- 1:41 PM
    posted by nobody knows my face

    Actually, the last paper I wrote was about the reality of the virtual environment, and the culture that is constructed within it. Once an individual has developed an identity and become enculturated (ie: no longer a n00b) within that environment, that environment in essence becomes real to them in the sense that what happens in that environment matters. People used to scoff at the thought and many psychologists initially denied that what happened on the internet had any bearing on people's actual lives. But in 1994, that all changed when the "virtual rape" at LambdaMoo occurred. Since then, the psychology of virtual identity has been respected as an incredibly important issue.

    June 08, 2005 -- 1:08 PM
    posted by Par

    A Shanghai online gamer has been given a suspended death sentence for killing a fellow gamer:

    Qui Chengwei stabbed Zhu Caoyuan in the chest when he found out he had sold his virtual sword for 7,200 Yuan (£473).
    ...
    In this case, Mr Zhu did offer to hand over the cash but Mr Qui lost patience and stabbed him with "great force" according to media reports.
    ...
    "My son was only 26 when he died. He was sleeping when Qiu broke into his home. He was barely able to put his pants on before Qiu stabbed him," said his father, Zhu Huimin.
    "We want Qui to die, and immediately," he added.

    I wish I knew where to begin on this one. I'm hesitant to believe that online gaming is the root cause of this (but, of course, it will take a hit proportional to how widely this story is reported.) I would like to think it takes more than an online game to drive someone to kill another person; that violent tendencies are surfaced in these cases, not ingrown by the gameplay.

    That said, there are foreseeable consequences to creating virtual economies driven by the obsessive nature of their participants. As stupid as it sounds, the article's implication that 'virtual property' laws would help may just be correct. Of course, this isn't necessary revolutionary in our legal history. The new thing about virtual property laws is that they apply to digital property created in an arbitrary economy; our currency, for all intents and purposes, is also virtual.

    June 08, 2005 -- 4:46 AM
    posted by nobody knows my face

    Nevermind... I pretty much got all the Mars Volta video now too...

    You know how IE only lets you download 2 files at a time from the same site? Yeah... there are ways around that. I only just discovered it now. Which means I can finally go to bed and hope that my precious files are downloaded in the morning!

    June 08, 2005 -- 4:26 AM
    posted by nobody knows my face

    still downloading ATDI shit...

    Haven't downloaded much of the Mars Volta shit yet... I figure since they're still together as a band that their stuff will be easier to find than ATDI's should this site go down. But with that being said, if anybody wants to get the Mars Volta vids we can trade the ATDI for MV shit afterwards or whatever.

    Some of this video is pretty spectacular. I've been watching ATDI all night. I've almost got ALL of the ATDI vids except the 3 interviews and the late-night-show appearances which I probably won't bother with.

    June 08, 2005 -- 2:07 AM
    posted by nobody knows my face

    How to hold your penis in your hands in public:



    hahaha, that's a good trick!!!

    load more posts . . .