This might also be of help:
http://www.computerhope.com/ipconfig.htm
Edit: Actually, I'm not sure if FreeDOS even has that- you may have to rely on third party tools.
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This might also be of help:
http://www.computerhope.com/ipconfig.htm
Edit: Actually, I'm not sure if FreeDOS even has that- you may have to rely on third party tools.
I have no experience to set up relay internet in DOS (ie DOS machine->Ethernet->Gateway), but I guess a first step would be confirming you got the LAN working. In DOS6.1 I had to install a dirver called Netbios.exe to do that. You may have to play with ipconfig as well (to set up gateway stuff).
For the dial-up, google a call-by-call provider's number if you want to quickly test if it works. No idea if there are still such services around.
Akira, I had a track of mine used for this and got a W8 to fill out. No problems (I'm in Germany). Contact with TheFly was excellent, no worries there.
Awesome, added! Thanks!
Recordings of Northern Lights EM
http://www-pw.physics.uiowa.edu/mcgreevy/
NOAA underwater recordings of natural, man-made and mystery sounds. Great ambiance.
http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/vents/acoustics/sounds.html
Confirmed. I've got dark blue text on the cm.org-text-bubble-grey. I've updated from 10.10, where it was still ok. It's either a bug or someone at Opera dug up a W3C doc that states background color has to be last used if not stated explicitly. They'll do anything for a better Acid test
Edit: On the upside, they've finally added round corners
Thanks for the feedback!
arfink: Thanks for the tips- I'm a bass addict, so the heavy kicks will probably stay. The dissonance on Whitetail may be the heavy vibrato I put on the kick (thus adding a very low FM sub). I haven't exactly the best speakers, so it might show on better equipment. Sorry about that.
Fixed version is up, arfink
And merci, Flashbob!
Hmm, maybe it's also for saving space on the cadriges. Do you know which games used the hardcoded tunes?
Aside from those handheld cheapo LCD games I never heard anything like that.
Banging pots & pans as a kid. Then making funny noises by shooting out the cleaner from my recorder in elementary school. Then started to teach myself guitar, then bass. From there some bands that went like thrash metal -> punk -> grunge. Then my first chippy period with Adlib -> ST3 -> FT2. Then ambient, trip-hop, industrial, illbient for a very long time. Then now.
XC3N: Sure, go ahead!
arfink: Ack, I'll put up a fixed version when I'm home- sorry for the inconvenience
Also, it's important to recognize your own energy. Some people can iterate like 12 times a day *COUGH*little-scale*COUGH* but some people simply can't. If you have endless reserves of creative energy to dedicate, writing music for a living might be for you. It's also a rewarding challenge to try to write great music inside of other peoples' limitations (sound familiar?)
I've been writing music for video games and it's really fantastic. The only downside is always having to be around the computer so much. I wish I had a piano and could write music on paper easily!
I think the more important part is, at least for me, preserving the feeling of freedom you have with hobbies. Certainly, doing comissioned work can be fun (mostly for the challenges involved, as you mentioned) and the reward of seeing it comming together is very satisfying.
However, I'm easily being stressed by pressure of commitment, which can build up pretty fast when your creativity decides to ignore the outlines of a project completely and wanders off to something different instead (which mine is prone to do). The fun always, always ends once money is involved
ChipMusic.org / Forums / Posts by µB