I understood so I think what you meant to say was "can you translate this into Thick please?"nocompromise wrote:DaveL60 wrote:Some years back, my wife was an alumni participant alongside undergrads in a MechE design contest at our alma mater. The students had ready access to CAD systems, with lovely computer-plotted output. When my wife unrolled her drawings, which she'd done "the old fashioned way," there were a lot of "wow, did you really draw that by hand?" reactions. She took the oppotunity to pull some legs, explaining how she'd used a new "graphite deposition printer" which was user friendly, point-and-click, platform and OS independent, etc., etc. She was, of course, describing a mechanical pencil but she really had the students going while the profs and the machine shop manager were working really hard to keep a straight face in the background.Steven West wrote:Something like a 'Mobile Lead Inscriber Untensil'... Nothing but a 'pencil' in militarise.![]()
DaveL![]()
could u translate that for us english speakers over the pond please?
But what IS "workflow"?
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- KVRAF
- 7936 posts since 18 Feb, 2003 from out there somewhere
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- KVRian
- 787 posts since 19 Feb, 2004 from QLD, Australia
There are better..... I'm just continuing my Britney theme for today.Sascha Franck wrote:And you're honest, yes?Chickenman wrote: Britney Spears has nice breasts.
Hm...
I was gonna say Celine
I play guitar
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- KVRAF
- 2608 posts since 26 Aug, 2002 from here
workflow is a phenomenon encountered by people in dredgers cleaning out silted waterways - as they work through the silt they occasionally hit less dense parts that leads to a rapid progress through the area resulting in brief overloads their multi-dimensional stabilisation system - work flow
this is often caused by hitting deposits from sewage outflows - heaps of shit
has that cleared anything (not a dredging analogy)?
this is often caused by hitting deposits from sewage outflows - heaps of shit
has that cleared anything (not a dredging analogy)?
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- KVRist
- 242 posts since 4 Feb, 2004 from New York, New York
ericj23 wrote:workflow is a phenomenon encountered by people in dredgers cleaning out silted waterways - as they work through the silt they occasionally hit less dense parts that leads to a rapid progress through the area resulting in brief overloads their multi-dimensional stabilisation system - work flow
this is often caused by hitting deposits from sewage outflows - heaps of shit
has that cleared anything (not a dredging analogy)?
Blog http://www.noolmusic.com/blogs/blog.shtml
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Music - http://www.noolmusic.com/music.html
200+ mp3s
http://www.myspace.com/nool
Buzz - http://www.buzzmachines.com
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- KVRian
- 507 posts since 14 Mar, 2004
For me:
Workflow is having your audio editor, sampler, and sequencer all in the one app, and being able to load in mp3 and ogg files as sample fodder. (Renoise)
Workflow is also having all the chords valid for the minor scale and their inversions at your fingertips, so you can improvise harmony like a hack, by stabbing randomly at keys and listening to the result. (energyXT)
And it's also programming in note length and note delay on sliders inside a step-sequencer plugin that applies unison and chording to the samples it hosts, which is great for programming lead or bass riffs and drum loops. (EST)
Workflow is having your audio editor, sampler, and sequencer all in the one app, and being able to load in mp3 and ogg files as sample fodder. (Renoise)
Workflow is also having all the chords valid for the minor scale and their inversions at your fingertips, so you can improvise harmony like a hack, by stabbing randomly at keys and listening to the result. (energyXT)
And it's also programming in note length and note delay on sliders inside a step-sequencer plugin that applies unison and chording to the samples it hosts, which is great for programming lead or bass riffs and drum loops. (EST)