where da party at
you are the person our math problems warned us about
I work at a dairy. I see this shit all the time. THIS IS WHY I HATE PEOPLE.
(via travelererrant)
I exist in a constant state of “I want to do the thing, but I don’t want to do the thing for arbitrary reasons.”
I’ve been sent a Miltank gif on Raricow, and I’m not sure what to do about it…
Same guy.
THIS IS THE SAME GUY.
Gavin Free is living proof that you can be an expert, even a world-recognized authority in one specific field, and borderline incompetent in every other field there is.
(via travelererrant)
garbage-intelligence-human-male:
But…what about learning to read sheet music?
What about it?
Boo fucking hoo, technology is making music more accessible and removing the barriers associated with sheet music. Fire is scary and Thomas Edison was a witch.
Yes, I said barriers.
Not everyone is great at reading sheet music. I started playing piano when I was four and I still absolutely SUCK at sheet music. It’s just never clicked for me. I can identify notes, given enough time, but it takes me forever to learn a new piece, I often have to literally mark what a note is, and sight-reading is incredibly far beyond me. If I had access to this, maybe I would still be playing piano instead of just letting it gather dust in the spare room. Maybe I would still be improving my skills. Heck, maybe I could use it as a tool to IMPROVE MY SHEET MUSIC READING.
Think of how accessible this makes piano music to the sight-impaired. How much easier it is to see those colored bars and lit keys than the little dots on little lines on a page.
Stairs didn’t go out of style because we invented escalators. Books didn’t go out of style because Kindles are a thing. Sheet music isn’t going to just up and vanish because there’s a new alternative on the block. You can keep playing from sheet music if that’s your thing, and people will keep learning from it.
But I can see this being fantastic for people who sheet music just really isn’t their thing, because of accessibility or other reasons.
I’m not against such an idea, and I’m so old fashioned when it comes to piano that even Mozart would say I”m outta style. I just have a simple question; what do you do when its time for them to play on an ivory (aka non-lighted) piano?
There is a magical phenomenon known as muscle memory. If the person has practiced on a lighted piano, they not only get used to seeing the notes coming, their fingers become accustomed to moving in rhythm and to particular places. Having to play a new piece on an ivory would be difficult, and potentially impossible, but playing a piece that you know how to play would be rather easy. It’s just like riding a bike.
If you’re happy and you know it clap your hands!
If you’re angry and you know it rave and rant!
The last 3 movies I only started watching after having read through most of the series. They suffer severely from the choices made in the previous films, primarily through omitting characters and events that tend to be kind of important later on.
askknightstar replied to your post:All Harry Potter books read: Check All Harry…
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Try again. I have never been fond of Harry Potter, but I decided to give it a shot after being encouraged by some people IRL, and here, including you. The books were passable, not great by any means but that just may be me reading them as an adult with a degree in English literature and literary theory. They were alright, despite some stupid decisions and some imbalanced character use.
The movies though, wow. They started out mediocre, improved through the 5th, then took a swan dive to crap afterwards.
All Harry Potter books read: Check
All Harry Potter movies watched: Check
Refund for my time: Pending.