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Alrite! Wow Looking Forward to Coding with the Notepad Tonight. First Gotta Go Out To the Garage for a "marlboro black 100" one of my favorite cigarettes. Hearing this time rythym from space thing in my room with Yekans hf-transmitter leaning up against the air purifier, It's like we're right like here alive somehow, listening to these text files, like, we're not sure how anyone would react to our text and computer sound experiments from long ago.
So we prefer not to admit that there are a couple of remaining audio and video clips of our very interesting computer experiments.
With our vast studies of this coding from scratch with text was the only option, so, when you are faced with the amount of pre-existing structural, sound-heywire magic,
u have to look at the structure of your .wav file at some point and when the .wav file is rendered correctly, you should never, go above 890 kb max for a .wav file, for Under 3 Minutes of Length for a .wav that you could actually keep up with and analze into the code which you are making with the instruments. So a 890 is a starlyght quality maximum acceptable, and beyond reason mysterious, example of the highest quality which extra-terrestrial beings, perportedly put a .wav render of the first song ever recorded
So we prefer not to admit that there are a couple of remaining audio and video clips of our very interesting computer experiments.
With our vast studies of this coding from scratch with text was the only option, so, when you are faced with the amount of pre-existing structural, sound-heywire magic,
u have to look at the structure of your .wav file at some point and when the .wav file is rendered correctly, you should never, go above 890 kb max for a .wav file, for Under 3 Minutes of Length for a .wav that you could actually keep up with and analze into the code which you are making with the instruments. So a 890 is a starlyght quality maximum acceptable, and beyond reason mysterious, example of the highest quality which extra-terrestrial beings, perportedly put a .wav render of the first song ever recorded