I know. I know. I haven't written on here in forever. And I need to do better. But anyway, there is a Willie Nelson song that really haunts me . . . the music more than the lyrics. It's old, but relatively new to me. Enjoy.
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I have listened to this song now many, many times since downloading it. On dialup, it takes about 20 minutes to get the .flv of it. It was worth it. I converted it to a .mpg version and loaded it on Jim's mp3 player. I also downloaded it to Laura's iTouch. One year ago, I couldn't have even told you what some of these terms meant, and now I throw them around like I've said them all my life. Thanks for the link; thanks for the blog. I like reading yours because you "don't" write all the time. ;-)
Love you!
Your leedle sissy
Posted by: Trisha McAdams | April 13, 2009 at 09:00 AM
Yeah, there's also some term that is called aac, but I'm not sure what that is either!
Posted by: ac5 | April 14, 2009 at 07:15 AM
Oh this is funny (to me)....
aac = your initials
aac = Advanced Audio Coding
The later is alot like when a man listens to a woman talking (come to think of it, so is the first one listed above):
"AAC is conceptually similar to the ubiquitous MP3 format. Like MP3, it takes advantage of deficiencies in human hearing to discard digital bits corresponding to sounds unlikely to be heard. The human hearing system cannot hear quiet sounds in the presence of loud sounds of a similar frequency; for example, a voice conversation cannot be heard while a jumbo jet flies low overhead. Known as auditory masking, this phenomenon allows the discarding of data with minimal loss of fidelity."
It's that "...discard digital bits corresponding to sounds unlikely to be heard" that made me realize how much you are like that... ha ha ha ha ha!
Do a little juggling of your initials and you get aca. Hmmmmmm........
Posted by: Trisha | April 18, 2009 at 09:03 PM
That is the clearest explanation I have ever seen. Thanks for the info.
Posted by: ac5 | April 23, 2009 at 12:30 AM