Not the Bee Gees, At All
"Are you listening to <i>the Bee Gees</i> over there, Stephen?"<br>
Silly as it may seem, I take Elizabeth's question quite seriously: "No," I say, "But it does sound a bit like it, huh?"<br>
"Um, yeah."<br>
"Are you listening to <i>the Bee Gees</i> over there, Stephen?"<br>
Silly as it may seem, I take Elizabeth's question quite seriously: "No," I say, "But it does sound a bit like it, huh?"<br>
"Um, yeah."<br>
Okay, now we have rayguns. I demand my jetpack.
Obviously, I am <I>not</I> the Geek King after all.
Thrilling proof that some people waste even more time than I do! Sightsee via Google Maps.
Nine "Life Hacks" that will make you happy.
I've read 'em all—does that make me the King of the Geeks? (And shouldn't <I>Cryptonomicon</I> be in first place?)
From the frontiers of neurobiology.
Be the hippest kid on your musical block.
Most of you admit to trying questionable tweaks if they are free or reasonably priced. What's the weirdest tweak you've tried? Did it work?
On November 12, the audio forum <A HREF="http://www4.head-fi.org/forums/index.php?">Head-Fi</A> staged a meet at the Adria Ramada Inn and Conference Center in Bayside, NY. You may be asking yourself, <I>What's a Head-Fi meet?</I> That's a complicated question, but the simplest answer is that it's an attempt to provide a real-world equivalent to the sense of community that Head-Fi's forum has engendered on the Internet. It's also a chance for like-minded enthusiasts to share their favorite equipment and software with one another. In a hotel conference room, some 30–40 headphone lovers set up their systems (frequently incorporating more than one headphone amp and multiple sets of headphones) and then everybody started listening, taking turns around the room, and discussing what they'd heard.