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#1
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Finally it exists!! IF YOU PLAY GUITAR, YOU NEED THIS BOOK!! Listen
to my story: In the process of teaching myself guitar, I went looking for a book that simply had the all the chords, scales and modes, and nothing else. I was totally surprised to find that such a book didn't exist. There are plenty of places to find this information, but it tends to be spread out over the coarse of a long book or in a poorly organized workbook. I found some of it on the web in the form of calculators and such, but that wasn't helpful since I wanted to practice away from my computer. That is why I created THE ULTIMATE GUITAR RESOURCE, which has LITERALLY EVERY CHORD, SCALE and MODE in an easy to download and print document. Its a full 37 pages for only $3.99! (hardcover is available) What makes this guide even better is that you don't need to read music to use it, so it can help every player at any level. I guarantee you'll use this guide for years! For way less than you spent on lunch, you'll learn: -EVERY CHORD (in every position) -EVERY SCALE, including the jazz and blues scales -ALL THE MODES -LITERALLY EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW - solo and play chords without reading music today. A free sample is available at: http://keystone-music.com/ http://keystone-music.com/ http://keystone-music.com/ Good luck and God Bless! p.s. I apologize if this message annoys, aggravates, miffs, disturbs, bugs or angers you. I'm actually just a dude who wrote a book that hundreds of people are using and apparently liking very much. While this may fall into a spam-like category, (since I am selling something, and you didn't ask for this message), I think that its not totally over that line since I'm not pitching a porn site, a refinance loan or a cock enlargement. Peace! |
#2
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Kind of Blue222 wrote in
news:2005020809241837837%createbeforeyouhate@itsju stabookcom: Finally it exists!! IF YOU PLAY GUITAR, YOU NEED THIS BOOK!! Listen to my story: Over on alt.binaries.e-book there are whole series of great guitar books posted in pdf format that's lots easier to store on a boat. E-book newsgroup also has great books, right now, on food storage very useful to boater cruisers. There's also great series of books on woodworking. I didn't see any on fiberglassing this week, though. If you're not interested in "Maximum Pseudo Likelihood Estimation in Network Tomography", I'm sure you'll all find a hundred books read on your next voyage. If I were cruising, I'd find a WiFi spot and load up the old hard drive before setting sail from alt.binaries.e-book (or its extensions newsgroups). www.usenetserver.com gives you unlimited downloads on up to 6 simultaneous ports for $15/month. You can access it with freeware Xnews (xnews.newsguy.com) with a username/password from any port on the net. This opens up the whole gamut of millions of MP3 music files RIAA cannot stop, ebooks and other "interesting binary files" your Mom wouldn't appreciate to take to sea on the laptop...(c; Well, so much for this spammer......(c; Oh, look! Someone reposted "The Protocols of the Learned Elders os Zion", again.....Very interesting reading.... |
#3
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Larry,
Does one have to use a subscription service to access the alt.binaries.e-book group? I tried it from GoogleGroups and was told that it did not exist. Any thoughts? Thanks Grant |
#4
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wrote in
oups.com: Larry, Does one have to use a subscription service to access the alt.binaries.e-book group? I tried it from GoogleGroups and was told that it did not exist. Any thoughts? Thanks Grant Freebie newsgroup providers usually have no access to binary newsgroups, like alt.binaries.(anything here) This reduces their server load to almost zero, allowing them to make some money off the spammers who have spots on the webpages. Might I recommend one of the best news servers, www.usenetserver.com for your newsgroup access? Knology Cable provides this for us in the SE USA as part of our broadband coverage. I'm on it, now. An unlimited $15/month personal account can be accessed with username/password from any point on the planet. Usenetserver keeps no records of what newsgroups you connect to and unlimited customers have no records of what or how much you get. As for downloading from binary groups, you need a better newsgroup client than Micro$not's hacker target, Outlook or Outlook Express. They suck for binaries. I recommend Xnews from http://xnews.newsguy.com/ Download the MANUAL WHILE YOU'RE THERE! Luu Tran is Xnews' author and gives the program away, completely free of adwares/spywares/anywares. Upon initial boot, Xnews asks you the nameserver (or IP) address of the news server you use and your username and password, if necessary. It will then go get the entire newsgroup list, over 76,000 newsgroups currently and put them in a list for that server. You look through the list and pick rec.boats.cruising by right-clicking on it and picking SUBSCRIBE from the picklist (or press + key). This moves this newsgroup to the top of the big list so you can find it easier. Xnews displays only subscribed newsgroups when it boots. Doubleclick any newsgroup on the list and Xnews will download the binary newsgroups' message list, neatly assemble all the multiple message posts for a binary into a single line on its message list with a light blue Rubix cube, indicating all the parts for that multipart binary file are present and available for it to download. You only need to click on the Q (for Que) field of the list to add that line to your download que. A number lights up, in sequence, in the Q field to let you know it is now qued for download. Incomplete binary files show up as a dark blue partial rubix cube icon on the left of the entry. You cannot recover those unless the original poster reposts them. Usenetserver is VERY complete on binary files and leaves them online for WEEKS, not days like other services. They have massive server storage over in Atlanta. They also do NOT restrict binary files to just alt.binaries newsgroups. I could post a binary here and it would be stored and downloadable on Usenetserver's server stack. Once you have qued a few binaries in the Q field (numbers showing), you click the Rubix cube icon along the bottom of that window and a popup directory select window asks where you want to put all these binaries it downloads. Picking your directory and clicking OK starts the downloading. You can go back to the list and add more and more files at any time, simultaneously while it downloads. Xnews also allows you to have several newsgroups open simultaneously, downloading from them all. Usenetserver.com limits their unlimited ($15/month) customers to 6 simultaneous ports, which is more than you have bandwidth for anyways. They do not restrict how many gigabytes you may download, or what bandwidth you use downloading, at all, which is very unusual these days. Once you've picked all the complete binaries and start it downloading, your usefulness is over. The program will download, ad nauseum, while you sleep, work or whatever, filling every available megabyte of hard drive space quite quickly. I have 360GB online that always stays slap full...(c; CDR manufacturers love me.... For most e-books, that's all you'll really need. But, some binary files on usenet are HUGE, like the ones in alt.binaries.movies.divx. Over there you'll see sequences of files with extensions like .rar or .r01 .r02 etc. These huge files, (700 MB for a movie or more) would be almost impossible to post as one huge message list. Parts would get lost. So, usenetters use some more software to do error corrections in the system called PAR (for parity) files, and WinRAR for advanced compression to reduce the actual size of the text files posted. (Remember - Usenet uses only 7 bits! It only can store TEXT. Encoding schemes like Yenc, UUnet, and others convert the 8-bit original binary file into TEXT that can be posted. Xnews can read and decode back into the original 8-bit binary all formats currently used to encode/decode binaries. You're not really involved as it does this automatically.) IF the poster has posted files that have PAR names in them, we'll be able to run a complete parity check on the entire WinRAR stack of files on the hard drive and be able to RECOVER any errors! I use Quickpar, another freeware program from the hackers in England. http://www.quickpar.org.uk/ Download and install it and it will associate itself with all PAR files. To use it is real simple. With your favorite file handler, like Windoze Explorer for instance, just doubleclick on the first PAR file you come to and Quickpar will open itself and start the file checking immediately. Check the box that says AUTO REPAIR and when it gets done checking the files for accuracy, it will go into repair mode automatically to correct any errors it found, RESTORE any partial files damaged or even REPLACE a missing file if not too many are missing that recovery with this many PAR files is impossible. It'll let you know if it can't repair your files. OK, we ran QuickPAR on the file stack and it fixed all the file errors, now what? Now, we run WinRAR on the stack to make the original binary file. So, you see a book or movie that has many binary file "parts", each part consisting of many, say 32 for instance, messages. What Xnews will put on your hard drive is a series of files, not just one file. They'll look like descriptive filename.part01.rar descriptive filename.part02.rar descriptive filename.part03.rar down to descriptive filename.part83.rar To decode this big binary, go to http://www.rarlab.com/ and fork over $21 for the latest version of WinRAR, a commercial program. It's the only way to decode these proprietary files I know of. UPdates forever are free. Winrar is easy to use. You have the whole sequence of rar files from Part00 to Part83 now stored by Xnews in a directory. You point WinRAR to the Part01 file and click EXTRACT. It asks you what directory you want to put the completed file or files. (Sometimes the poster has RAR'd many files together into one RAR compressed file.) You pick the directory to put the results and click OK. Winrar does the rest and you get that latest book, song, MOVIE, disgustingly dirty movie of young girls doing dispicable things to well endowed men you can only dream of being, etc....(c; Then, you doubleclick the completed binary file only to find out you don't have the right codec to watch whatever it is. Micro$not Media Player doesn't play DivX, for instance. You'll find cracked codec packages posted to the newsgroup you got the file from every so often. For movies, the solution is easy, thanks to some French computer engineering students. It's called VLC for Video LAN Client. It'll play anything that moves! http://www.videolan.org/ It's also GPL freeware. VLC is my favorite movie play. It also comes with all its OWN codecs, so Micro$not won't be cancelling them out in some future "upgrade" to Media Player from the movie lawyers. Download and install VideoLAN if you're gonna take usenet's movies to sea. I usually go to sea with 300-400 movies, incase we get becalmed, you see...(c; Once you get the hang of it, all this becomes rather automatic and by the end of the week you have used up every available byte of hard drive space downloading, decoding, assembling and storing all the NEAT STUFF usenet has to offer....(c; You'll NEVER, even if you have a T-3 fiber internet access, be able to get everything Usenet has to offer. If they took away my usenet, there would be no point of even being on the spam-soaked internet, any more..... I have over 19,000,000 MP3 files, from Edison's first recorded cylinder to albums that haven't even been released yet! And I NEVER used a peer-to- peer file transfer system like Napster or its clones that are the target of the lawyers....no, no, NO! |
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EVERY Chord and Scale for guitar- LITERALLY!! | Cruising |