8-bit Haddaway – What is love remix
Just stumbled on an 8-bit remix of the song What is love by Haddaway, a song from the early nineties. The three guys you see in the car is from a scene in the movie Night at the Roxbury.
a different look (v5.0)
Just stumbled on an 8-bit remix of the song What is love by Haddaway, a song from the early nineties. The three guys you see in the car is from a scene in the movie Night at the Roxbury.

Music note
For quite a while there is musical software out there which helps you in generating music – no I am not talking about software like Reason or oldskool software like ScreamTracker or FastTracker. The software I am talking about works by displaying a matrix of blocks which you can press independently of each other. The whole matrix of blocks is usually being traversed horizontally from left to right by an imaginary reader. By pressing a block a tone is being generated when the reader passes the block. By combining multiple pressed blocks you can make spacy music.
I have seen several of these programs on the internet already and today I found another very simple and tiny online music generator, but this one has a nice 3D presentation. Go and try it yourself here.
In the category blanded humor: take a bunch of samples from a movie and make soundboards of it. Take for example a Terminator soundboard, call a security company and try to have a conversation. You will find many more Terminator prank calls on Youtube, here one example:
You probably think that numbers and angles don’t have anything in common, but have you ever been thinking about the idea behind why numbers looks like … numbers? Today I heard from an Indian colleague that every number actually represent(ed) the amount of angles (or corners) it contains. I looked on the internet and there is indeed a theory behind numbers and angles, but it’s not easy to recognize it back in all numbers nowadays.