I easily explain common music ideas on the keyboard, learn strategies to play Rich Dad Poor Dad's 'Cashflow' game and improve your finances by understanding the passive income message.
Also, I'm just trying to improve the way we live by changing our lifestyle ideas for the better and encouraging people to stop and think about what they are doing!
We rush around far too much and don't have enough time to 'smell the roses'.
Hi Brett, this is a great video, however, I did notice some inaccuracies. Such as some of the words that you mentioned are not in the Official Scrabble Dictionary such as CH, FY, IO and KY. This means that not only are there no 2-letter words that start with V, but there are also no 2-letter words starting with a C. Also, Io is a moon of Jupiter, making it a proper noun, and therefore it isnt allowed in a Scrabble game because it needs a capital letter.
I bought a Bose Acoustic Wave Radio System 2 with CD that would not read, and checked out some videos... this one helped. Turned a marked-down Bose products into something worth twice as much because of this (Q-)tip :D Nice job. Now I can play CD's!
It didn't work for me but I'm thinking it's me because it worked for everyone else unless there is something else I can check. I heard you say we can turn it in either direction...so I turned it clockwise as suggested....a few times as I couldn't tell if it was 1/8" didn't work so then I tried the other direction....what exactly does this little pod do? Is there anything else I can troubleshoot. Thank you for sharing though I wish I was another success story.
Brett, I think this is magic. However, now that my CD is back together. There is a ticking noise when I play the CD's . I think it is something to do with that "ribbon/tape." I am afraid to do anything. Any suggestions? Thank you!
Not sure - probably the cd is fouling around the assembly - try taking it all out again manually spin the disc and see if it ticks - if you mean the sound has ticks in it, then I wouldn't know what to do about this!
Brilliant collection! Definitely more than my collection but I appreciate the showcase as I wasn't even around when most of these were issued. Beautiful notes. All of them!
This is my 3er video about this topic and I think I finally got it. And I think it should be called “Count signature” instead of “Time signatures”. Because I just got that what really matters is the count, not the time. The time can be different. 😮
It looks as though the laser is weak or dead - you can buy complete CD units to replace, but watch out, because there are several different types - good luck!
Thank you for this video. I've watched a few other ones to try and understand time signatures but none of them provided examples I could hear. I understand it all a little better now.
I bought one of these used 20 years ago mainly because I wanted a full 88 weighted keyboard to practice on. I never knew there was a whole other bank of sounds in PRE2 😂
Even faster game than in the video P1: 6,4 - just visiting P2: 6,4 - just visiting P1: 3,3 - buys that property. 1,1 - buys that property. 3,1 - Chance, Go back 3 spaces, Buys the final Orange property Builds 9 houses, 3 on each P2: 3,3 - 550 rent. During p2s turn, p1 buys 2 more houses and a hotel P2: Rolls 1,2 - Hotel 1000 rent but only has 950, BANKRUPT
In the game’s rule book for 202, it says the stock prices change after every turn but it doesn’t say how. But in this video I saw the card dictate the new price. What if a card drawn has nothing to do with the stock’s price? How then does the stock’s price change after every turn?
The stock price changes every time a player picks a relevant card (it should always say what the price is) and not therefore after every 'turn' - a bit ambiguous!
@@BrettGossage Thanks for responding. So pretty much the price could sit the same for a while right? Even after several turns until there’s a card drawn that dictates the new price?
I had used this CD player just the other day and it worked fine. Today when I went to use it, I was getting the disc CD error message. I went to the internet and found your video. I tried cleaning with alcohol with no luck. I then went to step 2 and voila following your directions, it worked. I had a little trouble getting the cover back on (you didn't show how to do that), but got it on and am very grateful to have the CD player working again. Thank you!!
Thanks for the video. Sorry to say it does not work for me. Cleaned the lens, then turned the pot first forward and back. All is I get is a short movement, stop, movement. Not even close to a full revolution. Any suggestions? Or do I need an external CD player?
Oh my gosh...it was so easy to fix, simply turning that pot ! You're a life saver...everybody I know that has one of these doesn't play cd.s Thank you , Thank you.
I've had my Bose for 22 years and I thought this might be the end. Had no idea how to fix it when it stopped playing CDs and got the error message you showed. Your quick and easy fix got it working again in about 60 seconds. THANK YOU!!!
@@BrettGossage Ok it varies but who or what determines where the next price gets set at when the turn ends? Can you please answer this? Does someone draw from a hat or HOW?
Your explanation provides such a simple and easy to understand justification as to why an octave has 12 notes. It's like putting together a series of clues that lead up to why 12 notes make sense. This is my take on how this is explained: Two notes sound good together when their frequencies follow a simple ratio. A note with 2x the frequency as some reference note, following a 2:1 ratio, would naturally sound the best, and the entire range of pitches between those two notes is called an octave. Six other notes with less than 2x the frequency as the reference note also sound pretty good because their ratios are simple enough. One can simply order these seven notes-semitone by semitone-together into one octave, and then stack that 7-note scale-octave by octave-to create music with. This is called "just intonation". However, one popular aspect of music of being able to play "in the key of" one of the other notes within that octave, which means that you play the same music but you shift every note by one to six semitones. With the 7-note scale, playing in the key of any of the other six notes will ruin the simple ratios because 1. Those ratios only exist with respect to our reference note and more importantly, 2. The simple ratios are unable to separate all adjacent pairs of notes by the same frequency ratio, which is a requirement for transposing music perfectly into different keys. Therefore, an equal-tempered scale is sought after. Unfortunately, a 7-note (tone) equal temperament scale, or 7-TET, fails to emulate the simple ratios with its included notes, and that's not good. Instead, you'd want an equal-tempered scale that can also closely approximate all seven simple ratios, and that means having to add more notes into the octave, but not too many such that it becomes harder to create music with. It just so happens so that you can achieve this with... 12 notes per octave! Yes, this means that you're gonna end up always having five not-as-good-sounding notes within that octave when played with its reference note, but it's a minor sacrifice that is outweighed by the benefits offered by 12-TET. While 12-TET is an equal-tempered scale whose notes can approximate simple ratios, there's also the 12-tone just intonation scale which follows the simple ratios faithfully while filling in the gaps as to approximate an equal-tempered scale. These two scales are very convenient because they cover three important aspects in their systems (simple ratios, constant intervals, ease of use). Now, something that people who don't know much about music theory aren't so aware about is that people of all cultures use all kinds of scales in their music and aren't just limited to using exactly 12 notes per octave. As such, 12 notes per octave is only a convenient convention, yet it's not a universal law.