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Sunday, September 07, 2008
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I would like to share to every my squidoo lens entitled "Make Money Online" (http://www.squidoo.com/kwartaonline) which is a collection of money making sites and services which are legitimate and REAL.
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Friday, June 20, 2008
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Current mood:  accomplished
Category: Blogging
Hello my friends I would like to invite you to check out my websites.
Blogs http://www.cnsqonline.com http://icnsq.cnsqonline.com http://digitaltoolz.blogspot.com
http://drupalism.co.cc http://my45degrees.i.ph
Squidoo Lens http://www.squidoo.com/cnsqwebdev - Web Developer Tools http://www.squidoo.com/kwartaonline - Online Money Making http://www.squidoo.com/ubuntu4all - Ubuntu guide for Windows users
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Monday, April 21, 2008
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Category: Blogging
Just recently I converted my personal website CNSQ Online into a wordpress-powered website since using a CMS system would ease my time in trying to update my website. But there will will be elements of PHP, Ajax, CSS involve sooner or later if I plan to update my site with a custom Wordpress theme.
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Monday, April 21, 2008
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Category: Blogging
It's been a while that I posted a blog post here in myspace. Anyway, this will now serve as my personal bulletin blog for my personal website and other blogs.
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Sunday, October 29, 2006
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Category: Travel and Places
 I recently went to Manila for the IIEE Annual National Convention in PICC. I was a great experience meeting some of my colleagues in the Electrical Engineering profession. One of the highlights of the convention was the concert of MYMP during our fellowship night on October 27 ,2006.
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Friday, September 22, 2006
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Current mood:  cheerful
Category: Art and Photography
HERE ARE MY ENTRIES FOR THE MULTIMEDIA CONFERENCE 2006   YOU CAN VOTE ONLINE at http://www.fwendz.com/multimedia/
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Wednesday, July 26, 2006
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Current mood:  accomplished
Category: Music
"Metal: A Headbanger's Journey," a documentary about one of the most loathed, lampooned and beloved music genres, isn't the kind of film to rock your world, though it may well inspire occasional tremors of laughter. Written, directed and produced by Scot McFadyen, Jessica Joy Wise and the film's narrator and on-camera tour guide, Sam Dunn, "Metal" is nothing if not sincere. Mr. Dunn, along with various academics, writers and music-industry types, dig up some interesting information during their inquiry, like the origins of the devil-horns hand signal, metal's signature salute, but their insider love of the music finally proves as big an obstacle to the film as their ploddingly pedagogic approach. Whether out of love or strategy, the filmmakers take on each subgenre with the same humorless air, even when the music and the sartorial choices of its practitioners call out for something lighter. ------------------------------------ All Things metal is well documented here in this documentary.
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Wednesday, December 28, 2005
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Current mood:  amused
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Tuesday, June 21, 2005
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MACHINE HEAD's fifth studio album, "Through The Ashes Of Empires", is the band's most brutally heavy effort since the one-two punch of their 1994 debut, "Burn My Eyes", and its '97 follow-up, "The More Things Change…". Parts of this album rank right up there as classic MACHINE HEAD moments in terms of sheer aggressiveness, yet the band hasn't just made a carbon copy of their earlier achievements. Instead, the disc finds the Bay Area quartet recapturing their initial fury while injecting elements of the melodiousness and songcraft they've explored on their last two studio efforts, 1999's "The Burning Red" and 2001's "Supercharger". That much-maligned latter album, derided intensely by some fans and critics, may not have been MACHINE HEAD's finest moment, but it was also far from the disaster its detractors claimed it to be. It found the band in an experimental mode, trying different approaches to their powerful, groove-anchored style, and while not every experiment on the record succeeded, it had its share of great tunes. It also found bandleader Robert Flynn taking a more open, personal direction in both his music and lyrics. On "Through The Ashes…" Flynn has retained that personal, intimate style, yet fused it successfully with the epic heaviness of early MH. The album's first track, "Imperium", begins deceptively quietly, commencing things on a somber note that seems to permeate the record even as things quickly become louder and heavier. It isn't long before "Imperium" launches into a monster barrage of riffs that never seems to stop throughout the album's ten cuts. "Bite The Bullet" and "Left Unfinished" have a raw, thrashy feel that's accentuated by Flynn's bloodcurdling, rage-filled vocals. "Elegy" is a slower, doomier cut that marries a mournful, melodic vocal line to simple, yet crushing riffs, while "In The Presence Of My Enemies" is a virtual symphony of precision guitars and tempo changes. The latter half of the album may suffer a bit in comparison to the first half — once the initial shock of the record's aggression wears off — but it ends with one of the disc's best songs, a haunting metallic ballad called "Descend The Shades Of Night" that is moving in its lyrical resignation toward the arrival of death. Death and anger are two running themes throughout the album, as Flynn deals lyrically with both global catastrophe ("Elegy") and his own personal demons. Just when you thought this man could not get deeper into his soul, with songs like "Five" from "The Burning Red", he candidly delves into his personal history again with "Left Unfinished", a song that almost makes the listener uncomfortable with its candor and pain. Clearly, the reshuffling of the band's lineup — replacing guitarist Ahrue Luster with Flynn's former VIO-LENCE cohort Phil Demmel — as well as a more collaborative approach to the songwriting, has given MACHINE HEAD a breath of fresh air as a band. And although "Through The Ashes…" still does not have an American distributor as this is being written, that has seemingly worked in the group's favor as well. By not facing the pressure to tailor any of their music toward U.S. radio — whether they would do so or not — the band has been set free creatively to rediscover what MACHINE HEAD is all about. The result is an album that raises MACHINE HEAD from the ashes of uncertainty and has set them ablaze again as one of metal's best and most challenging bands.
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