Hmph. I did this on my show in early '95. Didn't have any fancy tools, either. I set up 4 CD players, had giant stacks of CD's, and I flew through the choruses of a song from each CD as rapidly as I possibly could (cueing two or three at once). When the show was over the studio floor was covered with discarded (usually cracked) CD cases. It took me hours to refile everything. And I got a fever.
(That show's audio isn't online "yet," or I'd post a link.)
Too bad about the counting voice breaking up the quick106 one, though.
- Ken
kenzoATfree-music.com
ken's last ever radio extravaganza http://free-music.com/ken/extrav/
At 08:24 AM 6/25/2002 -0700, Steev Hise wrote:
>i heard this for the first time sunday and i was planning to post
>it here. it's totally insane, but incredible! at first i thought
>it was an accident, like the auto-playlist machine had been
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"Using the techniques we have presented here, we believe no public watermark-based scheme intended to thwart copying will succeed. Other techniques may or may not be strong against attacks. For example, the encryption used to protect consumer DVDs was easily defeated. Ultimately, if it is possible for a consumer to hear or see protected content, then it will be technically possible for the consumer to copy that content." - 'Lessons from the SDMI Challenge'