User:Tkorrovi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[1] My signature to the appeal to the Secretary General and to the Heads of State and of Government of the member countries of the United Nations for an interim United Nations administration in Chechnya.

Name: Tarvo Korrovits

Email: tkorrovi@mail.com

Well, I like Beethoven's 7. symphony, especially the 2. movement. Beethoven said that many like the 5. symphony, just because everyone can understand it, but 7. symphony is the best what he did. I liked though the 7. symphony before I knew Beethoven said that. Yes, there is something about the universe. But unfortunately, there are no free versions of the bh 7. symphony, so what we should be satisfied with, when we want a free music, is the Wikipedia sound list Wikipedia:Sound/list. There, the Mozart 40. symphony is quite well recorded, I guess everyone likes it, especially the 1. movement. I also listen sometimes the 5. movement of the Brahms hungarian dance, especially when I feel good. Yes, Vivaldi seasons are all well played, also the Bach piano concert. The bh 5. symphony is unfortunately not so well performed, seems that they even make mistakes, but not so very bad either. The same about Mendelssohn violin concert, the violin doesn't sound very good, but course it's only my opinion, it's good otherwise.

Then, if you really have nothing to read, there is the Gutenberg project, with more than 10,000 public domain books [2]. I read there things randomly, such as dubliners by james joyce. Oh yes, I like knut hamsun. And finally, there is SourceForge [3] for open source programs, this is the first place I look when I need some program. I have both windows 2000 and debian sarge linux in my computer, I mostly use windows, but from that only the os itself is commercial (oh, sure I bought an official copy), all the rest is open source, in a way very similar to linux, with things like MinGW compiler, unix utilities, vim, openoffice, mplayer (a command line media player which I use instead of windows media player).

I did some programming stuff, such as conio files for dev-c++ distribution, not so complicated, but I did things which nobody else did before, whatever the reason. Well, I like c, wrote a c89 description at [4] (the best site I think when one wants to learn c, not c++).

What else remarkable there is. Well, if you search SourceForge for consciousness, you find two projects, mine and a basket observer of the Global Consciousness Project of the Princeton university. This last is especially interesting, this basket observer is at [5] and at [6] there is a knob, which is green most of the times, but it went red for several hours before and during the major events like death of the princess Diana, and 9/11. Well, it was also red several hours two days ago (08/03/05), but seemingly though nothing of so great magnitude happened. Oh yes and the site of John Walker [7], the founder of Autodesk and author of AutoCad, who was one of the initiators of the Global Consciousness Project.