24 Oct 25

This article explores the mathematical and geometric relationships between musical intervals, scales (like the Chromatic Circle and Circle of Fifths), and esoteric concepts such as the Pythagorean Tetractys.

by tmfnk 2 months ago

26 Sep 25

So this got me curious: which property of AlgDTs gave the name to “sum” and “product” type, and which properties were discovered later? As I continued to researched this the blog sort of blew up into an early history of algebraic data types.

by eli 3 months ago saved 2 times

04 Sep 25

“Jean Monnet was one of the founding fathers of the European Union. One may even say that he was the architect of the European Union. However, as founding fathers go, he was rather unusual. His background was unusual: He was neither a political leader, nor a lawyer, a philosopher or a military commander. He was a son of a brandy merchant from the small town of Cognac near Bordeaux and himself a merchant by trade. He dropped out of school at sixteen and never got any extensive formal education. […]”

by cos 3 months ago

02 Jul 25

WERNER’S NOMENCLATURE OF COLOURS By P. Syme

A recreation of the original 1821 color guidebook with new cross references, photographic examples, and posters designed by Nicholas Rougeux

by smithographic 5 months ago

29 Apr 25

An interesting paper that sheds light on the activity of developing and maintaining software.

by tantan 8 months ago

09 Nov 24


Shannon wondered: Was it possible to marry the physics of these two styles? Could you capture, in one motion, the fluidity of toss juggling and the efficiency of bounce juggling? In practical terms: If you were dangling by your feet, could you toss balls in the air, let gravity do the work of bringing the balls down to earth, and then catch them again? Both the inquiry and the method were vintage Shannon: whimsical, indifferent to practicalities, and originating in an activity that typical professors might have dubbed unserious, but which Shannon, a tenured member of the MIT faculty, found amusing enough to merit scholarly time and attention.

by eli 1 year ago

19 Aug 24

➡️FREE Harmony Guide: https://bit.ly/FreeHarmonyGuideIt’s no midi chord pack, but here’s a quick and effective way to come up with nearly endless chord progr…

by chrisSt 1 year ago

21 Jul 24

12 Jul 24

Everybody writes chords progressions, but not many folks seem to do this anymore. Today we’ll take a look at a different approach to harmony that’s time-test…

by chrisSt 1 year ago

09 Jul 24

Max Konyi is a Udemy instructor with educational courses available for enrollment. Check out the latest courses taught by Max Konyi

by chrisSt 1 year ago

08 Jul 24

A collection of interactive online music theory tools and piano references for notes, keys, chords and scales. A fun way to learn and retain music concepts.

by levibeach 1 year ago saved 8 times
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17 May 24

Howdy! Today I want to just talk about some music theory stuff because this is my channel and I do what I want. Also I think it’s important.Become a Patron ►…

by chrisSt 1 year ago

28 Mar 24

ARPS are awesome for knob turning synth enthusiasts like myself. But how can we make our arpeggios less stagnant in our actual music?FREE Composition Guide…

by chrisSt 1 year ago

19 Jan 24

Jones theory:

If you don’t know, the Jones Theory essentially states that if you own several games that are similar - either in gameplay or ‘feel’ (what bucket(s) it fits in) - you’re better off only keeping the one you like and will play the most and trading/selling/giving away the others since you’ll usually default to that game.

by 2097 1 year ago