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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Top Cybersecurity Threats Earth Year 2019 | You Have Been Warned! Post 303036337 by wisecracker on Sunday 23rd of June 2019 12:02:35 PM
Old 06-23-2019
The initial impact of your original of the two was the start where the robot is typing in the _password_ and although the music was not exactly in sync was effective.

Your current one is fine enough but rock music by definition is chock full of deliberate distortion and audio compression so could be at a lower level of recording and yet not lose its impact.

Another:
Minimal Electronic - Royalty Free Music | Motion Array

Reasons:
Standard three chord sequence that can be totally ignored which changes to half the rate near the end as a closedown cue.
Again, repetitive and can be added at normal level without encroaching on the video it could be used on.
A super continual click simulating drumsticks tapped together.
Light hearted or happy sounding.
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DENEMO(1)						      General Commands Manual							 DENEMO(1)

NAME
denemo - gtk+ frontend to GNU Lilypond SYNOPSIS
denemo DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the denemo command. GNU denemo is a GUI musical score editor written in C/gtk+. It is intended primarily as a frontend to GNU Lilypond, but is adaptable to other computer-music-related purposes as well. You can compose, transcribe, arrange, listen to the music and much more. Denemo itself does not engrave the music for printout - it uses LilyPond which generates beautiful sheet music to the highest publishing standards. Denemo just displays the staffs in a slim and efficient way, so you can enter and edit the music efficiently. The word Denemo is a corruption of the French word denouement. The full documentation for denemo is kept in html format and can be found at /usr/share/doc/denemo-doc/denemo-manual.html after you have installed the denemo-doc package. SEE ALSO
lilypond(1), /usr/share/doc/denemo-doc/denemo-manual.html AUTHOR
Denemo was written by Matthew Hiller <matthew.hiller@yale.edu>, Adam Tee <eenajt@electeng.leeds.ac.uk> and others This manual page was written by Colin Watson <cjwatson@debian.org> and modified by Josue Abarca <jmaslibre@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation please see /usr/share/common- licenses/GPL-2 for the full text of the licence. February 22, 2010 DENEMO(1)
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