>PLACEBO-CONTROLLED, RANDOMIZED, OBSERVER-BLIND, DOSE-FINDING STUDY TO EVALUATE THE SAFETY, TOLERABILITY, IMMUNOGENICITY, AND EFFICACY OF SARS-COV-2 RNA VACCINE CANDIDATES AGAINST COVID-19 IN HEALTHY INDIVIDUALS
This means that some portion of the vaccines administered are actually just placebos.
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Anonymous2025-06-04 5:27
Anonymous ID:MSZhvoFF Wed 04 Jun 2025 00:39:45 No.506342501 Report >>506328214 >equally effective but less destructive stuff And also happens to cost 10x as much but don't worry I'm sure they're doing you a favor and you should trust what they say
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Anonymous2025-06-04 5:29
Anonymous ID:iPMtxQfj Tue 03 Jun 2025 22:08:45 No.506334491 Report Quoted By: >>506335088 >>506334388 time to start distilling your own pure ethanol, and looks like process for the electrolytic production of hydrogen peroxide is relatively straight forward
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Anonymous2025-06-04 5:29
Anonymous ID:Xmu4tI4R Tue 03 Jun 2025 22:19:31 No.506335088 Report Quoted By: >>506335802>>506336807 >>506334491 What modern people with PhD into Jewish science is that they cannot think anymore, they are so brainwashed by the Jews that don't understand that H2O2 is basically water + free radical H+, so what i am trying to say to People here, that microorganisms cannot create resistance against something that is a compound of itself! So in other words, bactéria, fungi or any shit cannot create resistance to H2O2 because water is essencial to live beings and is at same time present in bactéria,fungi and viruses(non-cristalized form). Yes I am medifag and biotechfag so yes, I am providing secret healing. Start learning basic chemistry processes with the help of chap gpt it can save your life in the future.
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Anonymous2025-06-04 5:30
Anonymous ID:Xmu4tI4R Tue 03 Jun 2025 22:50:30 No.506336807 Report >>506335889 I like to use isopropyl to take the water off my ear. When it get inside after diving. Having I said this >>506335088 you guys can already understand why this >>506327905 iodo povidone is very useful and used in tissue prepare for surgeries. Because the iodine is very toxic for microorganisms that are simple, or have very low organelle number because their cell structure is simple they can't handle the oxidative process very well, this is well explained when you study the difference of pro-carionts and eucariont cells. Also the soap with strong polar and apolar affinity will render the fostolipid membrane useless, compromising cell structure and balance causing it's death. So if you wanna get some lugol 5% solution it would be something nice to have for both a nuclear strike and microbiological warfare.
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Anonymous2025-06-04 21:52
@1astrophe 2 years ago I had a family of nine foxes living under my summer house in Dulwich (south east London) - I found a female cub in the bushes, very young.... She stayed in the garden for years, she recognised my voice (and probably smell) and would come when I called her.... She would wait patiently at the back door every morning to be fed (she really liked ham and her favourite was prawn crackers which were a very rare treat!) and if I didn't appear quickly enough she would jump up and rattle the door handle..... She would bring her cubs to show me every spring for about five years.... There was also a very large, quite majestic looking male fox, clearly the 'daddy' - he wasn't aggressive but I always knew to keep my distance.... One day he appeared with the end of his tail hanging off, it was obviously painful and infected - I crushed some antibiotics into a jam sandwich over the course of a few days and the damaged end fell off, with the infection cleared.... He then would wait in the garden to be fed with the others.... Six months later, he appeared again with one eye missing and a very infected socket - again antibiotics in a jam sandwich and a week later he was as good as new - I named him Cyclops and he became very much a part of my fox family and lived for another seven years.....
@Jonnie_Rich 8 years ago (edited) This isn't really a tuning-- this is a pitch raise. 0-26 mins he is raising the pitch using a chromatic tuner which is okay, however, notice he didn't do a pitch adjustments for the unisons in the middle section of the piano, nor did he do pitch adjustments in the treble. So, he should have included those unisons in his operation and then put the strip mute back in to start the real tuning. Also, if you notice 26 min - 30 min he uses a chromatic tuner to tune his temperament, which is not how you tune a piano, and he made very few checks to assess the beats. If you listen to his Major 3rd chromatic intervals ( starting at F3-A3, F#3-A#3, ...) they are all over the place-- some of them are slower than the previous interval-- which is not accurate. So, you would definitely hear some wonky chords and intervals with this tuning. I am not really trying to be an ass-- it's just hard to find quality videos on this subject. 12 @corbettnorwood9514 8 years ago maybe you should make one 8 @davidtanner5367 7 years ago Jonathan Price I have to agree, Jonathan. I have been tuning pianos for over 30 years, and this gentleman is breaking all of the rules that I have always followed. I employ a dual octave temperament method, which I have found to be the most reliable and stable way in which to tune any piano. I never use electronic tuners, unless there is unavoidable background noise, in which case, I use a strobe tuner, capable of recognizing pitches throughout the entire range of the instrument. I always back off the pitch, turning each pin, very slightly, counter clockwise, in the event that there is any rust or corrosion on the hitch pins, to almost completely eliminate the possibility of breaking any strings. I begin with a tuning fork for A440, and then move through the circle of 5ths, or the cycle of 4ths, until I have tempered all 5th intervals, throughout the middle two octaves. Next, I match all of the corresponding unisons, before moving on to tuning the perfect octaves. Tuning, by going through the cycle of 5ths, I avoid any frame stretching. Basically, the same principle that one utilizes when tightening lug nuts on a car tire. One significant mistake that I note is, the last motion in tuning all pins should be counter clockwise, as to prevent pins from "ratcheting", or slipping back to their original position. Granted, on a Wurlitzer spinet, there may be incidents where the tuner has no choice but to gently nudge the pin up to the desired pitch, when it won't set with proper technique. There's simply too much to critique about the techniques used by this tuner, so I may just make my own video!😉 5 @Goodi8 7 years ago Yes make one please.....there are 1000 videos here and everyone has an opinion I am getting more confused it can't be that difficult geeze ! 1 @benjamanity 7 years ago I believe your take is accurate when it comes to a studio Kawai or nearly anything beyond a spinet, but this video is great and plenty accurate for spinet Wurlitzer owners, at the very least. Pete makes some joking remarks about these little pianos at the beginning, and perhaps he could have expanded by saying he would not touch a concert grand the same way as shown in the video, but Pete shows how a majority of tuners approach an instrument of this class. Sure, you could apply the same standards and techniques here as you would (and should) use with a higher-end instrument, but in my opinion (and Pete's, as I believe can be inferred), there's negligible gain. 1 @adamjenkins7113 7 years ago Please show us how it's done properly. I found this highly educational and using this method was able to get my piano sounding beautiful and stable. I'd love to learn how to do an even better job than this tutorial taught me. 1
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Anonymous2025-06-05 17:59
@adamjenkins7113 7 years ago Please show us how it's done properly. I found this highly educational and using this method was able to get my piano sounding beautiful and stable. I'd love to learn how to do an even better job than this tutorial taught me. 1 @johansuh1 6 years ago (edited) Thank you for the honest comment. This video was highlyentertaining which helped me watch all at once. but I did wonder temperament section was too short. Mystery solved. So ... You can't get away with doing this? Mmmm I guess he said in the end, " this is just primer not for professionals"
I only tuned 2 piano and this is what I used to tune temperament. Well it took long time. Like making a fire with bare stick.
**A wide fourth beats about 1 beat per second, while a narrow fifth beats at about half beat per second. ** N5th = 2/sec. W4= 1/sec. 3rd= 10/sec
Tune A4 to a 440 tuning fork. Tune A3 to A4 a pure octave. Tune E4 to A3 a narrow fifth (tune perfect then lower E4 a tad such that there is about half beat per second). Tune F3 to A3 such that it beats 7 beats per second. Tune F4 to F3 a perfect octave. Tune A#3 such that F3 A#3 is a wide fourth and A#4 F4 is a narrow fifth.
------- Tune C4 to F3 a narrow fifth. Test: C4 E4 third should beat 10 beats per second. ----------- Tune G3 to C4 a wide fourth. Test: G3 E4 sixth should beat 8.9 beats per second. ----------- Tune D4 to G3 a narrow fifth. Test: F3 D4 sixth should beat 8 beats per second. -------------
Tune B3 to E4 a wide fourth. Test: G3 B4 third should beat 7.8 beats per second. ---------------- *Tune F#3 to B3 a wide fourth. Test: F# A# third should beat 7.3 beats per second. ----------- Tune C#4 to F#3 a narrow fifth. Test: A3 C#4 third should beat at 8.7 beats per second. ----------- *Tune G#3 to C#4 a wide fourth. Test: G#3 C4 third should beat at 8.3 beats per second. ----------- Tune D#4 to G#3 a narrow fifth: Test: F#3 D#4 sixth should beat at 8.4 beats per second.
Then all octive tuning. @XxJeanMixX 6 years ago @traveler8524 A lot depends on the state of your pinblock (the wooden part in which the tuning pins are in) if your piano is old and/or went through too many drastic changes in humidity at any point in its life, the wood may have shrunk so much that it won't be able to hold the pins tight enough. The strings will always tend to fall back because the pins can't hold enough tension. If only a few specific strings always fall back quickly after bringing up tension the pinblock might be cracked at those locations. This would make tuning the piano impossible even with ''older'' temperament tunings than equal temperament. If the strings can hold however you can achieve a decent tuning by doing many passes in small increments and eventually maybe the strings will stabilise at 440 but it can take a lot of time and will require loads of patience and know-how. When you get the strings to stabilise at pitch, getting a good equal tempered tuning is a whole other level of expertise.. you will need to understand how to construct intervals equally within an octave and learn how to stretch those octaves up going up the keyboard and down going down the keyboard by the means of many checks hearing beats etc. which can get complicated and overwhelming quickly for someone without the knowledge and experience. I wish you all the courage to tackle your piano, I recommend you gear yourself with rubber mutes and optionally muting strips to help in your tuning, don't forget to always pound hard the key you are tuning to help settle the string. Best of luck, have fun in your learning process. @richardyoung641 5 years ago Do people pay money for this guy to tune their pianos?..worrying 3 @PlaybyRaine 9 years ago thank you Mister! watchef so many tutorials this one was niceeee! 2
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Anonymous2025-06-05 18:02
@FixItPleaseJ 4 years ago Wow, I have that exact Wurlitzer! Thanks a million Pete! I appreciate seeing your craftsmanship and skill at work. I never realized how much of a trade there is for sound quality for the compact size. Would I be better buying a nice digital piano like a Roland FP90? 1 @wearashirt 4 years ago Hope somebody can chime in on this, 6 years on.
This isn't the first spinet I've encountered that was tuned flat. Maybe spinets were meant to be tuned a semitone lower to accomodate for the shorter strings? @wkidd41 3 years ago Pitiful @douglashatfield5676 4 years ago good job @themanlyacademy 5 years ago Fantastic video! Thanks a million! @VansSk8r990 1 year ago what a fucking legend homie is goated as hell @AndyManilow 6 years ago This guys is awesome. @spencerstephens7594 4 years ago "I'm gonna go through a erally quick description of how we tune this piano" Video is an hour long 10 @bepriceless 4 years ago That is quick. I'm on my 4th hour of tuning and I'm almost half finished. 5 @PragmaSolidity 4 years ago @bepriceless an hour while talking. He could've done this probably 1/3 faster! 1 @bobbyboydeke1 1 year ago Great video! I have a cable nelson spinet at 435 now,do you think it's safe to bring it to 440? @jameslyons1661 5 years ago Thank you Pete 🎹❤️ @rwicker05yes 2 years ago How do you mute the treble section with the felt strip? I tried but it doesn’t have enough space between the strings and the hammer. @michaelbuckner1408 10 years ago Thanks for the video! It is great! 1 @wickedgit 7 years ago A lot of pianotuners uses a strobe tuner,are the Boss tuners accurate enough or it is the electric tuners a lot better these days that you can tune almost anything with strings or even a trumpet? Just what i have heard. @MrTommy4000 7 years ago (edited) it's not a bad idea to depress the damper pedal before muting the strings. old damper felt can easily be destroyed by the movement of the strings being squeezed together, otherwise great job, piano is vastly improved 4 @djw315mw2 2 years ago I took the same screws out as this guy did and the part acts like it's stuck. Is there something still holding it on? @hellopsp180 3 years ago This guy is a Legend. Julia Childs rant Then some song coming out of his pants. What a riot @woodyblakemore8401 4 years ago Very entertaining. @PlatoniccR6 1 year ago How do you know how many cents flat it is ? @gasiouswiener 2 years ago "Close enough for jazz fellas" @fez3327 4 years ago My son didn't say "wow dad you bought a Yamaha!" 1 @sandrasims6480 8 years ago Best piano tuning video here. I will never let anyone tune my piano electronically again. I have a beautiful Baldwin. I had a piano store send out their tuner. He tuned it electronically and almost ruined it! Got it out of temperament. So, then the sent a guy out, after I complained, and he tuned it by ear. But it didn't stay. I will never use them again. Bought my own tools, and going to tune it myself. I can't hurt it any worse than they did. No electronic tuning for me ever again! 1 @ted1bates 4 years ago 😂😂 love the painting👍 @drumbeastgaming2327 4 years ago Man I have a piano like that and I wish it was a grand piano @StudioChaland 7 years ago Thank you very much sir! @reannalloyd9206 9 months ago I’m still trying to understand the A440. The A3 he started with was at 440. Mine says 220. In another video I watched, A4 was at 440 and he said each octave you move up, the number doubles, and down, the number decreases by half. Should I be finding a tuner that just has that 440 marking? I hope this makes sense. @AndrejSandor-v9j 1 year ago 🎉 2 @donaldnealious9662 9 years ago Thank you. I have Bell console (spinet?) piano that has not been tuned in maybe 20 years. I am looking to buy a tuning kit. The issue, is I don't know what pin socket type and size I need. It has square pins. I figure when I'm snowed in for a couple of days I'll tune it. I just want to have the tools on hand.
Great video! @guillermopamanes1 2 years ago lol, this dude is so awesome
@scanmead 1 month ago Honestly, I thought you'd have to replace the veneer on that top. Most people would have had to. You have more expertise on fixing messes than anyone I've ever seen.
And you do all this using products that are far more natural than the rest of us. Shellac, linseed oil, pumice, even turpentine.
And that poor, beautiful desk. From the corner veneers to the piano hinges, it was designed with such attention to detail. And you saved it. Yup. That was worth all the weeks spent on the finish! 176 @BL-sy7fx 1 month ago I thought this video would be a lesson on replacing a sheet of veneer. But no! This is a tour de force of restoration!!!!! Also a beautiful, well run shop. 15 @valsummers5330 1 month ago Anyone else notice the construction of the piece as it was being dis assembled 1 @Clessandra 10 days ago I probably would have replaced the veneer? However, it would appear you had plenty to work with and the glue must have been very strong? I'm surprised you got away with local heat. Beautiful work.
Like others have already said, there's nothing inherently wrong with parallel fifths.
The "sin" of using them is dependent of the style of music that you're playing. Music of the Common Practice Period (the long period that people consider classical music to reside in) avoided using that interval repeatedly because they had a specific set of rules that the harmony needed to abide by. They were trying to get away from what the monks were doing hundreds of years prior.
In contemporary music, while it pays off to learn different styles and techniques for composition, truly the only rule you need to follow is "does it sound good?"
As an example, if you've ever played two consecutive power chords on a guitar, you've just played parallel fifths. But most rock songs and beyond employ those harmonies and manage to sound fine.
Anonymous ID:LH4KpziH Mon 09 Jun 2025 22:56:51 No.506873354 Report Quoted By: >>506880163 >>506871716 >new physics model Electric universe and plasma cosmology. You don't hear from fags like Michio Kaku much anymore because they built their careers on meme shit like string theory which is currently collapsing in real time under evidence for electric universe theory pouring in thanks to the new telescope.
Turns out we were probably right on our first try to explain the universe but then low IQ hebrews hijacked soience seeing it as easy grifts. There's a reason the german scientists we imported were such a boon, they were educated in an era when electric universe was the accepted working model. The rocket engines achieved 30% greater than expected engine thrust because they were built with this model in mind. When they say they 'lost the technology' to go to the moon, what they mean is three generations of engineers were taught the fucking wrong kind of rocketry. Its probably also why we don't have working hypersonic missiles yet either, the plasma bubble needs to be stabilized with a magnetic field, not aerodynamics.