Posts Tagged ‘software’
Buddy Tags
Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

Do your like or hate the new Versus mode in Resident Evil 5?
Ive heard people hate it. But me personally i think its fun. Just tag along with a buddy and have a good time. Tell me your opinion.
I love it, it is actually like any other vs mode, the only thing i like is being able to controlo chris while fighting my friends.
how to change facebook theme
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Umbra Drinking Buddy Wine Bottle Stopper and Wine Glass Markers, 7-Piece Set $8.00 Invite a few new friends to your next party. Shaped like little stick-figure men, the Drinking Buddy bottle stopper and matching wine glass markers from Umbra will amuse guests while performing their important duties. Use the Drinking Buddy stopper to cork an open bottle of wine in order to slow its oxidization. His head-down position in the mouth of the bottle is certain to prompt a few giggles. … |
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Umbra Perch 6 Bird Rubber Wine Glass Charms $3.95 Umbra Perch 6 Bird Wine Glass Charms. Six rubber wine glass charms with suction cups. Six bird wine glass charms, one each of blue, fuchsia pink, green, black, white and red. Simply press and they suction on the base of the wine glass…. |
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Wine Glass Markers – 12 Pieces Heart Shaped Stemware ID Clips $9.77 … |
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Mr. Heater MH42T 42,000-BTU Propane Tank-Top Radiant Heater $126.69 The Mr. Heater MH42T 8,000-42,000 Btu triple heater is a step up from the two-burner model, giving you the flexibility of using one, two, or three burners. The unit mounts directly to 20- to 100-pound cylinders. It uses infra-red heat, which means that it warms the objects in front of it, not the surrounding air. This gives you more heat per Btu, which means that using all three burners at the hig… |
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Mr. Heater Double Tank-Top Propane Heater – 8,000-28,000 BTU, Model# MH24T $99.99 For convenience and flexibility in an outdoor-only heater, it’s hard to beat the Mr. Heater MH24T 8,000-28,000 Btu double heater. This unit gives you the option of using one or two burners and mounts directly on one- to 20-pound cylinders. It uses infra-red heat, which means that it warms the objects in front of it, not the surrounding air. This gives you more heat per Btu, which means that using … |
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The Gift Wrap Company Santa’s Whimsical Friends Wrap, Gift Bag and Ribbon Assortment, 16-Count $55.03 Amazon and the gift wrap company bring you everything you need to wrap gifts that coordinate. gifts wrapped with this exclusive assortment add to holiday decor when stacked around a christmas tree; 3 jumbo rolls of gift wrap, each one is 30-inches x 10-feet, sweet little santa, snowman polka, and winter buddies. plus you get 6 dgift bags in a variety of sizes; 2 large sweet little santa and 1 jum… |
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Buddy $8.57 Buddy |
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Buddy & the Juniors $14.38 The historical details surrounding the recording session that became Buddy & the Juniors are almost as entertaining — and oddly satisfying — as the music itself. Released on Blue Thumb in 1970 on multi-colored wax, this session, were it not for a very real economic necessity due to Buddy Guy’s feud with Vanguard Records, would never have happened. According to producer Michael Cuscuna’s liner notes on the CD reissue, Vanguard wouldn’t pick up the tab for Guy to fly to New York to mix an album he’d cut with Junior Mance and Gary Bartz — also produced by Cuscuna. Being an ever-enterprising genius, Cuscuna pitched the idea for a recording between Guy, Mance, and Junior Wells to Blue Thumb label boss Bob Krasnow; he jumped. The all-acoustic Buddy & the Juniors was recorded on December 18 of 1969, and on December 19 they mixed this album and the Vanguard date! While an acoustic pairing between Guy and Wells is a natural one, adding jazz pianist Mance — a Chicago native whose early influences were the boogie-woogie recordings of Meade “Lux” Lewis and Albert Ammons — to the mix was risky in terms of interpersonal dynamics, but in retrospect, proved a brilliant idea. The proceedings are informal and raw with plenty of fireworks. The first two tracks — “Talkin’ ‘Bout Women Obviously” and “Riffin’ [aka A Motif Is Just a Riff]” — were the last two recorded. They’re blazing, hairy, on-the-spot improvisational duets between Wells and Guy: the former offers lyrics in a back-and-forth extemporaneous style; the latter develops in intensity as it goes on. The playing by Guy and Wells is inspirational. “Buddy’s Blues,” the first interplay of the trio, has Mance digging deeply into the Otis Spann tradition, just rolling inside it, accenting lines, punching chords, and offering beautiful tags to Wells’ harmonica lines. Wells’ vocal on “(I’m Your) Hoochie Coochie Man” meets Guy’s six-string head-on, with Mance comping and popping a melodic fill underneath each sung phrase. He introduces “Five Long Years” as a piano blues that gets countered in exponential grit by Guy’s vocal and Wells’ punchy harp; he shuffles, fills, trills, and blows straight at the the keyboard, creating a forceful gale of dialogue. On the slippery boogie-woogie set closer, Wells’ “Ain’t No Need,” the listener grasps the deep communication of this trio. Given how earthy, informal, and joyful this acoustic session is, it conveys everything right about Chicago blues. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi Performers: Buddy Guy – Vocals, Guitar (Acoustic); Junior Mance – Piano; Junior Wells – Harmonica, Vocals |
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Buddy & The Juniors $11.87 The historical details surrounding the recording session that became Buddy & the Juniors are almost as entertaining — and oddly satisfying — as the music itself. Released on Blue Thumb in 1970 on multi-colored wax, this session, were it not for a very real economic necessity due to Buddy Guy’s feud with Vanguard Records, would never have happened. According to producer Michael Cuscuna’s liner notes on the CD reissue, Vanguard wouldn’t pick up the tab for Guy to fly to New York to mix an album he’d cut with Junior Mance and Gary Bartz — also produced by Cuscuna. Being an ever-enterprising genius, Cuscuna pitched the idea for a recording between Guy, Mance, and Junior Wells to Blue Thumb label boss Bob Krasnow; he jumped. The all-acoustic Buddy & the Juniors was recorded on December 18 of 1969, and on December 19 they mixed this album and the Vanguard date! While an acoustic pairing between Guy and Wells is a natural one, adding jazz pianist Mance — a Chicago native whose early influences were the boogie-woogie recordings of Meade “Lux” Lewis and Albert Ammons — to the mix was risky in terms of interpersonal dynamics, but in retrospect, proved a brilliant idea. The proceedings are informal and raw with plenty of fireworks. The first two tracks — “Talkin’ ‘Bout Women Obviously” and “Riffin’ [aka A Motif Is Just a Riff]” — were the last two recorded. They’re blazing, hairy, on-the-spot improvisational duets between Wells and Guy: the former offers lyrics in a back-and-forth extemporaneous style; the latter develops in intensity as it goes on. The playing by Guy and Wells is inspirational. “Buddy’s Blues,” the first interplay of the trio, has Mance digging deeply into the Otis Spann tradition, just rolling inside it, accenting lines, punching chords, and offering beautiful tags to Wells’ harmonica lines. Wells’ vocal on “(I’m Your) Hoochie Coochie Man” meets Guy’s six-string head-on, with Mance comping and popping a melodic fill underneath each sung phrase. He introduces “Five Long Years” as a piano blues that gets countered in exponential grit by Guy’s vocal and Wells’ punchy harp; he shuffles, fills, trills, and blows straight at the the keyboard, creating a forceful gale of dialogue. On the slippery boogie-woogie set closer, Wells’ “Ain’t No Need,” the listener grasps the deep communication of this trio. Given how earthy, informal, and joyful this acoustic session is, it conveys everything right about Chicago blues. ~ Thom Jurek, Rovi Performers: Buddy Guy – Vocals, Guitar (Acoustic); Junior Mance – Piano; Junior Wells – Harmonica, Vocals |
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Buddy 28 Hook Key Cabinet $51.99 0% 0128-32 1 1 Each 10″ Width x 3″ Depth x 12″ Height 28 Hook Key Cabinet 3.75 lb Key cabinet is ideal for organizing keys on any size or shape key ring. Includes metal rim key tags. Made of sturdy textured steel for long-lasting durability, with wafer tumbler lock and two keys for security. Slotted for wall mounting. Offers 28 hooks. Buddy Buddy Products Key Cabinet Key Storage No Platinum Security Lock Steel www.buddyproducts.com |
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BAKER,BUDDY: BUDDY BAKER $11.07 BAKER,BUDDY: BUDDY BAKER |