Why do we like listening to music?

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Do we listen to music differently in different stages of our lives?  Do we find some songs more gratifying than others in different times in our lives? Why do some songs make us feel good inside and others are just... just alright. Is it the wave frequency or is it that we relate to the lyrics? I, personally, know that I am not drawn to the words, sure it's great when the songs connect to your feelings and thoughts, but that is not my top requirement when choosing which songs I like or I should say which songs pull me in. I don't feel I choose them. They automatically get replayed and eventually given the title (at least in my head if I don't share them with anyone) that this song is goood.  My taste of music is different than what most people around me like. It is a personal thing. Most of the time I listen to music either on my earphones or in my car, sometimes there are others around me where in that case I listen to different genres usually something more upbeat. Most d

The Cloud is Heavy

As written by Fast Company...

"The cloud." The phrase is ubiquitous today, a buzzword, a shibboleth of the technorati. In some senses, the image of a cloud is a fitting metaphor for an increasingly common feature of modern computing--the storage of data in a location other than the device being used to access that data. It helps communicate, simply, the idea that our data floats around us, no matter where we go.


But in another sense, the image of the cloud is sorely lacking as a metaphor. It remains a little, so to speak, nebulous. Using the cloud is a light, mobile, free-wheeling experience. But the cloud itself--the machinery that undergirds it--is anything but light. As these surprisingly artful images from Interxion, a European data center company, illustrate well, the cloud is a heavy, heavy thing.


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