Music as good as new! Experience your favourite hits as you've never heard them before in absolutely crystal clear quality. Whether from old LPs, cassettes or MP3s Magix Audio Cleaning Lab 2005 Deluxe restores and optimises your sounds and burns them all onto CD or
Easy Recording - Quickly import sounds from your stereo system, load music directly from a CD, or grab from your hard drive (WAV, MP3, OGG Vorbis etc.).
Easy Restoration - One click is all it takes to remove crackles, hisses and other background noise. By selecting from over 30 high-end effects, MAGIX audio cleaning lab 2005 enriches and clarifies with the optimum effects mix. Lightning fast even for beginners simply click and enjoy.
Easy Disc Burning - Burn music onto CDs or DVDs and enjoy up to 100 hours of non-stop sounds on MP3* DVDs. Simply choose the track sequence and then burn your music CD or
Additional features
Music Covers & Labels - Design, print and copy with
Export Manager - Batch processing and MP3 encoder for limitless encoding
Transfer CDs and DVDs - Make analog transfers and backup CDs.
Non-stop Music - Burn MP3 DVDs with up to 100 hours of music, or burn data onto
Features :
Enhanced Features include 33 professional studio effects and CD ripping with preview function
http://rapidshare.de/files/9779641/MACLDx.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.de/files/9779658/MACLDx.part2.rar
http://rapidshare.de/files/9780315/MACLDx.part3.rar
http://rapidshare.de/files/9780022/MACLDx.part4.rar
Mirror :
Size: 178 MB
Greetings Chefs (or wannabe's like me ;) Someone was requesting books on Eastern cuisine. Really it proved to be difficult to find anything. I was lucky to get a little cookbook of Japanese Recipes. I hope this will suffice for the time being. Though I will continue to search for more!
Recipes included are:
Shumai (Gyosa): beef dish
Oyako Donburi: chicken dish
Yakisoba: noodles, Japanese style
Tempura: shrimp dish
Tentsuyu: a dipping sauce for Tempura
Fried Rice: fried rice, Japanese style
Download here:
http://rapidshare.de/files/8830790/Japanese_Recipes_1.rar
Password: avax
Lucinda Dykes, "Macromedia Dreamweaver 8 Advanced for Windows and Macintosh: Visual QuickPro Guide", Peachpit Press | ISBN 0321384024 | 2005 Year | CHM | ~11 Mb | 376 Pages
Macromedia Dreamweaver 8 Advanced for Windows and Macintosh: Visual QuickPro Guide
Lucinda Dykes, "Macromedia Dreamweaver 8 Advanced for Windows and Macintosh: Visual QuickPro Guide", Peachpit Press | ISBN 0321384024 | 2005 Year | CHM | ~11 Mb | 376 Pages
Macromedia Dreamweaver 8 Advanced for Windows and Macintosh: Visual QuickPro Guide
Book Description
Sure, you can use Flash MX 2004 without being a master programmer, but as any Flash developer worth his or her salt will tell you, you're not tapping all of its power unless you're taking advantage of its scripting language "ActionScript 2.0" which offers a more robust programming model and better object-oriented programming support than ever before. Here to take the fear factor out of learning it are Flash veterans and best-selling authors Derek Franklin and Jobe Makar, who demonstrate that scripting is an instinctual process you already know by translating real-life activities into ActionScript scripts. In these pages, you'll find methodologies and techniques for building over 40 real-life Flash ActionScript projects, including sample games, --- applications, Web sites, and more. New in this edition are coverage of ActionScript 2.0, Web services, Components, Printing, Video, and more. On the companion CD, you'll find all the project files and images you need to complete each project.
About the Author
Derek Franklin is director of derekfranklin.com, a resource dedicated to helping developers worldwide get the most out of Flash. He's been involved in Web design since 1995, having served as a multimedia director for a nationally recognized media company. He is the author of Flash 5! Creative Web Animation and coauthor of Macromedia Flash MX: Creating Dynamic Applications by Macromedia Press.
Reviewer: Mark Lindamood (
For years I labored to teach myself scripting of various kinds. As resources in that endeavor, the O'Reilly books were impenetrably dense and the "Dummies" books were so slight that I didn't feel like I was learning anything I could build on.
Then Flash came along, and in a couple of years Actionscript was added. I felt my way through some simple scripts, but still I couldn't cross the threshold into scripting anything particularly useful.
With this book, Derek Franklin and Jobe Makar have launched me across that threshold by helping me to learn Actionscript
I imagine that the only training sources better than this $45 book are the online courses which can run into the hundreds of dollars per course. As a layperson, if you want to learn Actionscript you would be well-advised to spend time and money on this book.
Links:
http://rapidshare.de/files/12220985/Macromedia.Flash.MX.2004.Acti...pt.Training.rar