View allAll Photos Tagged Behringer
This is my final podcast set-up: 15" MacBook Pro (June 09 model) Shure C606 Mic with Behringer Mixer.
I say final set-up, I mean final until I probably buy an audio interface which should allow two mics to record into two separate channels in Audacity.
Soldiers assigned to the 1st Brigade Combat Team “Ironhorse,” 1st Cavalry Division pose for a photo opportunity Oct. 2, at Fort Hood, Texas before leaving on the first man body flight to Germany to participate in Combined Resolve III this fall (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Paige Behringer, 1st BCT, 1st CD Public Affairs).
Soldiers of 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division dine at the Commando Cafe during a superhero themed Thanksgiving lunch, November 26, 2019, at Fort Drum, New York. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Paige Behringer)
Soldiers of 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division dine at the Commando Cafe during a superhero themed Thanksgiving lunch, November 26, 2019, at Fort Drum, New York. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Paige Behringer)
That's all the DJ hardware I own. Wait, the Audio 4 DJ is missing. This was for a Christmas party gig, with friends. My first gig with the Traktor Kontrol X1 and the Pioneer DJM-800. Fell in love with the X1.
The studio set up.
clockwise from top left: Roland tr606 drum machine, v-amp virtual amplification and effects modeller, EZbus digital mixer, fujitsu desktop pc networked to 200gb digital music library, micro Korg synthesiser and vocoder.
Bucharest, Romania - January 19, 2013: Detail of a Behringer music mixer desk with various knobs. Behringer is a German audio equipment company founded in 1989.
1954: RCA begins production of its first color-TV set for consumers, the CT-100. It's destined to become a costly classic.
The RCA set had a 15-inch screen and sold for $1,000, which has the buying power of $7,850 today. That's more than enough to take your pick of 50-to-60-inch plasma screens with up to 16 times the screen area of the 1954 model.
Admiral and Westinghouse sets had beaten RCA to the market by months and weeks, respectively, and they were expensive, too. The Westinghouse went for $1,295 -- more than $10,000 in today's money.
It was the RCA standard -- with its backward compatibility to existing black-and-white broadcasts -- that came to define the market. Few families wanted to clutter their living rooms with one box for color and another for black-and-white. But compatible color required packing two sets of circuits into one TV console. That complexity not only explained some of the cost, it also contributed to an image that was often blurry and ridden with ghosts.
Consumer Reports warned the model was fit just for what these days we'd call early adopters: "Only an inveterate [and well-heeled] experimenter should let the advertisements seduce him into being 'among the very first' to own a color-TV set."
A 1954 New York Times headline should sound familiar to modern ears: "Set Buying Lags -- Public Seen Awaiting Larger Screens, Lower Prices."
So RCA rolled out its 21-inch 21CT55 in November 1954 at 'just' $895 (over $7,000 today). Nonetheless, the company was apparently losing money on every set it sold. It would take years of price drops and technical improvement before color TV was no longer a plaything of the rich.
In a 64-gadget playoff bracket in 2007, the readers of Wired magazine named the RCA CT-100 as the Greatest Gadget of All Time.
Soldiers of 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division dine at the Commando Cafe during a superhero themed Thanksgiving lunch, November 26, 2019, at Fort Drum, New York. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Paige Behringer)
The settings on my Behringer MIC200 preamp: Neutral mode, gain right in the middle, output all the way up, +48V on, low-cut on, 20db pad off, phase reverse off. This is a better photo, taken with my new camera. Incidentally, the +48V light is red, not orange (but the camera is good, really!).
the power button that came with the amp was SOLDERED on. sigh... I clipped that sucker off and installed spade/lug push connectors (in blue) and that mates nicely with almost any standard on/off switch (or even relay).
Soldiers of 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division dine at the Commando Cafe during a superhero themed Thanksgiving lunch, November 26, 2019, at Fort Drum, New York. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Paige Behringer)
Maj. Gen. Walter Piatt, outgoing 10th Mountain Division Commander, relinquished command of the division to Maj. Gen. Brian Mennes, the incoming 10th MTN DIV commander, during a change of command ceremony May 1, 2019, at Fort Drum, New York. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Paige Behringer)