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The music video premiered on MTV.com and VH1.com and was directed by Gerard Way and Paul Brown.Picking up after the events of the "Na Na Na (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na)" music video, "Sing" opens with My Chemical Romance as their alter-egos (The Fabulous Killjoys) driving down a freeway tunnel on their Pontiac Firebird with brief "television advertisement" clips from Better Living Industries ...
IBM code page 949 (IBM-949) is a character encoding which has been used by IBM to represent Korean language text on computers. It is a variable-width encoding which represents the characters from the Wansung code defined by the South Korean standard KS X 1001 in a format compatible with EUC-KR, but adds IBM extensions for additional hanja, additional precomposed Hangul syllables, and user ...
Alternatives include UTF-8. However, the W3C/WHATWG Encoding Standard used by HTML5 incorporates the Unified Hangul Code extensions into its definition of "EUC-KR". [1] Microsoft assigns Windows-949 the label "ks_c_5601-1987", [8] [9] which properly applies to KS X 1001 itself (KS C 5601 being the original name of KS X 1001). [10]
Song Writer(s) Original release Year Ref(s). "All I Want for Christmas Is You" Walter Afanasieff / Mariah Carey: Kevin & Bean's Christmastime in the 909: 2004 [1] [2]"All the Angels"
The official discography of My Chemical Romance, an American rock band, consists of four studio albums, two live albums, three compilation albums, six extended plays, 24 singles, two promotional singles, four video albums, 18 music videos, and 13 original appearances on other albums.
KS X 1001, "Code for Information Interchange (Hangul and Hanja)", [d] [1] formerly called KS C 5601, is a South Korean coded character set standard to represent Hangul and Hanja characters on a computer.
It was released onto radio as the album's second single on March 8, 2005, [8] also through Reprise. [9] A live recording of the track, performed at the Starland Ballroom in Sayreville, New Jersey was released on iTunes on May 23. [10] "Helena" was later included on the band's greatest hits album, May Death Never Stop You, released on March 25 ...
[6] [a] Medhurst's romanization scheme was otherwise not significantly used. [8] In 1874, the Dallet system was introduced; it was based around French-language phonology. It was the first to use the digraphs eo and eu, [6] [9] and the first to use diacritics for Korean romanization; it used the grave and acute accents over the letter "e". [10]