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Tesla's electro-mechanical oscillator is a steam-powered electric generator patented by Nikola Tesla in 1893. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Later in life, Tesla claimed one version of the oscillator caused an earthquake in New York City in 1898, gaining it the colloquial title "Tesla's earthquake machine ".
"La Máquina de Hacer Pájaros" is a song written by Daniel Rucks and was recorded and performed in 1983 by Salvadoran group Nahutec, a musical project formed by students from the Technological University of El Salvador. This song became the most recognized song of the youth group, becoming one of the most emblematic of the 1980s in El Salvador.
Tesla, Inc. (/ ˈ t ɛ s l ə / ⓘ TESS-lə or / ˈ t ɛ z l ə / TEZ-lə [a]) is an American multinational automotive and clean energy company. Headquartered in Austin, Texas, it designs, manufactures and sells battery electric vehicles (BEVs), stationary battery energy storage devices from home to grid-scale, solar panels and solar shingles, and related products and services.
Computer music is the application of computing technology in music composition, to help human composers create new music or to have computers independently create music, such as with algorithmic composition programs.
Algorithmic composition is the technique of using algorithms to create music.. Algorithms (or, at the very least, formal sets of rules) have been used to compose music for centuries; the procedures used to plot voice-leading in Western counterpoint, for example, can often be reduced to algorithmic determinacy.
"De Música Ligera" (Spanish for Of easy-listening music) is a song by the Argentine rock band Soda Stereo, released as a promotional single for their fifth studio album Canción Animal (1990). [1] Widely considered to be Soda Stereo's most popular song, [ 2 ] it is considered an anthem of rock en español .
Suno was founded by four people: Michael Shulman, Georg Kucsko, Martin Camacho, and Keenan Freyberg. They all worked for Kensho, an AI startup, before starting their own company in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
The piece was featured in the Jerry Lewis film Who's Minding the Store (1963) [citation needed] and in the musical montage that opens Lewis' 1980 film Hardly Working, [citation needed] although his first recorded performance was on a January 1954 episode of The Colgate Comedy Hour.