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"Breezeblocks" is a song by British indie rock band alt-J from their debut studio album An Awesome Wave (2012). The song was released on 18 May 2012 as the album's second single. The song was written by Joe Newman, Gus Unger-Hamilton, Gwil Sainsbury, and Thom Green, and produced by Charlie Andrew.
The album artwork for An Awesome Wave is a multi-layered radar image of the Ganges river delta in Bangladesh and India. [4] The image in each of the three layers was acquired by the European Space Agency's Envisat Earth-observing satellite, taken separately on the 20th of January, 24 February and the 31st of March 2009.
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A man who tortured a man for two days before he jumped to his death from a 12th-storey flat has been jailed for eight years. Lee Smith, 37, abducted Jamie Forbes, also 37, and held him against his ...
Tyler appeared in court on Tuesday, Dec. 3, while Bailey is scheduled for an appearance on Jan. 28, per KMIZ-TV. If you suspect child abuse, call the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 1 ...
The new deficit plan compares with an initial target of 3% of GDP for 2024, and is in line with a "more proactive" fiscal policy outlined by leading officials after December's Politburo meeting ...
Lyrically, it is a hip hop song about being true to one's self and telling off people trying to "copy and paste" them. "Copy, Paste" peaked at numbers 21 and 24 on the US Hot Rap Songs and US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts respectively. A music video, directed by Phil the God, was created for the single that features Diggy tied up as a laboratory ...
Inspired by early line and character editors, such as Pentti Kanerva’s TV-Edit [4], that broke a move or copy operation into two steps—between which the user could invoke a preparatory action such as navigation—Lawrence G. "Larry" Tesler proposed the names "cut" and "copy" for the first step and "paste" for the second step.