約 4,099,194 件
https://w.atwiki.jp/ypen/pages/85.html
001 Auto-related corporate failures rise 50% Bankruptcies by auto-related firms in Japan soared more than 50 percent in the first half of this year, compared with the same period of last year. Private research firm Teikoku Databank says 273 auto-related companies went under between January and June this year, with debts of more than 10 million yen, or 104,000 dollars. The figure is up 50.8 percent from a year earlier. By industry, failures of new and used car dealers, and auto parts wholesalers and retailers rose 19 percent. There was an 11 percent increase in bankruptcies in the auto service industry such as maintenance and repair. Auto parts manufacturers saw 3.4 times more failures. Bankruptcies surged as slumping auto sales from the global recession led major auto companies to heavily cut production. More large firms have become casualties of the global downtown. 71 companies went bankrupt with more than 5.2 million dollars in losses. The number quadrupled from a year earlier. The research firm says that production cuts are easing at major carmakers, thanks to government tax incentives for eco-friendly cars. But as full recovery in demand is still not in sight, more corporate failures are likely.
https://w.atwiki.jp/flatlibrary/pages/13.html
Chapter I.序論(Introductory) Contents Top Chapter I.序論(Introductory) Chapter II.戦争以前のヨーロッパ(Europe before the War) Chapter III.会議(The Conference) Chapter IV.条約(The Treaty)-1 Chapter IV.条約(The Treaty)-2 Chapter IV.条約(The Treaty)-3 Chapter V.賠償(Reparation)-1 Chapter V.賠償(Reparation)-2 Chapter V.賠償(Reparation)-3 Chapter V.賠償(Reparation)-4 Chapter V.賠償(Reparation)-5 Chapter VI.条約後のヨーロッパ(Europe after the Treaty)-5 Chapter VII.救済策(Remedies)-1 Chapter VII.救済策(Remedies)-2 Chapter I.序論(Introductory) The power to become habituated to his surroundings is a marked characteristic of mankind. Very few of us realize with conviction the intensely unusual, unstable, complicated, unreliable, temporary nature of the economic organization by which Western Europe has lived for the last half century. We assume some of the most peculiar and temporary of our late advantages as natural, permanent, and to be depended on, and we lay our plans accordingly. On this sandy and false foundation we scheme for social improvement and dress our political platforms, pursue our animosities and particular ambitions, and feel ourselves with enough margin in hand to foster, not assuage, civil conflict in the European family. Moved by insane delusion and reckless self-regard, the German people overturned the foundations on which we all lived and built. But the spokesmen of the French and British peoples have run the risk of completing the ruin, which Germany began, by a Peace which, if it is carried into effect, must impair yet further, when it might have restored, the delicate, complicated organization, already shaken and broken by war, through which alone the European peoples can employ themselves and live. In England the outward aspect of life does not yet teach us to feel or realize in the least that an age is over. We are busy picking up the threads of our life where we dropped them, with this difference only, that many of us seem a good deal richer than we were before. Where we spent millions before the war, we have now learnt that we can spend hundreds of millions and apparently not suffer for it. Evidently we did not exploit to the utmost the possibilities of our economic life. We look, therefore, not only to a return to the comforts of 1914, but to an immense broadening and intensification of them. All classes alike thus build their plans, the rich to spend more and save less, the poor to spend more and work less. But perhaps it is only in England (and America) that it is possible to be so unconscious. In continental Europe the earth heaves and no one but is aware of the rumblings. There it is not just a matter of extravagance or "labor troubles"; but of life and death, of starvation and existence, and of the fearful convulsions of a dying civilization. For one who spent in Paris the greater part of the six months which succeeded the Armistice an occasional visit to London was a strange experience. England still stands outside Europe. Europe s voiceless tremors do not reach her. Europe is apart and England is not of her flesh and body. But Europe is solid with herself. France, Germany, Italy, Austria and Holland, Russia and Roumania and Poland, throb together, and their structure and civilization are essentially one. They flourished together, they have rocked together in a war, which we, in spite of our enormous contributions and sacrifices (like though in a less degree than America), economically stood outside, and they may fall together. In this lies the destructive significance of the Peace of Paris. If the European Civil War is to end with France and Italy abusing their momentary victorious power to destroy Germany and Austria-Hungary now prostrate, they invite their own destruction also, being so deeply and inextricably intertwined with their victims by hidden psychic and economic bonds. At any rate an Englishman who took part in the Conference of Paris and was during those months a member of the Supreme Economic Council of the Allied Powers, was bound to become, for him a new experience, a European in his cares and outlook. There, at the nerve center of the European system, his British preoccupations must largely fall away and he must be haunted by other and more dreadful specters. Paris was a nightmare, and every one there was morbid. A sense of impending catastrophe overhung the frivolous scene; the futility and smallness of man before the great events confronting him; the mingled significance and unreality of the decisions; levity, blindness, insolence, confused cries from without,—all the elements of ancient tragedy were there. Seated indeed amid the theatrical trappings of the French Saloons of State, one could wonder if the extraordinary visages of Wilson and of Clemenceau, with their fixed hue and unchanging characterization, were really faces at all and not the tragi-comic masks of some strange drama or puppet-show. The proceedings of Paris all had this air of extraordinary importance and unimportance at the same time. The decisions seemed charged with consequences to the future of human society; yet the air whispered that the word was not flesh, that it was futile, insignificant, of no effect, dissociated from events; and one felt most strongly the impression, described by Tolstoy in War and Peace or by Hardy in The Dynasts, of events marching on to their fated conclusion uninfluenced and unaffected by the cerebrations of Statesmen in Council Spirit of the Years Observe that all wide sight and self-command Deserts these throngs now driven to demonry By the Immanent Unrecking. Nought remains But vindictiveness here amid the strong, And there amid the weak an impotent rage. Spirit of the Pities Why prompts the Will so senseless-shaped a doing? Spirit of the Years I have told thee that It works unwittingly, As one possessed not judging. In Paris, where those connected with the Supreme Economic Council, received almost hourly the reports of the misery, disorder, and decaying organization of all Central and Eastern Europe, allied and enemy alike, and learnt from the lips of the financial representatives of Germany and Austria unanswerable evidence, of the terrible exhaustion of their countries, an occasional visit to the hot, dry room in the President s house, where the Four fulfilled their destinies in empty and arid intrigue, only added to the sense of nightmare. Yet there in Paris the problems of Europe were terrible and clamant, and an occasional return to the vast unconcern of London a little disconcerting. For in London these questions were very far away, and our own lesser problems alone troubling. London believed that Paris was making a great confusion of its business, but remained uninterested. In this spirit the British people received the Treaty without reading it. But it is under the influence of Paris, not London, that this book has been written by one who, though an Englishman, feels himself a European also, and, because of too vivid recent experience, cannot disinterest himself from the further unfolding of the great historic drama of these days which will destroy great institutions, but may also create a new world.
https://w.atwiki.jp/hmiku/pages/11285.html
【検索用 gratefulforyou 登録タグ 2008年 AOI/作詞家 G HIDAKA VOCALOID ミソ 初音ミク 曲 曲英 紅雪 鏡音リン 鏡音レン】 + 目次 目次 曲紹介 歌詞 コメント 作詞:AOI Rap詞:HIDAKA 作曲:HIDAKA 編曲:HIDAKA 絵:紅雪 動画:ミソ 唄:鏡音リン・鏡音レン 曲紹介 曲名:『grateful for you』(グレイティフル フォー ユー) 歌詞 (ピアプロより転載) 今日の自分を否定しては 明日を疑ったりなんかしてる ねぇ自分が自分自身を 信じられずに何が出来るの? あなたが教えてくれた 生きる意味を 言葉なんかじゃなくて 共に過ごした時の中で… 私の心の中の 暗闇を優しくかき消して 自然に連れ出してくれた その手の温もりを忘れない あなたと出逢った事で 変わった心(モノ)たくさんありすぎるよ 言葉に出来ず ただありがとう 強く握り締めた手に 込めたこの想いはいつしか 感謝だけではおさまらずに 愛へ 変わる You're not alone. ほらそうだろ? いつだって僕たちが居るだろ? だから 半ば諦めた顔しないで 仲間なんだ あの笑顔見せて All right ほらどうだい? ここに居る僕らみな兄弟 さあ、こっちへおいで共に歌おう 君の居場所はここなんだよ (あなたが教えてくれた 生きる意味を 言葉なんかじゃなくて 共に過ごした時の中で) 僕らは 自分を信じる事で 他人(ヒト)を受け入れられる そして沢山の愛に気付く… コメント 好きです^^//いい曲♪ -- 名無しさん (2011-02-28 17 40 10) 名前 コメント コメントを書き込む際の注意 コメント欄は匿名で使用できる性質上、荒れやすいので、 以下の条件に該当するようなコメントは削除されることがあります。 コメントする際は、絶対に目を通してください。 暴力的、または卑猥な表現・差別用語(Wiki利用者に著しく不快感を与えるような表現) 特定の個人・団体の宣伝または批判 (曲紹介ページにおいて)歌詞の独自解釈を展開するコメント、いわゆる“解釈コメ” 長すぎるコメント 『歌ってみた』系動画や、歌い手に関する話題 「カラオケで歌えた」「学校で流れた」などの曲に直接関係しない、本来日記に書くようなコメント カラオケ化、カラオケ配信等の話題 同一人物によると判断される連続・大量コメント Wikiの保守管理は有志によって行われています。 Wikiを気持ちよく利用するためにも、上記の注意事項は守って頂くようにお願いします。
https://w.atwiki.jp/gitadoraweekly/pages/121.html
GITADORA Weekly Guitar 歴代結果ページ一覧 Drum Ranking Gatewayへ Topページへ EXCHAIN(2018/9/12~) Number 課題曲 Part TopResult TopPlayer 第161回 Triple Journey -OJ EDITION- Guitar 2096132 栗坊 第160回 とってもとっても、ありがとう。 Bass 1633760 ご注文は逆詐欺ですか 第159回 ラジカル少女 Guitar 2107900 るーじゅ 第158回 たまごの物理科学的 及び調理特性に関しての調査、そしてその考察 Bass 2041661 るーじゅ 第157回 HEART BEAT FORMULA (GITADORA Ver.) Bass 2508256 橘ありす EXT-B 99.89% 橘ありす 第156回 memento mori -intro- Guitar 2137898 なおたけ MAS-G 87.22% 橘ありす 第155回 I think about you Guitar 1332820 ご注文は逆詐欺ですか 第154回 虹の彼方 Guitar 1392600 oldpioneer 第153回 four-leaf Guitar 1481800 oldpioneer 第152回 さんぼんがわ Guitar 2680207 @ゆゆゆ 第151回 流星☆JUMP! Bass 2086575 @ゆゆゆ 第150回 グローイングローイン Guitar 1270950 @ゆゆゆ 第149回 フラッター現象の顛末と単一指向性の感情論 Guitar 2258500 こりつさん 第148回 猫侍の逆襲 Bass 2001472 たまご EXT-B MAX たまご 第147回 ようこそジャパリパークへ Guitar 2061460 神谷奈緒 第146回 七福神 Guitar 1462185 たまご 第145回 SPRING BAZOOKA Guitar 1541900 こりつさん EXT-G 98.17% 山形まり夫 第144回 童話回廊 Bass 1899525 こりつさん 第143回 明鏡止水 Bass 1119470 有坂真白 MAS-B MAX サマポケをプレイしろ 他 第142回 三毛猫ロック Guitar 1427300 SYOGO.K 第141回 Road to Dream Bass 2676852 神谷奈緒 第140回 ホーンテッド★メイドランチ Bass 2409592 AN-Type_GD 第139回 ぐっばい my crybaby Guitar 2441795 ALEX-XX. 第138回 HYDRA Bass 1935119 こりつさん 第137回 Purple storm Bass 1220369 みやうら 第136回 ひと夏の戯れYeah!!Samba Bass 2777536 みやうら MAS-B MAX みやうら 第135回 Real ~Lサイズの夢~ Guitar 1459174 AN-Type_GD 第134回 Cutie pie Guitar 1318992 playing 第133回 1816 WIND Guitar 1662275 みやうら MAS-G 99.69% みやうら 第132回 RIGHT ON TIME Guitar 1306832 ご注文は逆詐欺ですか 第131回 言って。 Bass 1740950 giyan Matixx(2017/9/6~) Number 課題曲 Part TopResult TopPlayer 第130回 イジワルなあなた Guitar 1480425 ナターリアはいいゾ 第129回 Drastic Your Dream Bass 2187416 ご注文は逆詐欺ですか 第128回 Polaris Bass 1502200 @ゆゆゆ 第127回 双つ雲と暁の奏 Guitar 1971100 みやうら 第126回 How do you feel? Guitar 1171100 キャンノ 第125回 1/n Guitar 1355285 栗坊 他 第124回 ぽかぽかレトロード Bass 2464068 栗坊 他 第123回 摩天楼ノ特異点~Anti;HERO Bass 1684300 ギルトガイ 第122回 真摯撃情マイペース Bass 2208860 ナターリアはいいゾ 臨時開催 Road of Resistance Guitar 1875540 なーさんディエゴ教徒 MAS-G 91.79% ナターリアはいいゾ Bass 2169835 キャンノ MAS-B 96.15% キャンノ 第121回 色ハニホヘト散リヌルヲ Bass 1452300 みやうら 第120回 Blue Forest Bass 1736150 みやうら MAS-B MAX みやうら 第119回 ギタードライブ Guitar 2080731 なおたけ 第118回 Excavation Damage Bass 1588350 キャンノ 第117回 優しさの理由 Guitar 1118200 安部弘美 他 第116回 滅亡天使 † にこきゅっぴん Guitar 1851450 山形まり花 第115回 Dragon Blade Guitar 1457700 みやうら EXT-G 99.72% みやうら 第114回 Immortal Bind Guitar 2650920 みやうら 第113回 三毛猫ロックンロール Guitar 1072410 みやうら 第112回 月光蝶 Guitar 1556460 みやうら 第111回 回レ!雪月花 Guitar 1749618 ハミちん(ボロン) 第110回 追想 -SHINY DAYS- Guitar 2080509 みやうら 第109回 TOXIC VIBRATION Bass 1745358 ハミちん(ボロン) 第108回 激アツ☆マジヤバ☆チアガール Bass 1885000 ハミちん(ボロン) 第107回 Orbital Velocity Guitar 1276300 有坂真白 第106回 Cassis Bass 2280788 ナターリアはいいゾ 第105回 銃弾は解を撃ち抜いて Bass 2373575 山形まり花 第104回 ギタ・ドラ・jubeat大夏祭りのテーマ Bass 1880389 ナターリアはいいゾ 第103回 THE OCEAN AND YOU Guitar 1283377 なおたけ 第102回 たからもの Guitar 1354000 まじちゃんスラ固定 第101回 TRICK Guitar 1788900 ギルトガイ 第100回 チョコレートスマイル Guitar 2395684 山形まり花 第99回 MAD BLAST Guitar 1323625 みやうら MAS-G 92.63% みやうら 第98回 クリムゾンゲイト Guitar 2559100 みやうら 第97回 serial number Guitar 2047750 みやうら 第96回 Dynamis Guitar 1493138 有坂真白 第95回 タラッタダンス Guitar 1440850 やっしー 第94回 BRIGHT STREAM Guitar 1881968 みやうら 第93回 I m a loser Guitar 1291650 まじかるちゃんす 第92回 Come Back Alive Guitar 1435675 みやうら 第91回 ほしふり Guitar 1170393 みやうら 他 第90回 Chronos Guitar 2268127 まじかるちゃんす 第89回 時雨インソムニア Guitar 2079120 みやうら 第88回 OVER THE LIMIT! Bass 1332750 みやうら 第87回 CARNIVAL DAY Bass 1372550 みやうら 他 第86回 ☆shining☆(GF dm style) Guitar 1841900 みやうら 第85回 Vampire Killer Bass 1557850 みやうら 第84回 ヒマワリ Guitar 1530850 ギルトガイ 第83回 Victory! Guitar 1754212 みやうら 第82回 Mother Tree Guitar 1165850 みやうら 第81回 カタルシスの月 Bass 2315880 山形まり花 第80回 青い月 Guitar 1530800 みやうら 第79回 OVERHEAT -Type GD- Bass 2260668 こりつさん 第78回 万華鏡 Bass 1300716 おやつ Tri-Boost Re EVOLVE(12/14~) Number 課題曲 Part TopResult TopPlayer 第77回 君と同じ季節の下 Guitar 1940400 こりつさん 第76回 Terpsichore Guitar 1641962 みやうら 第75回 嘘 Guitar 1564400 SYOGO.K 第74回 Confession Guitar 1499644 みやうら 第73回 狂喜宴舞 Guitar 1930966 みやうら 第72回 Catharsis Garden Guitar 2190274 からぼー 第71回 †渚の小悪魔ラヴリィ~レイディオ† (GITADORA ver.) Bass 2182065 こりつさん 第70回 振動デザイア Bass 2022816 みやうら 第69回 TIERRA BUENA Guitar 1989020 みやうら 第68回 Eau Rouge Bass 1218216 みやうら 他 第67回 RAISE MY SWORD Bass 2071700 FUCHI.NET 第66回 One Phrase Blues Guitar 1507148 みやうら 第65回 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL Guitar 2105851 みやうら 第64回 カタルシスの月 Guitar 2415154 山形まり花 第63回 Sonne Guitar 1803200 ELOSSAMA MAS-G MAX ELOSSAMA 第62回 AREA 51 Guitar 1658075 みやうら 第61回 ジュピターガンズノベル Guitar 1857500 すーちょ大魔人 第60回 Shout!! Guitar 1684624 みやうら 第59回 紅蓮の焔 Guitar 1343193 ギルトガイ 第58回 Terra Car Guitar 1771330 みやうら 第57回 PRIME LIGHT Bass 2095800 すーちょ大魔人 第56回 Brazilian Anthem Guitar 1264644 みやうら 他 第55回 Say Guitar 1320304 春日咲子 第54回 Keep Ur Dreams Guitar 1752573 春日咲子 第53回 Restart Guitar 1921100 みやうら 第52回 夢について TYPE B Guitar 1382663 栗坊 第51回 Red Guitar 1633249 春日咲子 第50回 Sing A Well Guitar 3336812 栗坊 第49回 からふるぱすてる Guitar 1303715 遅延メモ1部100円 第48回 CARNIVAL DAY Guitar 1464775 すーちょ大魔人 他 第47回 Jailbreak Guitar 1393550 春日咲子 第46回 轟け!恋のビーンボール!!~96バット砲炸裂!GITADORAシリーズMVP弾!~ Guitar 2146568 栗坊 第45回 猫侍の逆襲 Guitar 1927050 みやうら 第44回 Endless cruising Guitar 1289300 讃岐うどん屋さん 他 第43回 Starlight Parade Guitar 1875693 みやうら 第42回 Pink Bird Guitar 2297566 すーちょ大魔人 第41回 シュガーソングとビターステップ Guitar 2276623 こりつさん Tri-Boost (2/3~12/14) Number 課題曲 Part TopScore TopPlayer 第40回 繚乱ヒットチャート Guitar 1575353 みやうら 第39回 CaptivAte~裁き~ Guitar 1740290 栗坊 第38回 Infinite Guitar 1689700 VITALITYさん 第37回 Agnus Dei Guitar 1295800 みやうら 他 第36回 女々しくて Guitar 2080625 Fusse布施店 第35回 αρχη Guitar 1294000 すーちょ大魔人 第34回 ZЁNITH Guitar 1440425 マリア 第33回 果たし状 Guitar 1932650 蒼 第32回 Rosetta Stone Guitar 2563512 こりつさん 第31回 乙女繚乱 舞い咲き誇れ Guitar 1776152 たっくみん 第30回 此岸の戯事 Guitar 2190500 たっくみん 第29回 恋は臆病 Guitar 1454050 すーちょ大魔人 第28回 STOP SPINNING ME IN CIRCLES Guitar 1162900 松野トド松 他 第27回 セツナトリップ Guitar 2542955 すーちょ大魔人 第26回 Vertigo Guitar 1978425 すーちょ大魔人 第25回 JET WORLD Guitar 1365000 買い物が下手 他 第24回 ルックス Guitar 1579875 SYOGO.K 他 第23回 Beautiful Dream Guitar 1661445 SYOGO.K 第22回 DOUBLE IMPACT Guitar 1905800 みやうら 第21回 人間進化論 Guitar 1308610 すーちょ大魔人 第20回 戦場のタクトシュトック Guitar 2880370 すーちょ大魔人 第19回 Endless Chain ~2人でトリガーをひこう~ Guitar 2038220 SYOGO.K 第18回 10,000,000,000 Guitar 1468450 SYOGO.K 他 第17回 nightbird lost wing (GITADORA ver.) Guitar 1376100 SYOGO.K 他 第16回 plastic imitations Guitar 1152100 SYOGO.K 他 第15回 Rock to Infinity Guitar 1799700 SYOGO.K 第14回 群青と流星 Guitar 1393750 たっくみん 他 第13回 ATOMS Guitar 1275800 SYOGO.K 他 第12回 空言の海 Guitar 1113500 たっくみん 他 第11回 ミラージュ・レジデンス Guitar 1564385 すーちょ大魔人 第10回 走れメロンパン Guitar 1539600 たっくみん 他 第9回 Ascetic Guitar 1606244 マジでガバ遅延サラダ 他 第8回 情熱 fun! fun! Guitar 1309897 すーちょ大魔人 他 第7回 でんでんぱっしょん Guitar 2169978 栗坊 第6回 どきドキ バレンタイン Guitar 1520800 たっくみん 第5回 全力バタンキュー Guitar 1330900 ギルトガイ 他 第4回 異常震域 Guitar 1626628 すーちょ大魔人 第3回 True Love and Valentine Guitar 1987308 たっくみん 第2回 水月鏡花のコノテーション Guitar 2239400 春日咲子 第1回 Destiny wings Guitar 1759925 すーちょ大魔人 OVERDRIVE (11/3~4/17) Number 課題曲 Part TopScore TopPlayer 第18回 青い鳥 Guitar 1671925 たっくみん 第17回 ヘリコプター Guitar 2014220 たっくみん 他 第16回 COSMIC COWGIRL Guitar 2584042 ruk 第15回 FIRE Guitar 1467820 たっくみん 他 第14回 Dragontail Butterfly Guitar 1898500 栗坊 他 第13回 The 勇気 Guitar 1627800 たっくみん 他 第12回 snow prism(GFDM ver.) Guitar 1996600 K.AND-M. 他 第11回 とってもとっても、ありがとう。 Guitar 1873950 讃岐うどん屋さん 他 第10回 Black horizon Guitar 1655328 脳内メビウス一色 第9回 solitude Guitar 2121275 栗坊 第8回 狂艶ノ華 Guitar 2420680 栗坊 第7回 幸せのかたち Guitar 1422980 BLANK-DW 第6回 夏・KOI・ムッシュ!! Guitar 1775764 栗坊 第5回 見習い天使と星降りの丘 Guitar 2694792 SU-CHO.D 第4回 マネマネサイコトロピック Guitar 2736116 栗坊 第3回 羽根亡キ少女唄 Guitar 1776966 栗坊 第2回 TEAR OFF YOUR CHAIN Guitar 2683016 栗坊 第1回 PRIME LIGHT Guitar 2163855 栗坊 他 Others 変則ルール Mr.3杯 -リザルトに多くの3を出せ! 想い出をありがとう ~追悼祭~ -削除曲を対象とした総合ランキング 変則ルール Mr.2杯 -リザルトに多くの2を出せ! 怒りと悲しみの突発ルーザー杯 -12/24 突発スコアアタック2 -Victory! 突発スコアアタック1 -heliodor Drum Ranking Gatewayへ Topページへ
https://w.atwiki.jp/flatlibrary/pages/14.html
The Economic consequences of the peace Chapter II-Europe before the War Before 1870 different parts of the small continent of Europe had specialized in their own products; but, taken as a whole, it was substantially self-subsistent. And its population was adjusted to this state of affairs. After 1870 there was developed on a large scale an unprecedented situation, and the economic condition of Europe became during the next fifty years unstable and peculiar. The pressure of population on food, which had already been balanced by the accessibility of supplies from America, became for the first time in recorded history definitely reversed. As numbers increased, food was actually easier to secure. Larger proportional returns from an increasing scale of production became true of agriculture as well as industry. With the growth of the European population there were more emigrants on the one hand to till the soil of the new countries, and, on the other, more workmen were available in Europe to prepare the industrial products and capital goods which were to maintain the emigrant populations in their new homes, and to build the railways and ships which were to make accessible to Europe food and raw products from distant sources. Up to about 1900 a unit of labor applied to industry yielded year by year a purchasing power over an increasing quantity of food. It is possible that about the year 1900 this process began to be reversed, and a diminishing yield of Nature to man s effort was beginning to reassert itself. But the tendency of cereals to rise in real cost was balanced by other improvements; and—one of many novelties—the resources of tropical Africa then for the first time came into large employ, and a great traffic in oil-seeds began to bring to the table of Europe in a new and cheaper form one of the essential foodstuffs of mankind. In this economic Eldorado, in this economic Utopia, as the earlier economists would have deemed it, most of us were brought up. That happy age lost sight of a view of the world which filled with deep-seated melancholy the founders of our Political Economy. Before the eighteenth century mankind entertained no false hopes. To lay the illusions which grew popular at that age s latter end, Malthus disclosed a Devil. For half a century all serious economical writings held that Devil in clear prospect. For the next half century he was chained up and out of sight. Now perhaps we have loosed him again. What an extraordinary episode in the economic progress of man that age was which came to an end in August, 1914! The greater part of the population, it is true, worked hard and lived at a low standard of comfort, yet were, to all appearances, reasonably contented with this lot. But escape was possible, for any man of capacity or character at all exceeding the average, into the middle and upper classes, for whom life offered, at a low cost and with the least trouble, conveniences, comforts, and amenities beyond the compass of the richest and most powerful monarchs of other ages. The inhabitant of London could order by telephone, sipping his morning tea in bed, the various products of the whole earth, in such quantity as he might see fit, and reasonably expect their early delivery upon his doorstep; he could at the same moment and by the same means adventure his wealth in the natural resources and new enterprises of any quarter of the world, and share, without exertion or even trouble, in their prospective fruits and advantages; or be could decide to couple the security of his fortunes with the good faith of the townspeople of any substantial municipality in any continent that fancy or information might recommend. He could secure forthwith, if he wished it, cheap and comfortable means of transit to any country or climate without passport or other formality, could despatch his servant to the neighboring office of a bank for such supply of the precious metals as might seem convenient, and could then proceed abroad to foreign quarters, without knowledge of their religion, language, or customs, bearing coined wealth upon his person, and would consider himself greatly aggrieved and much surprised at the least interference. But, most important of all, he regarded this state of affairs as normal, certain, and permanent, except in the direction of further improvement, and any deviation from it as aberrant, scandalous, and avoidable. The projects and politics of militarism and imperialism, of racial and cultural rivalries, of monopolies, restrictions, and exclusion, which were to play the serpent to this paradise, were little more than the amusements of his daily newspaper, and appeared to exercise almost no influence at all on the ordinary course of social and economic life, the internationalization of which was nearly complete in practice. It will assist us to appreciate the character and consequences of the Peace which we have imposed on our enemies, if I elucidate a little further some of the chief unstable elements already present when war broke out, in the economic life of Europe. I. Population In 1870 Germany had a population of about 40,000,000. By 1892 this figure had risen to 50,000,000, and by June 30, 1914, to about 68,000,000. In the years immediately preceding the war the annual increase was about 850,000, of whom an insignificant proportion emigrated.[1] This great increase was only rendered possible by a far-reaching transformation of the economic structure of the country. From being agricultural and mainly self-supporting, Germany transformed herself into a vast and complicated industrial machine, dependent for its working on the equipoise of many factors outside Germany as well as within. Only by operating this machine, continuously and at full blast, could she find occupation at home for her increasing population and the means of purchasing their subsistence from abroad. The German machine was like a top which to maintain its equilibrium must spin ever faster and faster. In the Austro-Hungarian Empire, which grew from about 40,000,000 in 1890 to at least 50,000,000 at the outbreak of war, the same tendency was present in a less degree, the annual excess of births over deaths being about half a million, out of which, however, there was an annual emigration of some quarter of a million persons. To understand the present situation, we must apprehend with vividness what an extraordinary center of population the development of the Germanic system had enabled Central Europe to become. Before the war the population of Germany and Austria-Hungary together not only substantially exceeded that of the United States, but was about equal to that of the whole of North America. In these numbers, situated within a compact territory, lay the military strength of the Central Powers. But these same numbers—for even the war has not appreciably diminished them[2]—if deprived of the means of life, remain a hardly less danger to European order. European Russia increased her population in a degree even greater than Germany—from less than 100,000,000 in 1890 to about 150,000,000 at the outbreak of war;[3] and in the year immediately preceding 1914 the excess of births over deaths in Russia as a whole was at the prodigious rate of two millions per annum. This inordinate growth in the population of Russia, which has not been widely noticed in England, has been nevertheless one of the most significant facts of recent years. The great events of history are often due to secular changes in the growth of population and other fundamental economic causes, which, escaping by their gradual character the notice of contemporary observers, are attributed to the follies of statesmen or the fanaticism of atheists. Thus the extraordinary occurrences of the past two years in Russia, that vast upheaval of Society, which has overturned what seemed most stable—religion, the basis of property, the ownership of land, as well as forms of government and the hierarchy of classes—may owe more to the deep influences of expanding numbers than to Lenin or to Nicholas; and the disruptive powers of excessive national fecundity may have played a greater part in bursting the bonds of convention than either the power of ideas or the errors of autocracy. II. Organization The delicate organization by which these peoples lived depended partly on factors internal to the system. The interference of frontiers and of tariffs was reduced to a minimum, and not far short of three hundred millions of people lived within the three Empires of Russia, Germany, and Austria-Hungary. The various currencies, which were all maintained on a stable basis in relation to gold and to one another, facilitated the easy flow of capital and of trade to an extent the full value of which we only realize now, when we are deprived of its advantages. Over this great area there was an almost absolute security of property and of person. These factors of order, security, and uniformity, which Europe had never before enjoyed over so wide and populous a territory or for so long a period, prepared the way for the organization of that vast mechanism of transport, coal distribution, and foreign trade which made possible an industrial order of life in the dense urban centers of new population. This is too well known to require detailed substantiation with figures. But it may be illustrated by the figures for coal, which has been the key to the industrial growth of Central Europe hardly less than of England; the output of German coal grew from 30,000,000 tons in 1871 to 70,000,000 tons in 1890, 110,000,000 tons in 1900, and 190,000,000 tons in 1913. Round Germany as a central support the rest of the European economic system grouped itself, and on the prosperity and enterprise of Germany the prosperity of the rest of the Continent mainly depended. The increasing pace of Germany gave her neighbors an outlet for their products, in exchange for which the enterprise of the German merchant supplied them with their chief requirements at a low price. The statistics of the economic interdependence of Germany and her neighbors are overwhelming. Germany was the best customer of Russia, Norway, Holland, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, and Austria-Hungary; she was the second best customer of Great Britain, Sweden, and Denmark; and the third best customer of France. She was the largest source of supply to Russia, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Holland, Switzerland, Italy, Austria-Hungary, Roumania, and Bulgaria; and the second largest source of supply to Great Britain, Belgium, and France. In our own case we sent more exports to Germany than to any other country in the world except India, and we bought more from her than from any other country in the world except the United States. There was no European country except those west of Germany which did not do more than a quarter of their total trade with her; and in the case of Russia, Austria-Hungary, and Holland the proportion was far greater. Germany not only furnished these countries with trade, but, in the case of some of them, supplied a great part of the capital needed for their own development. Of Germany s pre-war foreign investments, amounting in all to about $6,250,000,000, not far short of $2,500,000,000 was invested in Russia, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Roumania, and Turkey.[4] And by the system of "peaceful penetration" she gave these countries not only capital, but, what they needed hardly less, organization. The whole of Europe east of the Rhine thus fell into the German industrial orbit, and its economic life was adjusted accordingly. But these internal factors would not have been sufficient to enable the population to support itself without the co-operation of external factors also and of certain general dispositions common to the whole of Europe. Many of the circumstances already treated were true of Europe as a whole, and were not peculiar to the Central Empires. But all of what follows was common to the whole European system. III. The Psychology of Society Europe was so organized socially and economically as to secure the maximum accumulation of capital. While there was some continuous improvement in the daily conditions of life of the mass of the population, Society was so framed as to throw a great part of the increased income into the control of the class least likely to consume it. The new rich of the nineteenth century were not brought up to large expenditures, and preferred the power which investment gave them to the pleasures of immediate consumption. In fact, it was precisely the inequality of the distribution of wealth which made possible those vast accumulations of fixed wealth and of capital improvements which distinguished that age from all others. Herein lay, in fact, the main justification of the Capitalist System. If the rich had spent their new wealth on their own enjoyments, the world would long ago have found such a régime intolerable. But like bees they saved and accumulated, not less to the advantage of the whole community because they themselves held narrower ends in prospect. The immense accumulations of fixed capital which, to the great benefit of mankind, were built up during the half century before the war, could never have come about in a Society where wealth was divided equitably. The railways of the world, which that age built as a monument to posterity, were, not less than the Pyramids of Egypt, the work of labor which was not free to consume in immediate enjoyment the full equivalent of its efforts. Thus this remarkable system depended for its growth on a double bluff or deception. On the one hand the laboring classes accepted from ignorance or powerlessness, or were compelled, persuaded, or cajoled by custom, convention, authority, and the well-established order of Society into accepting, a situation in which they could call their own very little of the cake that they and Nature and the capitalists were co-operating to produce. And on the other hand the capitalist classes were allowed to call the best part of the cake theirs and were theoretically free to consume it, on the tacit underlying condition that they consumed very little of it in practice. The duty of "saving" became nine-tenths of virtue and the growth of the cake the object of true religion. There grew round the non-consumption of the cake all those instincts of puritanism which in other ages has withdrawn itself from the world and has neglected the arts of production as well as those of enjoyment. And so the cake increased; but to what end was not clearly contemplated. Individuals would be exhorted not so much to abstain as to defer, and to cultivate the pleasures of security and anticipation. Saving was for old age or for your children; but this was only in theory,—the virtue of the cake was that it was never to be consumed, neither by you nor by your children after you. In writing thus I do not necessarily disparage the practices of that generation. In the unconscious recesses of its being Society knew what it was about. The cake was really very small in proportion to the appetites of consumption, and no one, if it were shared all round, would be much the better off by the cutting of it. Society was working not for the small pleasures of to-day but for the future security and improvement of the race,—in fact for "progress." If only the cake were not cut but was allowed to grow in the geometrical proportion predicted by Malthus of population, but not less true of compound interest, perhaps a day might come when there would at last be enough to go round, and when posterity could enter into the enjoyment of our labors. In that day overwork, overcrowding, and underfeeding would have come to an end, and men, secure of the comforts and necessities of the body, could proceed to the nobler exercises of their faculties. One geometrical ratio might cancel another, and the nineteenth century was able to forget the fertility of the species in a contemplation of the dizzy virtues of compound interest. There were two pitfalls in this prospect lest, population till outstripping accumulation, our self-denials promote not happiness but numbers; and lest the cake be after all consumed, prematurely, in war, the consumer of all such hopes. But these thoughts lead too far from my present purpose. I seek only to point out that the principle of accumulation based on inequality was a vital part of the pre-war order of Society and of progress as we then understood it, and to emphasize that this principle depended on unstable psychological conditions, which it may be impossible to recreate. It was not natural for a population, of whom so few enjoyed the comforts of life, to accumulate so hugely. The war has disclosed the possibility of consumption to all and the vanity of abstinence to many. Thus the bluff is discovered; the laboring classes may be no longer willing to forego so largely, and the capitalist classes, no longer confident of the future, may seek to enjoy more fully their liberties of consumption so long as they last, and thus precipitate the hour of their confiscation. IV. The Relation of the Old World to the New The accumulative habits of Europe before the war were the necessary condition of the greatest of the external factors which maintained the European equipoise. Of the surplus capital goods accumulated by Europe a substantial part was exported abroad, where its investment made possible the development of the new resources of food, materials, and transport, and at the same time enabled the Old World to stake out a claim in the natural wealth and virgin potentialities of the New. This last factor came to be of the vastest importance. The Old World employed with an immense prudence the annual tribute it was thus entitled to draw. The benefit of cheap and abundant supplies resulting from the new developments which its surplus capital had made possible, was, it is true, enjoyed and not postponed. But the greater part of the money interest accruing on these foreign investments was reinvested and allowed to accumulate, as a reserve (it was then hoped) against the less happy day when the industrial labor of Europe could no longer purchase on such easy terms the produce of other continents, and when the due balance would be threatened between its historical civilizations and the multiplying races of other climates and environments. Thus the whole of the European races tended to benefit alike from the development of new resources whether they pursued their culture at home or adventured it abroad. Even before the war, however, the equilibrium thus established between old civilizations and new resources was being threatened. The prosperity of Europe was based on the facts that, owing to the large exportable surplus of foodstuffs in America, she was able to purchase food at a cheap rate measured in terms of the labor required to produce her own exports, and that, as a result of her previous investments of capital, she was entitled to a substantial amount annually without any payment in return at all. The second of these factors then seemed out of danger, but, as a result of the growth of population overseas, chiefly in the United States, the first was not so secure. When first the virgin soils of America came into bearing, the proportions of the population of those continents themselves, and consequently of their own local requirements, to those of Europe were very small. As lately as 1890 Europe had a population three times that of North and South America added together. But by 1914 the domestic requirements of the United States for wheat were approaching their production, and the date was evidently near when there would be an exportable surplus only in years of exceptionally favorable harvest. Indeed, the present domestic requirements of the United States are estimated at more than ninety per cent of the average yield of the five years 1909-1913.[5] At that time, however, the tendency towards stringency was showing itself, not so much in a lack of abundance as in a steady increase of real cost. That is to say, taking the world as a whole, there was no deficiency of wheat, but in order to call forth an adequate supply it was necessary to offer a higher real price. The most favorable factor in the situation was to be found in the extent to which Central and Western Europe was being fed from the exportable surplus of Russia and Roumania. In short, Europe s claim on the resources of the New World was becoming precarious; the law of diminishing returns was at last reasserting itself and was making it necessary year by year for Europe to offer a greater quantity of other commodities to obtain the same amount of bread; and Europe, therefore, could by no means afford the disorganization of any of her principal sources of supply. Much else might be said in an attempt to portray the economic peculiarities of the Europe of 1914. I have selected for emphasis the three or four greatest factors of instability,—the instability of an excessive population dependent for its livelihood on a complicated and artificial organization, the psychological instability of the laboring and capitalist classes, and the instability of Europe s claim, coupled with the completeness of her dependence, on the food supplies of the New World. The war had so shaken this system as to endanger the life of Europe altogether. A great part of the Continent was sick and dying; its population was greatly in excess of the numbers for which a livelihood was available; its organization was destroyed, its transport system ruptured, and its food supplies terribly impaired. It was the task of the Peace Conference to honor engagements and to satisfy justice; but not less to re-establish life and to heal wounds. These tasks were dictated as much by prudence as by the magnanimity which the wisdom of antiquity approved in victors. We will examine in the following chapters the actual character of the Peace. FOOTNOTES [1] In 1913 there were 25,843 emigrants from Germany, of whom 19,124 went to the United States. [2] The net decrease of the German population at the end of 1918 by decline of births and excess of deaths as compared with the beginning of 1914, is estimated at about 2,700,000. [3] Including Poland and Finland, but excluding Siberia, Central Asia, and the Caucasus. [4] Sums of money mentioned in this book in terms of dollars have been converted from pounds sterling at the rate of $5 to £1. [5] Even since 1914 the population of the United States has increased by seven or eight millions. As their annual consumption of wheat per head is not less than 6 bushels, the pre-war scale of production in the United States would only show a substantial surplus over present domestic requirements in about one year out of five. We have been saved for the moment by the great harvests of 1918 and 1919, which have been called forth by Mr. Hoover s guaranteed price. But the United States can hardly be expected to continue indefinitely to raise by a substantial figure the cost of living in its own country, in order to provide wheat for a Europe which cannot pay for it.
https://w.atwiki.jp/asigami/pages/387.html
曲名 アーティスト フォルダ 難易度 BPM NOTES/FREEZE(SHOCK) CELEBRATE NITE(EURO TRANCE STYLE) N.M.R MAX2 鬼11 144 288/2 STREAM VOLTAGE AIR FREEZE CHAOS 63 47 10 14 29 譜面 http //www.ddr.sh/steps/basic/c/celebrate_euro/4o_celebrate_euro_a_p.html 動画 https //www.youtube.com/watch?v=IlsOqk6nv-M (x1.0, NOTE) https //www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ygjkQpHtNs (x2.0, NOTE) 解説 譜面傾向はCELEBRATE NITE(激)とほぼ同様。こちらの方が捻りや同時踏みは少なめになっている。 名前 コメント コメント(感想など) 時折入る2連はほぼスイッチで踏むとシングルでいける。良譜面。 -- 名無しさん (2012-12-25 10 55 01) 名前 コメント
https://w.atwiki.jp/legendofnorrath/pages/452.html
32名の代表http //forums.station.sony.com/strategygames/posts/list.m?topic_id=21830 対戦順 http //forums.station.sony.com/strategygames/posts/list.m?topic_id=21883 結果http //forums.station.sony.com/strategygames/posts/list.m?topic_id=21886 1位の人の戦跡 http //forums.station.sony.com/strategygames/posts/list.m?topic_id=21897 2位の人の戦跡http //forums.station.sony.com/strategygames/posts/list.m?topic_id=21905 とりあえず張り付けだけ。
https://w.atwiki.jp/bemani2sp/pages/38.html
GENRE TITLE ARTIST bpm notes CLEAR RATE HYMNUS oratio 蓑舞衆 162 1493 ? だんだん密度が上がる。乱をかけると当たりとはずれの差がwww -- 名無しさん (2009-03-14 23 04 39) 三連皿混じりの1軸トリル、二重階段などの方が乱より捌きやすいなどと言う奇特な方でもなければ乱推奨。特に難狙いのときは。 難は、どう外れてもサビのトリル地帯までに補正に引っ掛かる程度の腕だとまだ厳しいか -- 名無しさん (2009-03-26 23 38 33) ラストはあんみつするとBADがでるのでガチ押しのほうがいい -- 名無しさん (2009-12-11 17 47 51) 乱はラストの同時押しが綺麗に左右に分かれる超当り有、道中も簡単だった -- 名無しさん (2009-12-16 11 13 05) 後半の3連皿+軸地帯は、あまり慣れてない場合下手に3連皿を取ろうとすると軸でBADはまりする可能性がある。3連皿を8分2連皿として処理しながらやると意外とBADはまりしなかったりする。 -- 名無しさん (2010-08-22 00 23 59) 12 34567の半固定と123 4567の完全固定を積極的に使い分けると楽 -- 名無しさん (2011-10-08 05 00 13) 皿が苦手で3連皿 軸地帯がボロボロでも、地力があれば2%からでもクリアできる。 -- 名無しさん (2012-01-04 21 55 19) ぶっちゃけ軸ゲー -- 名無しさん (2012-03-11 22 59 36) 乱はINAZUMA穴クラスの糞外れがあるので注意。 -- 名無しさん (2012-03-13 08 31 58) 一番長い軸が7に来なければ当たり。HARDは軸地帯までゲージをほぼ100%維持出来ないと辛い。ちなみにラストの同時押しがデニムみたいになる乱があったり。 -- 名無しさん (2012-05-24 22 43 13) ↑2 INAZUMA穴の方が簡単じゃね? INAZUMA穴の乱ハズレくらいのハズレの幅があるってこと? -- 名無しさん (2012-05-25 09 57 18) ↑そうです。乱の外れ幅が大きいと書きたかったんですが、紛らわしいことを書いてすみません。 -- 名無しさん (2012-06-12 18 07 53) 軸後のトリル複合が辛いので初回クリアは結局正規。BPM162の軸は結構早いことを意識 -- 名無しさん (2012-12-11 22 45 35) 最後はスコアラー以外全押し安定 -- タピオカウメェス (2013-05-30 17 52 21) 軸+皿複合とBADハマリしろと言わんばかりの譜面。初クリアは正規だった。ラスト前の2軸はGanymedeのサビを彷彿とさせる。速さが段違いだが押し方を考えておくといい -- 名無しさん (2013-05-30 20 21 26) 初ハードは正規でした。軸地帯外れるとヒドイ事になる。これ乱難安定してる人は相当運指力?が高いと思う。自分は1pだけど7軸とか来たら即落ち安定。最後の同時は気合いww -- 名無しさん (2013-07-04 18 46 38) 中盤、軸と皿が交互に来るところまで全繋ぎからの閉店で笑えない。 -- 名無しさん (2013-07-27 07 47 42) 難での勝負どころは皿が絡む軸地帯、そこだけなのでBPはほぼあてにならない。正規も酷いハズレというわけでもないので難に挑む頃なら乱当たり待たずとも押せるかもしれない -- 名無しさん (2013-12-29 20 59 37) 合唱のような芸術的な曲だが、正規の外れっぷりも芸術的。終盤34のロングトリルに外れ気味のデニムって・・・ -- 名無しさん (2014-03-18 14 53 23) ぶっちゃけ軸ゲー 軸の練習にはなるけどランプ狙いなら地力C群に殆ど点けてから軸終わりからの回復でいいと思う -- 名無しさん (2014-04-01 19 45 17) 軸地帯の軸の位置がころころ変わるから完全なあたりなんてあるのかな…。自分は6軸きてヨッシャ!!って思ったら3→1軸ってきて20%くらいまで落とされた。3連皿が嫌らしすぎ。軸地帯越えた所からは密度高めなので要地力。デニムで削られても小さな回復があるので諦めない -- 名無しさん (2014-06-12 23 28 46) 螺旋+軸という地力系風癖譜面。しかもラス殺しな為、やはり☆12下位と言えども選びづらい。 -- 名無しさん (2014-07-14 00 24 15) 地力Dハードでこれだけ埋まってない。ラストが全然見切れない… -- 名無しさん (2014-12-15 21 49 23) 正規鏡はラストが外れと思う。乱の軸当たり待ちが良いよ -- 名無しさん (2014-12-16 08 38 56) 乱をつけるとハード落ち余裕な譜面からエクハが狙える譜面までの広い難易度幅で降ってくる。バスの位置に最初のトリルが降ってきて、かつその軸が一番長いのでそこだけでも予測しておくとPフリーが捗る。皿側に軸が来た時に3連皿と一緒に軸を連打しすぎないように注意。ラストは見えた物を押せば意外とどうにかなる。 -- 名無しさん (2014-12-16 10 30 23) ラストは少しでもゲージが赤入ってるなら全押しで餡蜜した方がいい -- 名無しさん (2015-05-11 08 20 56) 軸が苦手な自分にとってはこの曲のランダムはとても練習になる 3曲目には選びづらいけどCSで練習するにはとてもいい曲だと思う -- 名無しさん (2015-05-11 21 11 17) 乱よりもR乱の方がだいぶ押しやすい。 -- 名無しさん (2015-11-20 17 54 08) 軸が裏軸になっていてバスの音通りに叩けば見事にBADハマりするのがこの譜面の最大の嫌らしさ。目押しを鍛えるのにはいいかも。今作追加されたアシストイージーのおかげで練習用に使いやすくなっていいと思う -- 名無しさん (2015-11-20 20 13 12) 12易以上70ついてるけどノマゲ地力Dでこいつだけラス殺しのせいでランプつくビジョン見えない。もうちょい上じゃね? -- 名無しさん (2016-03-11 22 20 41) 餡蜜しなよ 乱でも出来るよ -- 名無しさん (2016-03-11 22 44 54) ラストは全押し2+1+3で餡蜜可。あれを乱で見切って正確に押すのは十段中くらい~レベル。正規はラストの4軸裏バスのせいで☆12でもそこそこ難しいレベル。乱推奨だが、ハズレ軸が来たら素直に諦めましょう。 -- 名無しさん (2016-03-12 00 29 50) ノマゲは軸で2%になってもクリアできる。ちなみに正規でした。 -- 名無しさん (2016-05-21 18 01 47) ↑よくそれでラス殺し耐えれたなあ -- 名無しさん (2016-05-22 00 03 44) ↑ラストはあんみつで96%近く残った -- 名無しさん (2016-05-22 01 02 05) BP12で乱エクハ。当たり外れは大きいけど当たると全体的にかなり簡単になる。後半ドバッとBPが出て焦ったけどなんとかなった。 -- 名無しさん (2017-01-26 12 26 10) 後半BADハマりしやすい人は皿につられて鍵盤が早押しになってるケースが多いので、とにかく落ち着いて光らせる気持ちで。 -- 名無しさん (2017-01-26 14 01 52) フルコン狙いだと前半で何度も出てくるバス2連打が地味に鬱陶しい 軸地帯は皿側に来なければ普通に押せるはず。ラストもガチ押しするべし -- 名無しさん (2017-02-11 16 28 04) 地力Eほぼクリアできないがこれだけはクリアできる。2P鏡アタリ。正規も悪くない。 -- 名無しさん (2017-02-12 03 35 45) ハードは後半の軸までほぼ100%進行でいけないと地力不足かと思われる -- 名無しさん (2017-11-04 16 00 21) おらちおwラストのデニムは"身構える"w -- 名無しさん (2017-11-05 02 21 13) これ本当にノマゲ地力Dなの? -- 名無しさん (2020-03-15 21 58 54) 本当に地力Dだから軸かラス殺し誤魔化せない自分の弱いところ潰せとしか -- 名無しさん (2020-03-15 22 24 08) この曲まだ息してる?しっかり探してはいないけどACで見かけない気が。。 -- 名無しさん (2020-12-10 11 40 22) 今作含めて毎作やってるしアリーナでも投げるぞ -- 名無しさん (2020-12-10 13 22 30) 挑戦段階だと最後が見切れなくて適当に押しがちだけどリズムを灰や動画で掴むと嵌り辛くなるのでオススメ -- 名無しさん (2021-02-24 22 14 55) R乱で裏拍の軸のところめっちゃ当たる -- 名無しさん (2021-06-22 21 46 46) どのゲージでも最終的にはラストのデニムが押せるかに限る。よりによって正規が2356→14と236→1457→2356→147と規則性が無い+押しにくさMAXみたいな配置をしている。だからと言って乱を掛けるとピンキリが物凄く激しくなるので注意。 -- 名無しさん (2021-06-24 01 48 16) ラストのデニムが崩れたみたいなやつは下手にあんみつするよりガチ押し気味に見えた通り押した方が被害が出にくい -- 名無しさん (2021-09-27 17 45 34) ラストのデニムっぽい配置だが正規は悪名高い2356ビームが中心の配置という大外れ配置。よほど得意ではない限りR乱なり使って崩した方が幾分は押しやすいかも。 -- 名無しさん (2022-08-04 03 13 18) 乱、BP35でハード。地力Dラス2まで残った。1P正規はかなりハズレ気味。ハード挑戦段階では軸地帯とラス殺しの2箇所で当たりを引くおみくじゲーに感じた。 -- 名無しさん (2024-05-14 20 35 11) 名前 コメント
https://w.atwiki.jp/ercr/pages/2970.html
発売日 2004年6月11日 ブランド UNCHAIN タグ 2004年6月ゲーム 2004年ゲーム UNCHAIN キャスト 古崎杏(天美マナ),春日咲(南海向日葵),こっこ(御島京香),皆藤灰(久遠漣),瑞岐晃(岬健),松葉ひろあき(後藤高住(教授),久遠亮),吉月昂一(板垣空(助手)),河内浩希(真波京介),竹沢由依(東雲塔子),矢槇マヤ(マナ母,静香),岸辺亜弥(永遠人,健の祖母) スタッフ Character design:らいおんはーと,悪のタンケ Character graphics:おると,らいおんはーと Backgroumd CG design:Takaharu nagashida,Misao yoshida,おると Program:pokin,Yoshio ishii,hiro Music:ATM Scenario:冷凍ぱんつ,Ricky,ストレート果汁板垣の嫁 Sound director:Hiroki koharu 音声収録:今村孝行 キャスティング協力:TNC(劇団猫屋敷キャスティング部) Special thanks to ストレート果汁板垣(本人),Hidehiko senda,myan,Masato kudoh Planner:Yusuke shimada,Takayuki nakajima Director:Yusuke shimada 開発・販売:UNCHAIN Ending Theme 「アイズ」 Vocal:瀧沢一留 Lyrics:Hiroki kohara
https://w.atwiki.jp/brainwiki/pages/28.html
・用意するもの 名 前 作 者 URL 説 明 Task Switcher for SHARP Brain 川本優 http //henteko.pa.land.to/myapp.html Brainのバックライトが自動的に暗くならないようにする TCPMP easy install kit for "brain" by sharp Hackerzlife http //www.hackerzlife.com/downloads/ Brain用TCPMP Gine Nexhawks https //web.archive.org/web/20140722075508/https //yvt.jp/files/programs/Gine-0.1.zip シャープ社の電子辞書ブレーン上で作動する、GX.dll の同等品。エミュレーションを一切行わず、本来のGX.dllと同じくビデオメモリに直接アクセスする手段を提供する XMedia Recod Sebastian Dorfler http //www.xmedia-recode.de/download.html さまざまな形式の動画ファイルを各種携帯プレイヤー向けに一括変換 2GB以下のマイクロSDカード} ※マイクロSDカードはBrainの古いバージョンではSDHCに対応していないため結果的に2GB以下の物しか使えません。 一応【Task Switcher for SHARP Brain】を起動すると対応しますが、そのためには【Task Switcher for SHARP Brain】をBrainのNAND3に入れる等の操作をしなくてはならないため、この項では省いています。 ・手順 ※以下の手順中では拡張子名が表示されている状態を前提で書いていますが、別に表示させなくても作業はできます。 その場合は拡張子を取って読んでください。(例.msgothic.bat→msgothic) ※またファイルは「」、フォルダは『』、プログラム名は【】で囲ってあります。 1.XMedia Recodeをダウンロードしてインストールする。 2.XMedia Recodeを起動して、格子状の部分に変換したい動画ファイルをすべてドロップする。 3.変換するファイルをすべて選択して「リストに追加」を押す。 4.それぞれの項目を以下のように設定する。 『形式』 「プロファイル」→カスタム 「形式」→MP4 「ファイル拡張」→mp4 「ビデオコーデック-コーデック」→XviD 「音声トラック1-コーデック」→AAC 「ビデオ/音声の同期」→チェック 「出力ストリーム形式」→ビデオ+音声 『ビデオ-一般』 「フレームレート」→30 「ビットレート」→200※ 『音声トラック1-一般』 「ビットレート」→128(好みで) 『クロップ/プレビュー-解像度』 「幅」→480 「高さ」→320 「アスペクト比」→3 2 「拡大」→レターボックス 「アスペクト比を保持」→チェックしない 下の方にある「保存先」設定する。 ※動画がかくつく場合はここの値を下げてください。 5.「エンコード」を押す。 ※「音声設定に誤りがあります」と出る場合は、『音声トラック1-一般』の「Codec」をいったん別のものにしてから「AAC」にもどす。 6.【Task Switcher for SHARP Brain】の最新版をダウンロードする。 7.ファイルを解凍して『tswbrain』の中の「msgothic.bat」を実行。 8.【TCPMP easy install kit for "brain" by sharp】をダウンロードする。 9.マイクロSDカードをFat32でフォーマット。(ドライブを右クリック→フォーマット→ファイルシステムをFat32にする→開始) 4GB以上のSDカードを使う場合は、exFAT でフォーマットする必要がある。 (WindowsXPの場合は→をインストールでexFATに対応。http //www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?familyid=1CBE3906-DDD1-4CA2-B727-C2DFF5E30F61 displaylang=ja) 10.「TCPMP」を解凍してできた『アプリ』フォルダの中に『Task Switcher』を入れたものと、先ほど変換した動画をマイクロSDカードにコピーする。 11.電源を切ったBrainにマイクロSDカードを挿し込み、リセットスイッチを押す。 12.電源を入れ【ライブラリー→アプリ】から【Task Switcher】【TCPMP】の順に起動。 13.左下の矢印→工具のマーク→Power Configの順にクリックし、 「Keep LCD backlight brightness」にチェック。 「LCD backlight brightnee」を自分の好みの明るさに、 「Auto power off timeout」を「Never」にする。 最後にそのウインドウを閉じる。 14.Option→VideoでGDIを選択する。(←ここ重要 15.右上のFile→Open File...→Storage Filesの順にクリックしていって再生したいファイルをクリック。 16.正しいアスペクト比かつ出来る限り大きく見るには「Options」→「Zoom」→「Fill Screen」を選ぶ。 ・Gine (Gine Is Not a Emulator)でTCPMPを高速化 SHARP BrainのWindows CEを活用する Part5より 258 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/12(月) 08 05 03.61 ID yNdvkakQ んで連投 TCPMPがこのGX.DLLで高速化:http //at.nexhawks.net/dl/detail.shtml?id=65 262 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/12(月) 18 39 45.59 ID 3ec50+IJ 258 このDLLはどこに置けば良いのですか? 263 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/12(月) 18 45 05.62 ID MgnfikCo 262 GX.dllを使用したいアプリケーションと同じディレクトリに置きます。 たとえば、TCPMP.exeやAppMain.exeと同じディレクトリです。 すでにGX.dll存在する場合、それを上書きしても構いません。 265 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/12(月) 19 02 42.13 ID 2rQ4YOrc CorePlayerのベンチが15%くらい上がった。 これすごいな 271 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/13(火) 00 31 42.32 ID WSx21+MA GX.dllって全部のCEアプリで使われてるの? 272 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/13(火) 02 22 25.31 ID czM5mSMG 258 これすげえええええええええええええ とりあえずGAPIエミュレータ使ってたやつ全部取っ替えた。 271 一部のアプリだけだよ。 母艦PCでも「このソフトを動作させるにはDirectX~が必要です。」 みたいなのあるじゃん。あれと同じ感じ。 273 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/13(火) 02 28 02.49 ID WSx21+MA 272 なるほろ。 必要か否かはDepencyなんとかを使えば分りますかね? 275 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/13(火) 06 53 29.18 ID 3KHLSwED 273 分かるとは限りません。 起動後にLoadLibraryして動的に読み込む場合もあり、このとき .exeのインポートテーブルにはGX.dllが載りません。 276 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/13(火) 07 50 49.05 ID uC9SvLfh 261 ああほんとだ SharpLibにリンクしてるのか.. 仕組み知りたい 277 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/13(火) 19 23 30.21 ID 3KHLSwED 276 Windows CEには、MmMapIoSpaceという、物理メモリ空間を仮想メモリ空間にマップする 関数がありますが、これはユーザーモードからは使用することができません。 ドライバを作成するという手段もありますが、SharpLibにはEdMmMapIoSpaceという、 ユーザーモードからこれを実行することができる便利な関数があります。 Gineはこれを利用してTMPA910(ryのLCDコントローラで使用しているフレームバッファの 物理アドレスを取得し、そのアドレスにあるフレームバッファをプロセスの 仮想メモリ空間にマップすることにより、本物のGX.dllと同じ動作を実現します。 278 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/13(火) 19 45 53.47 ID WSx21+MA 誤爆したorz 275 なるほど。 利用するならば、動画再生や複雑なアニメーションが組み込まれたソフトに同梱するのが良いのでしょうか。 279 :名無しさん@3周年:2011/09/13(火) 20 08 27.66 ID 3KHLSwED 278 あと、ゲームでもGX.dllを使用しているものがあります。 詳しいことは、対象ソフトウェアの説明書やヘルプ等をご覧頂いた方が分かると思います。 補足.この項は以下の環境で動作確認しています。うまくいかない場合は確認してください。 PC WindowsXP SP3 NET Framework3.5・DirectX9.0・Java6.0・Windows Updateすべて適用済み。(2011.05.02) Brain PW-AC890 名前 バージョン Task Switcher for SHARP Brain Ver.1.5 XMedia Recode Ver.2.3.2.0 PW-G5100での動作報告 PW-G5100でTask Switcherを起動すると十字キーが使えなくなります。なのでタッチパネルで操作をしてください。