Reflexive Kasparov Chessmate PC Editions


Reflexive Kasparov Chessmate PC Editions
Reflexive Kasparov Chessmate


H + 1 setelah hari raya Idul Fitri ini saya sempatkan untuk menemani kalian semua , alhamdulillah ada sedikit waktu untuk upload sebuah Game , untuk menemani liburan kalian. Langsung aja ikut saya......


screenshot kasparov chessmate
Your play the game
Reflexive Kasparov Chessmate Game Catur satu ini akan menantang Kemampuan dan Kecerdasan Otak anda untuk bermain melawan Master Catur Garry Kasparov selama saya mainin game ini saya belum pernah menang lawan sang Master mungkin selanjutnya anda bisa mengalahkannya. Kalian bisa main dimana aja sesuka kalian, dan kamu bisa langsung download gamenya di bawah sini.....





Reflexive Kasparov Chessmate PC Editions
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Avast 8 All Version (Avast Internet Security 8 + Avast Professional 8 Full Patch until 2038)



Avast 8 All Version (Avast Internet Security 8 + Avast Professional 8 Full Patch until 2038)
Avast 8 All Version (Avast Internet Security 8 + Avast Professional 8 Full Patch until 2038)



produk avast 8
Minal Aidzin walfa idzin, selamat hari raya Idul Fitri, di bulan yang Fitrah ini saya akan berbaik hati kepada pengunjung CANGKRUK AN yang setia, heheh karena upload an saya ini termasuk istimeki (istimewa) penasaran ??  Ikut saya....

Avast 8 All Version (Avast Internet Security 8 + Avast Professional 8 Full Patch until 2038)  Avast 8 adalah versi Avast Antivirus yang terbaru dan terlengkap dalam fitur-fitur pendahulunya yaitu versi-versi sebelumnya . Avast adalah antivirus terbaik saat ini dengan fitur-fitur yang dimilikinya mampu mencegah dan defends virus dari (worm,adware,trojan,spyware,dll) selain itu Avas juga mampu merecovery Data/File yang terkena Visur dan masih bisa di Restore jika anda memerlukan File tersebut. Inilah fitur-fitur yang ada di Avast 8 :



Free Antivirus  Internet Security
Blocks viruses & spyware         yes           yes
Allows assistance from a geek friend         yes           yes
Secures shopping & banking
          yes
Runs risky programs safely
          yes
Blocks hacker attacks
          yes
Secures personal data
          yes
Stops annoying SPAM
          yes
Blocks phishing scams



System Requirements Avast Internet Security 8

    Windows 7 (any Edition, 32-bit or 64-bit)
    Windows Vista (any Edition excl. Starter Edition, 32-bit or 64-bit)
    Windows XP Service Pack 2 or higher (any Edition, 32-bit or 64-bit)
    Windows 8 (any Edition, 32-bit or 64-bit, excl. RT Edition)

Older Windows operating systems (Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000) are not supported.



Avast 8 All Version (Avast Internet Security 8 + Avast Professional 8 Full Patch until 2038)
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Metallica’s St. Anger - Full Album


Metallica’s St. Anger - Full Album


Metallica’s St. Anger was released ten years ago today. Since sometimes brilliant art is misunderstood and under-appreciated upon its initial debut and is only later recognized for the work of genius that it is, I was hoping that making myself sit through St. Anger all the way through for the first time since roughly June 6, 2003, would somehow turn me around on this album.

So I’m sad to report that St. Anger still has all the problems today that it did then: the drums sound like shit, the songs are too long, Hetfield’s vocals sound like shit, the lyrics were patently written by people in the throes of therapy, the bass sounds like shit, there are no guitar solos, the guitars sound like shit, the documentary Some Kind of Monster is more entertaining than the album itself, everything sounds like shit.

And yet…
If we consider the longevity of the work as an object of discussion and study to be the single greatest achievement any artist can realize, than the fact that we’re still conversing about St. Anger a decade later proves that it is special, in the strictest sense of the word: it’s “distinguished by some unusual quality,” “readily distinguishable from others of the same category,” and “other than the usual.” If the Load albums are bad because of their poorly-executed pandering to mid-90s radio rock and Death Magnetic is bad because it’s such a bland attempt to recreate the band’s glory days, St. Anger is a much more noteworthy form of bad: it is so badly misguided as to make the creators appear to be insane. After all, what other explanation could there be for four grown men (yes, I’m including Bob Rock) who have collectively sold more albums than there are stars to listen to this and think, “Nailed it!
I think this is part of the reason why St. Anger is still a work of fascination to this day. It is a work of creative hubris, but it’s also a truly singular vision in a way that most albums, good or bad, never are. It’s their world, sucker.

For one thing, there’s the riffs: there are actually some really good ones on this album. Riffs that don’t sound just like everything else Metallica have ever written, but still rock, and don’t feel forced or trendy. As Kerry King told Terrorizer magazine, “This part [of the title track where the pace picks up] could be entertaining as hell, but I just can’t get past the mix… those [other] songs [on the album] are alright, but there’s no reason for those songs to be seven minutes long, let along eight or nine.” It Metallica had even one key member of their inner circle who had the balls to tell truth to power, it’s entirely possible that St. Anger might have actually redeemed the band for blowing their Load.

Which is certainly how the album was heralded. Recall, for example, Revolver‘s June 2003 issue, which featured Metallica on the cover, and described the album thusly:

“St. Anger – loud, complex and unremittingly brutal. The album is easily the bands most purely metallic offering since 1988′s …And Justice For All. Heavy riffs and wicked time changes abound and instruments jump out of the speakers with demonic fury. St. Anger is merciless; just when you think a song is heading for an exit, another monster riff comes along and knocks you on your ass!”

I suspect I’m not the only Metallica fan who bought into that hype. Keep in mind that in 2013, Metallica have had another ten years to be ridiculous; in 2003, a time when they totally kicked ass didn’t seem so distant, and thus, redemption felt achievable. I sat through that entire stupid MTV Icon thing just to hear a minute of “Frantic,” and that truncated, largely instrumental, shitty-production-free snippet sounded promising.
Which, I think, brings us to the other other reason why St. Anger still gets attention: for many of us, it ended the denial, the nail in Metallica’s coffin, the moment when we absolutely had to stop lying to ourselves and admit that the band we knew and loved was dead. (If we were Star Wars geeks, St. Anger would be Revenge of the Sith.) St. Anger was a sad, shocking milestone.

And the craziest part about the album? Metallica in no way, shape, or form learned from their mistake. In fact, eight years later, they got behind the wheel and wrecked the car even more fantastically than they did with St. Anger.

Metallica’s St. Anger - Full Album
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Green Day’s ¡TRE! - Full Album


Sampul Album Green Day - Tre' 2012
Green Day’s ¡TRE! - Full Album


If nothing else, looking at the ¡UNO! ¡DOS! ¡TRE! album trilogy Green Day has released in the past four months, we should be impressed by the sheer songwriting prolificacy Billie Joe Armstrong and his brothers in pop-punk arms have put on boisterous display. This band that’s been going since 1987 just tacked on another third to their studio recording catalog, and did so, it seems, with incredible ease. If there was any question before, who is the most proficient rock band in mainstream America? We’ve found our answer.

But simply because you can do something, is that a reason why you should do something? The big hype around this trilogy was that, following a decade of outlandish conceptual rock-operas and musicals, it would be a return to form for MTV’s favorite snotty East Bay trio, with not just one album, but three of them. But even that idea, for this gang of middle aged eyeliner-wearing, hair-dying, tattooed, John Varvatos-modeling designer punks, is a gimmick. And it begs the question: Why not show some creative restraint and make just one really good album?

To be sure, these records are no slouches, and each would be good enough make a hit for probably any young band out there today. ¡TRE! (out today, December 11), the latest batch of songs, is packed with bittersweet confection, handling matters of the heart, society, politics and just breaking out and getting free, rock-and-roll style. Lyrically, Armstrong mostly favors the macabre in contrast to the songs’ catchy pop sensibilities, twisting clichés and familiar phrases around into instantly accessible sing-alongs ready and coming to a stadium near you. (Once he beats addiction and returns from rehab, that is.)

More than the others, thankfully, ¡TRE! stays consistent throughout in a tone that feels absolutely natural to the band. Where ¡UNO! was supposed to be a throwback to classic Green Day but felt more like pandering to the youthful masses, ¡TRE! blends a mixed pace of punchy broadsides and heartfelt ballads that could pick up right after 1997′s Nimrod and 2000′s Warning without a problem. And where ¡DOS! was a charming-but-imperfect love affair with retro garage rock, ¡TRE! bests it too by resting on catchy hooks in its appeal rather than suddenly resorting to grave robbing.

In turn, ¡TRE! was supposed to be the epic album, reportedly filled with the odds-and-ends leftovers, so it feels ironic that it would be the best of the bunch and seem the most complete. Unlike the others, there are no blaring missteps of ill-advised genre mash-ups. And instead of all the posturing, it’s just a straightforward songwriting love affair that seems fitting to the band’s age and place.

The opening track “Brutal Love,” could easily fit in a Nashville bar backed by a country outfit or in a Las Vegas casino with a big band as Armstrong croons out his heartache, line by line. “Sex, Drugs & Violence” is an ode to rock and roll’s favorite bed partners, while “X-Kid” is a ripe alternative teenage anthem and “Dirty Rotten Bastards” is a marching, Pogues-like chantey until it breaks into an atomic freak out, all worth note. If this collection is the “epic” pack of songs, we could induce the band put some lessons learned from American Idiot and 21st Century Breakdown to use here too. Only, this time around, they’re not restricted to a single, partially-pretentious concept or narrative line. Rather, this is Green Day as we’d hope and expect today — a big band playing big, honest songs.

Still, despite ¡TRE!‘s successes, and those on ¡UNO! and ¡DOS! before it…37 songs in four months? The whole package is overkill that could have easily been cut in half (or a third) for one really solid album that had fans and non-believers alike giving props and singing praises of Green Day’s return. Instead, now, even as ¡TRE! is released, it doesn’t stand alone, but rather as a confused part of some greater gimmick. It’s a contrivance. But for what purpose? For us to see how easy songwriting can be? Sorry, but that’s not compelling, mostly because it can always be better and more challenging. And even when you’ve won five Grammys and sold over 65 million records worldwide, that’s still something worth striving for.

The Best Song Wasn’t The Single: No song is more adventurous or dynamic than “Dirty Rotten Bastards.”

Best Listened To: While cruising suburbia, reflecting on your hard-up teenage existence with nothing to do and no place to go.

source: http://idolator.com/7323052/green-day-tre-album-review

Green Day’s ¡TRE! - Full Album
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FIFA 13 v1.0 +1 Trainer




This is very simple +1 trainer released by GGHZ that has only one cheat for the football simulation game FIFA 13 that you can use to increase your transfer budget to $500.000.000.

Note: This cheat is for the original retail version of the game FIFA 13, also known as FIFA Soccer 13 in the USA.

Trainer Options:

Numpad 0 ~ $500.000.000 Transfer Budget


FIFA 13 v1.0 +1 Trainer 

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