Archives for wow category
Posted on 2010 under wow |
12
Mar
I want to play a private server but I am pass the patch I need to have. Downloading WoW again is taking me way too long. Is there anyway to remove certain patches to play on Certain private servers?
Go to my computer the look in your C:/ folder in my computer.
When you double click the folder go to C:/Program Files
When you get there go to C:/Program Files/World of Warcraft
There should be a folder called "Patches"
Delete the "Patches" that are in the folder keeping you out of the new server.
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Posted on 2010 under wow |
4
Mar
I just started playing WoW and have been curious about the difference.
Thanks to anyone who answers.
If you’re talking about types of Realms, then a PvE server is exactly the same as a Normal server. They, for some reason, are just labeled differently. They are one in the same, however.
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Posted on 2010 under wow |
23
Feb

Following the success of 2002’s WOW Christmas is a new version for 2005, offering 30 holiday songs and Christian favorites stretched over two CDs. There are selections from veterans like Amy Grant (”Christmas to Remember”), Jars of Clay (a reverent “Little Drummer Boy”), and Michael W. Smith (”Welcome to Our World”), but it’s the sound of contemporary Christian pop that dominates here. Barlowgirl and Relient K turn in rockedup versions of “O Holy Night” and “Deck the Halls,” while Selah’s “Silent Night” is gentle and solemn. Other WOW highlights include Bethany Dillon adding a dusky RB touch to “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” and a slick, electronictinged “What Child Is This?” from ZOEgirl.
- Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide
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Posted on 2010 under wow |
21
Feb

WOW Hits 2003 continues the long-running CCM series with two discs’ worth of hits from artists like Point of Grace, Stacie Orrico, Salvador, Toby Mac, and Joy Williams. Disc one’s highlights include Steven Curtis Chapman’s “Magnificent Obsession,” Caedmon’s Call’s “Who You Are,” Rachael Lampa’s “No Greater Love,” and Newsboys’ “It Is You”; Audio Adrenaline’s “Ocean Floor,” Jars of Clay’s “I Need You,” and ZOEgirl’s “With All of My Heart” are some of the standouts from disc two. The collection does an admirable job of touching on most of the current sounds in contemporary Christian music, including contemporary gospel such as Kirk Franklin’s “911″ and CeCe Winans’ “Say a Prayer.” Though it doesn’t dig too deeply into any one style or sound of CCM, like the other volumes in this series, WOW Hits 2003 is a respectable primer of some of the year’s most important contemporary Christian songs.
- Heather Phares, All Music Guide
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Posted on 2010 under wow |
19
Feb

The WOW Gospel series of projects has been one of gospel music’s top compilation series. Each project, since its debut in 1998, has either reached gold or platinum record status. The 2002 edition should follow in the same footsteps of its predecessors. WOW Gospel 2002 keeps with the successful pattern of featuring the “Top 30 songs by the Top 30 artists” of the past year, and there are some good ones included on this two-CD/cassette set: CeCe Winans, John P. Kee, Richard Smallwood, Yolanda Adams, Fred Hammond, and Hezekiah Walker, among others. As an added bonus, included is the song “You” from Sean “P-Diddy” Combs’ 2002 gospel project, Thank You. The beat-driven track features vocals appearances by Faith Evans, Carl Thomas, Hezekiah Walker, and 112, along with others.
- Tim A. Smith, All Music Guide
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Posted on 2010 under wow |
17
Feb

CMH Records doesn’t have a stellar reputation among bluegrass aficionados since the label cranks out schlock like the Pickin’ On series at a frantic pace. Wow That’s What I Call Bluegrass is a decent offering although it, too, has several shortcomings. First, it is billed as a “fantastic” introduction to bluegrass music, but it contains none of the seminal recordings that best represent the genre. It is hard to say exactly what it does contain, in fact, since the booklet reveals nothing about the music beyond the names of the artists and the song titles. Some of the tracks are live recordings of apparently recent vintage, while others are latecareer studio cuts by veteran performers, most if not all of which are drawn from other CMH releases. The Nashville Superpickers, essentially the CMH house band, provide instrumental support on several tracks, and a few cuts include introductions by an MC. A number of bluegrass stalwarts are representedLester Flatt, Don Reno, the Osborne Brothers, Jim Jesse, and Mac Wisemanand the performance quality is generally high. The program isn’t entirely traditionalit is a matter for debate whether anyone needs to hear a bluegrass version of U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For,” but Brent Truitt’s instrumental rendition of “Paint It Black” works well. Wow That’s What I Call Bluegrass is essentially a label sampler geared toward people who don’t know anything about bluegrass, an audience that will tend to find it perfectly agreeable.
- Greg Adams, All Music Guide
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Posted on 2010 under wow |
16
Feb
I just got WoW and already installed TBC, but everytime I start WoW up it says "Download Successful. Restart now." Or something and then I restart and then it goes to TBC Installer immediately. Is it supposed to do that?
It might be patching the game. Even when i started 2 years ago i had to patch thegame for a few hours before i could play, so it may say it’s TBC installer, but it might be a patch downloader
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Posted on 2010 under wow |
15
Feb

Sony’s WOW: Worship Orange collects gospel songs like “Rock of Ages,” “Did You Feel the Mountain Tremble,” “Worship You,” and “We Want to See Jesus Lifted Up.” A decent collection of praise and worship songs.
- Heather Phares, All Music Guide
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Posted on 2010 under wow |
12
Feb

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Posted on 2010 under wow |
1
Feb

Word Entertainment’s twodisc Wow Hymns compilation collects 30 CCM hits from the likes of Mark Schultz (”Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing”), Chris Tomlin (”Take My Life (And Let It Be)”) and Todd Agnew (”Savior Like a Shepherd Lead Us”).
- James Christopher Monger, All Music Guide
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