Bringing Life Cycle Data to the Design Process
While working in a Revit model, Tally users correlate modeled elements to a custom LCA database built on GaBi, the largest environmental dataset for LCA used by leading corporations worldwide for both internal and critically-reviewed published studies. The database combines material attributes, assembly details, engineering and architectural specifications with environmental impact data, including branded information from manufacturer Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs).
Complete Bill of Materials
Buildings are composed of thousands of parts, each with their own origins and manufacturing flows, not all of which are accounted for in a Revit model. Tally helps paint a comprehensive portrait of a building and the products that go into it.
The specific quantities of materials like paint, sealants, fasteners, or grout not modeled in Revit are essential to a Life Cycle Assessment. Tally lets users assign materials and quantities, then leverage the tool to perform material takeoffs and provide a complete bill of goods for a building. Currently, no other environmental assessment tool provides this function.
New Features in the Tally Commercial Release
New enhancements and features have been released in the commercial version:
Download ►►► https://t.co/plHtFeryHp
Pricing and Information
Tally is available immediately as a 30-day free trial through Autodesk Exchange or www.choosetally.com, where video tutorials are also available. After 30 days, a license must be purchased to continue use. The cost per floating license is $1,200 USD annually. Educational licenses for non-commercial use are available by request to sup...@choosetally.com.
While merging Ideas has been available for quite some time, we have now released an update to accurately tally the total number of votes that ideas have received when two or more ideas have been merged.
Please note, if a user has voted on multiple ideas that are merged, we will only keep a single vote for that user. If you have downvotes enabled on your community and a user upvotes one idea but downvotes another idea and these ideas are merged, we will record the user's latest vote in the total tally.
We have added an Image Type Option to the Category and Subcommunity widgets to allow for different image display options on a per widget basis. You will find this option under Item Options in the widget settings. The default Image Type will be pulled from your Style Guide.
Cerevo has renewed the FlexTally Utility, a setting application for FlexTally, a wireless tally lights system for multi-camera set-ups, and released a Windows and MacOS compatible version (ver. 2.0.0).
* If the previous version is already installed, please uninstall it and then install the latest version.
* The latest Station firmware can only be installed from the latest version of FlexTally Utility.
FlexTally is a tally lamp system designed for easy operability and is available at a price range that means even small studios or streaming sites can look to add it to their multi-camera set-ups. FlexTally can be used via either wireless or wired connections for added convenience and its built-in battery allows for portability and use in remote shooting locations.
Tally Hall (sometimes stylized as tallyhall) is an American rock band formed in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in December 2002, and publicly active until the conclusion of their Good & Evil tour in 2011. The band is known for its upbeat melodies and whimsical lyrics, along with a dedicated fanbase on social media sites. The members originally described their musical style as "wonky rock", later redefining their sound as "fabloo" (/fəˈbluː/ fə-BLOO[1]), in an effort to not let their music be defined by any particular genres after critics began defining the characteristics of "wonky rock".[2]
Tally Hall has five members, each of them distinguished by the color of their neckties: guitarist Rob Cantor (yellow), guitarist Joe Hawley (red), drummer Ross Federman (gray), keyboardist Andrew Horowitz (green), and bassist Zubin Sedghi (blue). Touring partner Casey Shea, producer and roadie Bora Karaca and host of Tree Town Sound Matthew Altruda also had dedicated colors for their neckties (black, orange and pink respectively). All five members have provided vocals for the band.
Some Tally Hall members (Cantor, Hawley, and Sedghi) also provided the vocals and music for all of the songs in Happy Monster Band, a children's television series that aired on Playhouse Disney.
Andrew, born in Warren, New Jersey,[3] began writing songs when he was eight years old, and studied composition at the University of Michigan. There he met Rob Cantor, who had both attended high school with Zubin Sedghi and joined Joe Hawley's film production group, AnonyMous.[4] Tally Hall's original drummer, Steve Gallagher, left the band in May 2004. Ross Federman, who Joe knew from high school, took his place shortly thereafter.
On October 24, 2005, the band released their debut studio album, Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum, with violinist Jeremy Kittel contributing strings.[5] They re-released the album on September 12, 2006,[2] on the local label Quack! Media.[6] Tally Hall went on to receive national media attention, performing their song "Good Day" on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson on August 2, 2006, as well as appearing in MTV's segment "You Hear It First" in September 2006.[2] The band appeared at the 2007 South by Southwest Music Festival.[7] They signed to Atlantic Records in March 2007 and re-recorded their first album, releasing it on April 1, 2008.[8] In August 2008, Tally Hall was a performer on the BMI stage at Lollapalooza.[9]
Tally Hall was invited back by The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson on September 16, 2008, to help promote the launch of Tally Hall's Internet Show. They performed "Welcome to Tally Hall" in newly donned black vests on top of their traditional colored ties, white shirts, and black pants.[10] The band worked on several projects after the completion of Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum, including covering the song "Smile Like You Mean It" by The Killers for the sixth The O.C. soundtrack: Music from the OC: Mix 6.
On September 9, 2009, Tally Hall released the song "Light & Night", featuring Nellie McKay, as a free download when customers of Walmart purchased The Magician's Elephant by Kate DiCamillo, published the same day.[11]
In the band's 2010 March tour with Jukebox the Ghost and Skybox, Joe Hawley backed out of the tour and was subsequently replaced with Casey Shea, who wore a black tie, and filled in for him for the rest of their live shows that year. On March 25, 2011, the band announced that all six original band members were still together.[12] Later in the year, the band changed their management from The Hornblow Group, who also manages They Might Be Giants, OK Go, and Oppenheimer, to Stiletto Entertainment, who manages solo performance acts such as Barry Manilow.[13][14]
Their second album, Good & Evil, was released in 2011 under their original label, Quack! Media.[15] To promote the album, the band held a contest where the winner would be awarded a song written about them. The winner was a high school student named Nathan Naimark, whose self-titled theme song would be released soon after.[16] Around the same time, the band released a cover of the Flo Rida song "Club Can't Handle Me", with Casey Shea on guest vocals.[17] After the release of Good & Evil and its tour, Tally Hall became inactive with all band members going on to independent endeavors, though some of the projects had multiple members collaborate once again.
Andrew Horowitz, under the moniker "edu", released the solo album sketches (later re-released as sketches 3d) in 2012.[18] He additionally provided production and piano on John Legend's Love in the Future.[19] In 2018, Horowitz released etudes, a studio album of piano compositions written in 2003. A sequel titled etudes II was released in April 2019, featuring compositions written in 2005 while he attended the University of Michigan. In May 2020, he started a weekly Instagram livestream series titled Keep Up The Good Work, featuring interchanging guests such as Federman and Sedghi.[20][21][non-primary source needed] On April 29th, Andrew Horowitz was announced to be performing at Sonic Lunch.[22]
Ross Federman has made occasional appearances as a producer, percussionist, and DJ under the pseudonym "Mr. F", although has primarily focused on school. He graduated from the University of Michigan in 2013 with a Bachelor of Science in Cell and Molecular Biology,[23] later receiving a Ph.D. in Immunology from Yale University in May 2019.[24][non-primary source needed]
In 2012, Joe Hawley released a single titled "Variations on a Cloud" under the name ミラクルミュージカル (Miracle Musical),[25] later releasing the concept album Hawaii: Part II on December 12. Tally Hall members Federman and Karaca additionally worked on the album, with Sedghi and Cantor appearing on the album's tracks "White Ball" and "Time Machine", respectively. Hawley has been vague regarding the overarching story behind the album, at one point citing the September 11 attacks as inspiration, however this has been contradicted in other interviews. Several songs from the album, such as "Murders" and "The Mind Electric", have since achieved popularity on TikTok and other social media.[26] An album featuring demos and samples titled Hawaii: Part II: Part ii and a cover of "Candle on the Water" was released in 2014 under the same name. An album of 6 8-bit renditions titled Hawaii Partii released in 2015 as the soundtrack for the promotional game Labyrinth.[18]
In mid-2016, Hawley announced the comedy hip-hop album Joe Hawley Joe Hawley, which was released in October under his name on Bandcamp. The album was later taken down due to sampled copyrighted music. To avoid copyright, Hawley released γɘlwɒH ɘoႱ γɘlwɒH ɘoႱ on April 16, 2019, a reversed version of the album, to Bandcamp and Spotify. On November 11, 2020, a truncated version of the original album was uploaded to Apple Music and Spotify, removing the 13th and final track (a cover of rock band Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit"). The latter was due to copyright issues he could not resolve.[18]
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