About: Pas de Deux   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Pas De Deux were a Belgian band formed in 1982. They performed for their country at the Eurovision Song Contest 1983 at Munich with the song Rendez-vous. Although the title is in French, they performed it in Dutch as the Flemish broadcaster BRT was in charge of the entry. The performance and the song were both weird in their own ways, and it finished third-last on the night. They disbanded after their second single fell flat.

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  • Pas de Deux
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  • Pas De Deux were a Belgian band formed in 1982. They performed for their country at the Eurovision Song Contest 1983 at Munich with the song Rendez-vous. Although the title is in French, they performed it in Dutch as the Flemish broadcaster BRT was in charge of the entry. The performance and the song were both weird in their own ways, and it finished third-last on the night. They disbanded after their second single fell flat.
  • Pas de Deux is a song from Dirty Pair: Project Eden.
  • Pas de Deux (French for: "pair dance") is an Oware variant invented on June 15, 2004 by Ralf Gering, in Bad Breisig, Germany. The game was completely reviewed in December 2007 and several rules changed, after it was shown that the first player had a very strong advantage.
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abstract
  • Pas De Deux were a Belgian band formed in 1982. They performed for their country at the Eurovision Song Contest 1983 at Munich with the song Rendez-vous. Although the title is in French, they performed it in Dutch as the Flemish broadcaster BRT was in charge of the entry. The performance and the song were both weird in their own ways, and it finished third-last on the night. They disbanded after their second single fell flat.
  • Pas de Deux is a song from Dirty Pair: Project Eden.
  • Pas de Deux (French for: "pair dance") is an Oware variant invented on June 15, 2004 by Ralf Gering, in Bad Breisig, Germany. The game was completely reviewed in December 2007 and several rules changed, after it was shown that the first player had a very strong advantage. Even the best state-of-the-art computers cannot solve Pas de Deux by brute force because the branching factor of its game tree is much too high. The first turn can be made in 64 different ways. After each player has played once, 4,096 different board positions can exist. Humans should be able to outperform any computer programmes playing this game.
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