|
| Accueil |
Créer un blog |
Accès membres |
Tous les blogs |
Meetic 3 jours gratuit |
Meetic Affinity 3 jours gratuit |
Rainbow's Lips |
Badoo |
[ science ] [ Newspaper ] [ culture ] [ Biography ] [ Movie ] [ chicken soup for the ] [ Fashion ] [ Fashion ] [ online shopping ]
|
|
|
|
Geomesh is the name of yet another cool looking watch
10/02/2010 23:02
Geomesh is the name of yet another cool looking watch from the Japanese Tokyoflash company. As always, reading the time is a bit tricky.
The face consists of a mirrored grid with 27 LED’s which lights up in various patterns that cryptically tell the time. Here’s how it works (take a look at the photo below for reference):
Hours are indicated by counting the vertical lights & minutes by the horizontal lights. The minute lights can indicate 5 mins each light or 1 minute depending on the configuration – sounds complicated, but not really that difficult.
The Green (vertical) lights are hours. The Yellow (horizontal) lights are 5 mins each & the Red 1 minute each. The same applies to the other models, just the color is different.
Geomesh available in a brushed Gunmetal finish with either White, Blue or Multi-color LED’s.
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5 Ways to Express Concern
10/02/2010 23:00
When someone you know is going through a hard time such as the death of a loved one, job loss or divorce, knowing what to do can be tricky and awkward. That’s why we went to an expert—Darcie Sims, PhD, director of the American Grief Academy and author of multiple books such as Finding Your Way Through Grief—to find out the best ways to offer support.
1. Do something. Most people have no idea what to say and they think silence is the best option. They don’t realize that silence is one of the most painful things bereaved people can experience. It’s never too late to express care and concern; whether it’s a week, month or even a year later.
2. Make it personal. A handwritten note (not an e-mail, Facebook message or tweet!) or phone call makes a huge difference. Simply tell the person, “There are no words that will make this better, but I want you to know that I’m here and I care about you.”
3. Never, ever say, “I understand,” no matter what. Even if you think you do, you don’t. Just be there to listen if the person wants to talk.
4. Replace “but” with “and.” When you put the word “but” in the middle of a sentence, you negate the first part. For example, if someone lost a job, don’t say, “I know this is hard right now, but I know you have the strength to figure it out.” Instead, use “and” in that sentence to make it a lot more comforting.
5. Follow up. Continue to check in with people weeks and months after a hardship via phone, e-mail or a note. Let them know you’re still thinking about them. It will only cost you a few seconds and possibly a stamp, but it makes an impact on someone who is most likely still suffering.
Dr. Sims’ bottom line: Just. Show. Up. No one usually remembers who was at a funeral, they only remember who wasn’t there. In whatever way you can, show that person you are there for him or her.
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I see you
10/02/2010 02:27
I see you
by Leona Lewis
Walking through a dream I see you My light in darkness breathing hope of new life Now I live through you and you through me Enchanting I pray in my heart that this dream never ends
I see me through your eyes Living through life flying high Your life shines the way into paradise So I offer my life as a sacrifice I live through your love
You teach me how to see All that’s beautiful My senses touch your word I never pictured Now I give my hope to you I surrender I pray in my heart that this world never ends
I see me through your eyes Living through life flying high Your love shines the way into paradise So I offer my life I offer my love, for you
When my heart was never open (and my spirit never free) To the world that you have shown me But my eyes could not division All the colours of love and of life ever more Evermore
(I see me through your eyes) I see me through your eyes (Living through life flying high) Flying high Your love shines the way into paradise So I offer my life as a sacrifice And live through your love And live through your life I see you I see you
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Avatar from a Hindu perspective
10/02/2010 02:25
It's one of the biggest movie hits of the decade and has revolutionized the use of technology in film. But James Cameron's 'Avatar' may also be a profound interpretation of one of humanity's oldest scriptures. That's according to writer and director Sudipto Chattopadhyay, who writes in the Passion for Cinema film blog that Cameron's choice of title was deeply thought out from the Hindu perspective.
"The ancient Hindu scriptures have forever reiterated that whenever the world would be on the brink of disaster and mankind faces extinction, whenever the vessel of sin is about to spill over to create death and destruction, the divine Lord Vishnu would considerate his duty to manifest himself in mortal, palpable form to save mankind from the impeding doomsday....In the larger perspective the Avatar is meant to be the savior, the messiah of his own race and people," says Chattopadhyay.
"Despite the fear of being lynched by Hindu Fundamentalists," Chattopadhyay continues, "I propose that Cameron is alluding to that tenth avatar of Vishnu becoming manifest as the US marine (the character played by Sam Paddington) in Pandora's universe. The deliberate choice of the blue skin instantly, magically and metaphorically relates our protagonist to two previous avatar’s namely Rama and Krishna."
Despite the film coming under criticism for a weak story line Chattopadhyay instead lauds Cameron's "Avatar" as "a truly post-structuralist, post-modern work of epic proportions both in terms of story telling and redefining how the human eye can perceive a constructed image in motion."
"After this, cinema will be divided into two eras — Before Avatar/After Avatar."
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Avatar Mania Hits China
10/02/2010 00:44
Just days after the Jan. 4 premiere of Hollywood blockbuster Avatar in China, the box offices across the country had gone beyond 100 million yuan (around $14.7 million), thanks to the enthusiasm of huge number of Chinese movie fans.
As the year's first foreign movie in China, the sci-fi film has grabbed the imagination of tens of millions of Chinese. China Film Group Corp. Estimates are that the total box office take may ultimately top 500 million yuan. So far, the Hollywood disaster film 2012 has fetched the most at the box office in China's history at 460 million yuan.
Though almost every movie theater in big cities like Beijing and Shanghai gives Avatar top billing, with as many as 20 show times a day, Chinese viewers still find it tough to get a ticket. In Beijing, the Wanda Movie Theater in Shijingshan, the first IMAX theater in Asia, is the theater of choice for Avatar moviegoers. The theater's general manager told Chinese state-run broadcaster CRI Online that the theater shows the 3D IMAX version of Avatar five times a day, and that tickets are generally sold out a day in advance.
In Shanghai, to get an IMAX ticket for Avatar can mean waiting in freezing weather all night for a show three days later. Shanghai local media reported that on Friday, around 500 people were queuing for tickets at 8 a.m. in front of the downtown Peace Cinema, including some who had waited for 12 hours. Movie fans came equipped with quilts, wooden stools and snacks, in a scene reminiscent of that at train-station ticket windows before the Lunar New Year holidays in China, when huge numbers of Chinese travel to be with family.
For the 3D version of Avatar, ticket prices varied for different theaters and time slots, ranging from 60 yuan to 120 yuan. Meanwhile, illegal tickets traders asked as much as 600 yuan for the IMAX version in Shanghai. The Peace Cinema is planning to raise the ticket price for the IMAX version to as much as 200 yuan from the current 150 yuan from Jan. 14 for some time slots.
A report by the People's Daily (in Chinese ) attributes the difficulty in getting tickets partly to the scarcity of 3D screens in China. The report said, 'According to insiders, the number of 3D screens in Chinese movie theatres has sharply risen from the original 330 to around 700 now; however, there are only 11 IMAX commercial theaters in nine cities across China.' Several upcoming 3D productions, including 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' and the seventh Harry Potter movie, are expected to bring daunting challenges to movie theatres when they land in China.
With a lack of IMAX theaters, people are traveling long distances to see the movie. In southern China, the IMAX-equipped Dongguan Wanda theater has seen a huge influx of people from Guangzhou and Shenzhen. Wednesday afternoon, due to a technical breakdown of the system, the movie was suspended for an hour, and the sound didn't synch with the picture. In the end, the general manager of the theater had to beg forgiveness on his knees twice to sooth the angry audience who drove a long way to see the movie; the theater had to refund each audience member the full ticket price as well as 200 yuan for traffic expenses.
The stunning visual effects of the film that runs 2hours and 42 minutes are seen as too good to miss even a moment of. Tips from a foreign Web site about what are the best points in the movie for a quick bathroom run have lately made the rounds on China's social network Web sites, and have been translated into a text message that people send to their friends via cell phone. According to the tips , four time slots are suggested, one, approximately 56 minutes into the movie, when Trudy says 'You should see your faces,' the second, approximately 117 minutes into the movie, when Jake laments, 'Everything is backwards now. Out there is the true world and this is the dream', and the third, approximately 133 minutes into the movie, when the colonel says to Jake, 'I might want to give you a big wet kiss', and finally, approximately 142 minutes into the movie, when Dr. Grace says 'This is going to ruin my whole day,' followed by non-stop action scenes.
That raises the question: After waiting patiently in line, will viewers then spend the entire movie checking their watches?
| |
|
|
|
|