Jumat, 29 Januari 2010

Gangster Movies

Hantu Puncak Datang Bulan - No matter how much we like to see the good guy triumph in the end and those who have committed crimes be punished for them, we can never quite shake off that sneaking enjoyment that comes from bad guys doing what they do and being good at it! Gangster movies have been a part of American cinema from the beginning and by taking a quick look at the genre, we definitely can see why.

Film Hantu Puncak Datang Bulan - The two movies that are considered the grandfathers of this film genre are Little Caeser, starring Edward G. Robinson and Public Enemy, starring James Cagney. In both of these films, the gangsters get their comeuppance, but often, that's not what the audience remembers. In Little Caeser, you remember the scenes of Robinson's character Rico living it up in the lap of luxury and in Public Enemy, you fondly remember Tom Powers, played by Cagney doing a delighted little two step on a public street when a girl smiles at him.

Gangsters in Hollywood come in a variety of different flavors and Al Pacino has played two extremely different archetypes. In the Godfather movies, he is the elegant and doomed Michael Corleone, the war hero who got dragged reluctantly into the family business, while in Scarface, he plays the crazed killer Tony Montana, a Cuban who rose from immigrant to drug kingpin. Both of these characters were (in very different ways) extremely charismatic and its easy to see how we're drawn to them.

There are also quite a few movies that pay homage to the classic gangster movies, or satirize them, depending on your point of view. The prime time show, The Sopranos, features a modern day organized crime association where the members are quietly and sometimes not so quietly obsessed with Goodfellas and The Godfather and will quote them at any opportunity. Brick, a movie about love and death in high school, was heavily influenced by the classic Miller's Crossing in terms of tone and language.

The story of the gangster can be seen as the American Dream that is played in fast-forward. It usually starts with a young boy looking for a way out of poverty and with some luck and some help, he makes it to the top. Maybe that's the appeal of the gangster genre, and maybe that's why we're so willing to forgive the things they do to get there.

Don't look for a morality lesson when you watch gangster movies. You'll end up rooting for the wrong guy and when he inevitably gets what's coming to him, you'll be annoyed and disappointed. Gangsters top the charts in charisma, but their life expectancy and chances for lasting happiness are practically nil.

Jumat, 22 Januari 2010

Dell Studio 16

Dell Studio One 19 Desktop Computer Baru DPR - Dell has unveiled a concept laptop featuring a 16-inch OLED screen showing what could be possible in the future for notebooks. Packed into a Studio XPS 16, the OLED is just 2mm thick and comes with virtually a 180-degree viewing angle.

If that wasn't enough to get you giddy with excitement, the screen offers a contrast ratio that exceeds 10,000:1 and come with a response time of 0.004ms, 1000 times faster than current LCD technology.

The only concern we have? It means virtually everyone on the train is going to know what you are working on.

LED-lit TVs are the new darlings of HDTV manufacturers. These panels are a lot more energy-efficient and deliver some of the best picture quality among all flat-screen displays. Having said that, most LED-lit TVs do not come cheap and usually cost a premium. If you're not deterred by their higher sticker price, here're guidelines to get the best out of your purchase.

There's currently no industry-wide categorization for this relatively new type of HDTV. Technically, it is known as an LED-lit LCD TV or loosely referred to by Samsung as "LED TV" like the giant screens deployed in stadiums and malls. Still, LED panels can be singled out by their LED backlighting technologies which enable better picture quality, power efficiency, eco-friendliness, as well as sleeker bezel designs. They also cost much more than a comparable-sized flat screen.


The sleek 29.9mm-thin Samsung "LED TVs" that made LCD-lit flat panels sexy.

1. It's not exactly a different type of TV
An LED-lit TV is just an LCD TV that's backlit via light-emitting diodes (LEDs) instead of the regular cold-cathode fluorescent lamps (or CCFLs). While the former have come into the spotlight this year with Samsung's ultrathin models, LED-backlit LCDs have been around since 2007 when the Korean's LA70F91B debuted. Unlike plasma and OLED, which are emissive technologies where each pixel is its own discrete light source, LCD is transmissive and has to be separately illuminated.

2. LEDs are energy-efficient and eco-friendly
It's definitely true that LED backlighting can cut down on power use, and some LED-lit LCDs are--inch for inch--the most efficient flat panels available. Samsung's edgelit LA46B6000, for example, costs just US$18.73 per year to run based on US electricity tariff (after calibration to equalize light output). That said, standard fluorescent backlighting is getting more efficient, too. A similarly sized CCFL-based LA46B650 costs just US$8 extra in comparison. In other words, the actual savings is not substantial, though these LEDs are more eco-friendly because they do not contain toxic lead.

Selasa, 19 Januari 2010

Google Docs

Google In China, I’d like to present a scenario for you. Let’s say you are a freelance copywriter with many jobs on your plate. You are editing content for web pages, writing your own advertisements, writing brochures for large companies, blogging for small businesses, and you have a few worker bees to take care of some of the lesser work. Now imagine your Outlook, Entourage, or Mail application’s inbox. Pretty scary huh?

You can imagine how complicated your e-mailing experience can be when multiple attachments are sent to and from your computer everyday. Oftentimes we are revising documents and editing them before sending them right back where they came from creating multiple copies on multiple computers. This type of thing stresses many an e-mailer out there and makes it hard to stay organized when things get busy. Google Docs is definitely the fix for this person.

I came across Google Docs and watched their “Google Docs in Plain Language”. To give a quick summary, Google Docs is a remote place on the Internet that is used for storing any kind of document, spreadsheet, or presentation that you may be working with. Instead of receiving and sending multiple attachments everyday, they can be stored remotely and accessed by any user with the right credentials. This can help everyone be more productive with documents that are constantly being pinballed back and forth with new changes each time. Google Docs makes it easy to do this as well with their “add collaborators” feature. All you need to do is add their e-mail to a list and click “add collaborator” and they will now be able to make changes to the document. All you have to do is pick who can view and notify your client, co-worker, or other where it is stored.

For instance, let’s say you are the editor-in-chief for the state magazine of North Carolina. Many of your employees will be sending in all sorts of documents pertaining to the magazine that may or may not need editing. Now if each of these is handled separately via e-mail attachment, confusion will certainly occur but you know better. You are storing these documents digitally with Google Docs and your employees are logging in and posting their work and you are collaborating right there and they are able to see the finished product. How much more efficient and organized is this?

With Google Docs, you can make your e-mail attachment nightmares a thing of the past and start organizing remotely. This will help productivity and the overall stress load for all who are involved. If you haven’t heard of this tool, explore a bit by checking out some videos or tutorials to see if it’s for you. If not, then what’s the big deal? It was completely free just like all things Google.

Jumat, 15 Januari 2010

How To Start A Child In An Astronomy Hobby

Solar Eclipse January 2010, I caught the astronomy bug at an early age. It was right after my dinosaur-obsession and right before my car-obsession. Unfortunately, my interest in astronomy ended as abruptly as it began and on a very sour note. It took almost 30 years for me to decide to take it up again, and when I did it was hard to imagine waiting so long. Upon reflection, I realized I didn’t just stop; I stopped out of anger and frustration. My mother confirmed this recalling that when I was about 8 years old, my father and I went out with my little telescope for the first time. A half hour later when we came back in I wanted nothing more to do with it and wouldn’t even talk about it! It’s very easy to get a child interested in astronomy but it’s even easier for them to get frustrated and quit. I’ve come up with four suggestions that I feel may help you avoid the pitfalls I experienced and inspire your future scientist to take up the amazing hobby of astronomy and enjoy it for a lifetime!

First, you don’t need a telescope for an astronomy hobby. You heard that right! The very best way to start out is by learning about what you’re looking at. And you don’t need any equipment to do it. Get a book on constellations, sit down with your future astronomer (during the day), and start with the constellations that are visible for that time of year. Learn to identify the patterns, associate them with their names, and read the stories behind the historical characters they are named after. Kids have amazing memories and are fantastic at learning patterns and associating the names with them. Perfect for constellations! Check out science kits, science toys, and Janice VanCleave science experiment books, they are a great way to get started. After your child has become familiar with and can identify some of the constellations in the book, wait for a dark clear night, lie out on a blanket, and identify as many as you can. It will be so much fun you will count the days until the next time you go stargazing!

Now let’s talk about what you can and cannot see. The moon is amazing to look at through either binoculars or a telescope, but it’s bright so make sure you have a moon filter so you don’t hurt your eyes! A moon filter is like wearing sunglasses, it reduces the amount of light entering your eye(s). And don’t observe the moon when it’s full, it’s too washed out. Shadows bring out details in craters and other landscape features. Meteor showers are fun and there are schedules that will tell you when and where to look for them. Constellations are easy to see with the naked eye, but try to go out during a new moon (also called a dark moon) or close to it. The brighter the moon the harder it is to see celestial objects. With binoculars you will be able to see many open clusters and globular clusters, quite beautiful! With a low powered telescope you’ll be able to see both types of clusters, some double stars, and a few nebulae. You may also get to see Jupiter and Saturn. The only galaxy you should expect to see is Andromeda (M31), the closest large galaxy to the Milky Way. Unless you live under extremely dark skies and have a big telescope, galaxies are just too faint and too far away to see. Even Andromeda will look like a faint fuzzy in most parts of the country.

This leads right into my second postulate. Objects seen through a telescope rarely look like the clear, colorful, large photos you see. The human eye is unable to see the color that can be picked up by a camera. Therefore, a nebula that shows up in photos with wonderful reds and purples, and sticks out in sharp contrast to neighboring stars will look gray, faint, and ghostly through your telescope. And that’s if you can see it at all. Jupiter will show some color, but the image will be very small in your eyepiece and making out details will be difficult. I’m not saying the objects you see will be disappointing, quite the contrary. But if expectations are set too high for a child, the let-down can be damaging. Learning about the objects first will make them much more interesting to observe.

Let’s take the following example: Imagine looking at a globular cluster (personally, my favorite object in the sky). Looks pretty amazing through your telescope, believe me. But look at it again knowing its M-13 or Messier 13, the Hercules Cluster, the best globular cluster north of the celestial equator. This is a naked eye object under very dark skies with 500,000 stars extending 150 light years across and a distance of 26,000 light years from Earth. Discovered by Edmond Halley (of Halley’s Comet) in 1714. While Messier never saw its individual stars, even a small telescope brings out the details in this magnificent mass of stars. This globular cluster is about 14 billion years old! Three dark rifts radiate outward from near the center, like a dark “propeller”. M-13 is located in the constellation Hercules, son of Zeus, the hero who was made to perform twelve great tasks to cleanse himself after he went temporarily insane, killing his wife and children. Even if your child can’t grasp all the concepts, do you see how the constellation and the objects now have life?

Third, (as I’ve previously mentioned) you need to manage a child’s expectations. If they expect to see a big, bright, colorful object, and they end up having to struggle to see a bland, blurry one that takes you a long time to find, they will get frustrated and lose interest. Kids have big imaginations as we can see by the cartoons they watch. Their world is big, loud, and colorful and their attention span is short. It also depends on what age your child is. The Janice VanCleave science experiment books are for kids 8 years and older, and that’s probably a good age to start them with a telescope. They may be interested in constellations at an earlier age but when it comes time to look at things through the telescope it’s a little tougher. Astronomy can be a slow and deliberate hobby, with beauty in the very subtle details of the objects. As a parent you need to decide when to start your child in this fantastic hobby. If they have become interested, teach them as much as they can soak up!

And fourth, when you are ready to buy a telescope, don’t buy a cheap piece of junk! Now let me tell you how I really feel. ? You don’t need to spend a lot of money, but buying an inferior scope is a recipe for disaster. Walking through department stores you’ll notice the no-name brand telescopes being sold that advertise 400x power (sounds good, right?) and show beautiful large color pictures of heavenly objects on the box. As we’ve discussed, you won’t be seeing those objects on the box the way they are shown, but it’s a nice marketing tool. Cheap telescopes don’t focus well and 400 power just blurs images. A low power scope with quality optics is the best way to go, and they are inexpensive. A great source on the web is Science Store for the Stars for telescopes and Janice VanCleave science books.

Years after I put my telescope into “storage”, I got it out again and took it apart to see what was inside. The primary mirror was basically a piece of tin foil that reflected the little bit of light it could muster onto a small mirror that looked just like the hand mirror a dentist puts into your mouth. It was a complete piece of junk! It never focused or showed anything in detail. Even the moon was blurry. No wonder I angrily quit the hobby! Of course there was no way for my parents to know, and how would you?

Very briefly let’s talk about telescopes. The purpose of a telescope is to first, capture light with the primary mirror or refracting lens(s), and second, to focus it (with an eyepiece) into a clear and sharp image. The eyepieces are what give you different powers (also called magnifications). One lesson I learned rather quickly was that you don’t need an expensive, large, and powerful scope to see some of the best objects in the sky. But you do need a quality telescope. There are many different designs of telescopes, but there are really only 2 types; refractors and reflectors. Refractor telescopes use lenses like binoculars to refract or bend the light coming in. Reflectors, on the other hand, use a primary mirror which reflects light to a smaller secondary mirror, then through an eyepiece (a lens) before it gets to your eye. There are many different kinds of reflectors including the Dobsonian, SCT or Schmidt-Cassegrain Telescope, Maksutov-Cassegrain, Newtonian reflectors, Ritchey-Chretien, and others. We won’t get into the specifics of these, but the different types of reflectors all basically work the same way; by reflecting light.

If you start by learning about the constellations and other celestial objects and manage your child’s expectations, they will appreciate what they see. When it comes time to buy a telescope, do your research! There are plenty of inexpensive telescopes with quality optics out there. Try Science Store for the Stars for great starter scopes by Smithsonian and Educational Insights. Both are affordable with high quality optics. They also have Janice VanCleave science books on astronomy and constellations. If you follow these guidelines, you and your young astronomer will enjoy the hobby of astronomy for a lifetime!

Selasa, 12 Januari 2010

Samsung Corby Pop turns simpler and more basic

Samsung Corby, Heard of this hoary adage – ’simplicity touches everyone’s heart’? Something similar is happening in the realm of mobile phones as well. According to Ubergizmo, the Samsung Corby Pop will now be swaying with a cheaper price tag.

Apparently, the handset features an integrated FM radio, a 1.3-megapixel camera, 22MB internal memory and a 960 mAh battery for avid talkers to continue their conversation for about 8 hours.

Reportedly, the Samsung Corby Pop will hit shelves with a cheaper price tag of $150 (approx Rs. 7,028). The phone is anticipated to hit India and other emerging markets first.Samsung Corby S3650 users will now have an inclusion in their handsets. Samsung has added Wi-Fi to their most economical full-touch Corby device, reports Samsung Hub.

Apparently, this handset has got certified by the Wi-Fi association and now the model no has been named S3650W. This news comes after the company had released Wi-Fi to their handset, Star S5230.

The mobile phone boasts of a 2.8-inch QVGA touchscreen display, quad-band GSM/EDGE connectivity and 2MP camera. Logging on to sites like Facebook or Twitter is quite easy with this device. Other attributes that come with the handset are TouchWiz UI, FM Radio, Bluetooth and microSD card slot.

Supposedly more than 3 million Samsung Corby phones have already been sold, since its launch.

Presumably, Samsung Corby Wi-Fi could hit the stands in January next year and the cost of it is currently under wraps. People who have been craving to get their hands on the Samsung Corby Pop will have to wait for some more time. The complete specifications and image of the Corby Pop C3510 seems to now be available, reports Samsung Hub.

Samsung Corby Pop is claimed to be the most economical touchscreen mobile device. The handset appears to be a simplified version of Samsung S3650 Corby. One of the most striking features that Corby Pop boasts of is the identical sized touchscreen display of Samsung S3650 Corby.

The other attributes includes being social network friendly and encompasses DNSe, music player and microSD card slot up to 8GB. The handset supports MP3/AMR/AAC/AAC+/e-AAC+/WMA formats for the music player
. The dimensions of Corby Pop are 103.9×55.4×12.9mm and it weighs only 92grams. The handset’s display is 2.8-inch with a resolution of 320×24 pixels and 262k colors.

For photography enthusiasts, the camera is 1.3MP with 4X digital zoom. There are various photography features included in the camera along with video recording. This phone also embraces a FM Radio with RDS, Bluetooth 2.1, 3.5mm earphone jack and internal memory of 30MB. Samsung Corby Pop is designed for the network GSM/EDGE 850/900/1800/1900 MHz. Some of the other features comprises of battery with 960mAH, talktime of 10 hours and standby time up to 700 hours.

Reports claim that Samsung Corby Pop (C3510) is scheduled to hit the market this month and will apparently carry a price tag close to Rs. 7,000.

Kamis, 07 Januari 2010

Kings of Mobile Phone

Samsung omnia Pro b7610, Innovations have given mobile phones recognition as the one of the most admired technology globally. Though mobile phone is not too old innovation yet it has maintained its standard of high efficiency. To talk about mobile world, the reigning kings are more than one who worth mention. To be precise, Nokia and Samsung are two of the leaders who rule the roost of mobile world in India. Both these makers have some special features on offer with their respective mobile phone models.

After the Nokia and Samsung Mobile kings, Sony Ericsson and Motorola mobiles are in queue. Mobile phone manufacturers are always coming up with new and unique ideas for their next new handset, but Nokia have broken the mould with their new mobile phone concepts. Nokia mobile phones are one of the most reliable brands these days. With the passage of time various brands have succeeded in creating the reliability factor. To meet the increasing demand of these gadgets in the market the mobile phone manufacturers are striving hard to develop their existing brands and are coming up with new sophisticated models.

Mobile phones are user friendly, reliable, comfortable and lots of features which add more value to mobile phones. Now days it is very easy to buy mobile phone even a rickshaw wala is also carrying nokia phone, Advancement in technology has made electronics devices very cheaper, the resale value of nokia mobile phones are very high in India. People trust on Nokia, Samsung. Phones.

Nokia and Samsung mobile phones are acquirable in several designs. You can opt for any design such as flip, sliding and swivel etc. The handsets are further adorned with glossy designs and sophisticated features. Both slim and sleek Nokia handsets are available.