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2011-08-27

MICROSOFT SURFACE

MICROSOFT SURFACE
Microsoft Surface (codename Milan) is a multi-touch product that responds to natural hand gestures and real-world objects, helping people interact with digital content in a simple and intuitive way. Leave the mouse and keyboard behind. Surface lets you grab digital content with your hands and move information with simple gestures and touches.
It has a 360-degree user interface, a 30-inch reflective surface with a XGA DLP projector underneath the surface which projects an image onto its underside, while five cameras in the machine's housing record reflections of infrared light from objects and human fingertips on the surface. The surface is capable of object recognition, object/finger orientation recognition and tracking, and is multi-touch and is multi-user. Users can interact with the machine by touching or dragging their fingertips and objects such as paintbrushes across the screen, or by placing and moving placed objects. This paradigm of interaction with computers is known as a natural user interface (NUI).
Features:

1- Direct interaction refers to the user's ability to simply reach out and touch the interface of an application in order to interact with it, without the need for a mouse or keyboard. Multi-touch contact refers to the ability to have multiple contact points with an interface, unlike with a mouse, where there is only one cursor.

2- The technology allows non-digital objects to be used as input devices. In one example, a normal paint brush was used to create a digital painting in the software.

3- A unique feature that comes preinstalled with Surface is the pond effect "Attract" application. Simply, it is a "picture" of water with leaves and rocks within it (a lot like a screen saver used in Windows XP or Vista). By touching the screen, users can create ripples in the water, much like a real stream. Additionally, the pressure of touch alters the size of the ripple created, and objects placed into the water create a barrier that ripples bounce off, just as they would in real life.
I think this is going to be the most inventive part of the direction in future and there must be the great use of media.

2011-08-20

Funny pics

here are some funny pics for the future





WALL MOUNT WASHING MACHINE


WALL-MOUNT WASHING MACHINE Welcome to the world of Science and Technology and a pleasant good news to the new generations. In 10 years from now, new invention of future washing machine will appear and it will make your life easier.







Design by the Electrolux, this future washing machine is a wall-mount, portable washing machine. Besides that, this washing machine will definitely save up space in your house and energy consumed.





By using high-pressure steam instead of water, this washing machine will help us to reduce our water consumption. Furthermore for easy and convenient menu navigation, a touch screen display is been integrated.



In future, people do not have to worry if they wish to wash up their cloth. It is as simple as ABC, what you need to do is just bring your own washing machine box and then plug into any of the energy stick. After that, the machine will automatically clean up your cloth under high pressure of steam. 



In 10 years from now, people will not face any problem regarding the space to place the big-heavy old washing machine anymore as the new convenient wall-mount will replace this legacy technology. So people, let's move on!

2011-08-13

24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)

24 places NOT to see before you die
It’s every traveler’s fear: After all the planning, preparation, and time and money spent, your trip turns out to be a total bust. But for travel writer Catherine Price, ending up at a bad place isn’t necessarily a bad thing – at the very least, you’ll be bringing back a good story.
In her new book, “101 Places Not To See Before You Die,” Price has compiled a lighthearted list of horrible destinations, attractions and events from around the world that intrepid travelers should avoid at all costs. Here are top 24 places not to visit before you die.


1. The Mummies of Guanajuato
A museum display comprised of the exhumed bodies of mostly anonymous Mexicans whose relatives couldn’t afford a “grave tax,” the Mummies make for a macabre attraction in the town of Guanajuato, Mexico. Some visitors says that maybe a traveling mummy show is not the most respectful way to deal with the remains of indigent Mexicans, but otheres disagree: the mummies are so popular that in the fall of 2009, they were taken to the United States for a seven-city tour.




24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
2. Winchester Mystery House

This bizarre 1880s mansion in San Jose, Calif. (above), has 160 rooms and countless staircases and passageways that lead to nowhere – thanks to its eccentric owner, an heiress to the Winchester rifle company. On the advice of a psychic, Sarah Winchester had construction crews work round-the-clock for almost 40 years to appease the angry spirits of those killed by Winchester guns. “The effect of all this – the gift shop, the mile-long tour through endless empty rooms … leaves you feeling surprisingly empty.”




24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
3. Corbet’s Couloir in Jackson Hole, Wyoming

This double-black diamond ski slope on Rendezvous Mountain is one of the most dangerous in the world, thanks to a 30-ft. free fall onto a 55-degree slope surrounded by jagged rocks. “A must-miss spot for anyone who would prefer not to meet their doom on skis,”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
4. Four Corners monument

There’ nothing to do at the only point where four states intersect – New Mexico, Utah, Arizona and Colorado – except engage in “geographic Twister.” “The main tourist activity,” says Price, “is getting down on all fours so you can take a picture of yourself in each state.” Another reason not to bother? Price writes that the Four Corners monument is actually 1,807 feet of where it should be.



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
5. Euro Disney

Called a “cultural Chernobyl” by snooty French folks after it opened near Paris in 1992, Euro Disney – now known as Disneyland Paris – was an initial flop thanks to several tactical errors, says Price. It debuted during a European recession, offended would-be workers by requiring “appropriate undergarments,” and didn’t take into account France’s cold winter season. Even worse, says Price, is that the park turned off its European guests by banning alcohol in park restaurants.



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
6. The Seattle Gum Wall

For many, it’s a kitschy, colorful work of art – a brick wall in an alley next to the Market Theater in Seattle that’s covered almost completely in chewing gum put there by thousands of visitors over the past 15 or so years. For Price, the Gum Wall is simply “disgusting.” “Under no circumstances should you be allowed to take (a) moist, warm wad out of your mouth, stick it on a public wall, and call it art.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
7. The top of Mt. Washington in a snowstorm

Though only 6,300 feet high, this New Hampshire mountain is one of the most dangerous peaks in the world. Located at the convergence of several storm tracks, Mt. Washington gets snowstorms and 200 mph, hurricane-force winds year-round. “If you’re unfortunate enough to find yourself on Mt. Washington during a winter storm and can’t find shelter, you’re probably going to die,” says Price. “But at least you’ll have something pretty to look at: rime ice, a feathery frosting that’s beloved by nature photographers.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
8. The Blarney Stone

The huge rock, set into the battlements of Blarney Castle near the Irish town of Cork in the 1300s, is said to bless those who kiss it with the gift of eloquence. “The stone’s actual powers are debatable,” says Price, “but one thing’s for sure – the Blarney Stone is a germaphobe’s nightmare. Kissed by more than 400,000 people per year, it’s covered with trace bits of spit left behind with every pucker.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
9. Kingman Reef

Although the water around this small Pacific Ocean reef 1,000 miles south of Hawaii is teeming with marine life and corals, a visit is hardly worth the trouble, says Price. “Kingman Reef is an uninhabited spit of smashed coral and shells, decorated by occasional pieces of human-made flotsam: plastic bottles, broken bits of Styrofoam, and a large number of widowed flip-flops.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
10. Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument

Located in Arizona on the U.S.-Mexico border, Organ Pipe Cactus is a national park known for more than its desert wildlife and distinctive cacti – its an infamous border crossing for drug traffickers and illegal immigrants. “This doesn’t deter visitors,” says Price of the more than 1,000 guests per night. “Granted, most of those visitors have entered the United States illegally. But if they’re willing to deal with the desert’s 116-degree summer heat, venomous snakes … and, of course, drug traffickers, perhaps it’s only fair to let them spend the night.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
11. Stonehenge

Built in stages between 3,000 and 1,600 B.C., Stonehenge is a mysterious, supposedly mystical site in England that attracts thousands of New Agey-visitors and neo-pagans, especially during the summer solstice.

Unfortunately, ancient mysticism has given way to modern-day commercialism. Stonehenge, writes Price, “is cut off from surrounding fields by a chain-link fence. A large parking lot sits nearby with a gift shop, ice cream vendors, Port-O-Potties, and a subterranean visitors’ center. An entrance fee of more than $10 only allows you to walk around the periphery of the circle, kept at a safe distance by a wire guardrail.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
12. The top of Mount Everest

“Unless you love frostbite, hypoxia, blinding snow, and high-altitude games of Russian roulette,” says Price, “do Nepal a favor and stay home.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
13. Juarez, Mexico

Drug wars and alleged abuse of citizens by the Mexican army and the Cuidad Juarez police force have turned this bustling border city across from El Paso, Tex., into a highly dangerous place to visit. More than 1,800 people were killed in Juarez between January 2008 and early 2009, according to Price. “The border is indeed exhilarating – but unfortunately for anyone trying to live or visit Cuidad Juarez, not in a good way.”




24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
14. Times Square on New Year’s Eve

Being stuck in a massive crowd on a freezing night with no bathrooms available – and no liquor allowed – does not a New Year’s party make. “If you value your sanity, your extremities, and your bladder, you should find a different place to celebrate the new year,” says Price.



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
15. BART – Bay Area Rapid Transit

Smelly, excessively loud and with no trains running from midnight to 4 a.m., San Francisco’s public transportation system is a mess, says Price. It’s also vulnerable to earthquakes, she claims. “One can only hope that if and when the big one comes, it does so between the hours of midnight and 4 a.m.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
16. Pamplona, from the perspective of a bull

Considering that right after the annual running of the bulls festivities in Pamplona they end up drugged, diced and dead at the hands of a matador, “This is officially the worst day ever” if you happen to be a bull.



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
17. Mid-January in Whittier, Alaska

One of the most secluded towns in Alaska, Whittier was built as a secret military base in WWII and has a population hovering near 200, writes Price. It’s also extremely difficult to reach – a one-lane tunnel than can only accommodate one direction of traffic at a time is still the only land route into town. Making matters worse, a massive rockslide in 2009 (above) blocked the road leading to the tunnel, stranding most Whittier residents for more than a month.




24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
18. Action Park, N.J.

Known for “treacherous rides, untrained employees and copious beer stands,” says Price, “Action Park – also known as Traction Park, Class Action Park and Death Park – was an amusement park in Vernon Township, New Jersey. Responsible for at least six deaths and countless accidents, it inspired so many personal injury lawsuits that in 1996, it was forced to shut down.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
19. Black Rock City during the Burning Man festival

The annual anything-goes art festival in the Nevada desert that culminates in the immolation of a giant wooden sculpture – aka “Burning Man” – it can be a “life-changing experience, a chance to break free of societal norms and spend a week indulging in so-called ‘radical self-expression,’ ” says Price. “But if you don’t enjoy being surrounded by drugs and naked people coated in glitter, you probably should not attend.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
20. Mount Rushmore

“While Mount Rushmore is an impressive achievement, it’s not really that interesting,” says Price. “It was built specifically to draw visitors to South Dakota’s Black Hills. “Take into account the fact that the sculptures were carved into hills considered sacred to the Lakota Sioux, and it starts to seem less like a testament to the American spirit and more like an example of us looking like jerks.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
21. An overnight stay at a Korean temple

Price once joined a travel program that allowed guests to experience life as a Buddhist monk by staying at a Korean temple. “It sounded like such a nice idea – 24 hours of living as a monk – but that’s before I had to trade in my clothes for a scratchy wool suit, spend an afternoon sorting through potatoes in 90-degree heat, sleep on the floor (in the scratchy wool suit), and get up at 3:30 a.m. – after falling asleep at 1 a.m. – to meditate in the dark,” says Price. “I spent most of the time killing mosquitoes and then feeling guilty about the karmic implications.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
22. A Buzkashi Match

“An Afghan tradition, buzkashi is an animal-rights advocate’s nightmare: a sport in which three teams of horsemen compete to score goals with the body of a dead, headless goat,” says Price. The prize for the winning team: Barbecuing the goat.



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
23. Gloucester Cheese Rolling Competition

“A yearly festival in which scores of people gather at Cooper’s Hill near Gloucester, England, for the chance to chase a piece of cheese off a cliff,” says Price. “Bones are broken. Joints are dislocated. Contestants are carried off the field on stretchers. Runners are risking life and limb for the glory of winning a 7-lb. round of Double Gloucester cheese.”



24 places NOT to see before you die (24 images)
24. Centralia, Penn.

Though not one of Price’s choices, no list of places NOT to visit would be complete without mention of Centralia, a former Pennsylvania mining town under which an underground coal fire has been burning for almost 50 years. In the photo above, the heat from the eternal blaze has cracked the highway leading into town. Once home to about 1,000 people, the town’s population now numbers less than a dozen.

2011-08-04

POLLATHAVAN BGM

SHORTCUT TO TRAY





Shortcuts To Tray (Free)

Shortcuts To Tray is a tool for quick access to your favorite links and shortcuts from the system tray.
The program keeps your favorite links and shortcuts on files, folders, applications, Internet and network resources, command lines, system resources and more. 

                                     

PHOTOBOOTH

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