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009/365/01

This Friday, the 22nd is the annual Earth Day– the one day set aside (who set it aside…?) to ponder over the future of our planet and to determine to keep it green and healthy and all that good stuff.  Well, last evening, I saw this mannequin in our local Macy’s highlighting just this fact.  She’s dressed in biodegradable paper, btw, and you can see the various logos about the date, etc.  I didn’t fully get it– if she’s dressed in paper how can that be good– wouldn’t she need a new dress everyday?!  

Earthday

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The Fighter, 2010

Family doesn’t always mean support, comfort, safety or security.  Family might sometimes mean just the opposite of all that.  Which is what we find in the story of The Fighter.  Or at least, that’s how it starts out:  the family of Mickey the boxer is quite toxic really, and he is surely better off without them, and this he realizes after one terrible boxing match in which he’s pitted against someone way out of his league.  The mismatch results in knocking some sense into him, distancing himself away from his family, and taking his career more seriously with the help of some strangers in Vegas.  Well, all bad things must come to pass as well, and things do slowly turn around, including the family who once mistreated him.

And pass they do– bad times, that is.  And they finally come all the way around to where those bad times now become good times, thanks in no small measure to those same family members who were once as good as nothing as far as Mickey was concerned.  But it is now that same family (a mother, father, brother, and seven sisters) that rallies around Mickey, and it is his rising star that makes the rest of the movie what is is:  an impressive study in the dynamics of family, and both personal and professional choices and their impact on individuals and groups.

The mother in the story does a phenomenal job in portraying this Italian-style matriarch; no wonder she got Best Supporting Actress Award for it.  Amy Adams is also pretty convincing as Mickey’s love interest.  But it is truly Mark Wahlberg and Christian Bale who outdo themselves in presenting a powerful persona of the life and times of small town boxers who turn professional, lose it all, and then win it back again.

The film is a great window into those big Catholic Irish communities in the East where the workingman’s idea of a good time is to hit the local bars after work and/or buff up in the local gym.  The latter so as to either make you tough for the streets, or, if you’re lucky like Mickey, to turn you into a pro and win fame, fortune and the pretty girl.  Does life get better than that?  🙂

Thefighter

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Apple to ship new iPhone in September 2011

Apple to ship new iPhone in September: sources

HONG KONG | Wed Apr 20, 2011 7:29am EDT

 

  

HONG KONG (Reuters) – Apple’s next-generation iPhone will have a faster processor and will begin shipping in September, three people with direct knowledge of the company’s supply chain said.

 

 

The production of the new iPhone will start in July/August and the smartphone will look largely similar to the iPhone 4, one of the people said on Wednesday.

 

 

The iPhone — introduced in 2007 with the touchscreen, on-demand application template now adopted by its rivals — remains the gold standard in the booming smartphone market.

 

 

Reports on the timeline of the new iPhone launch vary, though it is largely expected that Apple will likely refresh its iPhone 4 later this year.

 

 

The sources declined to be identified because the plans for the new iPhone were not yet public. An Apple spokeswoman in Hong Kong was not available for comment.

 

 

The iPhone is one of Apple’s most successful products, with more than 16 million sold in the last quarter of 2010 and the product accounted for more than a third of the company’s sales in the quarter.

 

 

The current iPhone 4 was launched by Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs in June last year and began shipping the same month in 2010.

 

 

Apple sources many of its components from Taiwan-based suppliers, many of whom are expected to benefit from an uptick in sales as some of them rely on the U.S. company for about 20-40 percent of their business, said Vincent Chen, an analyst at Yuanta Securities.

 

 

“For some suppliers, Apple is their cash cow, or their bread and butter,” Chen said.

 

 

“With all these versions being launched so frequently, it will be the so-called low-margin suppliers, such as those that assemble the phones, who will benefit the most.”

 

 

Suppliers to the new iPhone include camera module maker Largan Precision Co Ltd, touchscreen panel maker Wintek Corp and case maker Foxconn Technology Co Ltd, two of the people said.

 

 

The companies would begin production either in July or August before shipping components to Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd, flagship of Foxconn Technology Group, for assembly, they said.

 

 

Officials at Largan, Wintek and Foxconn declined to comment.

 

 

On Wednesday, Largan’s Taipei-listed shares ended up 3.7 percent, Hon Hai rose 4.3 percent and Foxconn rose 6.6 percent, outpacing the benchmark TAIEX share index’s 2 percent advance.

 

 

Apple, a big purchaser of touchscreen displays and flash memory, is also dependent on Japan for some of its key components, sparking concern that the disruption due to the crisis there may hurt its gross margins.

 

 

Apple is expected to report another spectacular quarter on Wednesday, tempered by growing caution over how supply constraints will squeeze margins and restrain iPhone and iPad sales.

Iphone5

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008/365/01

View from my window; snow’s all gone today!

Photo04192011

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For The Love Of Art

This is an inaugural post to this sub-section of my blog, simply titled Art.  Simple though that word might be, it is, as we know defined by the eye of the beholder.  I have attempted to offer a brief description of the purpose of this blog, and I offer it here again:  A place dedicated to highlight and celebrate my love of art– especially my personal collections in various media ranging from lithographs and oils, to folk-art from around the world. Plus, news and information on lovers of art and those who create it.

Furthermore, I wish to share also Oscar Wilde’s preface to his book titled The Picture of Dorian Gray.  Wilde offers an interesting take on how he views art and what possibly comprises it; the approach of the viewer and creator of it; and the purpose of art itself.  An excerpt of this preface follows :

The artist is the creator of beautiful things. To reveal art and conceal the artist is art’s aim. The critic is he who can translate into another manner or a new material his impression of beautiful things.

 The moral life of man forms part of the subject-matter of the artist, but the morality of art consists in the perfect use of an imperfect medium. No artist desires to prove anything. Even things that are true can be proved. No artist has ethical sympathies. An ethical sympathy in an artist is an unpardonable mannerism of style. No artist is ever morbid. The artist can express everything. Thought and language are to the artist instruments of an art. Vice and virtue are to the artist materials for an art.

From the point of view of form, the type of all the arts is the art of the musician. From the point of view of feeling, the actor’s craft is the type. All art is at once surface and symbol. Those who go beneath the surface do so at their peril. Those who read the symbol do so at their peril.

It is the spectator, and not life, that art really mirrors. Diversity of opinion about a work of art shows that the work is new, complex, and vital. When critics disagree, the artist is in accord with himself.

We can forgive a man for making a useful thing as long as he does not admire it. The only excuse for making a useless thing is that one admires it intensely.

All art is quite useless. 

What-is-art

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007/365/01

Spring, you say?  Sure, it’s Spring.  But that doesn’t prevent the snow from coming!  Check out these spring flowers bursting in bloom alongside the snow-covered grass– which is also slowly turning green, as you can see.  Well, until Memorial Day (end of May), nothing surprises me– not even snow!

Photo04182011

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Chaat-Paapdi: Sleight Of Hand (My Hand, That Is!)

Yeah, so, unless you have an Indian restaurant next door that serves terrific Chaat-Paapdi, or unless you don’t mind driving 40 minutes every other day, and of course, shelling out $5 for each plate of Chaat-Paapdi, you’ll be in a bad way waiting for that next trip to get some.  Unless, of course, you can make it yourself.  And make it well, that is.

Well, here’s how you “make it well”:  You get the best quality ingredients, and toss them together in the right sequence, and serve it up with panache!  Panache, I said!  And what might those ingredients be?  Well, here goes:
  • Boil/Microwave your yellow potatoes and dice when cooled a bit
  • Get your bag of Paapdis out, and in a nice wide bowl break up the paapdis to make a good layer to build on
  • Second layer is the bhel-puri-style namkeen.  I use the most delectable homemade kind that my mother makes with puffed rice, sev, peanuts, and stuff
  • Third layer is the onion or two finely chopped
  • Open a can of the finest chickpeas or garbanzo beans, aka, chole and spread those out
  • Finally, lay on the diced potatoes
Now, you’re ready to starting “building” your individual servings.  This is how I do it:
  • Scoop out a few big spoonfuls of this awesome mixture into a lovely quarter-plate or salad-plate
  • Take a spoonful of the Imli Chutney and the Green Chili Chutney and spread out over this goodness
  • Next pour on the thinned out and salted yougurt, aka, curds
  • Garnish with the tastiest Haldiram’s Sev that is super crunchy and super spicy
Serve with panache!  Oh, and love too, if you like!  Hope the pictures tell even better the story of the recipe that I’ve offered up here.

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Rep. Jackson on job killing iPads

Ha haa haa!

Ipad2-cover-featured1