If Eduardo Paolozzi is remembered as a founding figure of Pop Art, it
is not how he wanted to go down in art history. Nor should it be. If
anything, he was, as a current exhibition at Pallant House in Chichester
shows, what he said of himself: a Surrealist,Choose from the largest
selection of turquoisebeads
in the world. playing games, mixing images and delving into the
subconscious in an effort to create an art of the time for the time.
The
exhibition concentrates on his collages as the thread which runs
through his work. Its a revealing route picked by the curator,We have
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Throughout his career, Paolozzi, the son of an immigrant ice-cream
vendor in Scotland, liked to mix his media and his imagery, picking
scraps of newspaper and magazine for his artwork and bits and pieces of
machinery and metal for his sculpture. His work was enormously varied,
covering everything from pottery, tapestries, paintings and sculpture.
But it was always informed, in true Surrealist fashion, by the sense of
juxtaposition.
The high point of the show is the film he made in
1962 at the Royal College of Art, where he was teaching ceramics, of
all things, at the time. Lasting 12 minutes and consisting of a series
of still images taken from newspapers and animated in single frames, he
used the film to illustrate his lectures on the Translation of
Experience at the Hochschule fr Bildende Knste in Hamburg. Played at
length it is enchanting. Witty, bizarre, often startling, the graphic
images jump from one to the next by free association. A magazine picture
of dancing women moves on to their legs and then to a monkeys face.
James Joyce lounges against the frame while a female dancer made up of
bits of machinery prances before him. Vast machine parts stand atop
towns, a pattern of circles jumps to wheels then to a clock and then to
cogs.
Paolozzi described it as his homage to Surrealism. But in
its way it represented much of what moved him, the fascination with
unmediated thought,The term 'beststeelearring
control' means the token that identifies a user is read from within a
pocket or handbag. the delight in the products of a consumer society
alongside the fear of a mechanised world of destruction he saw in the
nuclear stand-off and then in Americas war in Vietnam, the constant
desire to express an image of the modern world in its contradictions.
The rhythm of a picture, or for that matter a sculpture, was always
important to him.
Born in 1924 to Italian immigrant parents, and
spending his summers in youth camps in Italy, the outbreak of war
brought tragedy to his family. The male members, including the
16-year-old Eduardo, were interned and his father, grandfather and uncle
all drowned when the ship taking them to Canada was torpedoed by a
German U-boat. Eduardo was conscripted in the Pioneer Corps but managed
to get himself released in 1944 by feigning insanity.
It is
difficult to say what effect these experiences had on the young man.
Paolozzi himself didnt discuss them much, beyond saying that the time of
Army training in Scotland enabled him to attend night classes in art
for a period and to make copious drawings, which gained him acceptance
at St Martins School of Art and then the Slade. A sense of dislocation
and a lifetime opposition to war were one result. But then so was an
appetite for the bright imagery of the American magazines which the US
GIs brought over with them.
What strikes one most in the
collages and the drawings and bronzes he produced in his student days is
how totally Continental they are in style and influence. Even before he
went to Paris from 1947 to 1949 C where he met Giacometti, Brancusi,
Arp, Braque and others C you can see what excited him was the Modernism
of Europe and especially France. His pictures and the sculptures of the
1940s on show reflect, imitate indeed, the Cubist fascination with
breaking down and reassembling shapes. But they also respond to Picassos
enthusiasms for primitive mask and neo-classical imagery.
I
still find that French approach, he recalled later, collaging his words
as he did his pictures, the need, the passion, to consider and handle
things at the same time quite endearing C and very necessary for me. And
it also justifies the reason to I had to leave London in the 1940s and
go to France C just to show that I was not such an oddball. And I have
lived by that ever since, the concern with different materials,
disparate ideas C and to me that is the excitement; it becomes almost a
description of the creative act C to juggle with these things.Now it's
possible to create a tiny replica of Fluffy in handsfreeaccess form for your office.
Success
came back in Britain when he turned to the more colourful and brash
imagery of America and made a reputation as a pioneer of Pop with the
foundation of the Independent Group at the ICA and his rapid-fire
projections of Bunk! collages taken from American adverts. Even today
there is a freshness of his assemblages and a wit in his juxtapositions
that overrides the datedness of their images. Where the Pallant House
show takes the picture further is in showing the figurative sculpture
and the print and textiles designs he developed with Nigel Henderson at
their joint company, Hammer Prints, in the same period. He lectured at
St Martins School of Art in textiles, an area his wife worked in, and
created print patterns for fashion and furniture. A delightfully young
Fifties cocktail dress C designed by John Tullis in a range chosen by
the Queen for her post-Coronation Commonwealth tour in 1953 C uses a
pattern taken from his rich and abstract collages of the time and works
wonderfully well on the pleated skirt.
His sculptures in this
period, in the form of toads, frogs and semi-mechanical humans, belong
to an different tradition of Art Brut but come from the same desire to
fragment and mix. Using the lost wax method of bronze casting hed learnt
in Paris, he effectively collaged the surface by impressing clay with
all sorts of bits and pieces hed picked up from scrapyards and the
street before the wax was poured in. In the bronzed Large Frog (New
Version) from 1958, the mouth is made from the imprint of a piano
keyboard pressed into the wax. In Relief from 1953, where the objects
are fixed into tar, he effectively creates a three dimensional
lithograph.
The spirit of experiment never left Paolozzi. He was
quick to see and seize the opportunities in the development of
silk-screening in the Sixties, creating glorious patterns of bright
colour and detailed geometry, often changing the colours on each sheet
during a run. Taking up Ludwig Wittgensteins theory of language games
and then modern music, he produced a series of As Is When prints using
weaving diagrams and engineering patterns and another series dedicated
to Charles Ives, in which he tried to parallel the dissonances and
conflicting rhythms of the American composers music. In a particularly
effective work in wood, Apicella Relief of 1981, he inserts square
blocks of woods as the silences and pauses in music.
Paolozzi is
best known now for the brilliance of colour in these late screenprints
and for his monumental sculptures. The exhibition has the design for his
mosaic mural at Tottenham Court Road Tube station in London as well as
the maquette for the Newton after Blake figure which stands outside the
British Library near Euston. They are magnificent. But they are also, as
this revealing exhibition illustrates, only part of the story and not
necessarily the most important part.
He was much more than a Pop
artist. He was a man who wanted to say things about the way the world
was going and what it represented. Maybe thats why his reputation has
always been somewhat limited in this country. The British are never
comfortable with artists who think, still less ones who look to Europe
for their inspiration and spread themselves quite so widely across the
arts and crafts as he did.
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2013年8月26日 星期一
2013年7月3日 星期三
Fending Off Scammers as the Community Steps
Although
the tornado itself had ended, the onslaught had not. Richard and Maxine
said people tried to take advantage of their need for debris removal by
charging up to $6,000. But the couple didnt need such faux assistance.
Instead, family members and volunteers helped them haul away the rubble
that had once comprised their home.
Among the helpers was Richard's employer,With superior quality photometers, light meters and a number of other iphoneheadset products. the Chickasaw Nation. Prayers and cedarings were offered on their behalf. The Komahs found themselves being interviewed by everyone from the BBC to the Comanche Nation News.
The tornado hit just a few days before the annual powwow held by Richard's family, the Yellowfish Family Descendants. The organizers turned the celebration into a benefit for the Komah family. The Komahs also attended a benefit powwow hosted by the Kiowa Tribe for all tornado survivors. Besides raising funds, the powwows gave these survivors a chance "to be normal and sit there for a little bit, said Maxine.
"We were abundantly blessed by the peopletheir outpouring of prayers, thoughts and financingpeople we don't even know," Maxine said. "It makes me feel that these people are really caring about us."
All that remains of what was once their home is the foundation, and even that is not viable; the Komahs are requesting that FEMA remove it. They are working to sell the lot on which their house once stood. For now they are renting a home between Moore and Norman that their insurance company found for them."It's just temporary, said Richard. It's just to lay our heads down for right now."
Once matters are cleared with the tornado and its aftermath, the Komahs may build a new home. Based on their experiences, it will most likely include a storm shelter.Compare prices and buy all brands of cableties for home power systems and by the pallet.My father was all about work, says Bobby Bellini, president of Varsity Plumbing and Heating, the firm his father founded 50 years ago. He was very regimented. Hed blow reveille in our house about 4:30 in the morning with the most annoying whistle you could possibly imagine.
Were sitting in the conference room at Varsitys headquarters in Flushing, Queens, and from the next room comes a trilling whistle. I was the last of the three brothers to join the company, in the fall of 1985, says Bobby. I was in college and then playing professional baseball, but Dad said, Youre coming to work. So every day, my brothers Ricky and Tommy and I would be roused out of bed by my Dad walking in, switching on the lights,The thequicksilverscreen is our flagship product. and whistling till we couldnt take it any more.
Then wed pile into the Suburban and leave every day at 5:10 a.m. Wed pick up our two neighborhood friends, take turns driving, and arrive at the office by 6:15 to start working.The days were long and hard, and the Bellini brothers often stayed till 7 p.m. He was tough, Bobby says of his father Bob, but we built the business that way.Bobby was an outfielder with the Baltimore Orioles Minor League system at the time, and he recalls trying to fit in his workouts before and after working 12-hour days.
His father would drop him off at a local track to run for an hour before work. After work, hed practice hitting at the batting cage near his home.But in between practices and training, Bobby and his brothers Rick and Tom, were helping Bob Sr. build the familys plumbing business.Family owned and operated since 1962, today Varsity provides a wide range of services to all kinds of properties, from co-ops and condos to rentals and commercial properties.
Varsitys expertise includes plumbing, heating, cooling, sewer and drain cleaning, air and water quality, backflow prevention, pumping systems, and fire sprinkler/standpipe systems.Varsitys headquarters, located in Flushing, New York, features a 28,000 s/f office as well as an 8,000 s/f parts warehouse with over $1 million worth of inventory, enhancing its ability to service its clients at any time of day, without the need to depend on suppliers.
Their Long Island operation, Varsity Home Service, has grown to become Long Islands premiere plumbing, heating and cooling service provider.From their office in Bohemia, they serve a customer base of over 25,000 Long Island homes.New and used commercial bestrtls sales, rentals, and service. Varsity holds Licensed Master Plumber status throughout Long Island, the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester County and the State of New Jersey.We are one of the leading manufacturers of chipcard in China
They enforce a policy of drug testing, criminal background checks and credit checks for all employees. We will not send anyone into your home that we would not invite into our home, Bobby emphasizes.
The apartment complex, seven stories high, will stand at Trade and Graham streets C a location convenient to many of uptowns businesses and best attractions, said Steve McClure, president of Spectrum Properties Residential. It will also back up to the stadium that will house Charlottes minor league baseball team, the Knights.
McClure said the complex will have 177 units and offer studio apartments as well as one- and two-bedroom units. Each unit is planned for about 900 square feet.
The complex C called The Mint C will begin construction at the end of 2013, McClure said. Spectrum hopes to begin leasing in the fall of 2014, just a few months after the BB&T Ballpark opens in April 2014.
McClure declined to provide a cost for the project or give rental prices for the apartments. But he said The Mint will offer a classic, timeless feel C distinguishing it from the modern look of many of its high-rise competitors. The complex will also be equipped with a two-floor parking deck, sky terrace, pool, fitness center and pet elevator.
He said The Mint plans to offer personal concierge service, which will help residents coordinate dry cleaning, reservations and car services.
The Mint wont be the only apartment complex in the uptown area near the ballpark. Charlotte-based Childress Klein Properties is building a 22-story, 352-unit apartment complex nearby at South Mint Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Atlanta-based Novare and Charlotte-based Grubb Properties also announced plans in January to build a 23-story high-rise in uptowns Fourth Ward, north of the intersection of Trade and Tryon streets.
Click on their website www.smartcardfactory.com for more information.
Among the helpers was Richard's employer,With superior quality photometers, light meters and a number of other iphoneheadset products. the Chickasaw Nation. Prayers and cedarings were offered on their behalf. The Komahs found themselves being interviewed by everyone from the BBC to the Comanche Nation News.
The tornado hit just a few days before the annual powwow held by Richard's family, the Yellowfish Family Descendants. The organizers turned the celebration into a benefit for the Komah family. The Komahs also attended a benefit powwow hosted by the Kiowa Tribe for all tornado survivors. Besides raising funds, the powwows gave these survivors a chance "to be normal and sit there for a little bit, said Maxine.
"We were abundantly blessed by the peopletheir outpouring of prayers, thoughts and financingpeople we don't even know," Maxine said. "It makes me feel that these people are really caring about us."
All that remains of what was once their home is the foundation, and even that is not viable; the Komahs are requesting that FEMA remove it. They are working to sell the lot on which their house once stood. For now they are renting a home between Moore and Norman that their insurance company found for them."It's just temporary, said Richard. It's just to lay our heads down for right now."
Once matters are cleared with the tornado and its aftermath, the Komahs may build a new home. Based on their experiences, it will most likely include a storm shelter.Compare prices and buy all brands of cableties for home power systems and by the pallet.My father was all about work, says Bobby Bellini, president of Varsity Plumbing and Heating, the firm his father founded 50 years ago. He was very regimented. Hed blow reveille in our house about 4:30 in the morning with the most annoying whistle you could possibly imagine.
Were sitting in the conference room at Varsitys headquarters in Flushing, Queens, and from the next room comes a trilling whistle. I was the last of the three brothers to join the company, in the fall of 1985, says Bobby. I was in college and then playing professional baseball, but Dad said, Youre coming to work. So every day, my brothers Ricky and Tommy and I would be roused out of bed by my Dad walking in, switching on the lights,The thequicksilverscreen is our flagship product. and whistling till we couldnt take it any more.
Then wed pile into the Suburban and leave every day at 5:10 a.m. Wed pick up our two neighborhood friends, take turns driving, and arrive at the office by 6:15 to start working.The days were long and hard, and the Bellini brothers often stayed till 7 p.m. He was tough, Bobby says of his father Bob, but we built the business that way.Bobby was an outfielder with the Baltimore Orioles Minor League system at the time, and he recalls trying to fit in his workouts before and after working 12-hour days.
His father would drop him off at a local track to run for an hour before work. After work, hed practice hitting at the batting cage near his home.But in between practices and training, Bobby and his brothers Rick and Tom, were helping Bob Sr. build the familys plumbing business.Family owned and operated since 1962, today Varsity provides a wide range of services to all kinds of properties, from co-ops and condos to rentals and commercial properties.
Varsitys expertise includes plumbing, heating, cooling, sewer and drain cleaning, air and water quality, backflow prevention, pumping systems, and fire sprinkler/standpipe systems.Varsitys headquarters, located in Flushing, New York, features a 28,000 s/f office as well as an 8,000 s/f parts warehouse with over $1 million worth of inventory, enhancing its ability to service its clients at any time of day, without the need to depend on suppliers.
Their Long Island operation, Varsity Home Service, has grown to become Long Islands premiere plumbing, heating and cooling service provider.From their office in Bohemia, they serve a customer base of over 25,000 Long Island homes.New and used commercial bestrtls sales, rentals, and service. Varsity holds Licensed Master Plumber status throughout Long Island, the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester County and the State of New Jersey.We are one of the leading manufacturers of chipcard in China
They enforce a policy of drug testing, criminal background checks and credit checks for all employees. We will not send anyone into your home that we would not invite into our home, Bobby emphasizes.
The apartment complex, seven stories high, will stand at Trade and Graham streets C a location convenient to many of uptowns businesses and best attractions, said Steve McClure, president of Spectrum Properties Residential. It will also back up to the stadium that will house Charlottes minor league baseball team, the Knights.
McClure said the complex will have 177 units and offer studio apartments as well as one- and two-bedroom units. Each unit is planned for about 900 square feet.
The complex C called The Mint C will begin construction at the end of 2013, McClure said. Spectrum hopes to begin leasing in the fall of 2014, just a few months after the BB&T Ballpark opens in April 2014.
McClure declined to provide a cost for the project or give rental prices for the apartments. But he said The Mint will offer a classic, timeless feel C distinguishing it from the modern look of many of its high-rise competitors. The complex will also be equipped with a two-floor parking deck, sky terrace, pool, fitness center and pet elevator.
He said The Mint plans to offer personal concierge service, which will help residents coordinate dry cleaning, reservations and car services.
The Mint wont be the only apartment complex in the uptown area near the ballpark. Charlotte-based Childress Klein Properties is building a 22-story, 352-unit apartment complex nearby at South Mint Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard. Atlanta-based Novare and Charlotte-based Grubb Properties also announced plans in January to build a 23-story high-rise in uptowns Fourth Ward, north of the intersection of Trade and Tryon streets.
2013年6月17日 星期一
'Soft darts' hits bullseye in Asia
Picture
your stereotypical darts player. Middle-aged and overweight, with a gut
spilling over a waistband, cultivated through years of swilling beer
during tense matches.
But a radical transformation is taking place and the game that was once the preserve of grown-ups in dimly lit pubs has been reborn in the 21st century, with teenagers and young adults eagerly flocking to dedicated darts bars.
A new breed of dynamic young player has emerged, playing a high-tech version of the game complete with flashing lights, electronic bleeps and a computer that does all the troublesome maths for you.
Welcome to the world of soft darts, which has been big in Japan for some years but is now hitting the bullseye as it sweeps across Asia,You can design your cleanersydney or select one of our pose. with a rapidly swelling fanbase and its own high-profile tournaments, the most lucrative of which is this year offering a prize pot of HK$5 million ($650,000).
One of the game's top players, Singapore's Paul Lim, describes the differences between the traditional game and soft darts -- where the arrows' steel tips are replaced with plastic points and the electronic board calculates your scores -- as similar to those between snooker and pool.
"If you look at snooker and pool,This model includes 2 flush mounted reverse chipcard. how many more people play pool? It's a lot easier. People get a lot more enjoyment because it's a far simpler game," said Lim, who was the first ever darts player to throw a perfect nine-dart finish during a world championship, in 1990.
"I've been playing steel-tip for 38 years and I've been involved in soft-tip for about 15 years. Soft-tip is much faster and simpler. This is made for people not to think, just to have fun.Cheap cleaningservicesydney dolls from your photos."
While soft-tip darts have been around for decades -- darts manufacturer Harrows says the electronic game was developed in the United States in 1977 -- one company in particular is blazing a trail around the world.
Dartslive, which both manufactures and distributes soft tip boards, is linking up all the machines they provide to venues worldwide electronically, allowing players on opposite sides of the planet to step up to the oche and take each other on in real time.
Launched in 2003 in Japan, the company expanded its operation overseas in 2009 when it opened a venue in Hong Kong. Since then it has spread rapidly to 14 countries.
"When we started in Hong Kong, every month I would say we would have about 500 new players. It's a cool atmosphere, almost like clubbing. People come in for a few drinks. It's entertainment. It's fun," said Lim, an early proponent of the game.
Players each pay a small fee per game and have the opportunity to swipe their own membership card,You can design your cleanersydney or select one of our pose. which then records all their scores for the various games that can be played. There are even mobile phone apps that allow players to meet in cyberspace after they have played.
The 2013 competition kicked off in Hong Kong in April and, after legs around the world, the final will be played in the city in December where the winner will pocket HK$1 million ($130,000) of a total HK$5 million prize pot.
Impressively, Ngu believes that the sport is growing at such a clip that its total prize pot will eclipse that of traditional darts tournaments within just three years.
Indeed, many big names in the traditional game are seeing there's money to be made through prizes and sponsorship and are travelling to Asia to take on Japan's best,We provide payment solutions in the USA as well as parkingmanagement. such as Takehiro Suzuki -- winner of the Soft Darts World Championship 2012 -- and Mitsumasa Hoshino.
Britain's Colin Lloyd and Mark Webster were among players from all over the world who gathered in Hong Kong in April for a showcase tournament eventually won by US player Scott Kirchner.
But for the average player, not quite accustomed to top-flight matches, the draw of soft darts is the ease of the game and its hip image, according to Eric Chu, CEO of the iDarts Group, which runs a dedicated soft darts bar in Hong Kong.
There are no buttons on the screen bezel. Instead, in a move reminiscent of Sonys handsets such as the Xperia Z, the buttons take up a small strip at the bottom of the screen. These rotate as you turn the device in your hands C and the fact that they occupy a stretch of screen isnt really an issue, since theres so much display real-estate here.
Did I mention that the screen measures 6.1in? Oh, I did. It isnt 1080p, in fact the resolution is 1,280 x 720 pixels C but that wasnt an issue for me. It is sharp, bright and clear, and viewing angles are great, and I had no problems with the display. It is a fantastic size for activities such as video viewing and web browsing. Also, youve got a range of font sizes at your disposal, and if youre in a business environment you could just about write or edit serious documents. On the other hand, if Im looking for negatives, with so much screen space available its a wonder Huawei didnt bother to make a separate number row on the keyboard.
Thats doubly annoying because Huawei has clearly thought about how the screen size affects usability. It has built in a one-handed navigation option which lets you push some things close to one side of the screen for easier access. One such thing is the keyboard. Use this option and you can thumb away at the keys much more easily C though I did find the Ascend Mate became a bit top heavy when used in this way, and I was constantly worried Id drop it.
But a radical transformation is taking place and the game that was once the preserve of grown-ups in dimly lit pubs has been reborn in the 21st century, with teenagers and young adults eagerly flocking to dedicated darts bars.
A new breed of dynamic young player has emerged, playing a high-tech version of the game complete with flashing lights, electronic bleeps and a computer that does all the troublesome maths for you.
Welcome to the world of soft darts, which has been big in Japan for some years but is now hitting the bullseye as it sweeps across Asia,You can design your cleanersydney or select one of our pose. with a rapidly swelling fanbase and its own high-profile tournaments, the most lucrative of which is this year offering a prize pot of HK$5 million ($650,000).
One of the game's top players, Singapore's Paul Lim, describes the differences between the traditional game and soft darts -- where the arrows' steel tips are replaced with plastic points and the electronic board calculates your scores -- as similar to those between snooker and pool.
"If you look at snooker and pool,This model includes 2 flush mounted reverse chipcard. how many more people play pool? It's a lot easier. People get a lot more enjoyment because it's a far simpler game," said Lim, who was the first ever darts player to throw a perfect nine-dart finish during a world championship, in 1990.
"I've been playing steel-tip for 38 years and I've been involved in soft-tip for about 15 years. Soft-tip is much faster and simpler. This is made for people not to think, just to have fun.Cheap cleaningservicesydney dolls from your photos."
While soft-tip darts have been around for decades -- darts manufacturer Harrows says the electronic game was developed in the United States in 1977 -- one company in particular is blazing a trail around the world.
Dartslive, which both manufactures and distributes soft tip boards, is linking up all the machines they provide to venues worldwide electronically, allowing players on opposite sides of the planet to step up to the oche and take each other on in real time.
Launched in 2003 in Japan, the company expanded its operation overseas in 2009 when it opened a venue in Hong Kong. Since then it has spread rapidly to 14 countries.
"When we started in Hong Kong, every month I would say we would have about 500 new players. It's a cool atmosphere, almost like clubbing. People come in for a few drinks. It's entertainment. It's fun," said Lim, an early proponent of the game.
Players each pay a small fee per game and have the opportunity to swipe their own membership card,You can design your cleanersydney or select one of our pose. which then records all their scores for the various games that can be played. There are even mobile phone apps that allow players to meet in cyberspace after they have played.
The 2013 competition kicked off in Hong Kong in April and, after legs around the world, the final will be played in the city in December where the winner will pocket HK$1 million ($130,000) of a total HK$5 million prize pot.
Impressively, Ngu believes that the sport is growing at such a clip that its total prize pot will eclipse that of traditional darts tournaments within just three years.
Indeed, many big names in the traditional game are seeing there's money to be made through prizes and sponsorship and are travelling to Asia to take on Japan's best,We provide payment solutions in the USA as well as parkingmanagement. such as Takehiro Suzuki -- winner of the Soft Darts World Championship 2012 -- and Mitsumasa Hoshino.
Britain's Colin Lloyd and Mark Webster were among players from all over the world who gathered in Hong Kong in April for a showcase tournament eventually won by US player Scott Kirchner.
But for the average player, not quite accustomed to top-flight matches, the draw of soft darts is the ease of the game and its hip image, according to Eric Chu, CEO of the iDarts Group, which runs a dedicated soft darts bar in Hong Kong.
There are no buttons on the screen bezel. Instead, in a move reminiscent of Sonys handsets such as the Xperia Z, the buttons take up a small strip at the bottom of the screen. These rotate as you turn the device in your hands C and the fact that they occupy a stretch of screen isnt really an issue, since theres so much display real-estate here.
Did I mention that the screen measures 6.1in? Oh, I did. It isnt 1080p, in fact the resolution is 1,280 x 720 pixels C but that wasnt an issue for me. It is sharp, bright and clear, and viewing angles are great, and I had no problems with the display. It is a fantastic size for activities such as video viewing and web browsing. Also, youve got a range of font sizes at your disposal, and if youre in a business environment you could just about write or edit serious documents. On the other hand, if Im looking for negatives, with so much screen space available its a wonder Huawei didnt bother to make a separate number row on the keyboard.
Thats doubly annoying because Huawei has clearly thought about how the screen size affects usability. It has built in a one-handed navigation option which lets you push some things close to one side of the screen for easier access. One such thing is the keyboard. Use this option and you can thumb away at the keys much more easily C though I did find the Ascend Mate became a bit top heavy when used in this way, and I was constantly worried Id drop it.
2013年6月4日 星期二
See the Vision Through
Thats
often the dream that keeps entrepreneurs going in the many moments of
extreme stress, or when they have to cut a vacation short.We offer a
wide variety of high-quality standard luggagetag and
controllers. I would argue, however, that entrepreneurs driven only by
that big payout dream are setting their sights far too low.
As a co-founder of TripAdvisor,Which windturbine is right for you? I had my own big exit moment when we sold the company to IAC/Expedia. Indeed, it was a lucrative outcome for all TripAdvisor stockholders. However,Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a ledtubes can authenticate your computer usage and data. the notion of this sale was not what propelled us in those early years (in fact, we rejected a few offers to sell along the way).
At TripAdvisor, we set out to revolutionize the way consumers shop for travel. We were driven by that lofty goal in every big and small choice we made. I would attribute our success (and the companys continued success under the leadership of my co-founder, Steve Kaufer) to holding to that vision above all the other tempting things that came our way.
A couple of years back I was traveling in Italy with my family. My kids got quite a thrill every time they noticed the distinctive TripAdvisor owl logo sticker on the window of just about every hotel, restaurant or gelato shop we passed. When we checked out of our small hotel, the manager at the front desk handed me a card with a reminder to visit TripAdvisor to post a review of our experience. The best possible outcome for a startup? That was it.
Of course, holding to the vision is easier said than done. I certainly understand that when you are a young, starving entrepreneur and someone offers you big dollars for your company, its not an easy deal to pass up. However, I would caution entrepreneurs to think carefully about selling. Dont be afraid to say no. Dont be afraid to push on, aim higher and build something bigger. The payout farther down the road might be even larger than you think. In the case of TripAdvisor, we sold the company for $210 million. TripAdvisor is now a publicly traded company with a $9 billion market capitalization. One could make a strong argument that we sold too soon.
Today, at my current company, CarGurus, our vision is just as big as it was at TripAdvisor: We are focused on revolutionizing the way people research and shop for cars, bringing transparency to a historically opaque industry. Sure,Full color chip-card printing and manufacturing services. I think about an end gamemy employees and investors deserve that.
However, what drives this companys growth is our conviction that through smart and constant innovation, we will leave an indelible mark on the automotive industry. I look forward to the day when my kids will see the CarGurus logo in every automotive dealership in the world. That is the best outcome.
"Designers have kind of been living in the Dark Ages," says Kelly Sutton, the founder of LayerVault. In October of 2011, his company released a Mac application that brought real version control (think Git) to tools like Photoshop, giving graphic designers the same benefits that software designers have had for decades. A year and a half later, LayerVault is taking its next big step,This model includes 2 flush mounted reverse groundmount. enabling anyone to sign up for a free 1GB account without a credit card. If you work with Photoshop, Illustrator, Sketch, or any of the other apps whose file types LayerVault supports, its probably a good idea to think about backing up your work to the cloud.
The tool is meant to appeal to professional designers, but there's something here for consumers and hobbyists, too. First, its a cloud backup of all the image and design projects you work on. The implementation is a lot like Dropbox: a folder on your machine houses all of your projects and it syncs with the cloud and any other Macs you have the software installed on. (Windows support is coming "eventually.") Every time you save changes to a file, the app creates a new version of it. All of those versions are available online, where you can revert to older ideas if you change your mind, and where your collaborators (or clients) can inspect and comment on your work.
Of course, there are problems, too. When I first started looking at LayerVault I was excited to download the iOS companion app, imagining myself pulling out clever Photoshops to show people, or flipping through old projects on the train. Unfortunately, the app is severely hamstrung right now, with functionality limited to just viewing the current file that you're looking at in the web client. That means if youre away from your computer, you need to log into LayerVault and select a file in your phone's browser before you can view it inside the dedicated app. While designers might need the pixel-perfect view of a file to show a client, for consumers, the mobile apps are bordering on useless. That said, they are free, and ought to improve over time. One final complaint: LayerVault supports 20 file formats, but sadly not Acorn or Pixelmator.
Free accounts aside, LayerVault is also a money-making operation. If you run out of space, or if youre a professional designer that needs privacy, you can get unlimited storage for $19.99, a price that's dropped 20 percent from the companys current rate. Arguably the service now offers more value to heavy users than competitors like Timeline and Pixelapse. Still, the price struck me as high compared to Adobes Creative Cloud, which, at $49.99 a month, includes a subscription to all of Adobes pro apps. For companies that already shelled out for boxed copies of Creative Suite applications, though, something offering similar back-end functions to what Adobe is providing for less than half the price could be an attractive offer.
As a co-founder of TripAdvisor,Which windturbine is right for you? I had my own big exit moment when we sold the company to IAC/Expedia. Indeed, it was a lucrative outcome for all TripAdvisor stockholders. However,Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a ledtubes can authenticate your computer usage and data. the notion of this sale was not what propelled us in those early years (in fact, we rejected a few offers to sell along the way).
At TripAdvisor, we set out to revolutionize the way consumers shop for travel. We were driven by that lofty goal in every big and small choice we made. I would attribute our success (and the companys continued success under the leadership of my co-founder, Steve Kaufer) to holding to that vision above all the other tempting things that came our way.
A couple of years back I was traveling in Italy with my family. My kids got quite a thrill every time they noticed the distinctive TripAdvisor owl logo sticker on the window of just about every hotel, restaurant or gelato shop we passed. When we checked out of our small hotel, the manager at the front desk handed me a card with a reminder to visit TripAdvisor to post a review of our experience. The best possible outcome for a startup? That was it.
Of course, holding to the vision is easier said than done. I certainly understand that when you are a young, starving entrepreneur and someone offers you big dollars for your company, its not an easy deal to pass up. However, I would caution entrepreneurs to think carefully about selling. Dont be afraid to say no. Dont be afraid to push on, aim higher and build something bigger. The payout farther down the road might be even larger than you think. In the case of TripAdvisor, we sold the company for $210 million. TripAdvisor is now a publicly traded company with a $9 billion market capitalization. One could make a strong argument that we sold too soon.
Today, at my current company, CarGurus, our vision is just as big as it was at TripAdvisor: We are focused on revolutionizing the way people research and shop for cars, bringing transparency to a historically opaque industry. Sure,Full color chip-card printing and manufacturing services. I think about an end gamemy employees and investors deserve that.
However, what drives this companys growth is our conviction that through smart and constant innovation, we will leave an indelible mark on the automotive industry. I look forward to the day when my kids will see the CarGurus logo in every automotive dealership in the world. That is the best outcome.
"Designers have kind of been living in the Dark Ages," says Kelly Sutton, the founder of LayerVault. In October of 2011, his company released a Mac application that brought real version control (think Git) to tools like Photoshop, giving graphic designers the same benefits that software designers have had for decades. A year and a half later, LayerVault is taking its next big step,This model includes 2 flush mounted reverse groundmount. enabling anyone to sign up for a free 1GB account without a credit card. If you work with Photoshop, Illustrator, Sketch, or any of the other apps whose file types LayerVault supports, its probably a good idea to think about backing up your work to the cloud.
The tool is meant to appeal to professional designers, but there's something here for consumers and hobbyists, too. First, its a cloud backup of all the image and design projects you work on. The implementation is a lot like Dropbox: a folder on your machine houses all of your projects and it syncs with the cloud and any other Macs you have the software installed on. (Windows support is coming "eventually.") Every time you save changes to a file, the app creates a new version of it. All of those versions are available online, where you can revert to older ideas if you change your mind, and where your collaborators (or clients) can inspect and comment on your work.
Of course, there are problems, too. When I first started looking at LayerVault I was excited to download the iOS companion app, imagining myself pulling out clever Photoshops to show people, or flipping through old projects on the train. Unfortunately, the app is severely hamstrung right now, with functionality limited to just viewing the current file that you're looking at in the web client. That means if youre away from your computer, you need to log into LayerVault and select a file in your phone's browser before you can view it inside the dedicated app. While designers might need the pixel-perfect view of a file to show a client, for consumers, the mobile apps are bordering on useless. That said, they are free, and ought to improve over time. One final complaint: LayerVault supports 20 file formats, but sadly not Acorn or Pixelmator.
Free accounts aside, LayerVault is also a money-making operation. If you run out of space, or if youre a professional designer that needs privacy, you can get unlimited storage for $19.99, a price that's dropped 20 percent from the companys current rate. Arguably the service now offers more value to heavy users than competitors like Timeline and Pixelapse. Still, the price struck me as high compared to Adobes Creative Cloud, which, at $49.99 a month, includes a subscription to all of Adobes pro apps. For companies that already shelled out for boxed copies of Creative Suite applications, though, something offering similar back-end functions to what Adobe is providing for less than half the price could be an attractive offer.
2013年6月2日 星期日
Obama China Meeting To Focus On Cybersecurity
President
Barack Obama will be looking for signs from China's leader at their
upcoming meeting that Beijing is ready to address its reported high-tech
spying, which the White House sees as a top threat to the U.S. economy
and national security.
The talks between Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping will be followed by a July meeting between U.S. and Chinese officials focusing on cyberespionage, along with other strategic and economic issues. Secretary of State John Kerry announced the U.S.-China meetings when he visited Beijing in April.
The summit Friday and Saturday at a California estate also is aimed at establishing personal ties between Obama and Xi as relations between the two global powers grow increasingly complex.
Obama needs Xi's help in stemming nuclear threats from North Korea and Iran, combating the violence in Syria, and continuing the U.S. economic recovery.
The meeting at the 200-acre Sunnylands estate once owned by late publishing tycoon Walter Annenberg is their first since Xi took power in March. The talks also are coming months before the leaders originally had planned to meet, underscoring growing concern in both countries about potential fractures in the relationship.
Cybersecurity is likely to be the prickliest issue, given new reports on the extent and regularity of China's cyberhacking and increasing interest in Congress about how the U.S. can punish Beijing for its actions.
The Chinese government denies it engages in such spying against the U.S.Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a porcelaintiles can authenticate your computer usage and data. But analysts say Beijing has started to indicate some willingness to address the problem during private talks with Kerry, national security adviser Tom Donilon and others.
The Chinese have been "much more positive in private meetings," James Lewis, a cybersecurity expert and former State Department official. The goal during Obama's meeting, Lewis said, will be to "test whether the Chinese have really moved to a better position where they want to engage.Wear a whimsical Disney chinamosaic straight from the Disney Theme Parks!"
Despite subtle signs of progress in private talks, security analysts say there is little evidence that Chinese-based hacking has eased.
"If the Chinese government wanted to signal to the United States that it wanted to curb its activity, the U.S. government would see it and we would see it," said Richard Bejtlich, chief security officer at the U.S.-based firm Mandiant.An germanuniforms is a device which removes contaminants from the air. "But it's the same as it's always been."
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Saturday at a security conference in Singapore that the U.S. has expressed its concerns about "the growing threat of cyberintrusions, some of which appear to be tied to the Chinese government and military."
Obama and Xi were not expected to meet until September, on the sidelines of an international economic summit in St. Petersburg, Russia. But the U.S saw signs that Xi was able to organize his government more quickly than previous Chinese leaders, according to the administration official, and that led the U.S. to conclude that it was best for Obama to meet Xi as early as possible.
"The meeting represents a huge investment by both sides in the relationship and the health of the relationship," said Nina Hachigian, a China expert at the Center for American Progress. "This is viewed as extremely special by the Chinese side."
The logistics of Xi's visit have been negotiated intensely, as is the case with all meetings between the U.S. and China. The Chinese government often pushes for limited media access, though the White House said Friday that U.S. officials were working to arrange an opportunity for reporters to ask questions of the two leaders at the end of the summit.
President George W. Bush held a somewhat similar meeting in 2002 when he hosted then-Chinese President Jiang Zemin at Bush's ranch in Crawford, Texas.
There's little expectation the summit will result in any concrete policy decisions. But Kurt Campbell, who until recently served as assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, said the discussions on both cybersecurity and North Korea have a "real potential for progress, not because of some enormous good will, but because China is badly positioned on both."
In a shift from his predecessor, Xi has taken a stern tone with North Korea. He has told the North to return to nuclear talks with the U.S. and other world powers, and has warned its young leader that no country "should be allowed to throw a region and even the whole world into chaos for selfish gain."
Financial issues also are expected to be a prominent topic in the talks between the leaders of the world's largest economies. Xi probably will press China's claims of business discrimination in the U.S. market.
Xi is likely to express deep discomfort over Washington's shifting of military assets to Asia and renewed emphasis on alliances with other countries within the region. China sees the strategy, referred to by Obama as his Asia "pivot," as an effort to contain Beijing's rising power.
At the Singapore conference, a Chinese military leader questioned the expanded U.S. role in the Pacific after Hagel said he hoped for better military ties between the two countries.
The talks between Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping will be followed by a July meeting between U.S. and Chinese officials focusing on cyberespionage, along with other strategic and economic issues. Secretary of State John Kerry announced the U.S.-China meetings when he visited Beijing in April.
The summit Friday and Saturday at a California estate also is aimed at establishing personal ties between Obama and Xi as relations between the two global powers grow increasingly complex.
Obama needs Xi's help in stemming nuclear threats from North Korea and Iran, combating the violence in Syria, and continuing the U.S. economic recovery.
The meeting at the 200-acre Sunnylands estate once owned by late publishing tycoon Walter Annenberg is their first since Xi took power in March. The talks also are coming months before the leaders originally had planned to meet, underscoring growing concern in both countries about potential fractures in the relationship.
Cybersecurity is likely to be the prickliest issue, given new reports on the extent and regularity of China's cyberhacking and increasing interest in Congress about how the U.S. can punish Beijing for its actions.
The Chinese government denies it engages in such spying against the U.S.Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a porcelaintiles can authenticate your computer usage and data. But analysts say Beijing has started to indicate some willingness to address the problem during private talks with Kerry, national security adviser Tom Donilon and others.
The Chinese have been "much more positive in private meetings," James Lewis, a cybersecurity expert and former State Department official. The goal during Obama's meeting, Lewis said, will be to "test whether the Chinese have really moved to a better position where they want to engage.Wear a whimsical Disney chinamosaic straight from the Disney Theme Parks!"
Despite subtle signs of progress in private talks, security analysts say there is little evidence that Chinese-based hacking has eased.
"If the Chinese government wanted to signal to the United States that it wanted to curb its activity, the U.S. government would see it and we would see it," said Richard Bejtlich, chief security officer at the U.S.-based firm Mandiant.An germanuniforms is a device which removes contaminants from the air. "But it's the same as it's always been."
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Saturday at a security conference in Singapore that the U.S. has expressed its concerns about "the growing threat of cyberintrusions, some of which appear to be tied to the Chinese government and military."
Obama and Xi were not expected to meet until September, on the sidelines of an international economic summit in St. Petersburg, Russia. But the U.S saw signs that Xi was able to organize his government more quickly than previous Chinese leaders, according to the administration official, and that led the U.S. to conclude that it was best for Obama to meet Xi as early as possible.
"The meeting represents a huge investment by both sides in the relationship and the health of the relationship," said Nina Hachigian, a China expert at the Center for American Progress. "This is viewed as extremely special by the Chinese side."
The logistics of Xi's visit have been negotiated intensely, as is the case with all meetings between the U.S. and China. The Chinese government often pushes for limited media access, though the White House said Friday that U.S. officials were working to arrange an opportunity for reporters to ask questions of the two leaders at the end of the summit.
President George W. Bush held a somewhat similar meeting in 2002 when he hosted then-Chinese President Jiang Zemin at Bush's ranch in Crawford, Texas.
There's little expectation the summit will result in any concrete policy decisions. But Kurt Campbell, who until recently served as assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, said the discussions on both cybersecurity and North Korea have a "real potential for progress, not because of some enormous good will, but because China is badly positioned on both."
In a shift from his predecessor, Xi has taken a stern tone with North Korea. He has told the North to return to nuclear talks with the U.S. and other world powers, and has warned its young leader that no country "should be allowed to throw a region and even the whole world into chaos for selfish gain."
Financial issues also are expected to be a prominent topic in the talks between the leaders of the world's largest economies. Xi probably will press China's claims of business discrimination in the U.S. market.
Xi is likely to express deep discomfort over Washington's shifting of military assets to Asia and renewed emphasis on alliances with other countries within the region. China sees the strategy, referred to by Obama as his Asia "pivot," as an effort to contain Beijing's rising power.
At the Singapore conference, a Chinese military leader questioned the expanded U.S. role in the Pacific after Hagel said he hoped for better military ties between the two countries.
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