Friday, September 28, 2007

Signe of Johnny Angel



Signe of Johnny Angel
Johnny Angel is a 1945 film starring George Raft, Claire Trevor, and Hoagy Carmichael. I can say, the film is perfect. The movie, directed by Edwin L. Marin, is considered film noir (Signe of Johnny Angel).

A merchant marine sailor, played by Raft, comes home from the war and searches for his father's murderer. As he uncovers the mystery, he busts up the local mob.

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Naked People in Netherlands



Thousands of naked people get together in Netherlands to take a part in a photographing.

Free 25$ Burger King Gift Card



Free 25$ Burger King Gift Card



Fun Sport Video: Watts Zap Eurosport

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

2850 Mb Google Mail


Google Mail has already 2850 Mb!!!

Google Mail has already over 2850 Mb. Soon we can send a DVD-Film via E-mails :-)
What do you think about it? Need you so much? Google grows with internet up?



Cell Phone TV

Friday, May 4, 2007

Money Art. What Can You Do With Money? Make Money


Money Art. What Can You Do With Money?










Cell Phone TV

Thursday, May 3, 2007

The Ren Building. Architecture of Future



Architecture in China never ceases to amaze us—case in point—the REN Building. Copenhagen’s Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) proposed this eye-catching design over a year ago to coincide with Shanghai’s “Better City, Better Life” 2010 World Expo . "The building takes its form from the Chinese character for person ("ren") and combines two buildings (one symbolic of mind and the other symbolic of body). We love the poetic inspiration that reflects both site and cultural sensitivity."- is reported in Bjarke Ingels Group's release.

“The Ren building is a proposal for a hotel, sports and conference center for the World Expo 2010 in Shanghai. The building is conceived as two buildings merging into one. The first building, emerging from the water, is devoted to the activities of the body, and houses the sports and water culture center. The second building emerging from land, is devoted to the spirit and enlightenment, and houses the conference center and meeting facilities. The two buildings meet in a 1000 room hotel, a building for living.”

It’ll be exciting to see if the plans for the project are approved. Check out more views and an animated fly-through of the project below.










Video:


Make Your Own Kite (Sled, Diamond, Delta, Box, Parafoil, Dragon). How to guide.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Fruits and Vegetables Carving. How To Amaze Guests.



Watermelons, turnips, pineapples and many other fruits and vegetables can be carved and combined into either elegantly simple or very elaborate center pieces or accents for your picnic table or indoor party decorations.

The art of carving foods is an Eastern custom that has been adopted by creative food preparers around the world. In Thailand and Japan food carving is considered part of the presentation of the meal. The stunning designs that can be created makes the food the center of attention when you serve your guests. No need to worry about what else is on the table.

Some of the more elaborate carvings can take hours to get just right, but practice makes it go faster and soon you'll find yourself designing your own patterns for watermelons, radishes and any fruit or vegetable that can hold it's form when carved.


















Make Your Own Kite (Sled, Diamond, Delta, Box, Parafoil, Dragon). How to guide.

Monday, April 9, 2007

A New World Record! Martin Strel swam down the Amazon River 5,268 km


After six hours of swimming/suffering in which he poured out every last ounce of his energy, Martin has crossed the finish line after a seemingly endless final 27 km through huge waves and heavy rain. The unofficial Guinness totals are 5268 KM (3,274 Miles) swam over the course of 66 days.

Slovenian Martin Strel, after braving crocodiles, piranhas, disease and the threat of an imminent heart attack, on Sunday completed a record-setting 66-day, 5,268 km swim down the Amazon River and was taken to a hospital.

Thousands of people were on hand in the Brazilian colonial city of Belem as an exhausted Strel, 52, made his final stroke, and was pulled from the water.

On Saturday, Strel had officially set a Guinness Book of World Records mark when he hit the 5238 kilometre point, the swimmer's support team said on his website www.amazonswim.com.

On Sunday he was back in the water again, riding the early morning tide back upriver 6 miles to end the marathon Amazon swim in Belem at about 11:30 am (1:30am NZT).



It was the most challenging of Strel's big-river swims. He has previously swum 4,004 km of China's Yangtze in 2004, 3,798 km of the US Mississippi in 2002 and 3,004 km of Europe's Danube in 2000.

After arriving in Belem, Strel was placed in an ambulance and medics worked to stabilize his blood pressure, which was at near-heart attack levels, his support team said on the website.

Strel has been suffering from nausea, diarrhoea, dangerously high blood pressure, sunstroke, dizziness and delirium.

Due to his deteriorating health, Strel had been swimming six hours and then resting for six hours in his final leg down the world's most voluminous and second longest river.

On Friday, Strel had to be hauled from the water by his son Borut and others and had difficulty standing. His doctor ordered him not to swim but Strel, obsessed with reaching Belem, insisted on swimming the final few miles at night to avoid the blistering sun.

"I've had enough. I just want to finish and go home," he said on his website.

Nicknamed "fish man," Strel started his latest big-river swim on February 1 at the Peruvian jungle town of Atalaya, where buckets of animal blood had to be poured into the river to distract piranha from making a quick meal of the swimmer.

Strel formally finish his marathon swim down the Amazon four days ahead of schedule on Saturday.

In the last leg of his journey, Strel said the ocean tides coming up river were driving him backward at times.

Along the trip, Strel and his team had several near misses with pirate attacks and often had to steer toward swift flowing currents to avoid being set upon by piranha. This resulted in Strel being swept away in a giant whirlpool once and separated from his team and boat another time.

The team was constantly at risk of parasites and disease in the Amazon such as malaria and yellow fever.

"I think the animals have just accepted me. I've been swimming with them for such a long time that they must think I'm one of them now," Strel said recently on the BBC.

Source: Reuters

Make Your Own Kite (Sled, Diamond, Delta, Box, Parafoil, Dragon). How to guide.

Optische Täuschung

Secrets of Ocean: Bioluminescence



There are living lights in the ocean. They are beautiful, fascinating and critical to the very existence of most marine life. They are also little known and little appreciated, because so few people have the opportunity to see them with their own eyes. The images on this web site provide a rare glimpse of this remarkable phenomenon.

Visible light made by living creatures is known as bioluminescence. Fireflies are bioluminescent. So are a few other land dwellers, like some earthworms, centipedes and fungi. But on land, bioluminescence is rare. By contrast, in the oceans, bioluminescence is very, very common. In fact, it would be difficult to find any place in the ocean where bioluminescence doesn't exist.



In some places in the ocean bioluminescent creatures are so abundant that any disturbance such as a boat, a fish or, as you see here, even a hand passing through the water can produce a shimmering light show. Click on the menu above to see some of the most common sources of bioluminescence in the ocean.



HOW?

All light in the universe comes from the same basic process. When an electron absorbs energy, it moves to a higher orbit. When the electron falls back down to a lower energy state, a packet of energy, known as a photon, is released. Electrons can get excited in a number of different ways. In the sun, a candle flame or an incandescent light bulb, the electrons are thermally excited, which is why we tend to associate heat and light. In bioluminescence the electrons are excited by a very efficient chemical reaction that generates no heat at all. This is why bioluminescence is sometimes called cold light.



WHY?

There are so many bioluminescent creatures in the ocean, because their ability to make light helps them to survive. Some use their light to help them find food, some use it to help them find mates, some use it to defend themselves against predators and some, like this Viperfish, use light for all these purposes.




Real fish:

Fish from "Finding Nemo"















Make Your Own Kite (Sled, Diamond, Delta, Box, Parafoil, Dragon). How to guide.