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what caught my eye today
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1220.       lesluv
722 posts
 11 Oct 2008 Sat 05:03 pm

 

Quoting thehandsom

Beautification engine

 

a software "beautification engine" that can alter the facial geometry of people in photos and, in theory, make them look more attractive.

Developed by researchers in Israel (including a guy who now works at Microsoft), it uses algorithms based on 243 measurements between facial features and tries to determine the ideal set of distances.

The formula was developed by surveying 68 men and women in Israel and Germany who were shown photos of white men and women, and asked to pick the most attractive faces. Consequently, the process only works on Caucasian faces so far.

 

http://blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com/buzz/archives/151130.asp


The slide show

 

I bet, that software would not find anything to alter for my pictures

 

no i don´t think it would be able to get through the hair!!

 

 

 

 mmmmmm james franco......definately in my top 5 {#lang_emotions_shy}

1221.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 11 Oct 2008 Sat 08:01 pm


Concert at Chichén Itzá
October 10, 2008



Plácido Domingo has certainly stirred things up. Last Saturday night, the man many hail as the world’s greatest living tenor staged the “Concert of 1000 Columns” at the great Maya site of Chichén Itzá in Mexico. Domingo, for those of you who are not opera fans, was born in Spain but grew up in Mexico, where he sang in a rock and roll band, played the piano for a ballet company, and made his stage debut in the late 1950s. Since then, Domingo has seldom looked back, performing in the world’s premier opera houses to rave reviews, recording more than 100 albums, starring in numerous opera films, and even playing a cameo part in The Simpsons.


By all accounts, audience members at the “Concert of 1000 Columns,” who forked out as much as $900 for a ticket, lapped up Domingo’s performance. The great tenor reportedly turned on the charm, crooning a love song in Mayan and wooing devoted fans with several popular mariachi tunes.


But the performance left many Mexican archaeologists fuming. Mexican law, they pointed out, requires that Maya ruins be preserved to educate Mexicans about the ancient past: Domingo’s concert did nothing to illuminate Maya culture. Moreover, archaeologists worried that the construction of concert scaffolding would harm Chichén Itzá’s fragile stonework. In an effort at damage control, the Yucatan state government issued public assurances that all due precautions were taken to protect the site during the performance.


When I first read about the concert, I asked myself why Domingo was so keen to perform at Chichén Itzá. It’s difficult to believe that the site’s acoustics could rival those of his customary venues. So Chichén Itzá’s great appeal was clearly to provide a spectacular backdrop for the tenor—something that would convince fans to shell out big bucks for tickets and would attract major television interest. Can a “Live at the Concert of 1000 Columns” special or DVD be far off?


Domingo is not the only performer, however, who has been selling tickets and raking in the cash at a UNESCO World Heritage site. In 2004, Alicia Keyes, Cyndi Lauper and Boyz II Men performed a major concert at The Great Wall of China, claiming that the main message was “to promote peace.” Earlier on, both Sting and Pink Floyd played dates at the pyramids in Giza. And who can forget the performances of Verdi’s opera, Aida, at Giza in the 1990s?  In addition to making money,  they were staged to calm the fear of tourists after Islamic terrorists murdered 58 foreigners at Luxor. “Nothing can prove that this country is safe and stable better than a huge show like “Aida,” performed year after year in front of the most important tourist site in the world,” said Nazmi Amin, a top official of Egypt’s Tourist Authority, in an interview with the New York Times.


The truth is that we use our most important archaeological sites today for all sorts of reasons. But I wonder if it isn’t time for a little soul-searching about how we treat these cultural monuments. I personally believe the Mexican government had it right the first time. These sites are not backdrops or film sets, they are not concert halls or tourist ads, and they certainly aren’t profit centers. They are our fragile link with ancient civilizations. They deserve better.






1222.       Roswitha
4132 posts
 11 Oct 2008 Sat 11:34 pm

 Palestinian: Settlers Tied My Son to ATV, Dragged Him Through Olive Grove

Date posted: August 14, 2008
By Ali Waked
A Palestinian resident of Ras KarKar, a West Bank village located near Modiin, claimed Wednesday that a Jewish settler tied his 17-year-old son to an All-Terrain Vehicle (ATV) and dragged him through an olive grove.

According to Hafez Nupal, on Monday at around 6 pm he and his son were working in their fields when two settlers riding an ATV approached. "One of them yelled ´what are you doing on this land? God gave us this land and no Arab dog will set foot on it´," he recounted.

"When the argument began to heat up, one of the settlers pulled out a gun and the other beat me up. I was able to fight back a little, but then the other settler began to beat me up as well."

Nupal said the settlers, residents of the illegal outpost of Zait Raanan, proceeded to throw him to the ground, tie his hands and legs together and then tie his son to the ATV, adding that another Palestinian fled the scene and informed the Ras Karkar council, which reported the incident to the IDF´s Coordination and Liaison Office in Beit-El.

Nupal said that at this point another settler arrived and led him, his son and another 10-year-old Palestinian at gunpoint to the illegal outpost. There, according to Nupal, the settlers physically assaulted the boy and his teenage son, who was evacuated to a Ramallah hospital for treatment.

Ras-Karkar council member Ayad Masloum told Ynet that the army informed him that the three settlers had been detained after approaching an IDF firing range, but were released later that evening.

Sources in the defense establishment said they were unfamiliar with the incident.

 

http://chet-justice.blogspot.com/2008/08/palestinian-settlers-tied-my-son-to-atv.html

 

http://www.ism-germany.net/2008/08/13/%e2%80%9ekein-arabischer-hund-wird-dieses-land-betreten%e2%80%9c

 

 

Many farmers in the Gaza Strip are being denied access to their land
by Israeli occupation forces. An arbitrary ´buffer zone´ is being
imposed hundreds of metres deep long the Green Line. Agricultural land
has been destroyed in these areas and massive numbers of olive and
fruit trees have been bulldozed, devastating the livelihoods of entire
farming communities. According to the PCHR, approximately 31.503
dunums/31.5 million square metres of land in the Gaza Strip, most of
it agricultural, has been razed by the Israelis. This represents at
least 10% of the total arable land base of the Gaza Strip. This
statistic was published in 2005 but much more destruction has been
carried out since. The Al Mezan Centre for Human Rights quoted
31,845,815 square metres of agricultural land levelled by the end of
2007. This does not include lands confiscated more than once; the area
confiscated being nearly 10 million square metres.


 

1223.       libralady
5152 posts
 13 Oct 2008 Mon 03:08 pm

Warning - this could be very upsetting.

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_7652000/7652268.stm

 

When I heard this being discussed on TV yesterday morning I felt physically sick.  But the actions of a group of people, gathered at a multi story car park, last weekend, should leave them with severly battered consciences.

 

Wonder whey they were doing?  They had gathered to watch events unfolding over a period of three hours.  A young man, standing at the top on the parapit was threatening to jump.  Police were trying to talk him down.  So what do you think the crowd did?  The gouded him to jump, encouraging him and talking mobile phone videos and photos of him when he did jump.

 

It sickens me to think I now live in a society that act in such a way.  You cannot call these people human.

1224.       Deli_kizin
6376 posts
 13 Oct 2008 Mon 03:28 pm

 

Quoting libralady

Warning - this could be very upsetting.

 

It sickens me to think I now live in a society that act in such a way.  You cannot call these people human.

 

 +1

1225.       lady in red
6947 posts
 13 Oct 2008 Mon 03:35 pm

 

Quoting libralady

Warning - this could be very upsetting.

 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_7652000/7652268.stm

 

When I heard this being discussed on TV yesterday morning I felt physically sick.  But the actions of a group of people, gathered at a multi story car park, last weekend, should leave them with severly battered consciences.

 

Wonder whey they were doing?  They had gathered to watch events unfolding over a period of three hours.  A young man, standing at the top on the parapit was threatening to jump.  Police were trying to talk him down.  So what do you think the crowd did?  The gouded him to jump, encouraging him and talking mobile phone videos and photos of him when he did jump.

 

It sickens me to think I now live in a society that act in such a way.  You cannot call these people human.

 

Words fail me - it´s a great shame they can´t charge the entire crowd with manslaughter - its like something out of the middle ages {#lang_emotions_noway}

 

1226.       catwoman
8933 posts
 13 Oct 2008 Mon 04:25 pm

 

Quoting lesluv

no i don´t think it would be able to get through the hair!!

 

lol lol lol

1227.       catwoman
8933 posts
 13 Oct 2008 Mon 04:27 pm

 

Quoting libralady

Wonder whey they were doing?  They had gathered to watch events unfolding over a period of three hours.  A young man, standing at the top on the parapit was threatening to jump.  Police were trying to talk him down.  So what do you think the crowd did?  The gouded him to jump, encouraging him and talking mobile phone videos and photos of him when he did jump.

 

Wow... this is unbelievable.... shocking. I firmly believe that it´s teh culture of video games and violent movies that makes these people excited by something like this. {#lang_emotions_puking}{#lang_emotions_you_crazy}

1228.       thehandsom
7403 posts
 13 Oct 2008 Mon 05:52 pm

The vegetarian festival!

Caption of the images says:

The Vegetarian festival takes place during late September / early October each year for nine days and is intended to bring good luck to the individual as well as the community for the next year. Each of the main temples in the town are given the honor of letting the procession begin at their location. The Ma Song are devotees who are believed to possess supernatural powers and use self torture such as body piercing, walking on fire, and exposure to fireworks to inflict pain upon themselves in order to protect the community from future suffering.

 

Phuket Veg Fest

ps..I am still trying to figure out where the vegetables come into equation..{#lang_emotions_unsure}

 

http://images3.image-data.com/images/30/thumbs/95491/95491801.jpg  http://images3.image-data.com/images/30/thumbs/95491/95491812.jpg  http://images3.image-data.com/images/30/thumbs/95491/95491824.jpg  http://images3.image-data.com/images/30/thumbs/95491/95491832.jpghttp://images3.image-data.com/images/30/thumbs/95491/95491820.jpg

1229.       Elisabeth
5732 posts
 13 Oct 2008 Mon 06:55 pm

 

Quoting thehandsom

The vegetarian festival!

Caption of the images says:

The Vegetarian festival takes place during late September / early October each year for nine days and is intended to bring good luck to the individual as well as the community for the next year. Each of the main temples in the town are given the honor of letting the procession begin at their location. The Ma Song are devotees who are believed to possess supernatural powers and use self torture such as body piercing, walking on fire, and exposure to fireworks to inflict pain upon themselves in order to protect the community from future suffering.

 

Phuket Veg Fest

ps..I am still trying to figure out where the vegetables come into equation..{#lang_emotions_unsure}

 

 Vegetarians stabbing themselves with long object....am I supposed to see a connection???{#lang_emotions_lol_fast}

 

1230.       teaschip
3870 posts
 13 Oct 2008 Mon 07:31 pm

Half man Half tree.

 

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/woman/real_life/article516015.ece

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