Sunday 25 March 2012

uplay (TM) wireless keyboard and aluminum case for IPAD 2 and IPAD 3



IPAD become our part of life, almost everyperson own his personal IPAD, i think IPAD is mini LAPTOP for me and far better then laptop the only advantage i found in laptop is that it have keyboard which make work more easier for people but not to worry at all now company UPLAY induce new keyboard in market so now IPAD become complete mini laptop, Everyone can buy this tremendous IPAD keyboard from http://www.uplaytablet.com/uplay-tm-wireless-keyboard-and-aluminum-case-for-ipad-2-2nd-generation-49-99/  

This IPAD keyboard have best quality , best durability , have added 4 footers to avoid scratching and last but not the least have USB port and light charging.  


Friday 9 March 2012

The World's First Photograph




One summer day in France in 1826, Joseph Niepce took the world's first photograph. It's a photo of some farm buildings and the sky. It took an exposure time of 8 hours. Voila! It had to feel pretty incredible, like magic.

No one's exactly sure how he did this or what chemicals were used. All that's known for sure is that the photo is on an 8"x 6.5" pewter plate. It's so faint it has to be tilted in order for the light to catch it just right, to see it.



The Getty Museum in California did two weeks of tests in 2003 in a joint project involving the Rochester Institute of Technology and France's Centre de Recherches sur la Conservation des Documents Graphiques (try saying that three times fast). Then it went back on display at the University of Texas in a new air tight case, where it's been on display since 1964. I'm not sure why we have it and the French don't, but "hah".

The current theory about how the photograph was taken is that Niepce coated the pewter plate with bitumen, a petroleum derivative sensitive to light. After it spent those 8 hours hardening, he washed the plate with a mixture of oil of lavender and white petroleum. This dissolved the portions of the bitumen that didn't 'see' direct light, so didn't harden. Pretty damn clever. Niepce called his work a "heliograph," in a tribute to the power of the sun.

Believe it or not,,, This photograph is of a train interior in Japan



With the results looking nicer than most nurseries, the Japanese have taken the idea of ‘child-friendly public transport’ to the next level with these 2 beauties, both designed by Eiji Mitooka. He was the artistic force behind ‘omoden’ (toy train) and ‘ichigo ec’ (strawberry train), a couple of regional trains which travel on a daily basis on the 14.3km Kishigawa line in Japan.
These trains contain hundreds of toys, TV screens showing cartoons, immaculately clean wooden flooring and cots for younger children.

Thursday 8 March 2012

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Monday 5 March 2012

Oldest Table Tennis Player




The Oldest Table Tennis Player is Dorothy de Low (Australia, born: 5 October 1910) who was 97 yr 232 days when she represented Australia at the XIV World Veterans Table Tennis Championships, at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on 25 May 2008.

Underwater Cycling



Italy's Vittorio Innocente holds the world record in underwater cycling, pedaling his specially adapted bike to a depth of 66.5 meters (218.2 ft) in the sea near Genoa.

Birds or Cobra




Flocks of migrating starlings are renowned for their incredible aerial displays. But residents in Taunton, Somerset may have had a bit of a fright as thousands of flapping birds formed the shape of a giant cobra swooping down on houses in the late afternoon sky.

Twins for Blind Orangutan



Cradling her babies, this picture of motherly love is especially rare - because these healthy orangutan twins have been born to blind parents who are both lucky to be alive. The babies were born at the Batu Mbelin Orangutan Quarantine Centre in North Sumatra where both their parents are in long-term care.

Necklaces from Human Hair



Kerry Howley, a creative Art student, from Cambridge, England, is creating quite a buzz in the art world, with her collection of delicate necklaces made from human hair.
(Would you like to buy one for you?)


Amazing Creative Typewriter Artist



Meet Keira Rathbone, an Artist who is most famously known for her amazing typewriter art. The creative London artist makes detailed drawings on a typewriter she bought from a Poole charity shop. Typing out hundreds of letters, numbers and symbols in place of brush strokes and pixels results in beautiful enigmatic images. On average, she spends 90 hours on each typewriter-produced drawing. However, it dosn’t mean she can’t draw with a regular pencil – vintage typewriter is just one of Keira’s mediums to create her art.

Priceless Picture



This is the Columbus, Ohio family that just had the sextuplets. The Ohio woman has given birth to the state's second set of sextuplets. A team of about 50 medical staff members oversaw the delivery. The first baby weighed in at a fraction over 2 pounds and the smallest at 1 pound, 12 ounces.

Lenticular Clouds



These unusual clouds are called Lenticular clouds because of their lens-like shape and they tend to form at high altitudes, normally aligned at right-angles to the wind direction.

They have often been mistaken for UFOs in the past, due to their odd shape, but they are becoming more common these days. They are indeed another of mother nature’s wonders, truly a sight to behold!

Green River



On December 29, 2010 waters of this river in Goldstream Park, Canada, turned neon green. According to the local Environment Ministry, there was a chemical reaction in the water known as “fluorescein”. They believed that somebody dumped fluorescein in the Goldstream River to make a holiday season joke, but that substance wasn’t toxic and fish along with the habitat weren’t affected.

Ice Hotel in Finland




Decorated in a cartoon-style Snow Castle in Kemi, Finland is the largest snow castle in the world.
 — 

Girl Who Loves To Eat Soap



Tempest Henderson, a 19-year-old girl from Florida, has a rather peculiar addiction – she can’t help eating soap bars and washing powder. There are worst things to be addicted to, but this has to be one of the strangest..!

The World's Biggest Cave



The world's largest cave passage was discovered deep within a remote Vietnamese jungle. The Son Doong cave measures 262 feet by 262 feet (80 meters by 80 meters) and at least 2.8 miles (4.5 kilometers) deep, making it the largest single cave passage ever discovered, according to National Geographic News, where the discovery was announced. The previous record holder, Deer Cave in Malaysia, is 300 feet by 300 feet (91 m by 91 m) in parts, but is only about a mile (1.6 km) long.


Postcard Delivered After 94 Years



A First World War postcard has finally been delivered - 94 years after it was sent (delivered on 02-Sep-2010).
Soldier Alfred Arthur, 19, sent the card to his sister Ellen, known as Nell, in January 1916 at the height of the Great War.
Tragically the hero was killed in the brutal fighting which killed millions from all sides in the blood-soaked trenches on the Western Front in France.
Alfred's card poignantly ended up with Lauren Bleach, 61, and her partner Jill Liversidge more than nine decades on.
They decided to find out where it had come from after it arrived at their home in Lakenham, Norwich.
Mrs Bleach said: 'When we read it we were so emotionally taken because it's from a soldier who was obviously at a training camp waiting to go away to his sister.
'He lived in this street presumably all that time ago and it's only just arrived.
'The postcard is dated 1916 and bears a cartoon picture of a newly-recruited soldier on the front.
Thoughtful Alfred has written to his beloved sister: 'Dear Nell, Just a postcard to let you know I have not forgotten you.
'On the other side you will see our orders for next week. I will need your pity. Drop me a line, your brother Alfred.'
The front of the card, referred to in Alfred's note, displays a poster which says 'Orders of the day: Eight hours drill, eight hours route march, eight hours trenching' and the recruit saying 'And then we have the rest of the day to ourselves!'
Alfred was born in Lakenham and went to school nearby a century ago.One of his descendants is his great-nephew Brian Buxton, 68, of Salhouse, Norfolk.

WAVE ROCK At Hyden, Australia



This interesting natural rock is called Wave Rock and located to the east of the town of Hyden in Western Australia. It got its name from the fact that it is shaped like a tall breaking ocean wave. The rock formation is composed of granite and the total outcrop covers several hectares. The rock is about 15 meters high and approximately 110 meters long.

Sinkhole in Guatemala



Heavy rains from tropical storm Agatha likely triggered the collapse of a huge sinkhole in Guatemala.
The Guatemala sinkhole fits into a broader use of the term, which refers to any sudden slump of the ground’s surface. Instead of solid bedrock, much of Guatemala City rests atop a layer of loose, gravelly volcanic pumice that is hundreds of feet thick. And at least one geologist says leaking pipes—not nature—created the recent sinkhole.

Floating Boat Bridge



Commuters cross the Buriganga River on a floating boat bridge in Dhaka, Bangladesh. When rampant-growing water hyacinth prevented boats from moving freely on the river, a group of boatmen came up with a bright idea. They made this floating bridge by connecting 34 wooden dinghies together and are charging a small fee to cross. 
Creative work..!

Fly Geyser


When you first see this stunning geyser you don't believe it's real. But it is. This geyser is called Fly Geyser and it's located approximately 20 miles (32 km) north of Gerlach, in Washoe County, Nevada. 
Fly Geyser is located on the private Fly Ranch owned by Todd Jaksick and is accessible only by a small private dirt road. The owner wanted to keep the people away from the geyser so he placed a high fence and a locked gate with several metal spokes on the top to keep trespassers out. Several organizations have tried to purchase the land for conservation, and make it open to the public, but have been denied.