Category: News

  • smallHD launches external HD monitor for DSLRs

    SmallHD DP-SLR external monitor for DSLRs

    No matter how big Nikon and Canon make their rear body LCDs, you can never quite beat the control you have when shooting tethered. SmallHD’s DP-SLR external monitor for DSLRs offers up a good solution for previewing 1280 x 800 resolution images on a hotshoe-mountable, hand-sized screen which boasts the title of the world’s smallest HD monitor. Priced at US$1199 for the model with all the bells and whistles, it will also be available without the 3G/HD/SDI inputs to keep the cost down to $899.
    ..
    Continue Reading smallHD launches external HD monitor for DSLRs

    Tags: ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,

    Related Articles:


  • Amheida website updated

    NYU Excavations at Amheida

    Three reports from the 2010 season are new available at the above page (Field Report, Geophysical Survey and Palaeozoology).

    Amheida is an important site in Dakhleh Oasis. Here’s an exerpt from the website’s introduction:

    The excavations undertaken at the ancient city of Amheida (known as Trimithis in the Roman period) are a unique combination of archaeological fieldwork and educational program. Although primarily a modern, multidisciplinary excavation, the project also offers undergraduate students the opportunity for a study-abroad semester in Egypt that combines fieldwork with classroom study and visits to archaeological sites and museums. We make our ongoing work on site available internationally to both scholarly and public audiences via the web as well as through printed work.
  • Beneretmut and DNA of the mummy KV35YL

    News from the Valley of the Kings

    An article has appeared on a Spanish site which duplicates much of my eariler article showing that KV55 is probably not Akhenaten including extrapolition of the DNA to cover Nefertiti (although I am not credited); however the author comes to a different conclusion than me and opines that KV55 is Akhenaten. In coming to this conclusion it theorises that there was a genetic mutation between the two generations. Unfortunately the author, Juan de la Torre Suárez, President Andalusian Association of Egyptology doesn’t cite any evidence for the frequency of mutation in the allele concerned.

    See the above page for more, including a link to the Spanish article.

  • Snooki Dumped Guido Boyfriend Emilio Masella In Voicemail

    Did Snooki attend The Joe Jonas School of Celebrity Breakups?

    Stealing a signature move from the middle JoBro — who famously dumped Taylor Swift over the phone in 2008 — Jersey Shore’s Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi used a profane voicemail to call it quits with her muscular Facebook buddy-turned-BF Emilio Masella.

    Snooks — who is in Miami filming seasons for the forthcoming second season of The Shore — dumped the Gold’s Gym trainer after she suspected him of cheating and using her for fame — these fears were magnified after Emilio tried out for the upcoming season of MTV’s The Real World. Emilio — who cried a river over the split in an exclusive with PEOPLE on Wednesday — argues that he’d never be unfaithful to his poufy-haired girlfriend and charges that Snooki ditched him so that she’ll have a free pass to lock lips and exchange bodily fluids with her Jersey Shore castmate — and chiseled friend with benefits —
    Mike “The Situation” Sorrentino.

    A newly-single Emilio tells PEOPLE: “I told Nicole I tried out for Real World and she was upset. She thought I was using her to get on the show which is ridiculous. I’d never cheat on her–I love her. I talked to her yesterday and I was like, ‘You know I’d never cheat on you; I’d never do something so low.’ She said she hadn’t hooked up with anybody [either] — but she freakin’ lied to me. She put out there that I cheated, which is ridiculous, and now the tables have turned. It sucks. I never asked her for anything. She’s the one that pulled me into the spotlight, bringing me to all these places. It seems like she’s starting to get jealous. I talked to her yesterday afternoon and I fought with her. I [told her] she has no reason to be mad — and she hung up on me. I told her, ‘You can’t expect me to stay home and never go out if you’re gone for two months.’ But I’m not a scumbag. She said, ‘If you want to have fun, bye,’ and she hung up. She’s being very jealous and spiteful. I don’t know if she [broke up with me] on purpose so she could hook up with Mike. I knew [her time on set] was going to be crazy, but I didn’t think it was going to be this crazy. I trusted her and I trusted all the kids in the house too — I was friends with them too. I thought they’d have more respect for me than that. I’m not going to let a girl step all over me and cheat on me.”


  • Samsung Leaks ARM’s Roadmap For Next Three Years [Processors]

    Thanks to Samsung leaking a document, we now have details about ARM’s roadmap for the next three years. It’s not the best leak of the decade (or even the century), but helloooo 2013’s Aquila, the 1.2GHz quad-core Cortex-A9. More »







  • Greek Bond Yields Keep Rising As Budget Deficit Is Found To Be Worse Than First Thought

    Greece Riot Fire

    Greece’s ten-year bond yield has hit 8.13%, the highest level since 1998, after it was learned that the country’s budget deficit was even worse last year than originally thought.

    Bloomberg:

    The EU’s statistics office said today Greece’s deficit was 13.6 percent last year, higher than the government’s April 7 forecast of 12.9 percent. The EU forecast a shortfall of 12.7 percent in November. Ireland overtook Greece as the EU nation with the largest deficit, with its deficit revised up to 14.3 percent, the Luxembourg-based Eurostat said.

    Read more here >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Seminar notes – Coptic Thebes

    Coptic Heritage blog

    I’ve written up my notes from last Saturday’s Coptic Thebes: Life in the 7th and 8th Centuries seminar by Dr Jennifer Cromwell (Lady Wallis Budge Junior Research Fellow in Egyptology at Oxford University) at the Egypt Exploration Society.

    It was an excellent seminar. In the four hours Dr Cromwell was able to paint a vivid portrait of many aspects of Coptic life on the west bank of Luxor.

    It is remarkable the extent to which the Coptic monks and settlers occupied Pharaonic temples and tombs on the west bank of Luxor. Perhaps even more remarkable is the extent to which so much evidence of this Coptic world was eliminated by excavators interested in the underlying Pharaonic levels. Dr Crowell talked about this remarkable landscape, the surviving evidence (both archaeological and textual), the clues to secular life in the village of Jeme (which occupied Medinet Habu) and the the practise of donating children to one monastery in particular.

    It was, needless to say, a day very well spent!

    Thanks very much to Jenny Cromwell for checking over my notes and picking up a couple of errors.

  • YouTube Removes Hitler ‘Downfall’ Parodies

    Viral videos and Internet memes, by nature, come and go pretty fast. The web’s attention span is pretty low. Some memes that have endured the test of time are the Hitler ‘Downfall’ videos, which have been linked to anything from banned Xbox 360 Live accounts to the Apple iPad. Literally, hundreds of parody clips have been made using the… (read more)

  • MediaInfo 0.7.31

    MediaInfo 0.7.31

    MediaInfo supplies technical and tag information about a video or audio file. This is a free software (free of charge and free for access to source code, GPL or LGPL licence).

    What information can I get from MediaInfo?

    • General: title, author, director, album, track number, date, duration…
    • Video: codec, aspect, fps, bitrate…
    • Audio: codec, sample rate, channels, language, bitrate…
    • Text: language of subtitle
    • Chapters: count of chapters, list of chapters

    What format (container) does MediaInfo support?

    • Video: MKV, OGM, AVI, DivX, WMV, QuickTime, Real, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, DVD (VOB)…
      (Codecs: DivX, XviD, MSMPEG4, ASP, H.264, AVC…)
    • Audio: OGG, MP3, WAV, RA, AC3, DTS, AAC, M4A, AU, AIFF…
    • Subtitles: SRT, SSA, ASS, SAMI…

    What can I do with it?

    • Read many video and audio file formats
    • Multiple means to view information (text, sheet, tree, HTML…)
    • You can customize theses views
    • Exporting possibilities: text, CSV, HTML…
    • Graphical Interface, or Command Line, or DLL
    • Integration with MS-Windows shell (drag´n´ drop, and Context menu)
    • Internationnalization: any language diplay on any version of your Operating System
    • Localization capacities (but volonteers needed)

    What’s New in version 0.7.31:

    • SCTE 20 closed caption support
    • Difference between width/height in the container and in the raw stream
    • AVC: GOP structure
    • MXF: more raw stream formats are detected (MPEG-4 Visual, A-law…)
    • DV: Better detection of DVCPRO 50 and 100
    • DV: less files without the right extension wrongly detected as DV

    Homepage: http://mediainfo.sourceforge.net/
    Download: MediaInfo_GUI_0.7.31_Windows_i386.exe
    File Size: 1.87MB


    Related posts:

    • MediaInfo 0.7.5
      MediaInfo supplies technical and tag information about a video
    • MediaInfo 0.7.20

      MediaInfo supplies technical and tag information about a video or

    • MediaInfo 0.7.12

      MediaInfo supplies technical and tag information about a video or

    • MediaInfo 0.7.26

      MediaInfo supplies technical and tag information about a video or

    • MediaInfo 0.7.26

      MediaInfo supplies technical and tag information about a video or


    Copyright © 2008
    Best Freeware Blog | Buy Laptop | Business Software Reviews | astaga.com lifestyle on the net

  • Do the Face-Veil Bans Violate International Law?

    by Julian Ku

    Belgium and France are both considering laws to ban the wearing of full-face veils in public. According to Amnesty International, such bans would violate international human rights law.

    “A general ban on the wearing of full face veils would violate the rights to freedom of expression and religion of those women who choose to express their identity or beliefs in this way,” said Claudio Cordone, Amnesty International’s interim secretary general.

    “At the same time the Belgian authorities must make sure that all women who chose to wear the full veil do so without coercion, harassment and discrimination.”

    Under U.S. constitutional law analysis, such a ban would have serious trouble under the Constitution’s Free Exercise of religion clause, especially because it seems aimed pretty directly at the religious practice of a single group. (Are yamakas in public next?)  But it would depend on the secular purpose of the law, which I don’t know much about.

    Under, say, Article 18 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which both France and Belgium are parties, there seems to be a pretty serious conflict  since it guarantees a right to religious practice (emphasis added).

    1. Everyone shall have the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion. This right shall include freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice, and freedom, either individually or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in worship, observance, practice and teaching.

    And then there is the European Convention on Human Rights, Art. 9(1) (emphasis added):

    Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief, in worship, teaching, practice and observance.

    So maybe Amnesty has a point. I suppose there might be a decent argument that the full-face veil is simply not a manifestation of a religious belief through practice and observance. Or that there is a strong public need to ban this practice. But there seems a clear basis for a challenge under the ECHR at least.  But I am far from an expert in this area, and would encourage any readers with better knowledge of the facts behind the bans, or with knowledge of how Article 9(1) has been interpreted, to comment.

  • Porsche Boxster Spyder test drive: take off the roof!

    It’s just as well Fifth Gear is still around to give us some serious car test drives, picking up where TopGear has left off (and gotten a little crazy). Besides, we like the woman’s driving style, not that we’re biased or anything. Here Fifth Gear checks out the Porsche Boxster Spyder, describing it as a purist Porsche model where they’ve done the research on how to get it lighter.

    While we question whether as a driver you’d actually notice the 0.2 seconds acceleration difference the 80 kg less makes, overall the Boxster Spyder is old-school Porsche sports driving style. It’s basically a pared-back driving machine, so if you wanted a Sunday car drive where you can sing along to the radio, this is not for you (the stereo system has been removed and is now available as an add-on).

    The debate over whether you can really drive this with the roof on seems to have been resolved. We had originally suggested that the Porsche Boxster Spyder was strictly for fair weather driving, and while you can have the roof closed, the video does show how noisy and uncomfortable the ride can be at just over 60 miles an hour. If you’re a Mediterranean customer and can be guaranteed plenty of sun in your summer, the wind-in-your-hair pure sports machine could be just for you. Perhaps not recommend for Britain’s less clement weather… See the video for all the details.


  • New Book: Swimmers in the Sand

    From Miroslav Bárta

    Swimmers in the Sand. On the Neolithic Origins of Ancient Egyptian Mythology and Symbolism

    ISBN 978-80-87025-26-0, 112 pages
    Publisher: Dryada: Prague
    Publication date: April 2010
    Author: Miroslav Bárta, photographs Martin Frouz

    I couldn’t find this on any of the usual online retailers but perhaps it is not available just yet. I for one am interested in getting hold of this title so if anyone finds it available online please let me know.

    The origins of ancient Egyptian civilisation have been attracting the attention of archaeologist ever since the beginnings of Egyptology more than 200 years ago. This book presents a new and original interpretation of the rock art in Egyptian Western Desert which is of a key importance for our understanding of the roots of ancient Egyptian civilisation. Indeed, her very origins can be most likely dated to the 6th millennium B.C. In this time and the centuries to follow the paintings in the Cave of the Swimmers known from a blockbuster English Patient and in the Cave of Beasts discovered only few years ago were created. These caves are located in a distant and hardly accessible part of Egypt, on the border of Egypt, Libya and Sudan.

    The rock-art preserved in these caves features several unique motifs that will become cornerstone of ancient Egyptian iconography and mythology. Among them may be named the motif of the sky goddess and the earth god, prototypic representation of an ancient chieftain in the much later pharaonic guise or the concept of cave creatures protecting the entrance to the Netherworld.

    During the Fifth and Fourth millennia B.C. the vast areas of Western Desert suffered from a major depredation of climate that most likely caused a gradual evacuation of the region and instigated appearance of permanent settlements in the Nile valley which led to genesis of ancient Egyptian culture. The present study aims to present a theory according to which at least some parts of the discussed rock art in the Western Desert was created by an ancient mind that later on contributed to the intellectual emergence of ancient Egyptian civilisation in the Nile valley.

  • Strategic Partnership to develop 3D archaeological content

    3DS

    Press Release.

    One of the world’s largest Egyptology databases, the Giza Archives Project, will be the first to benefit from the power of interactive, immersive and multi-platform 3D experiences for both the scientific community and the general public

    Paris, April 21st, 2010 – Dassault Systèmes (DS) (Euronext Paris: #13065, DSY.PA), a world leader in 3D software solutions and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), one of the world’s most important encyclopedic art museums, today announced that they will join forces in a strategic innovation partnership to bring the power of industrial and experiential 3D to the domain of archaeology.

    The Giza Archives Project is a digital initiative, housed at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. It is supervised by Egyptologist Peter Der Manuelian, the MFA’s Giza Archives Director and Philip J. King Professor of Egyptology at Harvard University. The Project aims to “assemble and link” the world’s archaeological information on the Egyptian Pyramids at the Giza Plateau. In the last decade, it has digitized historic expedition photographs, excavation diaries and field notebooks, maps, plans and sketches from the ancient tombs and pyramids at Giza. The result is the largest database and Web site ever assembled relating to the Giza Plateau (www.mfa.org/giza). Most of the archaeological documents and photographs had been assembled over forty years of excavation by Egyptologist George Reisner (1867–1942), one of the prominent founding fathers of modern scientific archaeology who led the Harvard University-Boston Museum of Fine Arts Expedition in Egypt. In a unique international collaboration, the Giza Archives Project partners today with all of the world’s institutions that house major collections related to Giza.

  • Who Thought Cloning a Sony Vaio P Was a Good Idea? [NetBooks]

    Come on, ‘fess up. Which Chinese is obviously so delusional he thought that what the public really needed was a Vaio P clone, complete with chiclet keyboard and pink satin casing? I guess the Vaio P 2 hasn’t appeared yet… More »







  • Sipping On Some Non-existant Naked Citrus Lemongrass

     2650

    Since I missed Tuesday’s installment of “I tried something new” #foodrevolution due to the fact that I was laptop-less due to web viruses, I’ll share today with something kinda weird.

    Lemongrass is one of my favorite ingredients in Thai and Vietnamese food. The folks and I were shopping at Costco the other day and I saw a jug of Naked brand juice in Citrus Lemongrass flavor, and was both intrigued and excited, so I got one to try as I’ve never seen a juice with lemongrass in it at your typical suburbia market.

    What’s even more intriguing about this juice is that apparently it doesn’t exist on the Naked Juice website nor does it appear anywhere on Google search. I’m scratching my head. I am even more perplexed as you can clearly see, I did buy a bottle. So oh well, let’s just pretend the juice exists shall we because I did drink it.

    The Naked juice is  made of orange juice, apple juice, lemon juice, and lemongrass extract. The nice thing about the juice is that there are no added sugars which is good because this juice is sweet on its own. One 8oz serving of the Citrus Lemongrass does have 24g of sugar which is almost at my daily goal of 25g of sugar/day, so I’m not going to be drinking this stuff everyday.

    And the taste…

    As for the taste, I’ll say it’s interesting. My first reaction was that it wasn’t bad but it wasn’t omg-I-love-this-stuff. Over the last few days, the juice has grown on me. What I found a bit off was that the orange juice and lemongrass seem to be fighting with each other a bit to see who can be the dominant flavor, and in the end neither win. Perhaps that is why the juice doesn’t exist anywhere.

    I do think that this juice would make for an awesome mixer in cocktails because the lemongrass will give the drink an interesting twist. In fact, this Citrus Lemongrass could make for an exotic Mamosa for Sunday brunch, or as a different twist in any drink that calls for plain orange juice. Here’s over 1,000 cocktail recipes with OJ in it. I’d pour in some Amaretto straight in for a tasty happy hour drink.

    If you’ve seen this juice in a store, tried it, or seen it online, do let me know.


  • King Tut, The Tour And The Ways Of Zahi Hawass

    Real Clear Arts (Judith H. Dobrzynski)

    Before going to the press preview this morning for Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharoahs, which will open at the Discovery Center Times Square on Friday, I had never seen Zahi Hawass in action. But now I know why Hawass, the Secretary General of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, has been so good at elevating the profile of Egyptian antiquities, claiming and repatriating artifacts from Western museums, raising money for archaeology and museums in Egypt, getting very good press in the process, etc. Too good, sometimes.

    He’s a charmer, story-teller, teaser and advocate par excellence. Relating a tale about flying back to Cairo on Egypt Air with a coffin recovered with the help of Homeland Security officials here, he said a woman near him, learning that the coffin was in the plane’s cargo area, got the willies. “Don’t worry,” he told her, “If there had been a curse, I’d have taken Lufthansa.”

  • Handicapping the Zurich Classic

    We head to New Orleans this week, which means good eats and plenty of birdies to go around (your winning score should be in the -13 to -15 range). Let’s check out this week’s form:

    A-List: It’s a bit of a ghost town in this slot, with only ten players to choose from (Steve Stricker was a late WD). … I’ve been chasing the Steve Marino first win for a while, and he was in the hunt here last season (T5, two shots back). He’s got a full and consistent stat profile; I fully expect that his second win will come a year or less after the maiden victory. … We haven’t seen Bubba Watson since the Houston event earlier in April, so sharpness cold be a factor. He made a run in New Orleans three years ago (tying for fifth), but nothing happened for him the last two visits (T70, cut). … Stephen Ames is one of the bigger names in this field but he’s had trouble getting adjusted to TPC of Louisiana layout (two trunk slams, after a history of New Orleans success on other courses). … Scott Verplank was rolling along merrily until last week’s surprising missed cut at the Verizon Heritage. He’s cashed in two stops at this particular course, but no deep runs yet. I’m still going to use him off of back class, but I’m hoping my starter can go all four rounds. … Picks: Marino, Verplank.

    B-List: Charles Howell III was just one shot off the lead here last year and Louisiana homeboy David Toms was two shots back, good reason to dial both of them up here (even with Toms battling some injury issues). … K.J. Choi faded after a hot start last week and he’s playing for the fifth time in six weeks. He saw this course for the first time last year, finishing T24. … Brian Davis‘s classy move last week buys some cred in this space, and his play before the controversial ending gets him on my sheet. He’s got some experience over the layout (T19, T33) and I like that his scoring average is better than what the component stats would suggest.

    Sergio Garcia remains on Pianow suspension until further notice. It’s also his debut at this event, and that’s never a good thing to speculate on. … Could this be the spot for a Briny Baird surprise win? He ran T12 back in 2008 and he’s quietly been in the Top 20 in two of his last three starts this year. … Daniel Chopra has good history at this event (34, 33, 15, MC, 9, 34) but his 2010 resume takes him off my list pretty quickly (nine starts, two cashes). … Picks: Howell, Toms, Davis, Baird.

    C-List: Jerry Kelly isn’t getting a lot of fantasy pub this week, but why not? He won here last year. He’s made seven cuts in a row, with three six-figure checks. No need to overthink it, he’s a smart play. … Mike Weir is still putting well, but the rest of his game is a mess right now. I need a show of good faith first. … Justin Rose has played at TPC of Louisiana twice – a missed cut last year and a T17 back in 2005. But based on what I’ve seen from him recently (three deep runs in his last four events on our side of the pond) I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt. … Tim Petrovic won here in 2005, but he’s currently sitting 180th on the money list (just three cuts made). No need to get cute, you have better options. … Ben Crane has settled into a solid if unspectacular groove since his win in January. He’s made five cuts in a row, nothing worse than T36 and nothing better than T24. I suppose that makes him a safe play here, but I’d like to swing for more upside. … Picks: Kelly, Rose.

  • ‘Sound bullets’ aim to improve on ultrasound imaging

    A stylized image depicting a sound bullet superposed onto a brain MRI (Image: Spadoni &amp...

    Researchers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have built a device that produces highly focused, high-amplitude acoustic signals dubbed “sound bullets.” Called a nonlinear acoustic lens, the device could produce acoustic images superior to conventional medical ultrasound imaging, probe for damage in the interior of nontransparent objects like bridges, ship hulls, and airplane wings, and be used to develop non-invasive scalpels – although there’s no word on whether it will enable the development of sonic screwdrivers…
    Continue Reading ‘Sound bullets’ aim to improve on ultrasound imaging

    Tags: ,
    ,

    Related Articles:


  • Book Review: Cleopatra

    Forbes (Review by Hannah Elliott)

    Cleopatra: A Biography
    By Duane W. Roller (Oxford University Press, $16.47)

    Forget what you think you know about Cleopatra. She wasn’t a voracious seductress who led men to their doom. She never wore bangs à la Liz Taylor circa 1963. And she almost certainly didn’t die by the bite of an Egyptian snake.

    That’s the premise of Duane W. Roller’s Cleopatra: A Biography, a bare-bones approach to understanding the last ruler of the 270-year-old Ptolemaic dynasty and the only woman in classical antiquity who ruled with complete autonomy.

    If you’re looking for romance-novel details of the Mark Anthony-Cleopatra VII affair, keep looking. Roller, a professor emeritus of Greek and Latin at the Ohio State University, makes it abundantly clear that his goal is to create a portrait of the infamous queen that is based “solely on information from the ancient world.”

    That means forgoing all input from Shakespeare, Massenet and Hollywood. It makes for a somewhat dry read–navigating through Ptolemaic genealogies, recounts of political posturing with obscure satraps and discussions of ancient Roman land disputes won’t keep the casual reader engaged.

  • New rust sensor could lead to safer bridges

    The sensor-transponder system Fraunhofer researchers say delivers an early warning of dang...

    According to the Neil Young album title, rust never sleeps. In construction, rust damage can be insidious – especially in infrastructure like concrete bridges where rust can have fatal consequences if the steel in bridges fails. But detecting rust before it’s too late has been an ongoing challenge for engineers and scientists. Experts at the Fraunhofer Institute for Microelectronic Circuits and Systems IMS have developed an early-warning system for rust. By installing sensor-transponders into in the concrete to measure the extent of corrosion, engineers are being given a vital heads-up…
    Continue Reading New rust sensor could lead to safer bridges

    Tags: ,
    ,

    Related Articles: