Category Archives: CULTURE
Insane Photoshop Skills
London Philharmonic Orchestra: The Greatest Video Game Music (2011)
01 – Advent Rising Muse
02 – Legend of Zelda Suite
03 – Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2 Theme
04 – Angry Birds Main Theme
05 – Final Fantasy VIII Liberi Fatali
06 – Super Mario Bros Theme
07 – Uncharted – Drake’s Fortune Nate’s Theme
08 – Grand Theft Auto IV Soviet Connection
09 – World of Warcraft Seasons of War
10 – Metal Gear Solid Sons of Liberty Theme
11 – Tetris Theme (Korobeiniki)
12 – Battlefield 2 Theme
13 – Elder Scrolls Oblivion
14 – Call of Duty 4 – Modern Warfare Main Menu Theme
15 – Mass Effect Suicide Mission
16 – Splinter Cell Conviction
17 – Final Fantasy Main Theme
18 – Bioshock The Ocean on his Shoulders
19 – Halo 3 One Final Effort
20 – Fallout 3 Theme
21 – Super Mario Galaxy Gusty Garden Galaxy
22 – Bonus Track Dead Space Welcome Aboard The U.S.G. Ishimura
Source
Nike Vintage Nylon Blazer Hi
Available in either blue or red colour ways, each style features a nylon upper accented with white at the Swoosh and collar.
Conference of cool.
Beats By Dr. Dre Studio Color Campaign
For Holiday 2011 we have reinvented our first and most popular headphone, The Studio, in a spectrum of candy colors good enough to eat. Whether you choose blue, pink, orange, or green, we have the color that “is you.”
Nero’s first live performance at our recently opened Pop-Up store in NYC. Dre, who was in attendance at the performance, chose Nero “Me & You” for the spot’s powerful track.
Album: Welcome Reality (Digital out now, CD in stores 12/13)
How to Remove the Rust from Your Designing Skills
Finally realization has dawn on you that your designing skills are failing short of holding your clients back. To put it in simple English, clients are not impressed with your templates anymore and they are looking for something cool, trendy and sharp which is clearly not in your limit anymore. Since there is no alternative, unless witnessing exodus of clients, you need to accept the fact that your designing skills have gather some rust and you need to get rid of it at the earliest. Here we are going to share some quick fire tips that can help you though to some extents only remove the rust from your designing skills:
Do a Career Sabotage
It is quite though to do a career sabotage like taking one year break in this tough economic condition. But if you have the guts, provided you have the required amount of saving, you should take the risk to come up as stronger. It will have a refreshing effect your creativity. However, you should not waste the time partying hard, rather join some short-term courses. For say, if you are not that much confident working with HTML5, it makes perfect sense that you should join a small course to get the hang on it.
Participate in Some Conference
Definitely, this is not anything new and there are some people who just hate to participate in conference for some reasons unknown. But they are not that much bad. Though tediousness sermons will be delivered time and again, you can get valuable tips from industry experts around the world. Moreover, at least, you will have a clear insight of the latest trends ruling the web design industry.
Reward Yourself
Of course, you cannot pamper yourself with chocolate and ice creams when you are clearly not doing anything awesome. But to live up the expectation of the clients, you need to take up new challenges like learning a new CSS trick or completing the next chapter of HTML 5 and once you successfully completed the benchmarks, reward yourself with a 2 hours break or anything that you would just love to do.
Community
There is nothing like joining a community where some of the best and the finest minded designers gather to share their experience and views. You should join Dribbble, DesignersCouch, Forrst and their likes and you will get to know the probable future of website design and be sure to share your personal opinions. However, it is not just about online community. You need to create small community with your peers and colleagues as they are the best friends you can have to learn new techniques.
Read Books
When your designing skills require serious makeover, you need to reignite your passion for reading and there are some great publications available like O’Reilly. O’Reilly has got probably the best online library of covering almost every technical subject imaginable. So you can have truly great books on Photoshop, Dreamweaver etc. And the good thing is that there are several books available there for free.
W3C Schools
This is probably the best resource you should have, if aspire to catch up with the latest designing trends. The best part of W3C School is that they always update their content and publish a full overview of content even when they are not even supported by browsers. So, now you can race ahead of time and give your designing skill a whole new dimension.
About Guest Author:
Jacob Smith is a passionate writer and a vocal support of intellectual property rights. He has written numerous articles on blogging, social media, intellectual property, tech and he has published some articles for the guardlex.com, a website famed for its DMCA take down services.
David Beckham & James Bond: Background Check
HBTV2: David Beckham & James Bond: Background Check from HBTV on Vimeo.
HBTV sit down with UNDFTD’s James Bond and soccer luminary David Beckham, as they talk about the inspiration that goes into their ongoing capsule collection for adidas. Introduced through Beckham’s wife, Victoria, their partnership was one that came about through sharing the same likes and dislikes when it came to fashion and product collaborations. In describing the line, both men consider it to be “simple, yet aspirational,” and products that aren’t defined by age. Check out the interview with two men who are at the forefront of their respective professions.
Can’t wait for snowboard season to kick in!
SIR ANTHONY HOPKINS: “I SEE THE LINES, BUT I DON’T CARE”
Sir Hopkins, you once said that the more life you experience the more it seems like a dream. Was there a certain moment in your life where things seemed to diverge from reality?
Most of my last 30 years have been like that. Results and manifestations of things I’d dreamed of as a young kid and wanted as a child and as a young man. I realized it maybe 30 years ago. I thought, “This is unreal. This has happened as I expected it to, as I’d pictured it.” My whole life has been like that and I’m fascinated by that power that we all have. That we create our lives as we go.
Do you think actors and filmmakers have a more powerful inner life? People often say actors are more emotional, more sensitive.
Well, I always distrust the word art when it is applied to acting. I’ve always liked to be a meat and potatoes kind of actor who doesn’t believe in any of the highfalutin stuff about acting, so I tend to be a little bit more cynical. But I guess it is a creative process; acting is a creative process, and directing and music. I think creative people – and I take myself as a creative person and it doesn’t mean you have to be an actor, a musician, or a painter – but I think if you are in a creative profession or a creative business you do have a heightened awareness. It doesn’t make you special though.
A lot of actors certainly behave as if they are…
You have to be careful of that because when you begin to believe you have license because you are a special person breathing special oxygen, that’s when you’re in big trouble. That’s the road to insanity. And a lot of people in the studios are like that. They believe that they are special. I do think actors are blessed, or cursed, with maybe a slightly heightened awareness, which you have to use. That’s all. It doesn’t mean you’re superior or better than anyone it just means that’s the way our brains tick.
Were there any directors in the past that have really inspired you?
There have been a number of them and they all have their own quirky way of working. I’ve worked with Oliver Stone, Spielberg, a number of them. Some of the best and I’ve been lucky. When I direct I try to keep it a unique design of my own. Naturally you’re influenced. Oliver Stone is a great director and I’ve seen many films over the years, but I try to create stuff out of my own imagination. I want to break all the rules and mess about with it and make a different movie just for the fun of it.
Does acting help to keep you young?
Yeah. I am young! Being creative and keeping your brain occupied is very sensible because if you don’t you die, slowly. Although sometimes I feel tired and think I ought to give it up, I don’t want to just retire. No, I enjoy it all and you just keep going until the day comes when you can’t do it anymore. And that’s what I want to do.
Are you still obsessed by acting?
I used to be a bit obsessed by it but not anymore. I do enjoy acting but I probably enjoy it more now because it’s easier. I can’t work in the theater because to me it’s too serious. It’s like being in prison for me. I admire people that can do that but I can’t do it. I’d rather live my life and do a bit of acting in between.
What does your life look like these days?
I play piano and that’s my love. I read and I paint and I compose music, so I’ve got a pretty full creative life. And it’s not because, you know, I’m obsessively creative. I enjoy painting. I don’t know if I’m good at it, but I paint. I paint very quickly. I paint in acrylic and it seems to work and I write music and compose music and play the piano and I read a lot and life’s good. So acting is something I do as a fill in.
You seem to be at harmony with yourself…
I wish when I was younger I knew what I know today, what I feel like today, a kind of ease with myself. Because when you’re younger you are much more intense and everything’s much more important and you look back and you think, “Oh what was that all about?” Nothing is that important, just live your life because we’re here so briefly.
So you enjoy getting older?
Yeah. I keep in shape. I look in the mirror and I see the lines, but I don’t care. It’s a good time. I don’t know why it’s such a good time, but it’s a good time. Mortality is the great rescuer, it finally takes you out of everything, and that makes life good, you know? Read Carl Jung. It makes life richer because this is it; none of us know where we go and this is the fun of it.
Have you achieved everything you wanted to achieve?
Beyond everything. I’ve been very lucky. I’ve had my problems in the past, I’ve had my troubles, but you move on. I had a great life and I am really thankful for it.
Burton: Snow Porn Series
Danny Davis proves that you can’t have easy livin without putting in a lot of hard work, and it shines through in his snowboarding. Doesn’t hurt that he is always smiling and having a good time either.
From the pages of Transworlds December issue – check out Danny Davis, Stephan Maurer, Nicolas Muller, Mads Jonsson and more in Mike Basich’s backyard, the famed Area 241.
A little park mash up from last summer featuring the Burton team.
FK is short for Frederik Kalbermatten, and Superspines is short for some really really gnarly lines in British Columbia. Not bad for a days work.
What is the future of email??
The Guardian UK Article –
So email is dead, according to the infant prodigy Mark Zuckerberg, proprietor of Facebook. This news arrived in an email from the editor, where it nestled cosily with the 1,401 other messages that I hadn’t quite got round to reading.
On closer inspection, it turns out that Zuck is not exactly an unbiased source on this topic, because his prediction was made as he launched a new “messaging” service for his 750 million subscribers, which he obviously hopes will supplant a communications medium that’s been around since an engineer named Ray Tomlinson invented it in 1971.
Outbreaks of what the computer scientist John Seely Brown calls “endism” have been rife in discussions about communications technology since the time of Plato, who opined that writing would destroy memory. In the 20th century, it was widely trumpeted that television would be the death of, first, radio and, later, movies.
When the CD-Rom arrived, people predicted the death of the printed book. The explosive growth in text messaging was thought to herald the end of Civilisation As We Know It, or at least of grammar, spelling and punctuation. And so on, ad infinitum, until we reach the current prediction that an explosion of tweets, status updates and messaging onsocial networking sites heralds the death of email.
The prediction is buttressed by selective use of ambiguous statistics. On the one hand, it does seem that young people use email less than their elders. According to comScore, a market research firm, for example, the number of emails sent by 12- to 17-year-olds fell by nearly a quarter in 2010, while visits to web-based email sites such as Gmail, Hotmail and Yahoo declined 6% in the same period.
The only thing that’s surprising about this is that people are surprised by it. Most teenagers use technology to communicate with their friends and for that purpose email is, well, too formal. (Apart from anything else, because it’s an asynchronous medium, you don’t know whether someone has read your message.) So kids use synchronous messaging systems such as SMS and social networking tools that provide the required level of immediacy.
But the main reason young people don’t use email is that they haven’t yet joined the world of work. When (or if) they do, a nasty shock awaits them, because organisations are addicted to email. The average employee now-adays receives something like 100 email messages a day and coping with that deluge has become one of the challenges of a working life.
Organisational addiction to email has long since passed the point of dysfunctionality and now borders on the pathological, with employees sending messages to colleagues in nearby cubicles, people covering their backs by cc-ing everyone else and managers carpet-bombing subordinates with attachments. The real problem, in other words, is not that email is dying but that it’s out of control.
Written by John Naughton
Minimal Pencil Portraits By Ileana Hunter
Ileana Hunter is a graphite artist currently living and working in Norwich, UK. Her realistic drawings are inspired by both the fluidity of the human body and the hidden lyricism of mundane objects.
Shady 2.0 BET Cypher feat. Slaughter House & Yelawolf (Tried By 12 Sample)
Bad Mutherf#cker
“Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for I am the baddest motherf#cker in the Goddamn valley.” – Jarhead.
Chimney House by Marcio Kogan – Studio MK27
In the bustling city of Sao Paulo, Brazil, this cool and calm retreat provides quite a contrast from the activity around it. The Chimney House by Marcio Kogan and Studio MK27 has a level of architectural harmony that is akin to a Japanese rock garden, where everything feels to be perfectly in its place.
A common trait of Kogan designs is continued in the Chimney House, as the slatted decking, lined concrete ceilings and patched hardwood floors start at one wall and stretch perfectly to another. This provides a visual “vanishing point” within the home’s landscape, and an even sense of balance and symmetry amongst its character.
The main level of the Chimney House is wide and open, used for entertainment, relaxing and dining. A central living and dining area is flanked on both sides by garden patios, but the separation between them is subtle enough that the entire space feels like one large, uniform atrium. On the second floor, much of the area is blocked off into personal spaces with plenty of privacy. One section of the upper floor opens into a long veranda overlooking the city around it and the gardens below. Toward the veranda’s end is the home’s namesake, a metallic chimney that is established as a design accent, not something to be hidden away or designed around.
Agoria & Carl Craig ‘Speechless’ (Gesaffelstein remix)
Sweet play by Elsa Lambinet
Sweet play by Elsa Lambinet from Dezeen on Vimeo.
Want more choice in your chocolate box? Mix and match fillings and toppings with these modular chocolates by French designer Elsa Lambinet.