Category Archives: TRAVEL
Wish I was here…
Mars One Introduction Film
This movie shows how Mars One plans to establish a human settlement on Mars in 2023. Special appearance by our ambassabor Nobel Prize winner prof. dr. Gerard ‘t Hooft.
For more information visit www.mars-one.com
Wish I was here.
Contemporary Brown Desert Residence in Arizona
The city of Scottsdale, Arizona has been described by many as a desert version of Miami’s South Beach with plenty of late night partying all throughout the area, so it makes sense that such an incredible bachelor pad would reside in this desert town.
Designed by the team at Lake|Flato Architects, the Brown Residence is located on an expansive golf community, with incredible views offered through the entire dwelling thanks to the massive floor to ceiling windows. The backyard was designed for entertaining, equipped with a fire pit, swimming pool, and jacuzzi for taking in the scenic desert landscape.
Star Wars Burlesque on Tour 2012
Star Wars Burlesque on Tour 2012 from Tenderloins on Vimeo.
Star Wars Burlesque is going on the road in 2012!
MELBOURNE
Athenaeum Theatre
Sat 25th & Sun 26th February
Tickets from ticketek.com.au
ADELAIDE
Her Majesty’s Theatre
Thu 5th April
Tickets on sale next week from Bass
NEWCASTLE
Civic Theatre
Fri 13th April
Tickets on sale soon from Ticketek
CANBERRA
Playhouse Theatre
Fri 4th May
Tickets on sale soon
SYDNEY
The Vanguard
Wed 15th, Thu 16th, Fri 17th, Sat 18th & Sun 19th August
Tickets on sale now from thevanguard.com.au
Disclaimer: This is a parody production. Star Wars™ and it’s characters are registered trademarks of Lucasfilm Entertainment Company Lt or Lucasfilm Ltd. This production is not sponsored, endorsed by or affiliated with Lucasfilm Entertainment Company Ltd, Lucasfilm Ltd or any of its subsidiaries or affiliated companies and/or third party licensors.
Cyberwar Is With Us: Details Emerge About Use Of Stuxnet Worm In Iran
Stuxnet: Anatomy of a Computer Virus from Patrick Clair on Vimeo.
TechCrunch Artile –
In an excellent piece by David Sanger, the NY Times has confirmed what we all suspected: that the US deployed the Stuxnet worm, a powerful worm that targets very specific machines within Iran’s nuclear enrichment program.
Mr. Obama decided to accelerate the attacks — begun in the Bush administration and code-named Olympic Games — even after an element of the program accidentally became public in the summer of 2010 because of a programming error that allowed it to escape Iran’s Natanz plant and sent it around the world on the Internet. Computer security experts who began studying the worm, which had been developed by the United States and Israel, gave it a name: Stuxnet.
Some inkling to the source of the worm came in 2011 when Gary Samore, White House Coordinator for Arms Control and Weapons of Mass Destruction, said “we’re glad they [the Iranians] are having trouble with their centrifuge machine and that we – the US and its allies – are doing everything we can to make sure that we complicate matters for them.” However, until now the worm, which jumped out of the Natanz facility and into the wild, was considered a rare and effective cyber attack by an unknown party.
The worm took down “1000 of 5000″ of the centrifuges running n the facility. “It appears to be the first time the United States has repeatedly used cyberweapons to cripple another country’s infrastructure, achieving, with computer code, what until then could be accomplished only by bombing a country or sending in agents to plant explosives,” wrote Sanger.
There are two interesting points in this mission, one that could be rightly termed a fiasco. First: cyberwar is real and it is happening now. If this worm can shut down a secure nuclear facility, even through the “air gap” between the Internet and the facility’s internal network, then we are all in danger. I’m not suggesting that we will see reactors explode and planes fall out of the sky. I could, however, see the day when it becomes harder to perform research unpopular to a certain regime. Politics aside, we are living in a world where one nation can perform no end of trickery on another in the name of national security.
Second, this attack shows us that cyberwarfare can cause collateral damage. Because this worm jumped out of the facility and into the wild, it’s clear that even the best laid schemes aft gang agley. Anyone – be it in government, security, or development – who thinks this is a magic bullet akin to the neutron bomb. As we become dependent on the networks that support our lives – visibly or invisibly – a worm that has jumped the rails can (and dare I say will) come to affect all of us at some point. It’s just a matter of time.
Cyberwar has grown up. I hope we learn to use it more wisely than we’ve used other technologies of destruction.
Tourists poster by Jim Field
Jim Field – “During my trip to Australia a few years ago I became obsessed with photographing tourists going about their ‘touristy’ ways, they started to look uniform to me – dressed in their chinos, silly hats and armed with digital cameras. I then created a series of illustrations based upon the photographs and created a poster.”
You can purchase one of the Lithographic prints from my store here.
Apolis + Fabric Auckland Market Bag
Apolis have teamed up with Auckland retailer, Fabric to create the last item from their Local + Global project, “connecting regional retailers with our global advocacy and helping to create consistent employment for artisans in rural Bangladesh”. The Apolis + Fabric Auckland Market Bag is sold exclusively at Fabric in Auckland, New Zealand. The press shot above shows some of New Zealand’s finest exports, including The New Order Magazine.
Jiro Dreams of Sushi
JIRO DREAMS OF SUSHI is the story of 85 year-old Jiro Ono, considered by many to be the world’s greatest sushi chef. He is the proprietor of Sukiyabashi Jiro, a 10-seat, sushi-only restaurant inauspiciously located in a Tokyo subway station. Despite its humble appearances, it is the first restaurant of its kind to be awarded a prestigious 3 star Michelin review, and sushi lovers from around the globe make repeated pilgrimage, calling months in advance and shelling out top dollar for a coveted seat at Jiro’s sushi bar. For most of his life, Jiro has been mastering the art of making sushi, but even at his age he sees himself still striving for perfection, working from sunrise to well beyond sunset to taste every piece of fish; meticulously train his employees; and carefully mold and finesse the impeccable presentation of each sushi creation. At the heart of this story is Jiro’s relationship with his eldest son Yoshikazu, the worthy heir to Jiro’s legacy, who is unable to live up to his full potential in his father’s shadow. The feature film debut of director David Gelb, JIRO DREAMS OF SUSHI is a thoughtful and elegant meditation on work, family, and the art of perfection, chronicling Jiro’s life as both an unparalleled success in the culinary world, and a loving yet complicated father.
Stately Sandwiches: Deconstructed Sandwiches From Each State
Stately Sandwiches is a project put together by art student and designer Kelly Pratt. The goal is to present a sandwich for each U.S. state.
Tom Ford Sells His Home in London
Tom Ford has sold his home in London’s Mayfair neighborhood for an undisclosed price and is reportedly on the hunt for a new residence in England’s capital.
The designer bought the 8,222 square Georgian townhouse in 2004 for £5.75 million, or just over $9 million at current exchange. He tried to sell it in 2009 for £45 million — about $71 million in today’s money — but took it off the market when he didn’t find a buyer.
Now that he’s sold his Mayfair residence, he’s said to be looking for a house in London’s South Kensington area. Until he finds one, he has residences in Paris, New York, and New Mexico where he can stay.
Take a look at one of his other homes in London’s Chelsea neighborhood, a 3,700-square-foot home that a subsequent owner listed for £8.5 million (about $13.4 million) in 2009.
FERRAN ADRIÀ: TASTES CHANGE
The Talks Interview –
Mr. Adrià, are you the best chef in the world?
You can’t measure something like that. However, my restaurant elBulli, not I, was certainly the most influential restaurant in the world. You can observe the fact that some of the most successful chefs now in their 30s and 40s worked at elBulli at some point. That is something that you can measure and a point of praise that I can accept. But everything else? Whether I’m the best or not, no one can really say. I did indeed work there, but I’m a long way from working alone.
Cooking in a restaurant is always a team effort.
Most definitely. That was the heart and soul of our kitchen! Everyone who found himself there committed himself entirely.
What is your favorite restaurant? You must be incredibly picky…
That varies. I’ve never consciously had a favorite. What I enjoy is the actual process of discovery and becoming acquainted with new things, even as a guest. It is simply unbelievable what our generation is able to do in comparison to those who came before us.
What do you mean?
We have the ability to eat out several times a year and enjoy the various cuisines of multiple regions. Forty years ago that wasn’t yet the case. The world of discovery was still reserved only for the rich. For most, eating wasn’t about enjoying food, but rather simply consuming enough nutrients.
Have you retained any interest in plain traditional fare?
These are really two different ways to cook. For the one, the name says it all: it is food for traditional purposes. The other is a high art. What a person likes is certainly dependent upon his or her individual taste or how he or she happens to be feeling on that particular day. It’s no different for me.
So you can still enjoy a simple plate of pasta? For a lot of people Italian is the universal go-to cuisine.
Did you know that there are now actually more Japanese restaurants than Italian?I must admit I didn’t.
That’s exactly what I mean. Tastes change. Especially young people prefer Italian dishes less and less. They would rather have something light and fresh. Just wait and see: fifty years from now even the current trend will have changed.
Is cooking more of an art or a science for you?
Cooking was the first occupation pursued by humanity. Since then we have experienced an endless evolution in the history of cooking; we continually discover new possibilities. You can therefore most definitely look at cooking as an ongoing experiment.
Is the motto “cook from the heart” nevertheless an applicable statement for you? In any case your kitchen bears a resemblance to a sterile research laboratory.
Research always has a great deal to do with passion. If you pay close attention, you’ll realize that nearly all researchers pursue their professions passionately. It makes no difference how sterile the environment seems.
Your restaurant was only open six months out of the year despite receiving 2 million reservation requests for that period. Was artificial scarcity – the exclusivity of a reservation – part of your concept?
It was certainly one of the factors contributing to the appeal of the restaurant, but we also needed those six months of quiet in order to prepare something new for the upcoming season.
That’s true. There was never a dish from a previous season, even though items on the menu consisted of up to 35 portions.
The challenge for us was to continually develop a new palette for the next year. In your time as a restaurateur, if you don’t occasionally think about closing again you don’t have this challenge. There simply isn’t the room or time.
With a mere 50 guests per night, you employed roughly 70 staff to see to their needs. On top of that you cooked and experimented with the most expensive ingredients. Despite the high price for a meal on your menu, there can’t be much money left over.
The purpose of elBulli was never to make money. Financially, our goal has always been the continuation of the concept. Even universities have examined elBulli as a special case. Overnight it became a magnet, a research center for culinary art.
Is the creation of food more important to you than serving it?
Yes. If I didn’t see it that way I would have no perspective! I can’t make people happy if I’m not happy myself. That applies to anyone who tries to achieve something in their life: if you’re not happy, you can’t transfer any happiness to anyone else. With elBulli, the aspect of creativity was always most important for us. Worrying about whether or not people were able to experience good food and a nice time just wasn’t the point. I developed a couple smaller restaurants with my brother to do that – elBulli was always about much more.
Secrets of Superbrands: Technology / Fashion / Food
Alex Riley explores the world of the superbrands in a three part series on Technology, Fashion and Food – how they get us to buy their stuff, trust them and even idolise them.
The Wythe Hotel in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY
Wythe Hotel started with the discovery of an old factory on the Brooklyn waterfront. Built in 1901 as a cooperage, we have preserved, renovated, and turned our historically industrial building into a place where people feel welcome.
80 Wythe Ave. at N. 11th Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY 11249
P:718-460-8000 F:718-460-8001 hello@wythehotel.com
Click here for more information.
The IKEA Premiere of UPPLEVA
The Times Of India Article –
IKEA is already the one-stop shop for smart and compact home furnishing. Now they are venturing into the world of technology-with theIKEA TV.
The new furniture range, named UPPLEVA the Swedish word for experience, integrates an LED TV, a sound system with wireless bass speakers, an internet connection and CD, DVD and Blu-ray players-all in one self-assembly piece.
Although the TV and the other electronics are made by Chinese manufacturer TCL, IKEA has built everything around them, hiding the masses of cables that can be a nuisance and make a living room look shabby.
To further simplify things, IKEA and TCL have combined all the controls into a single remote. The furniture surface is especially designed to allow the remote’s signals through, so the devices can remain hidden from view.
The TV screens are available in four different sizes, from 24 inches (60 centimeters) to 46 inches (117 centimeters), and in a range of colors including gray, black and blue. Users are also able to plug in their iPods or other MP3 music players.
Like most IKEA furniture, the UPPLEVA is purchased in a flat-pack and is ready for assembly at home for those handy with screwdrivers and other tools.
The furniture comes in three designs and will be sold first in Sweden, France, Poland, Germany and Italy in June, with a few more marketsdue to launch in the second half of the year. By the first half of next year, it will be available worldwide, with the cheapest costing about 6,500 Swedish kronor ($955).
To test market appetite for its latest innovation, IKEA had a survey conducted by pollster YouGov. The poll showed that three out of four people want less visible cables in their living rooms and 50 percent wanted to reduce the amount of electronics lying about.
The study, done in five countries with more than 5,200 respondents between Feb. 29 and March 15 this year, also showed that 60 percent of the people asked have between three to four remote controls at home.
“We’ve realized that people are watching more TV and are using electronics in their living rooms more and more,” IKEA spokeswoman Ylva Magnusson said. “We came up with this because we found that people want to get rid of the cables and they don’t want those mountains of remote controls either.”
Martin Rask, a 38-year old from Stockholm, said the all-in-one concept sounded interesting but wondered how it could keep up with new technologies.
“The furniture is a tempting idea-I’m wrestling with a bundle of cables at home myself at the moment-but the problem is that so many new things are released all the time,” he said. “I’ve had three different Internet suppliers in the past year for example, and imagine if you had an old VHS player built into your furniture that no one is watching.”
Magnusson at IKEA said that although the electronic devices are physically attached to the furniture, there is plenty of room for customers to put in IKEA-designed add-ons.
IKEA employs more than 130,000 people and has 280 stores in 25 countries. Last year it drew 655 million customers.
High Tech Transformers Ride at Universal Studios
Fans of the Transformers film series will be happy to know that director Michael Bay worked closely with Universal in designing the ride. As the director of all three Transformers films, no one is more knowledgeable about the intricate details and nuances of the robotic superheroes than Bay. Thus Universal was guaranteed a ride that is true to the films and that will appease the most exacting Transformers fans. When Bay signed on as creative consultant, he demanded that Universal hire the visual effects company of his choosing, and not the one they already had lined up. Bay felt that only Industrial Light and Magic(ILM), a division of Lucasfilm LTD, could handle the “characters made up of 25,000 parts.”