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Friday, May 13, 2016

The Most Powerful Photos In History

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This is a “Punt Gun”- used for duck hunting, it had the potential to kill 50 birds in one fell swoop- it was banned it the late 1860’s.

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Union prisoners receive rations at Fort Sumter in 1864

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Photo captured of a girl in the early 1900s at a gravesite. It wasn’t until years later that the abnormality was discovered


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The World’s Record black sea bass caught by Edward Llewellen. It weight 425 lbs. He bought it in alone. 1903


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Annette Kellerman promotes women’s right to wear a fitted one-piece bathing suit, 1907. She was arrested for indecency


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Turkish official teasing starved Armenian children by showing bread during the Armenian Genocide, 1915

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Measuring bathing suits – if they were too short, women would be fined, 1920′s


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Samuel Reshevsky, age 8, defeating several chess masters at once in France, 1920


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Prohibition- Alcohol barrels to be burned (1924)


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Circus hippo pulling a cart, 1924


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The real Winnie the Pooh and Christopher Robin, ca. 1927

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The night they ended Prohibition, December 5th 1933


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Shooting practice for German soldiers in 1935.

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The original prototype of Mt. Rushmore in 1941- this was before funding ran out.


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Little Kids React to the Revealing of a Villain in a Puppet Show – 1944


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A beautiful suicide – 23 year-old Evelyn McHale jumped from the 83rd floor of the Empire State Building and landed on a United Nations limousine, 1947


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Moody Jacobs shows a giant bruise on the side his patient, Ann Hodges, after she became the only person in history to have been struck by a meteorite. 1954


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Laika, the first dog in space, has her capsule built around her. No provisions were made for her return, and she died in orbit. 1957


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Ruby Bridges, first african-american to attend a white elementary school in the South (Nov. 14th, 1960)


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Yuri Gagarin, first man in space (1961)


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Unknown soldier in Vietnam, 1965


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Wonder Woman – Linda Carter 1977


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Street Skateboarding in Venice 2010






Saturday, March 5, 2016

Cina Malaysia cuba berpolitik cara "Cina China" atau "Cina Singapore" ?!!



Bingung kerana Cina Malaysia sudah 'kumpulkan' segala kononnya 'kekuatan' yang mereka ada untuk TOLAK BN d PRU13..ya nampak macam puok ni dah berjaya..hampir 100% Cina Malaysia tidak mengundi atau pilih BN d PRU13 kali ini...akhirnya mereka sedar..harapan yang d beri kononnya inilah PRU yang bakal melihat BN tumbang hanyalah SANDIWARA puok kera dalam jagaan. 
Keputusan yang Cina Malaysia buat seakan memakan diri..benteng SETIAKAWAN yang d bina lebih 60 tahun runtuh sebelum waktunya..Melayu UMNO tak pernah zalimkan Cina selama ini menang besar..Kuasa Melayu tiba-tiba d lihat sudah ada tanda yang jelas..SEPAKAT ! 
Slogan "inikali laah" rupanya betul-betul..Ini Kali Lah Melayu tunjuk kuasa..Ini Kali laah, Melayu bangkit untuk pertahankan apa yang sepatutnya HAK MELAYU !


Thursday, March 3, 2016

Earthquake Exposes Gaps in Indonesia’s Tsunami On These Wednesday, ‎2 ‎March, ‎2016

A sign points the way to a tsunami-evacuation route in Indonesia.ENLARGE

JAKARTA—A large earthquake off the west coast of Indonesia has exposed major flaws in the multimillion-dollar warning system installed after the deadly 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, raising questions about whether the country would be able to prevent a similar disaster.

None of the country’s 22 warning buoys were working at the time of the earthquake, Indonesia’s disaster agency said Thursday. An official separately blamed the malfunctions on vandalism by fishermen and inadequate maintenance.
Indonesia straddles the Indian and Pacific oceans in one of the world’s most seismically active areas. On Wednesday evening, a shallow 7.8-magnitude quake struck about 500 miles from Padang in West Sumatra province, stirring panic and sending residents scurrying for higher ground. No killer wave materialized and no damage or deaths were reported.
Authorities issued a tsunami warning, but struggled to acquire the data needed to rescind it quickly, waiting nearly three hours until it was clear that massive waves hadn’t formed.

A police officer stands on the roof of a tsunami evacuation center in Indonesia.ENLARGE
A police officer stands on the roof of a tsunami evacuation center in Indonesia. PHOTO: REUTERS

Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for the National Disaster Management Agency, said all of the 22 buoys in the area operated by Indonesia needed to be replaced. Five other buoys operated by India, Thailand, the U.S. and Australia were working, he said. However, those are much further from the Sumatra coastline than the Indonesian-operated buoys.

After the 2004 earthquake and tsunami, which killed an estimated 228,000 around the Indian Ocean, regional tsunami-warning centers were set up in Indonesia, India and Australia. These centers use a series of seismic sensors that sit on the seafloor and floating buoys that relay information to land using satellites.

Knowing how big a wave is and being able to estimate when it will arrive onshore is crucial to determining how much flooding will result and creating more targeted evacuations, said Costas Synolakis, director the Tsunami Research Center at the University of Southern California.
“This is not a trivial matter,’’ Mr. Synolakis said. “False warnings diminish the credibility of the system, people become cynical and complacent.”
Djoko Hartoyo, a spokesman for the Coordinating Ministry of Maritime Affairs who worked as a project manager on the buoy warning system from 2007 to 2011, blamed the malfunctioning on ``vandalism,’’ saying that fishermen have tampered with the buoys by removing their antennas, preventing them from sending data to the main tsunami warning center in Jakarta.

An interactive map provided by the U.S. Geological Survey shows the location of Wednesday’s quake off Sumatra.ENLARGE
An interactive map provided by the U.S. Geological Survey shows the location of Wednesday’s quake off Sumatra. PHOTO: US GEOLOGICAL SURVEY

Another major concern is lack of maintenance. Mr. Hartoyo said Indonesia has tried to fix damaged buoys but doesn’t have the budget to do so. Mr. Nugroho estimated that Indonesia would need around 30 billion rupiah ($2.2 million) a year to maintain its 22 buoys.
Officials responsible for budgeting weren’t immediately available to comment on the matter.
Parts of Indonesia’s warning system did work on Wednesday. The temblor struck just before 8 p.m., and Indonesia’s meteorological agency quickly issued a tsunami warning based on a system of projections made after an earthquake occurs. Alarms sounded and people moved to higher ground.
But officials say public preparedness remains limited. Some people still head to the coast to check the sea level rather than heed evacuation warnings. Others try to leave cities and towns by car or motorcycle, causing traffic jams—something that happened Wednesday and during a similar earthquake in 2012.
Public confidence in evacuation buildings—tall structures built after 2004 as safe places for residents in low-lying areas—is also very weak. People often try to go to distant higher ground rather than the shelters closer at hand, Mr. Nugroho said, adding that local governments need to conduct drills more frequently to increase preparedness.


Sunday, February 28, 2016

Apple v. FBI: How to Do Your Part

Apple v. FBI: How to Do Your Part
“This is not a case about one isolated iPhone,” says Apple in the introduction to Apple Inc.’s Motion to Vacate Order Compelling Apple Inc. to Assist Agents in Search, and Opposition to Government’s Motion to Compel Assistance. I’ve just read and reread it. You should do the same.
It reads more like a press release than a motion attempting to vacate a specific judicial order. This may be because we simply don’t have contemporary laws designed to deal with the issue. It is also interesting that the document seems to conflate legal arguments with policy arguments. This is easy to explain, as (1) most of the law is on the government’s side and (2) passions are high:
“If Tim Cook’s kid was kidnapped, you know the data from that iPhone would be at the FBI in five minutes flat!” 
— Popular rhetorical statement paraphrased from numerous social media sites
“In short, the government wants to compel Apple to create a crippled and insecure product. Once the process is created, it provides an avenue for criminals and foreign agents to access millions of iPhones. And once developed for our government, it is only a matter of time before foreign governments demand the same tool.” 
— From Apple, Inc.’s Motion to Vacate
Apple is surely right about one thing: “This is not a case about one isolated iPhone.” The opinion of every lawyer I’ve asked is that Apple v. FBI is headed for the Supreme Court. The problem is, I don’t want the Supreme Court (or any court) empowered to make policy – that’s a job for the Legislative branch. Regardless of what you think of Congress, this is their job and they’d better get this one right. What it means to be a digital citizen and identifying the border between security and privacy are two of the most important issues of our time.

Can This iPhone Be Hacked?

Let’s stop talking about whether or not Apple can or cannot hack the phone. It is within the capabilities of several organizations (including Apple) to retrieve the data from this specific iPhone 5c. As my good friend Col. John Fenzel (Ret.) told me, “The NSA most certainly has the expertise to decrypt Farook’s iPhone, and if they don’t, that represents not only a technical security gap, but a virtual chasm of expertise at Fort Meade that needs to be addressed now.” In other words, Apple can do it, the NSA can do it, and so can John McAfee (just ask him).

The Balance Between Security and Privacy

Taking into consideration that the entirety of our digital lives – the 150-plus times each day that we check our smartphones, the amount of information we store in the cloud (remember, there is no cloud; it’s just someone else’s computer), the fact that everything about us, our tax ID numbers, social security numbers, credit card numbers, contact information, financial data, medical history, entertainment preferences, our computer software, the content we own, everything we are – is digitally described and stored somewhere, the right question to ask is: “What is the proper balance between security and privacy?”

The Value of Information

According to Cornell University Law School’s Legal Information Institute, “The Fourth Amendment originally enforced the notion that ‘each man’s home is his castle’, secure from unreasonable searches and seizures of property by the government. It protects against arbitrary arrests, and is the basis of the law regarding search warrants, stop-and-frisk, safety inspections, wiretaps, and other forms of surveillance, as well as being central to many other criminal law topics and to privacy law.” So, in practice, the Constitution says that even if Apple is compelled to create a piece of software that compromises the security of iOS, it will only be used lawfully. Our Fourth Amendment rights are sacred, and there is nothing about Apple’s motion that suggests otherwise.
I asked my friend Jane Rhodes-Wolfe, FBI Section Chief of the Exploitation Threat Section/Counterterrorism Division, to tell me why the FBI is choosing this particular phone at this particular time to fight this particular battle. She could not comment on the pending litigation, but she did say, “The evidence obtained from communication (telephonic and electronic) records is key to law enforcement and intelligence matters. The evidence obtained may identify key members of an organized group or contacts of a lone actor. That information leads investigations in locating witnesses, co-conspirators, facilitators and influencers. Communication is key to understanding the crime or terrorist attack and bringing those responsible to justice or to thwart further nefarious acts.”
Eavesdropping on communication is good for catching bad guys. I get it. But why limit our thoughts to getting info about a terrorist off of an iPhone? What about all of the other data in Metamerica – the digital description of each and every one of us? What about the remarkably large digital infrastructure that is completely invisible to us but enables almost every facet of our modern, connected lives?

The Danger of Compelling Apple to Comply

There is another side to this story, and it foretells a dark, evil place where no one – not Tim Cook, not the FBI, not the Judge, not you, not I – knows enough to snap to judgment. What would the world look like if only nation-states and bad guys had access to your most personal information? Jane pushed back and said, “How would that make the future different than today?” There’s a pretty profound difference. Today, only Apple, the NSA and a few virtuoso hackers have the ability to hack our phones. If Apple is forced to create a backdoor, the code will get out into the wild and no one knows what would happen at scale. Don’t pretend you can imagine it – you can’t!
The horror show won’t happen all at once. One scenario has nation-states and law enforcement chipping away at our digital liberties (however we will ultimately define them) until the law of unintended consequences rules. In that scenario, average citizens will be 100 percent at risk 100 percent of the time and “bad guys” (however we ultimately define them) will go so far underground, they will cease to be findable.  Don't limit your imagination to human "bad guys," the bad actors are likely to be machine learning algorithms.
Now, bring together every nightmare scenario you can imagine from every Orwellian-style writing you’ve ever seen, and you will start to understand the remarkable number of bad things that might happen in a digital world where there are no metaphorical door locks, and not even bathrooms are private.

Your Future, You Decide

Which brings me to the most critical, time-sensitive thing about Apple v. FBI: your personal role in our collective future. This is not a hypothetical case; it is real and it is happening now. What you need to do is decide how you want Congress to act. What kind of law do you want to see passed? What does it mean to be a digital citizen of the United States of America?
If you’ve read this far, you are probably wondering how to frame the debate, with whom to have it, and what to do when you’re sure you have an answer. My suggestion is to speak to everyone you know. This is not a technical debate. Don’t worry about who can or cannot hack any particular device. Just keep discussing the real issue: “What is the proper balance between security and privacy?” It is truly one of the most important questions of our time, and we owe it to our posterity to have a civil, Socratic debate about it.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Tattoos so pretty even your mother might approve! Artist designs incredible body art masterpieces that look just like beautiful watercolour paintings

A South Koran tattoo artist has used the human body as a canvas to create incredible designs that resemble a watercolour painting.Instagram user Tattooist Silo creates the tattoos, using pastel colours to give the designs a feminine feel.The talented artist has done tattoos of cats, floral arrangements and a lotus flower using the technique, and photos of his work have received more than 600 likes on social media.

Unique design: A South Korean tattoo artist creates tattoos that resemble watercolour paintings

Unique design: A South Korean tattoo artist creates tattoos that resemble watercolour paintings


Finer details: Instagram user Tattooist Silo uses pastel colours and blurred lines to create the effect

Finer details: Instagram user Tattooist Silo uses pastel colours and blurred lines to create the effect

One design shows the tops of a women's feet covered in colourful flowers surrounded by greenery.

The design extends up the woman's ankle to create a flower in bloom.
The use of pastel colours and soft lines means the tattoo, which Silo described as a 'cover up', resembles a watercolour painting.


'I didn't think I could love you more': This design features a heart surrounded by flowers along with a message

'I didn't think I could love you more': This design features a heart surrounded by flowers along with a message

'Night black cat': Photos of his work have received more than 600 likes on social media

'Night black cat': Photos of his work have received more than 600 likes on social media

Cat lover: One person chose to get a realistic pictures of cats tattooed on the top of their arm

Cat lover: One person chose to get a realistic pictures of cats tattooed on the top of their arm

Another design featured a 'night black cat surrounded by flowers'.The artist behind the designs, Instagram user Tattooist Silo, works for Aro Tattoo which has two stores in Seoul, the capital of South Korea.On their website Aro Tattoo said customers are encouraged to send through the design they would like before collaborating with the artist to create the piece.

In bloom: This lotus flower used soft pink, orange, blues and purple to create a feminine feel


In bloom: This lotus flower used soft pink, orange, blues and purple to create a feminine feel

Dainty: Tattooist Silo works at Aro Tattoo in the South Korean capital, Seoul

Dainty: Tattooist Silo works at Aro Tattoo in the South Korean capital, Seoul

SUMBER



Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Queensland Catholic school strike: teachers say it's not just about pay

Queensland Catholic school teachers say their employers are behaving like "naughty students" in a long-running wage dispute they insist isn't just about money.
More than 8500 Independent Education Union of Australia staff at 242 schools have been authorised to stop work on Thursday – the eighth and largest action in the 10-month dispute.
Central to the ongoing argument is the $6700 disparity between what experienced Queensland teachers earn each year compared to their New South Wales counterparts.
The union is pushing for a 3.25 per cent pay rise, but the Queensland Catholic Education Commission is offering a 2.5 per cent rise.
IEUA branch secretary Terry Burke said under the lower offer, the pay gap would only be reduced to $4300 a year.
"It's making it harder to remain committed to the work that you're doing," he said on Thursday.
Union members were ready to resolve the situation, Mr Burke said, and there was still room to do so before the next meeting in March.
"We're ready to talk ... but we don't see that there's anything on the table from the employers that's actually going to resolve it," he said.
Striking Queensland Catholic school teachers protesting at South Bank.
Striking Queensland Catholic school teachers protesting at South Bank. Photo: Robert Shakespeare
The QCEC said the comparisons were irrelevant because teachers in NSW work different hours and term dates.
"The offer is fair in the current Queensland marketplace and it comes with full back pay," QCEC executive director Lee-Anne Perry said.
Police watch on as the teachers rally.
Police watch on as the teachers rally. Photo: Robert Shakespeare
IEUA Queensland and Northern Territory president Andrew Elphinstone said there was a lot of parental support for the teachers.
"They understand the pressures that we have as teachers – it's not just about money, it's also about workload and supporting us to provide quality education for their students," he said.
Brisbane's All Hallow's school is one of 242 Catholic schools affected by Thursday's strike action.
Brisbane's All Hallow's school is one of 242 Catholic schools affected by Thursday's strike action. Photo: Michelle Smith
Mr Elphinstone told a spirited meeting at the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre their employers were "slow learners".
"They are like the naughty students you send to the 'responsible thinking' room," he said.
"When they come back, they refuse to negotiate."
Mr Elphinstone added: "We might need toV remind them we are not going to continue to be undervalued and disrespected."

SUMBER

VIDEO

GIRLS’ GENERATION MEMBER TAEYEON OPENS UP ABOUT HER FIRST DEBUT EXPERIENCE AS SOLO ARTIST


“When I was getting trained (for my debut), I didn’t know I’d be a member of a girl group like Girls’ Generation,” the K-Pop star Taeyeon said to host Yoo Hee Yeol, during the talk show, reported OSEN.“But it wasn’t like I only wanted to debut as a solo artist, added the singer.The Girls’ Generation member also shared her experience of releasing her first solo album to the host Yeol who is also K-pop boy band WINNER & singer.It seemed that she was extremely nervous while making her first solo album. According to her, it was rather a nerve-racking and devastating experience as everyone was looking at her, reported Soompi.“I don’t know why I’m this way either, but if there’s a camera I just get nervous and forget what I was going to say and can’t think,” said the Girls’ Generation member.The South Korean singer & actress admitted that she is scared of cameras when questioned whether she had stage fear. Indeed, it seemed that she was absolutely out of control during her first solo performance, despite of performing in the Girls’ Generation group.After the discussion, the Girls’ Generation member performed her solo songs “I,” “Gemini,” and “Rain.” Indeed, “I” gives reason to cheer to Girls’ Generation Taeyeon. The song “I” is so special for her as she wrote the song’s lyrics in which she has expressed freedom and what she is.Well, the South Korean singer & actress Taeyeon (Kim Tae-yeon) has performed for the South Korean girl group Girls’ Generation and its subgroup TTS (TaeTiSeo), as well as for SM the Ballad. However, her experience during her first solo album is quite unforgettable for her, as per her statements during the music talk show “Yoo Hee Yeol’s Sketchbook.”

READ MORE AT: 

 TAEYEON WORKED HARD TO FIND THE PERFECT CONCEPT FOR ALBUM: ‘I’ CLAIMED NO.1 SPOT ON BILLBOARD WORLD ALBUM CHART!

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