jess3 blogs,



Der Mensch als Industriepalast (Man as Industrial Palace)
Stuttgart, 1926. Chromolithograph. National Library of Medicine.

Fritz Kahn
(1888-1968)
[author]

Kahn’s modernist visualization of the digestive and respiratory system as "industrial palace," really a chemical plant, was conceived in a period when the German chemical industry was the world’s most advanced.


my baby



Eminem Tops in 2002


"The Eminem Show," "8 Mile" among year's best sellers

Eminem's third album, The Eminem Show, was the best-selling record of 2002, according to SoundScan, the music industry's record keeper of sales for all music products. The rapper scored a double achievement for the year, as the 8 Mile soundtrack, which featured several of his songs, was the year's fifth best-seller at 3.2 million, despite only two months of release.
St. Louis rapper Nelly's Nellyville was the year's second best-selling record with sales of 4.8 million, strong, but far below his Motor City counterpart. Teen sensation Avril Lavigne sold a hearty 3.9 million copies of her debut album, Let Go, which dropped in at Number Three.

Though industry-wide sales were down for the second year in a row -- five percent from 2000 to 2001 and nine percent from 2001 to this year -- country music thrived. The genre offered strong entries by Tim McGraw, Kenny Chesney, Toby Keith and Faith Hill and proved resilient through thin times with an eleven percent sales increase over 2001. Four country offerings broke into the Top Ten: The Dixie Chicks' Home sold 3.4 million copies at Number Four, Alan Jackson's Drive moved 3 million at Number Eight, the O Brother Where Art Thou? soundtrack, despite being a 2000 release, sold 2.7 million copies at Number Nine. And Shania Twain's Up!, which just crept into stores a month ago, still managed to sell 2.6 million copies this year at Number Ten.

The year's other Top Ten finishers were Pink's Missundaztood (Number Six, 3 million sold) and Ashanti's self-titled debut (Number Seven, also 3 million).
click for full size image

click for full size image

whos name is that on the left ???????? spooky



The Streets Original Pirate Material
Rolling Stone (12/26/02, p.110) - Included in Rolling Stone's "50 Best Albums of 2002"
Rolling Stone (12/26/02, p.104) - Ranked #1 in Rolling Stone's list of 2002's "10 Best Debuts"

Spin (1/03, p.71) - Ranked #17 on Spin's list of 2002's "Albums of the Year"

Q Magazine (12/02, p.68) - Included in Q Magazine's "50 Best Albums of 2002"

Entertainment Weekly (12/20-27/02, p.126) - Ranked #1 on EW's list of 2002's "Albums of the Year"

Rolling Stone (11/28/02, p.86) - "...Funky....[With] hilarious faux-cockney rhymes..."

Spin (11/02, p.128) - 8 out of 10 - "...Rarely short of poignant..."

Entertainment Weekly (11/8/02, p.102-3) - "...[Skinner] takes U.K. garage to a new level, making for the year's most striking debut..." - Rating: A

CMJ (10/28/02, p.7) - "...It's not just that Skinner's ideas are innovative, but also the way that he so deftly brings the varying styles together, that makes his debut record so special..."



Two artificial fish swim in a fishtank at the Eamex Corp's laboratory in Osaka, western Japan on December 26, 2002. The company says it uses small pieces of artificial muscle, or polymer actuator, attached between the bodies and tails of the fish to help them swim. The fish were jointly developed by Eamex and Daiichikogei, another Osaka-based company. A set of two fish in a tank will be on sale in January 2003 for an open price, which company officials expect to be around 16,000 yen ($133). REUTERS/Keiko Kanai

i want one !
thats america for ya


U.S. soldiers stationed on a rooftop dress for Christmas at Bagram Air Base near Kabul, December 25, 2002. U.S. soldiers serving in Afghanistan celebrated the birth of Christ with prayers and hymns and Christmas dinner.



W. Virginia Sells $315M Powerball Ticket



By GAVIN McCORMICK, Associated Press Writer

HURRICANE, W.Va. - Christmas is over for the rest of us, but for the winner of the $314.9 million Powerball jackpot it just may go on forever.

Only one winning ticket was sold in the Christmas night drawing, making it the largest sum ever won with a single ticket in U.S. history. The ticket was purchased at the C&L Super Serve in Hurricane, 25 miles west of Charleston, said Multi-State Lottery Association spokesman Joe Mahoney.


A man who identified himself as an attorney representing the winner contacted the West Virginia Lottery Commission Thursday morning, said Lottery Director John Musgrave.


"He said he would contact the lottery at a later date," said Musgrave, who made the announcement from the store.


The man did not identify himself nor the winner, Musgrave said. He identified the winner as a resident of Putnam County, a bedroom county sandwiched between Charleston and Huntington.


Bulla declined to identify the attorney or the potential winner.


"We don't consider it a winning ticket until validated and claimed," Bulla said.


Lottery officials planned a news conference later Thursday.


An unexpected Christmas Day run on Powerball tickets pushed the already whopping $280 million jackpot to $314.9 million just before numbers were drawn, making it the multistate lottery's largest prize ever.


The numbers in Wednesday night's drawing were 5-14-16-29-53 and the Powerball was 7.


The winning ticket was purchased Monday, said Nancy Bulla with the West Virginia Lottery Commission. The winner has an option of taking a cash payout of $170 million before taxes or collecting the entire jackpot in 30 payments over 29 years.


Because of the jackpot's size, Bulla said the state didn't have enough cash on hand to award the full amount on either option. Several million dollars could be paid now, with another payment made in early January "once funds are transferred from the Multi-State Lottery Association," she said.


The winner has 180 days to claim the prize, the third-largest lottery jackpot in U.S. history, Bulla said.


"We're asking the winner not to talk much about it until they come into our office," Bulla said. Lottery officials want the winner to call first so arrangements can be made.


Super Serve clerk Aaron Gillispie said the 24-hour grocery store and gas station was in a frenzy Thursday.


"It's a mad house," he said in an Associated Press Radio interview. "Every camera crew, every news crew, every person that has anything to do with anything wants to talk to us."


He said workers were excited at the possibility that someone from town of 5,200 residents had won.




"We have a lot of people come in regularly and say, 'If we win, we'll remember you' and that type of thing," he said. "So, everybody's wondering who sold it, and it's been pretty wild."

Store owner Larry Trogdon told NBC's "Today" that police called his house at 3 a.m. with the news.

"It was scary," he said. "Then they told me we sold the lottery ticket for $314 million. That made me relieved. Then I had to travel 90 miles to get here."

By selling the ticket, Trogdon gets $100,000.

"I have a daughter getting married this summer," he told NBC, smiling.

Mahoney said the jackpot grew after holiday sales were much higher than expected.

"We were always planning on Wednesday, Christmas Day, to be a very light day for sales," Mahoney said. "Monday and Tuesday were much higher than we expected them to be and (Christmas) ... was much higher than we anticipated it to be."

But since gas stations and convenience stores — typical lottery retailers — were open Christmas Day, throngs of people ventured out to get a piece of the action.

Powerball, the nation's largest lottery game, is sold in 23 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The Christmas Day prize was the largest Powerball jackpot ever. The game's second-largest jackpot was $295.7 million in July 1998. Last summer, it reached $295 million.

The biggest lottery jackpot in U.S. history was a Big Game prize of $363 million, won in May 2000 by ticketholders in Michigan and Illinois. The second was a $331 million Big Game jackpot split between three tickets in April.

Spain's annual Christmas lottery known as El Gordo — The Fat One — is billed as the world's richest. This year's $1.7 billion jackpot spreads wealth among millions of people. About 10,000 numbers win some kind of prize, from $20 to $200,000.

___

On the Net: Multi-State Lottery Association: http://www.powerball.com/powerball.shtm



USB Networking Solution



By David Prager and Patrick Norton


Q: My notebook computer has many digital photos and I would like to back them up onto one of my desktops without using my Zip Drive. All my PCs have USB. Can I create a network using USB?

-- Gene via email


A: USB allows up to 127 devices to be simultaneously connected for a total of 12 megabits per second of combined bandwidth. USB has become such an easy and standard interface for connecting so many devices, why not connect computers with it as well, right? Wrong -- well, at least not over a regular USB cable strung between two systems.


USB is strictly hierarchical and is controlled by one host. The host uses a master/slave protocol to communicate with attached USB devices. This means that the host initiates every kind of communication; devices cannot establish direct connection. Put two hosts (one on your notebook, one on your desktop) on the same USB chain, and you're in trouble.


Special USB cables

But wait -- networking between computers is still possible thanks to several manufacturers who have developed specialized USB cables.


BUSlink Corporation offers an affordable solution. It sells a USB file transfer cable with software and drivers for $50. This product only allows you to connect two computers.


Belkin, on the other hand, sells a product called USB Direct Connect for $80. It's a kind of miniature two-port USB hub that will network two computers and includes the capability to network even more, if you purchase additional USB Direct Connects.


The software is extremely simple, allowing you to drag and drop files between systems. I would say that the installations were simple as well, except that in their simplicity both of these came exclusively on floppy.

I almost didn't get one of my notebooks working, because I had to remove the CD drive and go hunting for the removable floppy, which I'd last used months ago.


These are great for simple sharing and even gaming, but if you're looking to do some serious networking, we definitely recommend you go out there and purchase network interface cards and routers or hubs.

from techtv



Rasta, Roots, Rock and Reggae
Negril Makes for Jamaica's Secret Paradise


By Kathleen Murray

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

You know how the song goes: "...Key Largo, Montego, baby why don't we go...." But what the Beach Boys neglected to promote was the other sun haven of Jamaica -- Negril. Montego Bay is considered a stereotypical travel spot: loud bars replete with vacationers running drunk and aimless in loud Hawaiian prints. On the other side of the island, the atmosphere is a little more reserved and relaxed. In Negril the pace may slow down, yet the opportunity for excitement is overwhelming.

Negril was established in the '60s by American "flower children" in search of a secret utopia. Somewhere where they could escape the political and social problems of the United States to chill and smoke marijuana. Three decades later, Americans are still seeking refuge in this hidden paradise. Amidst the trees -- Negril law requires no building can be constructed higher than the tallest palm tree -- lies a distinct culture of reggae, drugs, jerk chicken and Rastifaris.

The blazing Jamaica sun reflects off the crystal blue water. Massive formations of rock surround the enclave, damming off the sea. A combined odor of coconut suntan oil and cold Jamaican Red Stripe beer fills the air of the Pickled Parrot.

One of Negril's finest cliff jumping spots, the Pickled Parrot brings out the diverse personalities of each tanner. Intent on securing the perfect tan, several vacationers relax in their lounge chairs overlooking a breathtaking horizon, immune to the carcinogenic sun beating down on their bodies. Many others crave rejuvenation: the Caribbean sea is calling. The less daring of the group climb down a rusted, unsteady ladder to frolic in the wonder of the sea. You can also rent a banana boat here for extra water pleasure. The encircling 30 and 40 foot cliffs are too enticing to be ignored by the adventuresome, but be sure to take along someone who is familiar with the cliffs (there are rastafarians hanging out who will be more than happy to jump with you).

Promising awe-inspiring sunsets and prime cliff jumping, Rick's Cafe is within walking distance of the Pickled Parrot -- actually, the term walking distance is debated by the lazy and tired. Although not as infamous as Rick's Cafe, the Pickled Parrot offers the same amenities without the touristy crowds and pricey menu.

The spirit of Bob Marley -- his name alone symbolizes Jamaica -- lives on through Negril natives. All radio stations are devoted to preserving his memory and the freedom his music praised. Although the prophet of music is dead, wonderful and talented reggae bands are plentiful in Negril. An escorted walk along the beach (shady people erupt at night) ensures an encounter with one of the dozens of places to listen to good music and drink Appleton rum (Jamaica's national liquor). Check out Runaway's, De Buss and Sam Sara where the Marleys and Yellowman are known to make appearances during the spring season.

Are you more interested in doing the Macarena? Risky Business is geared toward an American college crowd looking for that "spring break" experience (i.e. loud top 40 music, sloppy drunks and guys in guinea-tees). Several discos located in Port Antonio offer an escape from reggae as well. For a $20 admission fee at The Underground, you can drink all you want and dance to "Come on Eileen" all night long.

Visions of Jamaica often equate with endless fields of mushrooms and marijuana stalks on every corner. Narcotics are illegal on the island, but tolerated. Be careful, being thrown in Jamaican prison is not an enjoyable end to your travels. However, for some psychedelic pleasure tell your cabbie to stop off at Ma Brown's or Ted's One Stop Shop. The mushroom tea comes in three strengths: mild, strong and extra strength. Be forewarned that extra strength really means extra strength. Most of the clientele are locals, but Ma Brown loves her American spring breakers. The menu is terse -- Ganja cake or mushroom tea -- but both items are highly recommended. The prices are a bit steep, but the atmosphere is copacetic and satisfaction is guaranteed.

If your funds haven't been completely swept up by Ma Brown, a day trip to Ocho Rios is a must. Quite a distance away, but well worth the bumpy bus trip, are the famous waterfalls of Jamaica. Climbing to the top around these immense and breathtaking waterfalls is an adventure to remember.



A man selects numbers on a Powerball lottery ticket form Tuesday, Dec. 24, 2002, in Philadelphia. The multi-state Powerball lottery drawing is on Christmas, and with no winner Saturday, the prize is rising to what is expected to be its third-largest jackpot and largest Christmas jackpot since it started in 1992. (AP Photo/Sabina Louise Pierce)




Introducing a New ASIMO Featuring Intelligence Technology

Tokyo, December 5, 2002 --- Tokyo, December 5, 2002 - Honda Motor Co., Ltd. has released a new model of its intelligent humanoid robot ASIMO which is capable of interpreting the postures and gestures of humans and moving independently in response. ASIMO's ability to interact with humans has advanced significantly --- it can greet approaching people, follow them, move in the direction they indicate, and even recognize their faces and address them by name. Further, utilizing networks such as the Internet, ASIMO can provide information while executing tasks such as reception duties. ASIMO is the world's first humanoid robot to exhibit such a broad range of intelligent capabilities.

Starting from January of next year, Honda plans to commence rental of this new version of ASIMO to public institutions and companies.





The New ASIMO
Movement in response to a gesture
(posture recognition)



The key features of the new ASIMO include:

1. Advanced communication ability thanks to recognition technology
1. Recognition of moving objects
2. Posture/gesture recognition
3. Environment recognition
4. Sound recognition
5. Face recognition

2. Network integration
1. Integration with user's network system
2. Internet connectivity


1. Advanced communication ability thanks to recognition technology

Recognition of moving objects
Using the visual information captured by the camera mounted in its head, ASIMO can detect the movements of multiple objects, assessing distance and direction.

Specifically, ASIMO can:
follow the movements of people with its camera;
follow a person;
greet a person when he or she approaches.




Recognition of the distance and direction
of movement of multiple objects


Recognition of postures and gestures
Based on visual information, ASIMO can interpret the positioning and movement of a hand, recognizing postures and gestures. Thus ASIMO can react not only to voice commands, but also to the natural movements of human beings.

For example, ASIMO can:
recognize an indicated location and move to that location (posture recognition);
shake a person's hand when a handshake is offered (posture recognition);
respond to a wave by waving back (gesture recognition).




Movement to an indicated location


Recognition of hand movements
such as the waving of a hand


Environment recognition
ASIMO is able to assess its immediate environment, recognizing the position of obstacles and avoiding them to prevent collisions.

Specifically, ASIMO can:
stop and start to avoid a human being or other moving object which suddenly appears in its path;
recognize immobile objects in its path and move around them.

Distinguishing sounds
ASIMO's ability to identify the source of sounds has been improved, and it can distinguish between voices and other sounds.

For example, ASIMO can:
recognize when its name is called, and turn to face the source of the sound;
look at the face of the person speaking, and respond;
recognize sudden, unusual sounds, such as that of a falling object or a collision, and face in that direction.

Face recognition
ASIMO has the ability to recognize faces, even when ASIMO or the human being is moving.

For example, ASIMO can:
recognize the faces of people which have been pre-registered, addressing them by name, communicating messages to them, and guiding them;
recognize approximately ten different people.



Distinguish between registered faces.


1. Advanced communication ability thanks to recognition technology

Integration with user's network system

ASIMO can:
execute functions appropriately based on the user's customer data;
greet visitors, informing personnel of the visitor's arrival by transmitting messages and pictures of the visitor's face;
guide visitors to a predetermined location, etc.


Internet connectivity
Accessing information via the Internet, ASIMO can become a provider of news and weather updates, for example, ready to answer people's questions, etc.




Screamin Serpent Roller Coaster
AMAZON Price: $59.99
Roller Coaster excitement for the whole family! Build a huge replica of today's "steel" style roller coaster -- with twists, turns, loops, and cool styling! Over 6 1/2 feet long, 2 1/2 feet wide, and 3 1/2 feet tall -- the battery-powered motor pulls the roller coaster cars up the incline! The sound module creates real coaster sounds and screams! The figures easily press into the seats. Alternate model includes a canopy and is 5 feet long. Perfect for smaller spaces! The Screamin' Serpent requires two AA batteries for the motor and three AAA batteries for the sound module. Batteries are not included.
http://www.knex.co.uk



An upgraded model of Honda Motor Co.'s walking robot Asimo raises its hand to greet an unidentified Honda employee during a press unveiling at the Japanese automaker's headquarters in Tokyo Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2002. The 1.2 meter (four-foot) tall machine, that already knew how to walk, climb stairs and recognize voices, now also understands human gestures and movement by using the visual information taken by a camera in its head to recognize 10 different preprogrammed faces. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)



Attendant Peter Dorendorf stands in an empty tube of the Old Elbtunnel in Hamburg, northern Germany, Monday Dec. 16, 2002. Attendants and workers at the tunnel under the Elbe River staged a three-hour strike in the morning as German public service workers continued a wave of short stoppages in support of a pay claim that cash-strapped authorities say they cannot afford to meet. (AP Photo/Christof Stache)



Artist Ken Feingold represents the newest of media at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington from Saturday, Dec. 21, 2002, at an exhibit entitled 'Fantasy Underfoot'. Feingold's multimedia installation, 'Sinking Feeling', 2001, consists of a bald bespeckled talking head, a self-portrait, planted in a flower pot.



Awash with Cheap Beer - Fleetingly


Germany is being flooded by cheap beer -- selling for as little as five cents a can -- as shops rush to clear stocks ahead of new charges from January to discourage throw-away containers.



"Germany foams over with joy!" wrote Bild newspaper on Saturday. "Everyone's buying cheap beer."


The country's top-selling newspaper said some stores were selling off canned beer stocks for a price that amounted to 6.6 liters per dollar, a tiny fraction of the normal cost.


"Beer price war!" wrote Berlin's B.Z. tabloid on Saturday. "Discounters are chucking out everything they've got. At this rate beer will be given away for free by Christmas."


Retailers have warned, however, drinkers could face their worst nightmare -- a beer shortage -- in January.


The government is imposing charges on non-reusable cans and bottles -- 25 cents for small ones and 50 cents for larger ones -- because the percentage of recycled cans and bottles has fallen below a 72 percent minimum target set in 1997.


Drinkers will have to bring their empties back to the shop to get their deposits. But shops say they don't have any room to store the empty cans and bottles, so are selling their stocks now at discount prices.


The new charges are meant to counter a trend toward non-reusable containers. Environmentalists say they will help clear three billion cans and bottles off the streets.


Germany is the world's top beer producer with some 1,200 breweries nationwide churning out 53 million hectoliters a year. Germans drink on average a third of a liter of beer a day each.




Jackson Baby-Dangling Exploits Spawn Video Game

Michael Jackson's baby-dangling exploits have spawned a new video game in which the player has to catch babies in a basket as a cartoon version of the popstar hurls them from a rooftop.

At the end of the game, called "Michael Jackson Baby Drop," players receive a score and a supposed evaluation of their parenting skills.


Jackson startled German fans last month when he dangled his baby outside his fourth-floor hotel window in Berlin, a moment captured on film and widely broadcast.


He held his baby, whose head was covered by a towel, over a balcony with one arm to horrified gasps from the crowd of fans on the street below.


The singer apologized, saying he had been caught up in the emotion of the moment.


In the game by www.madblast.com the cartoon Jackson also throws spiders from the rooftop, which the player has to dodge.


The popstar, who keeps tarantulas at his Neverland Valley ranch in California, was recently bitten by a spider on the foot.


No spokesman for the singer could be reached for comment.

strange dude !

Michael Jackson's baby-dangling exploits have spawned a new video game in which the player has to catch babies in a basket as a cartoon version of the popstar hurls them from a rooftop. Jackson is shown holding the baby from a third floor balcony after their arrival at the Hotel Adlon in Berlin, November 19, 2002.

Pop Star Michael Jackson jokes with the photographer during a break in his testimony in Santa Maria, California, December 3, 2002. Superstar Michael Jackson turned up on crutches in a California courtroom on Tuesday after a close encounter with a spider. Jackson, whose bizarre appearance and baby-dangling antics have made headlines around the world for the past three weeks, was resuming testimony in a $21 million lawsuit over canceled millennium concerts.



Blogs Make the Headlines

By Noah Shachtman
Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,56978,00.html


It's safe to assume that, before he flushed his reputation down the toilet, Trent Lott had absolutely no idea what a blog was.

He may have a clue now. Internet opinion pages like Instapundit, run by University of Tennessee law professor Glenn Reynolds, and Talking Points Memo, from leftie political columnist Josh Marshall -- were among the first to latch on to ABCNews.com's brief item on Lott's racist comments during Strom Thurmond's 100th birthday bash.

And they kept focusing on Lott's hateful past -- until the national press corps finally had to take notice.

"Joshua Marshall, whose talkingpointsmemo.com is must reading for the politically curious, (is) more than anyone else, responsible for making Trent Lott's offensive remarks the issue they deserve to be," noted Paul Krugman in his New York Times column.

In a year when throngs of people joined Marshall and Reynolds -- there are now more than 970,000 registered users of Pyra's popular Blogger software, up from 343,000 a year ago -- Lott's bile is one of several issues that this burgeoning community helped push on to the national agenda.

In May, when pro-Palestinian activists attacked a group of Hillel students at San Francisco State University, the national press took no notice; there was a small mention in the May 12 edition of the San Francisco Chronicle, nothing more.

But bloggers -- led by Richmond, Virginia, freelance writer Meryl Yourish -- piled on the story.

Within days, the attack became a nationwide matter. On May 14, blogger James Lileks mentioned it in a nationally syndicated newspaper column for the Newhouse News Service. Five days later, The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post, all followed suit with their own articles.

Congruent events occurred at Montreal's Concordia University. In September, Palestinian supporters clashed with riot police before a planned speech by former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Then, in December, the Concordia Hillel had its funding cut by the Concordia Student Union -- allegedly for displaying a pamphlet for the Mahal 2000 program, which helps diaspora Jews volunteer for the Israeli army.

Bloggers were the only ones to pay attention to these events in the United States. Despite hundreds of articles on anti-Semitic incidents in France, the confrontations at Concordia received scant press coverage.

Bloggers like Reynolds and California Web designer Charles Johnson focused the attention of readers on the issue.

Now, Noah Joseph, a Concordia Hillel student leader, feels he's got an international network of support.

"Were getting an absolute influx of e-mail -- 400 to my personal account, thousands more to a general mailbox," Joseph said. "It's uplifting to know you're not alone in all of this."

Bloggers also held big media's feet to the fire when they screwed up stories. After the assassination of Dutch politician Pym Fortuyn, the U.S. press immediately labeled the quixotic candidate a clone of French neo-fascist Jean-Marie Le Pen. Bloggers, like Amsterdam-based former MTV jock Adam Curry, helped humanize the stereotype. How exactly this influenced later coverage of Fortuyn is anyone's guess. But by September, The New Yorker was running a nuanced portrait.

But it'd be a big mistake to think that these Internet diarists are all supporting noble causes and high ideals. In fact, the biggest interest that bloggers seem to have is blogging itself, said MIT Media Lab researcher Cameron Marlow, who tracks such things on the Blogdex website. Only items about the Google search engine and those cult-inducing Apple computers seem to be able to pull bloggers away from the mirror.

"Bloggers are navel-gazers," said Elizabeth Osder, a visiting professor at The University of Southern California's School of Journalism. "And they're about as interesting as friends who make you look at their scrap books."

She added, "There's an overfascination here with self-expression, with opinion. This is opinion without expertise, without resources, without reporting."

Maybe so, but bloggers' individualistic perspectives have allowed them to burrow deep into issues the mainstream press wouldn't ordinarily touch.

Steve Outing, a senior editor at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies, wrote in an e-mail, "What we're seeing more and more are webloggers breaking niche stories, and thus serving as an early warning system for traditional journalists."



Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade
Written by Mamoru Oshii (the director of the cult favorite Ghost in the Shell) and directed by Hiroyuki Okiura (a key animator on Akira), Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade offers a violent but compelling vision in animation. The story is set in a fictionalized version of the recent past, when a repressive Japanese government is battling the Sect, a violent revolutionary organization that uses adolescent girls they call "Red Riding Hoods" as couriers. During a raid, Capitol Police Constable Kazuki Fuse (pronounced "foo-seh," voice by Michael Dobson) balks at killing Nanami Agawa (Maggie Blue O'Hare), one of the Red Riding Hoods. She commits suicide with a powerful bomb. While Fuse undergoes retraining, he meets Nanami's older sister, Kei (Moneca Stori), and initiates an odd romance. Soon both characters are caught in a web of plots and counterplots that center on the possibility that Fuse may be a "wolf," a member of a secret cabal within the Capitol Police.
Jin-Roh is drawn in a comic book style that recalls the work of the popular graphic novelist and film designer Jean "Moebius" Giraud; Okiura's skillful cutting and striking imagery transcend the limited animation. Although anime continues to grow in popularity in America, it's rare for a Japanese feature to receive even a limited theatrical release, as this one did: a dark, brooding film of exceptional power, Jin-Roh deserves to be seen by a large audience.

link to amazon to buy...


Dark Days DVD
Soundtrack by DJ Shadow. Beautifully shot black and white indie film about homeless people
living in old train tunnels. This took NYC by storm and cleaned up at Sundance in 2000.
http://www.jess3.com/christmas.html
the FlAsh version of my christmas card...
















http://alterpop.com/

pimpin!!!!!!!!


http://www.monochrom.de.vu/


http://psychology.wichita.edu/optimalweb/position.htm


Criteria for optimal web design (designing for usability)





MS490
Creating Stories with Pictures: A Mastercourse Workshop with William Wegman
Section A
3 sessions March, 17, 18, 19, 2003
Mon to Wed
10am-4pm
Georgetown Studio 304

Tuition: $600

Enrollment for the Mastercourse with William Wegman will be taken on a first come, first served basis. Call 202.639.1820 for information about availability.

Join artist William Wegman for a three-day workshop on creating stories with photos. You will get to observe Wegman in the process of photographing his dogs, then work with him to invent a story and illustrate it with a flow of images. Students will work on a narrative, sets, and figures with digital backgrounds. The artist will talk about portraiture and its role in storytelling. A field trip to David Adamson's digital studio for fine printing is included as part of the workshop.

Lecture: Mr. Wegman will also give a retrospective lecture on his life and work on Wednesday, March 19th, at 7pm. Tickets for the lecture are purchased separately and cost $16 for members and $20 for non-members. To purchase tickets to the lecture, please contact our Public Programs office at 202.639.1770.

About the Artist
William Wegman received a BFA in painting from the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston and an MFA in painting from the University of Illinois Champagne-Urbana. He has taught at the University of Wisconsin and California State College in Long Beach. It was in Long Beach in the 1970s that Wegman got his dog, Man Ray, with whom he began a long and fruitful collaboration. Man Ray became central to Wegman's photographs and videos, known in the art world for his endearing deadpan presence. Fay Ray and her litter of puppies succeeded Man Ray and were joined by two new dogs, one a grand pup of Fay's.





Wegman's involvement with his dogs has led him to create a series of books for children and adults inspired by the dogs' acting abilities. These books have included Cinderella, Little Red Riding Hood, Mother Goose, Farm Days, My Town and many others. Wegman has produced film and video works for Saturday Night Live and Nickelodeon, and his segments on Sesame Street have appeared regularly since 1989. His film The Hardly Boys, starring Fay, Battina, Crooky and Chundo was screened at the Sundance Film Festival in 1989.

Wegman's work has been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally. His work is admired for its humor, irony and empathetic understanding of his subjects.






Manufacturer's Description

The amazing X3D System transforms your favorite PC games, DVDs, home videos, educational CD-ROMs, TV shows, and even family photo albums into 3-D images that practically leap out at you. Images will appear to float inside and in front of the screen, so real you can practically touch them.



Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph



Eminem Aims For Dre-Like Perfection On 50 Cent, Obie Trice, D12 LPs
Despite the success of "8 Mile," Eminem won't be going down that road again anytime soon.

Rather than pursue an acting career, Marshall Mathers is more interested in developing his Shady Records roster and producing hits.

"I'm staying in the studio," Eminem said on Wednesday. "I'm gonna keep plugging away at that."

Shady's next project is the LP from Queens, New York, rapper 50 Cent, whose album is due in February. Obie Trice's long-awaited debut will follow soon after.

"Obie is in the studio. His album is half-done," Eminem said on the set of 50 Cent's new video, "In Da Club." "We are hoping for spring [for Trice's release] and D12 in the fall. And we've already got songs for that album. We sneak [recording D12] songs in between 50's album. And Obie's album ... expect the same quality as 50's album, from my album, from Dre's album. It's the same type of producers, it's the same type of perfectionists in the studio with every artist.

"We won't put it out unless it's perfect," he continued, pointing toward his mentor, Dr. Dre, who appears in 50's clip along with Eminem. "I learned that from this man right here."

Eminem has produced two tracks for 50 Cent's album and co-produced several more, although it's his role as executive producer that he is most enthused about.

"I'm there doing the mix downs and me and Dre are just overseeing the whole project, making sure that every song is hot," he explained. "I wish my first album was this hot. That's all I can say. I'm not selling the album. The album is going to sell itself."

Slim Shady may be busy with his protégés, but that doesn't mean he's finished infecting the world with The Eminem Show. While in Los Angeles for the 50 Cent video, Eminem is shooting a clip of his own for his next single, "Superman."

"We're still going through the concept a little bit, but basically it's the whole what a chick wants me to be to her and what I can be," Eminem explained. "It's her vision of me and me being a perfect gentleman and this and that. And what I can be to her, because I know what she is and I know why she's with me."

Eminem said the success of The Eminem Show, "8 Mile" and his #1 single "Lose Yourself" has not changed the way he works on any of his projects.

"It makes you more scared than anything," he said. "It puts your expectations up to a certain level and you got to keep ... making that, so I try not to concentrate on it and just do what I am doing. Whatever."



im bidding on this ... EBAY !

http://www.930.com

Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
w/ Twiztid
@ 9:30 Club • Washington, DC
THU. JAN. 23
$20.00




Roly Rocks

A balancing act of function and design. These unique roly-poly glasses are designed to roll in a circular motion without tipping. Clear glass is blown into a wooden mold, the rim is angle-cut and polished. Dishwasher safe. Made in Poland. Roly shot glass and vase also available.

5.95$ each

DC Flash Users Group

December 17th

January 21st

WHEN AND WHERE

Tuesday, November 19th, 7pm - 9:30 pm, at Henninger Arlington. Henninger is located at 2601 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, Va. They are conveniently located within walking distance of Metro's Orange Line Courthouse Exit (2/10ths of a mile west on Wilson Boulevard). The facility also has off-street
parking and metered street parking.

These meetings are free and open to anyone interested in Flash. No RSVP is necessary.
contact Erik Muendel at erik@mouseup.com if you have any questions.







Cyber-shot® Sport Jacket
SJK-P71
Neither rain nor snow can keep you from your picture-taking when youve got the new weather-resistant Sony Sport Jacket by your side. Designed exclusively to fit your Cyber-shot®


$ 29.99



InfoLithium S series Batteries



Portable Tripod Kit
VCT-MTK
This portable tripod is perfect for those who need a steady hand for picture and video taking. It's metal alloy finish, expandable legs (up to 7-1/8'') and carrying pouch

$ 19.99



Tabletop Tripod
VCT-TK1
Compact Pocket Tripod for use with camcorders and digital still cameras. Ideal for mounting on a table or desk. Uses a standard screw


$ 20.00



bling bling



This is the actual house in Detroit just south of 8 mile in which Eminem lived

for sale on ebay



MTV charity auction....



Two Van Gogh paintings stolen from Dutch museum

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) — Thieves broke into the Van Gogh Museum on Saturday and made off with two works by the 19th century master -- less than a week after a multimillion-dollar gem heist from a Dutch diamond exhibition.

The value of the oils was not immediately known, but major works by Vincent van Gogh sell for millions of dollars.

The second-story heist was the second theft from the museum in 10 years. Security was boosted after the first robbery of the Amsterdam collection, which holds the world's largest van Gogh display -- more than 200 paintings and hundreds of drawing.

"This is the worst thing that can happen to any museum," said the director, John Leighton.

Alarms went off at 8 a.m., two hours before opening. By the time police got to the scene, the thieves had vanished, Leighton said.

Police were impressed. They responded quickly and hoped to find the culprits still in the building.

Instead, they discovered a 15-foot ladder leaning against the rear of the building. The thieves climbed to the second floor and broke a window, police spokeswoman Elly Florax said.

Leighton said the missing paintings were painted early in van Gogh's career. They "have no market value since they were not for sale, but comparable paintings sold for several million dollars," he said.

"View of the Sea at Scheveningen," a small picture measuring about 13 inches high by about 20 inches wide, of a boat setting off into a stormy sea was painted in two days in 1882. The thickly applied paint contains grains of sand blown onto the canvas from the beach where van Gogh worked. It is one of his first major pieces.

"Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen," painted in 1884-85, shows the village church where van Gogh's father served as pastor. That painting measures about 16 inches high by about 13 inches wide.

"The 'Reform Church' was emotionally important. He probably meant it as a souvenir for his mother," Leighton said.

Van Gogh, who suffered chronic depression, died in 1890 at age 37 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Police turned away the public Saturday while investigators combed the building and curators rearranged the paintings to cover the blank spaces.

Last Monday, thieves raided a diamond exhibition at the Museon in The Hague, about 30 miles south of Amsterdam. Museum officials said millions of dollars worth of gems were taken.

The Van Gogh Museum opened in 1973 near the century-old Rijksmuseum. As well as the largest van Gogh collection, it also hosts the work of leading 19th century impressionists.

In 1991, two robbers made off with some of its most famous van Goghs, only to abandon the paintings less than an hour later outside a nearby railway station. All 20 paintings were recovered, including the final version of his priceless masterpiece "The Potato Eaters," as well as "Still Life With Sunflowers" and "Still Life With Irises."

Leighton refused to discuss security, including what measures were taken after the first break-in.

"There is a risk for every museum," Leighton said. "You can't have a Fort Knox situation. This is a public institution."



http://www.chronicamsterdam.com/


A place to go to purchase the highly acclaimed documentary called Chronic Amsterdam



Animals get early Christmas treats

Animals at a US zoo have been opening their Christmas presents - more than two weeks early.

Visitors watched polar bear Jandy carry his present, a festively wrapped packed of fish, around San Francisco Zoo.

The animals have been receiving Christmas presents from visitors.



A Chinese car salesperson talks in front of a poster of a Jaguar car at a car show in Shanghai, December 9, 2002. China is witnessing a car-buying boom this year as a price war combined with cheaper imports after China's entry into the World Trade Organization (news - web sites) a year ago have fuelled sales, especially among private buyers. REUTERS/China Photo



A man inhales marijuana from a huge water pipe in the Dutch town of Haarlem, Friday night, Nov. 29, 2002, as the pioneers of Dutch marijuana culture celebrated three decades of progressive drug policy. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong



Bella the cow, looks into the camera lens as she wanders around outside Mexico's Congress in Mexico City, December 5, 2002. Ranchers from the state of Chihuahua have brought 20 cows to take part in a sit in outside Congress to pressure legislators into proposing that the presidency impose a moratorium on the lifting of tariffs on agricultural products imported from the U.S. and Canada on from January 1, 2003. Mexican farmers fear they will lose their livelyhoods if Mexico is flooded with cheaper imports from its North American Free Trade (NAFTA) partners. REUTERS/Andrew Winning



Fitzwilliam Hunt fox hounds exercising in Milton Park, Cambridgeshire, November 1, 2002. Long-awaited British government proposals concerning hunting with dogs are expected to offer a compromise when they are announced on December 3, 2002, banning some hunts but allowing others. REUTERS/Peter Macdiarmid

Afghan men carry piles of old banknotes to be burnt in Kabul, December 9, 2002. Between 100-150 million old Afghan banknotes are destroyed daily after Afghanistan's banks exchanged the old notes with new ones. From the 15 trillion Afghanis in circulation, the banks have already collected some 13 trillion



more memories....



the gallery of images of my old room...ah memories....


http://www.pimento.btinternet.co.uk/


This web page is about a family holiday spent in Jamaica in March 2000, on the north coast of Jamaica



Photo Diaries and Sketches
by Robert Bremec

amazing photo journal of this dudes travels.....


Amsterdam... mmmmmmm..i need to plan anotha trip ther....mmmmmm

http://www.bugbog.com





Bugbog Travel Gallery
- collection of images from destinations around the world.


http://topweblogs.com/Winners_22.asp


The First Persian Top Weblogs Competition
Winners

praise allah!