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Posts Tagged ‘deane’

Kim Kardashian, Miles Austin ‘aren’t getting back together’

Kim Kardashian is not getting back together with NFL star Miles Austin. The Internet was abuzz with reports that the couple, which split in September, was reconciling after the two swapped messages on Twitter last week. “They are not getting back together, they are just friends. And she”s not dating Kanye West, either,” the New [...]

LeAnn Rime to Speak about her Relationship with Eddie Cibrian

Finally, LeAnn Rime started to speak about her relationship with her boyfriend, Eddie Cibrian. It has become a couple that ended two divorces and has become the reason of months of headlines.
According to LeAnn, she made the most selfish things. She is responsible for everything that has been done by her. The singer hates when [...]

Morning Crunch Crumbs: Brittnay Murphy Update; Tiger Still Sleeping With Rachel Uchitel; LeAnn & Deane Divorce Settlement

There’s a number updates about the tragic passing of actress Brittany Murphy over the weekend. Let’s get to it:
-Brittany’s half-brother Jeff Bertolotti calls the actress a “casuality of Hollywood” and says the people around her should have “taken care of her better……”
-Dakota Fanning co-starred with Brittany Murphy in the 2003 comedy Uptown Girls – and [...]

Web-a-ccino

Impact internet cafe in Eastbourne

By Ana Lucia Gonzalez
BBC News

It’s 15 years since the first internet cafe opened in the UK. Yet, while home and work access have proliferated, the internet cafe shows no sign of disappearing. Why are there still so many of them

When Cyberia, widely considered to be the first internet cafe in the UK, opened its doors in London in 1 September 1994, it offered access to what was then a novelty.

The picture has changed a lot since then, with around 65% of households in the UK having internet access.

Send us your internet cafe stories

Interactive map

But you can still see internet cafes in every High Street in UK towns and cities. From local shops which offer web access, along with services like printing and money wiring, to cavernous underground spaces open 24 hours a day in which gamers gather to compete and share tips.

This survival act has even surprised Eva Pascoe, the founder of Cyberia, who says she thought that the need for public access to the web would be temporary, and that by now "everyone would have a computer built into the watch or earring".

So why is the internet cafe still going strong if people can now surf the web from the comfort of their own desks

Digital divide

While in UK cities the percentage with internet access has increased over the years, some areas still haven’t reaped the benefits of the digital age.

The Megabytes Cafe has been providing services since 1996 for the people at Aberfan, in Merthyr Vale.

It started out as place where young people could go to do their homework or play games, but the grandparents of the children also wanted to learn more about computers.

"As a result, the younger and the older generation were brought together, so in terms of community cohesion it has been an absolutely terrific project to undertake," says Jeff Edwards, founder of the cafe which is part of the Aberfan Merthyr Vale Youth and Community Project.

The web cafe plays an essential role in a community in which only a third of the population owns a personal computer, he says.

"Older people, for example, can get cheaper electricity by going to comparison sites. And the problem with fuel poverty is deep here."

The internet cafe also runs online auction taster sessions in community centres where people can bring their unwanted items to sell.

Albert Lloyd, 70, started visiting when he became a widower. Through the web he has found some of his old friends from when he was stationed as a soldier in Libya 40 years ago.

He also uses Google Earth, he says, "to retrace my steps. It just brings it all back."

Gamers and nostalgia

So what about London and the South East, where households have the highest proportion of internet access in the UK at 74% Do people still feel the need to go elsewhere for their surfing needs

Carlos Guzman at the Videoclip internet cafe in London

Alex Deane is the managing director of Quarks, a small internet cafe chain with premises in Guildford and Reading. His company did some research last year and found that two-thirds of their customers had internet access at home or at work.

"People need a change of scene," Mr Deane says. "Also, some people are not good at maintaining their computers, because this is quite a job these days. Another element is that some companies have restricted the access to websites like Hotmail and Facebook at work. So we have rush hour at lunch time."

Apart from practical needs, it seems like some people still go to the smallest web cafes because they want to feel part of a community, and surf and chat in a familiar atmosphere.

Colombian food at Distriandina, where the Videoclip internet cafe is located

The Videoclip internet cafe is a new addition to Distriandina, a Colombian coffee shop in the Elephant and Castle station arches in South London.

Tucked between Colombian food products, soap opera DVDs and a dance hall which usually holds salsa evenings and political gatherings, the venue is popular with Colombian expats who come to talk to their families back home.

"I can open the internet at home and at work, but I like it here because I can see my friends, they speak my language, I can play ‘sapo’ [a traditional Colombian game] and then buy some Colombian food before going home," says Carlos Guzman, a customer who visits the cafe on the weekend to talk to his family through the camera.

Ye olde concept

Cyberia itself is no longer – Ms Pascoe sold up to a South Korean company, which transformed it into a gamers’ haven. Now all that remains is a vacant shop.

So does the internet cafe still play a role as a social space Ms Pascoe says her idea of Cyberia was based on the coffee shops in eastern Europe.

WHERE PEOPLE GO ONLINE

  • 2003: At home 82%, internet cafes 6%
  • 2006: At home 85%, internet cafes 8%
  • 2008: At home 90%, internet cafes 5%

ONS figures

"I’m Polish and we have coffee shops everywhere, and I don’t see them going away. We all have coffee at home but still go to coffee shops because they fulfil a social function. We just added internet to a concept that is hundreds of years old."

The most successful internet cafes are those which have gone back to the original format of a "public access space, plus IT support centre, plus a social space", she says.

This concept can be seen at Netstream, a 24/7 internet cafe in Soho in central London. A giant silicon chip decorates the main wall along with magazine cuttings from the 1930s. Customers can get technical support for their laptops and can also have their lunch delivered.

"We always play chill-out music and jazz, and try to give people a bit of a relaxing atmosphere, a place where they don’t get disturbed and can work," says manager Alex Karev.

"Sometimes you just can start speaking to people just because they’re sitting so close next to you, you can’t help but speak to each other"

Ali, a gamer

Different groups come at different times, says Mr Karev. "During the day it’s mostly business people who come to work on the computers and need something right here, right now. Once the normal working hours are gone, you get the gamers. Some of them are married or have families, so they come here to relax and play games for a couple of hours, and make friends with other people playing games."

Ali, a gamer, says he makes friends playing community games. "Sometimes you just can start speaking to people just because they’re sitting so close next to you, you can’t help but speak to each other."

And it might be that, 15 years later, the internet cafe is still a space where we can combine the act of solitary surfing with the physical proximity of other humans.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Pygmalion Music Fest Schedule

Pygmalion Music Festival, September 16-19, In Champaign-Urbana, Illinois

Announces 2009 Stage Schedule


Low

Now in its fifth year, the Pygmalion Music Festival, happening September 16-19, in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, has emerged as a surprising player in what seems like an endless sea of new music festivals across the nation. Combining the ease and cred of festivals such as SXSW or CMJ, with a humble, gentle Midwestern backdrop, Pygmalion Music Festival seeks to engage a devoted group of music fans by presenting both established and emerging artists in venues no bigger than a small theater. For year five, the festival has expanded to include over 100 performers over four days in 15 different venues taking place in two different vibrant neighborhoods in Champaign-Urbana. This year’s lineup features well established mainstays, including Iron & Wine, Low, Lucero, RJD2 and The Books, alongside up-and-coming acts, such as The Antlers, YACHT, Wavves, Headlights, Japandroids, Autolux, BLK JKS, My Brightest Diamond and many more.

The Pygmalion Music Festival was conceived in 2005 after determining that Champaign-Urbana could not only support such a festival, but also develop it in a fashion that it might thrive. Since its inception, the music festival has always sought to be the bridge between the thriving local music scene and the national indie rock touring scene. In each show, there are local bands present alongside some of the finest that the nation, and the world, has to offer.

Pygmalion Music Festival passes are currently $60. To purchase tickets and find out more information, about the festival visit pygmalionmusicfestival.com.

Pygmalion Music Festival 2009 Schedule:

Wednesday

Canopy Club:
8:30 PM — Common Loon
9:30 PM — Mt. St. Helen’s Vietnam Band
10:00 PM — Owen
11:00 PM — Japandroids
12:00 AM — Headlights
1:00 AM — Physical Challenge DJs

Thursday

Blues:
11:45 AM — Liesel Booth
12:30 PM — Pamela Machala

Sandella’s:
12:45 PM — Tracey and Tricia
1:30 PM — Stanton McConnell
2:15 PM — Cara Maurizi

Red Herring:
6:00 PM — Morgan Orion and The Constellations
7:00 PM — My Dear Alan Andrews
8:00 PM — Post Historic
9:00 PM — Early Day Miners
10:00 PM — World’s First Flying Machine

Krannert Art Museum:
6:40 PM — Liz Janes
7:20 PM — Brooke Wagonner
8:00 PM — Denison Witmer
8:45 PM — My Brightest Diamond
9:45 PM — William Fitzsimmons
10:45 PM — Bob Nanna

Courtyard Cafe:
7:30 PM — Butterfly Assassins
8:30 PM — TBD
9:30 PM — Starfucker

Canopy Club:
6:20 PM — Ohtis
7:00 PM — Santa
7:40 PM — Mason Proper
8:20 PM — Company of Thieves
9:00 PM — Elsinore
9:40 PM — Joe Pug
10:30 PM — Decibully
11:10 PM — Margot and The Nuclear So and So’s
12:10 AM — Maserati
1:00 AM — Lucero

The Highdive:
9:00 PM — DJ Substr8
10:00 PM — DJ Belly
11:00 PM — DJ Mertz
12:00 AM — Skream

Friday

Blues:
11:30 AM — Girls Next Door
12:00 PM — Ryan Groff
12:45 PM — William Fitzsimmons
7:00 PM — The Jips
8:00 PM — Empires
9:00 PM — jigGsaw
10:00 PM — So Many Dynamos
11:00 PM — So Long Forgotten

Sandella’s:
12:45 PM — Final Pygmalion Effect
1:30 PM — Matt Wagemann
2:15 PM — Kilroy et al

Channing-Murray:
6:30 PM — You and Yourn
7:15 PM — Hathaways
8:00 PM — Good Night and Good Morning
9:00 PM — Low

Red Herring:
10:30 PM — Comedians: Jon Hansen, Pat Deane, Devin Bockrath, Collin Bullock, Trey Mowder, Billi Casey, The Tuttle Brothers.

Canopy Club:
6:20 PM — Zach May and The Maps
7:00 PM — Ganglians
7:40 PM — Phantogram
8:20 PM — BLK JKS
9:00 PM — Jookabox
9:40 PM — Maps & Atlases
10:30 PM — Pomegranates
11:10 PM — The Antlers
12:10 AM — Autolux
1:00 AM — Wavves

Courtyard Cafe:
7:30 PM — Pet Lions
8:30 PM — Oceans
9:30 PM — Solid Gold

Cowboy Monkey:
10:00 PM — Angie Heaton
11:00 PM — Mazes
12:00 AM — Cameron McGill
1:00 AM — The 1900s

Mike N’ Molly’s:
5:15 PM — The Delta Kings
6:15 PM — The Duke of Uke
7:15 PM — The Number One Sons
8:15 PM — Tina Sparkle
9:15 PM — Gentleman Auction House
10:15 PM — Light Pollution
11:15 PM — Neoga Blacksmith

Bentley’s:
9:30 PM — Village
10:30 PM — The Horns of Happiness
11:30 PM — Alpha Mile
12:30 AM — Golden Quality

Saturday

Parasol Records:
TBD Afternoon Sets

Exile on Main St.:
TBD Afternoon Sets

Courtyard Cafe:
5:00 PM — The Daredevil Christopher Wright
6:00 PM — Lymbyc Systym
7:00 PM — Brighton, MA

Krannert Center:
7:30 PM — The Books
8:45 PM — Iron and Wine
10:00 PM — Princeton
11:00 PM — Ra Ra Riot

Canopy Club:
9:00 PM — Physical Challenge DJs
10:45 PM — YACHT
11:30 PM — The Hood Internet
12:30 AM — RJD2

Red Herring:
10:00 PM — On Again Off Again
11:00 PM — Now Now Every Children
12:00 AM — Drew Danburry
1:00 AM — Sunset Stallion

Cowboy Monkey:
10:00 PM — Lonely Trailer
11:00 PM — The Horse’s Ha
12:00 AM — Gazelle
1:00 AM — New Ruins

Mike N’ Molly’s:
10:15 PM — Tyson and The Friction
11:15 PM — Steel Eater
12:15 AM — Scurvine
1:15 AM — The Life and Times

Bentley’s:
10:30 PM — Take Care
11:30 PM — Marmoset
12:30 AM — Mordechai in the Mirror



Deane Waldman: Government cuts expenditures. Only WE can cut costs.

You cannot listen to a politician talk about healthcare without hearing the phrase “cost cutting.” Problem is: government cannot cut costs, only we can….

Deane Waldman: I oppose Obama’s healthcare reform (and you should too) because it does not reform healthcare.

Most people think in binary – black and white; good or bad. “If you’re not with me, you’re against me.” If you are against…

Deane Waldman: “Anything” is NOT necessarily better than the healthcare we have now.

Healthcare is considered so sick in the USA that many believe anything is better than what we have now, so let’s pass ObamaCare. At…

Deane Waldman: ObamaCare: Robbing Peter to Pay…No one.

I should know better than to think, “They can’t be serious proposing that!” But the Democrats’ fix for healthcare sends even my shock-and-surprise meter…

Deane Waldman: STOP Pay-For-Performance! START Pay-For-Outcome.

Blame for our healthcare nightmare has recently been aimed at the doctors: inadvertently by Dr. Atul Gawande in the New Yorker magazine and intentionally…