Hide your electronic devices, the cattiest maven to ever hit the catwalk is off her meds again — and this time she’s attacking cameras. Tempermental beauty Naomi Campbell has refused to testify at the war crimes trial of former Liberian dictator Charles Taylor, saying that she would not speak about the huge, uncut “blood diamond†[...]
Posts Tagged ‘hide’
New but not raw – Bollywood newcomers come prepared
The mantra in Bollywood is no more about learning on the job, but coming prepared before the director calls “action”. Newcomers venturing into the industry believe they must have a sound understanding of their craft, even technically.
Raj Kumar Yadav, who played Adarsh in Dibakar Banerjee’s “Love Sex aur Dhoka”, said: “As competition is tough in [...]
20 cops among 49 injured; 300 arrested
KASHIF ABBASI & SHAHID RAO
ISLAMABAD/RAWALPINDI – Hide and seek between police and the protesters continued on Friday as apparently politically motivated protesters kept protesting on the second consecutive day against the hike in public transport fares in the twin cities.
Hundreds of protesters took to roads at Bhara Kahu in the morning and blocked Murree Road in the Federal Capital by placing heavy trucks on it. Whereas, hundreds of people, mostly belonging to Rawalpindi, came on Express Highway and blocked it to press the Government to decrease the transport fares and prices of edible items.
Angry protesters smashed the windowpanes of shops and vehicles, set ablaze a car at Faizabad Bridge and blocked the highway for all kinds of traffic. Furious protesters burnt tyres and damaged the parked cars to vent out their anger against the Government.
The protesters not only blocked the Express Highway – the main road that links Rawalpindi and Islamabad – but also damaged traffic signals, electricity poles and police pickets. When charged protesters were trying to cross Faizabad picket, police hurled teargas on them and chased them for arresting. On this, some protesters stormed a house in sector 1-8 where the local opened fire on them. Resultantly one student got bullet injury on his leg.
The huge number of people came on Express Highway at 09:00 a.m. and blocked it for all kinds of traffic.
Heavy contingents of police stopped the protesters near Faizabad who were trying to enter the Red Zone where Parliament House, Supreme Court building etc are located.
The Faizabad was centre of hide and seek between police and protesters. The protesters pelting policemen with stones and police used teargas to disperse them. During this course 29 people and 20 police officials got injured.
SSP Islamabad Tahir Alam Khan and Deputy Commissioner Islamabad Amir Ali Ahmed led the police party. Finally police lost it temper after waiting for several hours and started an operation at 04:32 p.m. against the protesters to disperse them by force.
Heavy contingent of Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) were called in to control the worsening situation, as the police seemed to be unable to control the angry mob.
Police resorted to baton charge, teargas shelling and aerial firing and arrested more than 300 protesters from Faizabad. Later while extending operation against the mob, police arrested dozens of protesters from Dhoke Kala Khan, Kuri Road and Koral and Bhara Kahu.
The Express Highway presented the scene of a battlefield as thousands of stones, casings of teargas shells, even a large-sized tree placed by protesters at Koral could be seen at roads.
The arrested protesters were shifted to different police stations.
Talking to TheNation SSP Islamabad said that despite having sufficient force they were not ready to start operation against the protesters but they compelled them to do this.
Protesters blamed the administration that it had failed to rein in transporters who charged increased fares, which was the reason of FridayÂ’s violence.
Talking to this scribe Deputy Commissioner Islamabad said, “We have suspended fares list but protesters are demanding cut in fares issued by Rawalpindi administration.”
Later, Acting IG of Islamabad Police Bin Yameen and Commissioner Islamabad Tariq Pirzada made aerial inspection over the city to check the situation.
Meanwhile, the commuters travelling between the twin cities also faced difficulties in absence of public transport and had to travel on foot to reach their destinations. The road blocked at Faizabad caused record traffic jam in twin cities.
PPI adds: On the occasion, protestors talking to journalists vowed to continue their protest till the acceptance of their demands. They said no one will be allowed to usurp the rights of poor masses. The protestors said they were ready to offer their lives in order to protect their rights.
`Hide & Seek’ director shoots with Abhishek’s gifted camera
The director of the recently released movie `Hide & Seek`, Shawn Arranha cant stop appreciating the Bollywood star Abhishek Bachchan for his wonderful gift to him.
Abhishek drop light on the amazing bonding with his friend Apoorva Lakhia`s former assistant. He said,†We were shooting for Apu`s first film `Bambai Se Aaya Mera Dost` [...]
Reader Play: A Cool New Feature from Google Reader
Don’t worry, Google Reader is not going to be replaced, but the Google Reader team did come up with a cool new feature. It’s called Google Reader Play and is an experiment in Google Labs.
Google Reader Play is all about the visual experience. It uses the same technology as recommended items to find content you [...]
The Feelies: Crazy Rhythms
By: Ron Hart
Straight outta Haledon, NJ, The Feelies were the complete antithesis of cool back when they officially formed during the year punk broke (1976, kids). Named after a deep reference from Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and dressed like the kids who ran the math club in high school, this quartet of North Jersey suburbanites were the outsiders amongst the outsiders of the NYC underground during the late ’70s. They hated gigging in the city because driving through the tunnels gave them headaches, drank coffee the way Jimmy Page downed Jack Daniels before shows, and were known to shave onstage with electric razors plugged into their amplifiers.
But once co-frontmen Glenn Mercer and Bill Million switched on their guitars as the terse, tight rhythm section of bassist Keith Clayton and one-time Pere Ubu/Electric Eels drummer Anton Fier kicked in their boxcutter-sharp, jittery grooves, The Feelies were an unstoppable force. Their sound was pure minimalism, taking the repetitive patterns of such modern classical composers as Terry Riley and Steve Reich and compounding it with a Bo Diddley groove stripped down to the studs a la the Velvet Underground, creating a sonic style as unique as their image. Originally released in 1980 on the UK-based Stiff Records, the group’s debut, Crazy Rhythms, is only LP to feature to Mercer/Million/Clayton/Fier lineup and remains one of the all-time great albums from the New Wave era. Now, after years of being out of print after the album’s U.S. label, A&M Records, got sucked up by the Universal Records machine, Crazy Rhythms is available once again for a whole new generation to enjoy its quirky genius thanks to Individuals frontman Glenn Morrow’s Bar-None imprint out of Hoboken, NJ, home of The Feelies’ favorite haunt, Maxwell’s.
Remastered and repackaged in a very cool slimline digipak (this is key, as the album’s cover art featuring headshots of the original members of The Feelies against a sky blue backdrop is one of the main selling points – just ask Weezer, who paid homage via the cover of their 1994 debut), the CD and LP of Crazy Rhythms only features the original 9 tracks – which includes such favorites as “The Boy With The Perpetual Nervousness”, “Fa ce-La,” and their scorching cover of The Beatles’ White Album rocker “Everybody’s Got Something to Hide Except for Me and My Monkey” – at the request of the band in order to maintain the integrity of the album’s initial issue. However, the CD does include a download card that features five bonus tracks, including the original Rough Trade 7-inch single version of “Fa ce-La,” demo versions of “The Boy With The Perpetual Nervousness” and “Moscow Nights,” and live renditions of the title track and a cover of the Modern Lovers’ “I Wanna Sleep In Your Arms” from a March 2009 show at the 9:30 Club in Washington, DC.
Also released in tandem with Crazy Rhythms is its equally-indispensible 1986 follow-up, The Good Earth, produced by Peter Buck of R.E.M. and one of the true cornerstones of that jangly, college rock sound we all love so much.
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Hide avatar display photo from friends in Yahoo Messenger
Yahoo messenger allows you to add and display your personal photo as avatar image. We have already seen how to add picture as avatar photo in Yahoo Messenger. Incase after addition, you want to hide your avatar image from Yahoo messenger friends / buddies – following is simple procedure.
Hide avatar images in Yahoo Messenger
1. Open [...]
Add picture / photo as avatar image in Yahoo Messenger
Yahoo messenger is a cool application to chat and stay connected with Yahoo friends. Just like any social networking platform showing personal (self) photo on your profile in Yahoo messenger is a usual routine.
Following is an easy procedure to add and show your picture as avatar image in Yahoo messenger.
Add your image as avatar in [...]
What the Fed is REALLY Trying to Hide In Fighting an Audit
75% of Americans and at least 276 Congress members and 19 Senators want to audit the Fed, but the Fed is fighting tooth and nail to keep everything hidden.Most people assume that the Fed wants to keep secret the list of banks which received bailout m…
Shaurya Chauhaan to work with Bipasha Basu and Billy Zane
Shaurya Chauhaan is currently on a new high. The actress has been offered the second lead in renowned Bengali director Tapan Saha’s forthcoming Hollywood project with Bipasaha Basu and Billy Zane.
This beautiful and hot Kingfisher calendar girl had the opportunity to meet the renowned Bengali director Tapan Saha when she was shooting for an [...]
Cheney Told CIA To Hide Program From Congress
WASHINGTON — Former Vice President Dick Cheney directed the CIA eight years ago not to inform Congress about a nascent counterterrorism program that CIA Director Leon Panetta terminated in June, officials with direct knowledge of the mat…
Giving life a shape

Novel ways of thinking about the digital world are needed, says Bill Thompson, and perhaps the arts can help.
One of the more interesting shifts in the technology world over the last quarter century has been the way that cultural organisations have gone from being the late adopters, inheriting office-oriented computer systems from business and making do with them, to being those leading the digital revolution in many areas.
When I worked with the Community Computing Network in the late 80s it was hard work persuading charities and voluntary organisations that having a computer to handle their member databases and print letters was worthwhile.
But now that there really is a computer on every desk and word processing, spreadsheets and databases are standard, arts organisations seem to be far more willing to engage and experiment with the latest tools, especially online.
"We have few stories that talk about technology and few workable metaphors or analogies that let us convey complex technological issues in ways that people really grasp"
Bill Thompson
Many are making expert use of social media, moving from MySpace and Bebo to Facebook to follow the audiences, but also finding out how Twitter and other services can be used to help them engage and interact with people who may be interested in their art.
Stage craft
The much-loved Pilot Theatre brought in virtual worlds expert Caron Lyon to built them a stage set in Second Life. The team at Hoi Polloi used video diaries, Facebook and Twitter to establish an online following that has supported them as they tour from their Cambridge base as far afield as Australia, offering new audiences a chance to discover their work in all its strangeness while also ensuring that fans – including me – know what they are up to while they are away.
When it comes crossover organisations like Hide&Seek, who recently ran a social gaming festival in London, it is impossible to separate the art from the technology, and their work offers a real inspiration to those who wonder what the arts will look like in a digitised world.
This cross-fertilisation is important in several ways. It obviously makes sense for those committed to experiment and exploration in the arts to embrace new technologies as a way of exploring the creative potential of a new domain of human activity, just as painters explored the radical new technology of oils for for many decades, or sculptors turned from marble and limestone to work with welded iron or novel materials like frozen blood.
But there is something else going on, something deeper and potentially more important, because in working through the creative potential of new technologies artists of all types are helping us to find new ways to think about these tools and working out how to integrate them into our wider cultural and commercial practice.
They are helping us to explore the latest chapter in the ongoing conversation between human psychology and the capabilities of modern technology, something which will matter more and more as the network becomes pervasive and digital devices penetrate every area of our lives.
The point was made clear to me at Shift Happens, a conference on the ways arts organisations are using new technologies that took place this week at York Theatre Royal.
Over a day and a half the audience, mostly made up of practitioners, was treated to a fascinating selection of arts-based technology, or technology-based arts, from the interactive animations of the always-engaging Sancho Plan through calls to ensure that tech-based arts are environmentally sustainable from Envirodigital and a demonstration of how to subtitle your online video from Internet Subtitling.

It quickly became clear that the network revolution is already happening in the arts even if its success on the political stage is sometimes sadly limited, as we saw this week in Iran.
One problem in talking about this is that relatively few people understand the underlying technology sufficiently well to be comfortable with it. We have few stories that talk about technology and few workable metaphors or analogies that let us convey complex technological issues in ways that people really grasp.
Texting times
I wonder, however, if we can take some old stories and use them to explore the new world. Take The Tempest, for example, Shakespeare’s last play and one of his finest. Set on a remote island where Prospero, exiled Duke of Milan, lives with his daughter Miranda and a strange creature called Caliban, the Tempest explores issues of redemption and forgiveness and the use and abuse of power.
Prospero rules his island thanks the the spells in the books he has studied in his exile, commanding the spirit Ariel to torment and manipulate his former enemies, who have been shipwrecked on the island by a tempest created at Prospero’s command.
A modern reading this tale would see Ariel as a representative of the digital realm, created from bits but able to have a real effect on the physical world. We discover during the play that Ariel was locked into a forked tree until released by Prospero, a good analogy for the effort needed to liberate the power of the digital revolution, represented by Prospero’s books of spells.
We can take this further. The witch’s child Caliban believes himself the true inheritor of the island as his mother was banished there before Prospero arrived and fails to realise that Prospero’s books have given him power over the unseen world that far outstrip Caliban’s physical prowess, just as the rulers of analogue distribution fear the world we have conjured from our code.
And when Caliban, wandering the island with shipwrecked sailors Trinculo and Stephano, hears an invisible Ariel playing on a pipe he tells them:
Be not afeard. The isle is full of noises, Sounds and sweet airs that give delight and hurt not.
Today the thousand twangling instruments that Ariel and his sprites conjure up are replaced by millions of tweets, status updates, but they still fill the world with sweet sounds, and offer us a vision of a digital world that can be as rich and full of delight as we choose to make it. It’s reassuring to see that some of our best artists are working hard to make that happen.
Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service programme Digital Planet.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




