RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘journey’

Jenna Jameson says she quit porn industry for kids’ sake

In an interview, Queen of Porn Jenna Jameson has revealed why she quit the adult film industry. The former sex movie worker – widely acknowledged as the world”s most famous ‘adult entertainment performer” – says she felt that giving up her job and covering up was the only way she could give her 19-month old [...]

Akron/Family: S/T II: The Cosmic Birth and Journey of Shinju TNT

NEW ALBUM HITS STORES FEBRUARY 8 (US) AND MARCH 14 (UK)


S/T II: The Cosmic Birth and Journey of Shinju TNT

Akron/Family will release their new album, S/T II: The Cosmic Birth and Journey of Shinju
TNT
, on February 8 in the US and March 14 in the UK.

A press release states that the album was “written in a cabin
built into the side of Mount Meakan, an active volcano in Akan National Park, on the island of Hokkaido, Japan. It
was recorded in an abandoned train station in Detroit with the blackest white dude we all know, Chris Koltay (Liars,
Women, Deerhunter, Holy Fuck, No Age). Chris, on tour after finishing the record, commented: “This album will
transcend the Internet.”

Click here to listen to “sound fragments” off
the upcoming album.

Tracklisting:
1. Silly Bears
2. Island
3. A AAA O A WAY
4. So It Goes

5. Another Sky
6. Light Emerges
7. Cast a Net
8. Tatsuya Neon Purple Walkby
9. Fuji I (Global Dub)
10. Say What You Want To
11. Fuji II (Single Pane)
12. Canopy
13. Creator

Akron/Family
Tour Dates

::
Akron/Family News
::
Akron/Family
Concert
Reviews


Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson To Replace Brendan Fraser In “Journey To The Center Of The Earth” Sequel

Dwayne Johnson will replace Brendan Fraser in the sequel to 2008’s Journey to the Center of the Earth 3D, The Hollywood Reporter said Wednesday. Journey 2: The Mysterious Island — slated for release in 2011 — will begin production in North Carolina and Hawaii late next month.

Gorillaz Video: “Journey to Plastic Beach”

PLASTIC BEACH OUT NOW

Fresh off their triumphant headlining slot at Glastonbury,
which featured half of The Clash (Mick Jones and
Paul Simonon) as part of the backing band and guest appearances by Snoop Dogg (check out the band
performing “Clint Eastwood”
with Snoop Dogg below), Lou Reed, Shaun Ryder, Mark E. Smith, Kano, De La Soul, and Bobby Womack, Gorillaz have unleashed a
short film which includes both Plastic Beach videos “Stylo” and “Melancholy Hill.” Narrated by fictional
Gorillaz leader
Murdoc, the film is a nifty way to kill 15 minutes and forty four seconds. Check it out below, and click here for the Gorillaz Hulu channel featuring videos, live
performances, and documentaries.

“Journey to Plastic Beach”

“Clint Eastwood” feat. Snoop Dogg Live at Glastonbury 2010

Stressful training for Mars journey begin in Moscow

In order to have some more experience and data for traveling to Mars, an international team of researches have started on an experiment that will last 520 days and will put the members of the team to extreme pressures required for the journey.
The six-member all male crew for the experiment include three Russians, [...]

Jenna Jameson OxyContin Addiction To Blame For Felony Assault Charges, Says Tito Ortiz

Are drugs behind the early Monday morning arrest of former UFC champion Tito Ortiz, who now faces domestic violence charges for assaulting porn queen Jenna Jameson?The martial arts star claims his ex-porn star girlfriend of four years is addicted to the powerful prescription painkiller OxyContin, and he blames Jenna’s continued drug use for his arrest [...]

Tito Ortiz Jenna Jameson Assault — Ortiz Arrested For Domestic Violence Against Former Porn Star

The Fighting World has a Chris Brown Situation on its hands…..UFC star Tito Ortiz was arrested for felony domestic violence earlier Monday morning after attacking girlfriend Jenna James in the Huntington Beach, California home he shares the retired adult film star. Cops collared the beefy Ortiz after responding to a distress call to find Jenna [...]

Tata Nanos on epic journey

I still haven’t driven a Tata Nano. From the reports I have seen, it’s pretty good for what it is but not exactly a vehicle for long journeys. Some guys raising money for charity are driving some Nanos overland from India to Britain and will arrive in Trafalgar Square on April 10th – all going well. Sounds like a proper road trip and not for the faint-hearted. 

The first leg of 2000 plus km from Amritsar to Mumbai was completed on March 3rd  The team set off again from London on March 26th to join the cars in Iran and complete the second leg to UK.

Good luck to the lads. And, given something I read yesterday, perhaps they should be aware that things could  -  if a handful of recent incidents in India are anything to go by – get a little hot at the rear.

IDEALS Nano Challenge 2010

Tata Nano catches fire

 

Tata Nanos on epic journey

I still haven’t driven a Tata Nano. From the reports I have seen, it’s pretty good for what it is but not exactly a vehicle for long journeys. Some guys raising money for charity are driving some Nanos overland from India to Britain and will arrive in Trafalgar Square on April 10th – all going well. Sounds like a proper road trip and not for the faint-hearted. 

The first leg of 2000 plus km from Amritsar to Mumbai was completed on March 3rd  The team set off again from London on March 26th to join the cars in Iran and complete the second leg to UK.

Good luck to the lads. And, given something I read yesterday, perhaps they should be aware that things could  -  if a handful of recent incidents in India are anything to go by – get a little hot at the rear.

IDEALS Nano Challenge 2010

Tata Nano catches fire

 

Sheikh Hasina, Sonia Gandhi to attend Basu’s last journey

Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and United Progressive Alliance (UPA) chairperson Sonia Gandhi will be among a host of dignitaries scheduled to arrive here Tuesday to pay their last respects to Marxist patriarch Jyoti Basu.
Union Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee will represent the central government, Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) West Bengal state secretary Biman Bose [...]

A fare price?

The costliest cities for public transport

AN UNEXPECTED benefit of the recession for those lucky enough to keep their jobs may be a less crowded journey to work. So while the commute may be a bit more pleasant now, painful future fare increases are likely to compensate for lost revenue. But commuters and other travellers already suffer great financial pain in some cities. In Stockholm it costs $4.88 for a single journey of 10km on public transport, the highest cost in a study of 73 cities by UBS, a Swiss bank. London and Sydney are not far behind. But in Delhi it costs a mere $0.16 to make a similar journey.

Nation mourns as Kennedy makes final journey

With Americans mourning Edward Kennedy and the end of a dynasty that dominated US politics for a generation, the liberal lion’s family Thursday prepared to accompany his body on its final journey. All government buildings lowered the Stars and Stripes to half-mast, as did private homes in

Plane disappears over Indonesia

A plane with 16 people on board has gone missing over the remote Papua region of eastern Indonesia. The journey, from Jayapura to Oksibil, usually takes 50 minutes. The region is thickly forested. Some planes that crashed there have never been found.

Hard road

By Brian Hungwe
Harare

Human smugglers are running a complex multi-million dollar network, fleecing distressed Somalis seeking a way out of their war-torn country and desperate Ethiopians caught up in vicious cycles of hunger, floods and political repression.

Trafficked person

Thousands of people leave their countries every year, trekking thousands of miles through eight countries from the Horn of Africa, via East Africa down to South Africa.

Bribes oil their journeys across the region by air, overland and sea.

And immigration and police are complicit. The state of the airports and the corruption that goes on there mirrors the body politic of the countries involved. And this has security implications for the countries involved.

"The next five to 10 years, Somalia will have nobody there"

Ismail, Somali truck driver in Malawi

In a recent report on smuggling in the region, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) noted that "guardians of national border integrity… are deeply compromised, creating a threat to national security".

It says their complicity is keeping the smuggling business afloat and that they "should be considered part of the illegal and abusive enterprise" where "cupidity appears to be the foremost and only visible motivation".

Huge sums

IOM’s Tal Raviv, based in Nairobi, acknowledges that the smuggling ring is "sophisticated."

Street scene in Eastleigh, Kenya

"Tens of thousands of people are able to move from Somalia and Ethiopia, all the way down to South Africa, and they arrive successfully," she said.

"All the borders are porous, it’s just that," points out Mokotedi Mpshe, who heads South Africa’s National Prosecuting Authority.

Mr Mpshe knows the extent to which corruption has permeated his society.

"Some government officials can let you down. We may try to fight human trafficking, but at the same time there may be elements amongst ourselves that are working against us," he said.

Cash-strapped governments can’t match the huge sums smugglers pay immigration and police officers to ease the path of illegal immigrants en route to South Africa.

Expanding business

I found that immigrants pay smugglers on average $1,500 – $2,000 before the journey begins.

map of africa

The IOM also estimates the smuggling business generates annual revenue of about $40m. Along the way the immigrants lose much more to robberies.

And rape and other abuse is common.

Over the years, the flow of Somalis has been growing, and thus, according to the IOM, "providing smugglers an expanding and lucrative business opportunity".

"The next five to 10 years, Somalia will have nobody there," said Ismail, a Somali truck driver living in Malawi.

"There is no peace which is coming, there is nobody who is fighting for Somalia."

Lions and snakes

Salma left Somalia with her son Nasir, 3, six years ago, when she was 23. She left her mother and brother behind, and has no clue where they are.

"Sometimes [smugglers] ask the women to sleep with them. You sleep with them, otherwise they leave you behind"

Salma, Somali migrant

From her flat in Cape Town, South Africa, she says that everyone in Somalia is trying to flee the fighting there.

She says she walked on foot for 24 days during the journey.

In Kenya, Salma met Amina, a smuggler linked into a network that carried her across several countries.

Nairobi’s Eastleigh district is, according to IOM, the smuggling hub of the region.

It is a little Mogadishu in the heart of Nairobi, whose life runs 24 hours, hosting a close-knit Somali community that keeps itself to itself.

Money transfers are done with ease, and anything goes. Vehicles with tinted windows are a common sight, and haulage trucks move goods in and out every hour.

It is here that Salma gave $1,000 to the smuggler, Amina, who accompanied her and a small party of migrants on the first half of their journey.

Police bribed

In Tanzania, six members of the party were arrested.

Salma says the smuggler bribed the police to secure their freedom.

She says they had similar experiences in Zambia and Zimbabwe.

"[Smuggler] paid some money and we came out."

Militiaman in Mogadishu

Six years later, Salma’s journey is still vivid for her, as she recounts how she was terrified of lions and snakes as she trudged through the bush.

"Sometimes [smugglers], they ask the women to sleep with them," Salma remembers.

"You sleep with them, otherwise they leave you behind… they do that."

The IOM’s Tal Raviv confirmed that almost all smuggled women get raped, and her organisation has also received reports of the same thing happening to men.

Salma’s journey was even tougher than usual because she was travelling with a child, so the smugglers told her they could not give her accommodation.

"I was struggling too much," she remembers.

Nasir, now nine, vividly recalls sleeping in the forest, his mother walking long distances, and sometimes going for days without food.

"I never ever, I don’t want to do again that journey."

To listen to Brian Hungwe’s full investigation, tune in to African Perspectiveon the BBC World Service.The program is first broadcast on Saturday 1 August at 1106 GMT. It will be available online from 2106 GMT, for one week.</p


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

Novel ideas to beat traffic woes

Worsening traffic is making travelling by car an increasingly frustrating and unpleasant experience. Therefore, companies around the world are working towards a new generation of monitoring and data-gathering technologies that could radically change the way we plan and drive our journeys.
The technologies, according to researchers, should deliver more accurate information on traffic densities to [...]

Apollo 11: We have liftoff

A Saturn V rocket launches Apollo 11 on the first leg of its journey to the moon on 16 July 1969. Apollo expert Christopher Riley commentates


Great ideas aren’t enough

Clean technology entrepreneurs need help to make their low-carbon brainwaves succeed commercially

The UK has a great track record in innovation. A quick look through the history books reveals an illustrious history of invention, from the telephone and the jet engine through to genetic fingerprinting and the internet.

When it comes to tackling climate change, the diversity of the ideas in this week’s Manchester Report shows there is certainly no lack of British ambition or creative thinking. With suggestions such as cheap biomass cooking stoves to harvesting the oceans for energy, many readers might have been wondering why these ideas aren’t already widely deployed. Particularly given their potential to deliver such great rewards for the planet, entrepreneurs, investors and the economy as a whole.

Sadly, the truth is that great ideas alone are not enough to transform the way we generate energy or the carbon-intensive industries that underpin modern living. Serious blood, sweat and tears are needed to ensure that ideas become commercial reality. Investors speak of the journey from “lab to listing”, and finding the right path on this journey is essential if low-carbon entrepreneurs want to see their ideas succeed.

The bottom line, of course, is that the technology needs to work. And this means both in the lab and in the world outside. Having tested the initial concept, the much bigger challenge is then to prove that the technology can be scaled up and replicated on a much larger, commercial scale.

Solar energy from photovoltaic cells is a case in point. The technical potential of generating electricity from the sun’s rays is well-recognised. Making the technology cost-effective when deployed at scale, however, is an issue that must be overcome. To make this a reality, it is vital that we develop advanced photovoltaic technology that can be manufactured at large scale and low cost. That is why the Carbon Trust is currently running a major R & D project to make this vision a commercial reality.

And this gets to the crux of the matter, because development of the technology is only half the battle when it comes to its success. The clean tech sector, like any other, is governed by the basic market principles of supply and demand. There needs to be an appetite for the product and it must be possible to deliver it on the scale required, at the quality required and at an acceptable price.

For this reason, the innovators behind any great low-carbon idea must build a thorough understanding of the market from the outset. Understanding who the key players are and establishing relationships with them is essential – both to build credibility and to understand the needs and wants of the organisations that may well be the customers of the future. Innovators also have to show they understand their final customers, and what they want. This requires a focus on moving them from a state of indifference (we know you exist, but… ) through curiosity, and on to where they have a genuine desire to purchase your product.

We have seen this sort of transition with fuel cells. Over the past five years, UK fuel cell companies have moved from small research-focused organisations to companies with listings on the Alternative Investment Market, partnering with household-name utilities and maintaining order books worth tens of millions of pounds.

Finally, the ability to build a capable and financially stable company as the organisation grows is a key factor in determining whether a technology lives or dies in the real world. The reality is that the best inventors aren’t always the best business leaders, so pulling in the right skills from a commercial and production perspective and attracting significant, private, external funds to fuel growth, is key.

Not all clean tech brainwaves will see the light of day but, with the UK on the cusp of a clean tech revolution which could generate fantastic economic opportunity, it is imperative that we speed up the process of commercialising new ideas. As the Manchester Report demonstrates, there is a wealth of innovative thinking ripe for the picking. The key will be to provide flexible but targeted support for these companies, to help them navigate the innovation journey. They can then emerge from the lab and grow into successful commercial businesses that will sit at the heart of the low-carbon economy.

• Garry Staunton is Technology Director at The Carbon Trust

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Alan Lurie: What The Bible Teaches About Being Of Service

This is a follow up to last week’s message about answering the call to service. According to the Bible, the call to service began with…