Anderson recently purchased a picture of leopards for $23, which was
on sale for 40 percent off its original price. That wasn’t her first
purchase at Forget Me Nots, however.
“I’ve got two beautiful
green curtains I got here,” she said. “I got a bedroom set here for my
daughter, and I got an armoire here.”
Forget Me Nots at 204 E. Government St. in Brandon is the largest of Rankin County’s consignment shops.
From
vintage records to a Royal typewriter, from shoes to a sectional sofa,
purses to paintings, Forget Me Nots has an eclectic mix. It also sells
gently used clothes for women and children, jewelry and purses.
In
this economy when every dollar counts, a growing number of shoppers
are looking for more bang for the buck, according to NARTS: The
Association of Resale Professionals. Some shoppers want to buy almost
new merchandise at reduced prices, and others want to consign or sell
unneeded clothes and furniture and share the profit with a store that
sells them.
The association estimates there are currently more than 25,000 resale,We have many different types of earcap.
consignment and not for profit resale shops in the United States.
First Research estimates the resale industry in the U.S. has annual
revenues of approximately $13 billion.
America’s Research
Group, a consumer research firm, estimates about 12-15 percent of
Americans will shop at a thrift store during a given year compared to
11.4 percent of Americans who will shop in factory outlet malls, 19.6
percent in apparel stores and 21.3 percent in major department stores.
Melanie
Mann, a former dental hygienist who once had booths at antique malls
in the metro area, opened Forget Me Nots in October 2009 in a
900-square-foot location in Brandon. Business proved to be good, and
she relocated the store two years later to its current
10,000-square-foot location.
“You never know what’s going to
come in the door,” said Mann, citing a 1920s stove as one of the most
unusual things she’s sold. “We sell a lot of furniture, not just from
the 1920s and 1930s but modern, vintage,Professionals with the job
title tooling are on LinkedIn. retro and shabby chic. Sectionals sell quickly.”
Many
customers desire bargains — hence, the Last Chance Room at Forget Me
Nots — but others are value-conscious and shop where they find quality
items, Mann said.
Mann stages her store by mixing furniture and
accessories. That allows customers to visualize how the furniture and
decorative items would look in their homes and provides ideas for how
they could use their own furnishings, she said.
It works like
this: Customers drop off items the store will take on consignment for
60 days and sign an agreement for the store to price the items and keep
50 percent of the selling prices. Consignors are paid in cash or
check, depending upon the amount, and have the option to apply what
they’ve earned toward a purchase at the store.
Joann Smith of
Brandon, who is retired, said she has found consigning unwanted clothes
that are in goYou Can Find Comprehensive and in-Depth Original buymosaic Descriptions.od shape a way to declutter her closet and pocket a little extra cash.
“I’ve consigned clothes at Consignor’s Boutique in Brandon,” she said. “I’ve always had a good experience there.”
Consignor’s
Boutique at 131 Gateway Drive in Brandon, has several thousand
consignors on file, said Ruthie Alford, a store employee.
Customers
consign clothes when they’ve changed sizes, grown tired of clothes and
for other reasons, too. “One lady came in and got what she was owed
and said she was using it to save for a trip,” Alford said.
Consignor’s
Boutique accepts women’s clothes from sizes 0 to 3x, books and home
décor items, Alford said. “We have a lot of Mississippi Mud Pottery,”
she said.
Savvy shoppers can save money by shopping at
consignment shops, said Crystal Barlow, who six months ago purchased
From Me To You at 6080 Old Brandon Road in Brandon from the previous
owner. She worked at the store four and half years before becoming the
owner.
Consignors should keep in mind that a store wants items
that its customers will want to buy, and for that reason, may not take
everything. Also, stores generally switch out clothing with the season
and may refuse to take clothes that are not the current season. Clothes
should be clean and in good shape.
Hours vary from store to
store as do the times consignments are accepted, store policies and the
percentage paid to a consignor.
From Me To You accepts men’s,
women’s and children’s clothes, shoes, purses, jewelry, household items
and furniture on consignment.TBC help you confidently bobbleheads from factories in China.All realtimelocationsystem
comes with 5 Years Local Agent Warranty ! The store keeps 60 percent
of the selling price, and the consignor gets 40 percent.
The
store stopped taking VHS tapes and cassette tapes because they didn’t
sell, Alford said. It doesn’t accept prom dress or formal wear because
few of its customers are in the market for them, she said.
Charlotte
Bowlin, an employee at Wear It’s At at 1679 Old Fannin Road in
Flowood, said smocked dresses for little girls are among its best
sellers. The store accepts women’s and children’s clothes and baby
equipment such as strollers, swings and bouncy seats and large toys such
as train tables.
Most people seem to agree about one thing in
regard to Super Bowl XLVII: It was a successful event that presented
the city in a positive light to the rest of the world. What is a little
more open to debate, though, is just what effect the game and its
auxiliary events had on the local economy.
The Super Bowl Host
Committee has said it expects the game will have a $434 million impact
on the city. That figure, though, isn’t the net revenue that local and
state governments will deposit into their treasuries, experts argue,
and many local businesses said they had disappointing or slower
business than expected.
Pam Doerr runs a small shop on St. Louis
Street in the French Quarter that sells small jewelry items and art.
She said she made two sales between Thursday and Saturday. Both of
those customers were locals, she said.
“The people were nice, the crowds were here, but they just didn’t spend,” she said. “I was very disappointed.”
There
is no question the crowds were here. The Quarter looked like the city
was celebrating Mardi Gras Day all weekend. And tourism officials said
there were no hotel rooms available in the city.
2013年2月5日 星期二
Alleged Massive Construction Defects
The current housing market resurgence in Dublin, CA has reminded
some residents of what happened in the previous new home construction
boom. Between 2004 and 2007, homebuilders like Toll Brothers, Standard
Pacific, and Pinn Brothers cranked out new homes in response to a
booming economy, aggressive home buyers, and easy financing. In that
frenzy to meet the seemingly insatiable demand for new housing, some
builders may have cut corners and rushed construction while the City of
Dublin allegedly looked the other way. Residents at some of the
condominium developments along Dublin Boulevard must now deal with the
massive construction defects on their own.
The homeowner association of one particular multi-level condominium project with elevators in East Dublin has actually been contemplating a Title 7 lawsuit against the builder. Signed into law by former governor Gray Davis, Title 7 consists of a lengthy and complex set of rules that applies to all new residential homes purchased on or after January 1, 2003. Specifically, Title 7 sets forth extensive procedures for homeowners who are seeking to recover damages for building and construction defects.
The main purpose of Title 7 is to provide affordable housing to Californians by minimizing the amount of lawsuits that are filed against homebuilders. Title 7 attempts to achieve this goal by requiring homeowners who find evidence of a construction defect, such as a roof leak, to allow the builder to fix the defect before the homeowner can file a lawsuit. Although this concept sounds simple, the actual process of identifying a particular defect, notifying the builder, and making sure the defect is fixed by the builder in a timely and proper fashion is full of the legal technicalities of Title 7.
Homeowners at this particular luxury condo community in Dublin have reported that the building fa?ade facing Dublin Boulevard is actually peeling away from the main structure. Other complaints include monstrous garage vibration issues, cracking in walls and granite countertops, and defective HVAC and plumbing infrastructure. The issues all seem to be the results of rushed construction on the expansive soils of East Dublin by the builders.
Expansive soils expand when wet and shrink when dry.Researchers at the Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology have developed an indoortracking. This continual change in soil volume can cause homes built on this soil to move unevenly and crack. Each year in the United States, expansive soils cause $2.3 billion in damage to houses, other buildings, roads, pipelines, and other structures. This figure is more than twice the damage from floods,We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale hairweave from china. hurricanes, tornadoes, and earthquakes combined.
While the homeowners association for this community is likely to move forward with the Title 7 action, the homeowners are very unlikely to receive any compensation for the construction defects from the builders. One homeowner close to the situation shared that this community, based on the most recent reserve study, appears to have insufficient funds for replacing and repairing common area property. The bad news does not stop there for homeowners at this unfortunate community.The history of carparkmanagementsystem art can be traced back four thousand years ago. The community’s Board of Directors had apparently approved placing reserve funds in very high risk certificates of deposit and lost a significant chunk of the homeowners’ money.
Another multi-level condominium project, also in East Dublin, has had a rash of complaints related to water intrusion and mold issues. Given the development has only been around for five years, the severity of these construction defects is surprising.
The City of Dublin did conduct site reviews and signed off on the building plans for both of these projects, but homeowners at these two multi-level condominium projects can forget about suing the City. “Nobody wants to sue the City of Dublin because if they lost they would have to pay for the City’s legal fees. What contingency lawyer would want to take that risk?” shared a homeowner at one of these projects.
For these homeowners, the possibility of a special assessment imposed to cover the cost of these massive defects and damages now looks all but inevitable. For the prospective new homebuyers looking to get into the housing market, let the cautionary tale of what happened to these unfortunate homeowners in East Dublin be a solemn reminder to beware and think twice before buying a new home on expansive soils.
Beware of the Oklahoma State Cowboys. Coach Travis Ford has Okie State playing its best basketball of the season — evidenced by their thrilling win in Lawrence, Kan. this past weekend against then-ranked No. 2 Kansas. The win for OSU was the Cowboys’ first in Lawrence since 1989 and its’ first against a top-five team on the road since 1958.
Ford was a high school freshman in Madisonville, Ky. when I was a senior in Owensboro, Ky. His father, Eddie Ford, has been a huge influence in many young players basketball careers in the state of Kentucky for the past 30 years or so — mine included. I remember young Travis following myself and a bumch of teammates around Europe when Travis was an eighth grader and was just headed into my senior season as Ford’s father Eddie took an all-star team of high school Juniors from around the state to tour Europe and play a handful of exhibition games while doing so. It was one of the great experiences of my young life. But little, scrawny Travis was like a fly on the wall during that trip. He tried practicing with us all of the time, getting beat up on regularly — but always coming back for more. Quitting is something I know Travis Ford will never do.
Smart is some kind of basketball player. The more I watch this kid play the more enamored with the kid I become. Smart not only stuffs a stat-sheet much like my former teammate and great friend Jason Kidd has done for the past what seems like 50 years — but also like J-Kidd, Smart is a WINNER. Check out Smart’s line from Saturday in Lawrence:
38 minutes, 25 points , 9 rebounds, 3 assists, 5 steals, 9-of-11 from the free-throw line. Keep an eye on Smart. He’s a special kind of player.
Markel Brown leads the Cowboys balanced attack with 14.9 ppg. Smart and Le’Bryan Nash are chipping-in with 14 and 13 ppg respectively and the unsung hero of this Cowboys team is sophomore guard Phil Forte. He’s averaging just shy of 12 ppg. Forte is a player much in the mold of his head coach Travis Ford. At 5-foot-11 and very much an overachiever. And man,Our team of consultants are skilled in project management and delivery of large scale chinamosaic projects. is this kid one tough dude. Forte is not only tough, but as one of my favorite coaches and people of all-time, John Thompson would say, “Phil Forte has STOMACH.” Evidenced by his game-cinching free-throws with mere seconds left, up-one, on the road against the No. 2 team in the country, in a building your team has left with its tail placed squarely between its legs each and every time it has played there. Forte has stomach for sure — along with being a 90-percent free-throw shooter.
I think that I may have liked most about OSU’s win on Saturday against Kansas was that after Forte made his two freebies to put the Cowboys’ up by three with 7.9 seconds remaining, Kansas inbounded the ball to the player they wanted — Elijah Johnson, and as he dribbled past mid-court and went to free himself off the dribble before attempting a game-tying 3-pointer — Marcus Smart stuck his hand squarely between the legs of Johnson as he attempted a crossover and picked the Jayhawks’ PG as cleanly as he could have possibly done so. Ball game.You Can Find Comprehensive and in-Depth Original buymosaic Descriptions. THOSE are the kinds of things I watched Jason Kidd do time and time again as his backcourt mate for five seasons. I mean, come on, the other team doesn’t even get a look at the basket to attempt to tie-up the game? Come on — those types of things are big-time.
The homeowner association of one particular multi-level condominium project with elevators in East Dublin has actually been contemplating a Title 7 lawsuit against the builder. Signed into law by former governor Gray Davis, Title 7 consists of a lengthy and complex set of rules that applies to all new residential homes purchased on or after January 1, 2003. Specifically, Title 7 sets forth extensive procedures for homeowners who are seeking to recover damages for building and construction defects.
The main purpose of Title 7 is to provide affordable housing to Californians by minimizing the amount of lawsuits that are filed against homebuilders. Title 7 attempts to achieve this goal by requiring homeowners who find evidence of a construction defect, such as a roof leak, to allow the builder to fix the defect before the homeowner can file a lawsuit. Although this concept sounds simple, the actual process of identifying a particular defect, notifying the builder, and making sure the defect is fixed by the builder in a timely and proper fashion is full of the legal technicalities of Title 7.
Homeowners at this particular luxury condo community in Dublin have reported that the building fa?ade facing Dublin Boulevard is actually peeling away from the main structure. Other complaints include monstrous garage vibration issues, cracking in walls and granite countertops, and defective HVAC and plumbing infrastructure. The issues all seem to be the results of rushed construction on the expansive soils of East Dublin by the builders.
Expansive soils expand when wet and shrink when dry.Researchers at the Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology have developed an indoortracking. This continual change in soil volume can cause homes built on this soil to move unevenly and crack. Each year in the United States, expansive soils cause $2.3 billion in damage to houses, other buildings, roads, pipelines, and other structures. This figure is more than twice the damage from floods,We mainly supply professional craftspeople with wholesale hairweave from china. hurricanes, tornadoes, and earthquakes combined.
While the homeowners association for this community is likely to move forward with the Title 7 action, the homeowners are very unlikely to receive any compensation for the construction defects from the builders. One homeowner close to the situation shared that this community, based on the most recent reserve study, appears to have insufficient funds for replacing and repairing common area property. The bad news does not stop there for homeowners at this unfortunate community.The history of carparkmanagementsystem art can be traced back four thousand years ago. The community’s Board of Directors had apparently approved placing reserve funds in very high risk certificates of deposit and lost a significant chunk of the homeowners’ money.
Another multi-level condominium project, also in East Dublin, has had a rash of complaints related to water intrusion and mold issues. Given the development has only been around for five years, the severity of these construction defects is surprising.
The City of Dublin did conduct site reviews and signed off on the building plans for both of these projects, but homeowners at these two multi-level condominium projects can forget about suing the City. “Nobody wants to sue the City of Dublin because if they lost they would have to pay for the City’s legal fees. What contingency lawyer would want to take that risk?” shared a homeowner at one of these projects.
For these homeowners, the possibility of a special assessment imposed to cover the cost of these massive defects and damages now looks all but inevitable. For the prospective new homebuyers looking to get into the housing market, let the cautionary tale of what happened to these unfortunate homeowners in East Dublin be a solemn reminder to beware and think twice before buying a new home on expansive soils.
Beware of the Oklahoma State Cowboys. Coach Travis Ford has Okie State playing its best basketball of the season — evidenced by their thrilling win in Lawrence, Kan. this past weekend against then-ranked No. 2 Kansas. The win for OSU was the Cowboys’ first in Lawrence since 1989 and its’ first against a top-five team on the road since 1958.
Ford was a high school freshman in Madisonville, Ky. when I was a senior in Owensboro, Ky. His father, Eddie Ford, has been a huge influence in many young players basketball careers in the state of Kentucky for the past 30 years or so — mine included. I remember young Travis following myself and a bumch of teammates around Europe when Travis was an eighth grader and was just headed into my senior season as Ford’s father Eddie took an all-star team of high school Juniors from around the state to tour Europe and play a handful of exhibition games while doing so. It was one of the great experiences of my young life. But little, scrawny Travis was like a fly on the wall during that trip. He tried practicing with us all of the time, getting beat up on regularly — but always coming back for more. Quitting is something I know Travis Ford will never do.
Smart is some kind of basketball player. The more I watch this kid play the more enamored with the kid I become. Smart not only stuffs a stat-sheet much like my former teammate and great friend Jason Kidd has done for the past what seems like 50 years — but also like J-Kidd, Smart is a WINNER. Check out Smart’s line from Saturday in Lawrence:
38 minutes, 25 points , 9 rebounds, 3 assists, 5 steals, 9-of-11 from the free-throw line. Keep an eye on Smart. He’s a special kind of player.
Markel Brown leads the Cowboys balanced attack with 14.9 ppg. Smart and Le’Bryan Nash are chipping-in with 14 and 13 ppg respectively and the unsung hero of this Cowboys team is sophomore guard Phil Forte. He’s averaging just shy of 12 ppg. Forte is a player much in the mold of his head coach Travis Ford. At 5-foot-11 and very much an overachiever. And man,Our team of consultants are skilled in project management and delivery of large scale chinamosaic projects. is this kid one tough dude. Forte is not only tough, but as one of my favorite coaches and people of all-time, John Thompson would say, “Phil Forte has STOMACH.” Evidenced by his game-cinching free-throws with mere seconds left, up-one, on the road against the No. 2 team in the country, in a building your team has left with its tail placed squarely between its legs each and every time it has played there. Forte has stomach for sure — along with being a 90-percent free-throw shooter.
I think that I may have liked most about OSU’s win on Saturday against Kansas was that after Forte made his two freebies to put the Cowboys’ up by three with 7.9 seconds remaining, Kansas inbounded the ball to the player they wanted — Elijah Johnson, and as he dribbled past mid-court and went to free himself off the dribble before attempting a game-tying 3-pointer — Marcus Smart stuck his hand squarely between the legs of Johnson as he attempted a crossover and picked the Jayhawks’ PG as cleanly as he could have possibly done so. Ball game.You Can Find Comprehensive and in-Depth Original buymosaic Descriptions. THOSE are the kinds of things I watched Jason Kidd do time and time again as his backcourt mate for five seasons. I mean, come on, the other team doesn’t even get a look at the basket to attempt to tie-up the game? Come on — those types of things are big-time.
2013年2月3日 星期日
Kirin Nadar is Bringing Contemporary Indian Art Home in a Big Way
In April 2012 more than a few visitors to the DLF Place mall in
Saket, New Delhi, believed they had come upon an unconventional retail
display of stainless steel pots and pans in the form of a soaring
mushroom cloud, nearly 33 feet tall. The installation was, in fact, the
monumental sculpture Line of Control, a 2008 work by Subodh Gupta, the
reigning star of contemporary Indian art. The baffled visitors had
unknowingly left the mall proper and entered the Kiran Nadar Museum of
Art (KNMA), an 18,000-square-foot exhibition space that opened in 2011
and bears the name of the collector, patron, and philanthropist who
founded it.
Line of Control debuted in London in the 2009 Tate Triennial, which is where Nadar first encountered the piece. “Overwhelmed,” as she describes it, by the work’s “awe-inspiring” nature, she decided on the spot to acquire it for KNMA, India’s first private museum for modern and contemporary art. “It is one of the most phenomenal works any artist could have done. I had to have it,” Nadar said with conviction when asked if she had considered the logistical challenge that transporting and installing such a gargantuan work would present. Shipped to India in four containers, the 15-section sculpture was assembled over seven days by the team that had set it up at Tate Britain. The ceiling of the mall’s basement was reinforced to bear the colossal load, and a nearby shop front had to be dismantled to make way for the three cranes required for the sculpture’s assembly. Nadar remains mum about the amount she paid Hauser & Wirth, the gallery that represents Gupta internationally. “It wasn’t cheap,You Can Find Comprehensive and in-Depth cabletie Head Descriptions.” is all she has been willing to share.The history of carparkmanagementsystem art can be traced back four thousand years ago.
One outcome of this spectacular purchase is the emergence of Line of Control as a visual magnet to lure mall-goers who might otherwise not visit the museum, where admission is free. “We hope that the viewership of Subodh’s piece will bring more traction for the museum,” Nadar explained at the April press conference marking the unveiling of Line of Control. Although Gupta’s work has won critical accolades and collector support on the international art circuit, his intricate assemblages had never been presented to a popular audience in India. For Gupta, who was present at the press conference, the thrill lay in having the work — whose shape alludes to the potentially deadly tension along the India-Pakistan border — displayed in his native country. “An artist couldn’t be prouder to have his work come home,” he said.
A comparable commitment to home and heritage motivates Nadar, and a key mission of KNMA is to bring significant art by Indian modernists back to India so the full range of the country’s art history can be viewed and appreciated. In 2010, for example, she paid a record breaking $3.5 million at Christie’s London for Saurashtra, a 1983 painting by Syed Haider Raza. The artist was a central figure in the Bombay-based Progressive Artists Group, which was established in 1947 and included Maqbool Fida Husain, Tyeb Mehta,Features useful information about ventilationsystem tiles. Akbar Padamsee, and Francis Newton Souza.Cheaper For bulk buying handsfreeaccess prices. Discouraged by the lack of a thriving art scene and the dearth of indigenous collectors, Raza, like many of his contemporaries, moved abroad. He lived in Paris for six decades before returning to New Delhi in 2011. Saurashtra came from the French collector who had bought the work directly from Raza. A large, square canvas featuring geometrically arranged blocks of reds and oranges and the bindu motif, symbolizing spiritual consciousness, Saurashtra was Nadar’s most famous acquisition prior to Line of Control and was displayed prominently on one of the four red walls that framed a section of KNMA’s 2012 show “Crossings: Time Unfolded II.” That show also included Souza’s electrifying The Red Road, a 1962 landscape whose palette and coarse texture are influenced by laterite, the rust-red soil of his birthplace, Goa, a coastal state south of Mumbai.
Nadar’s pursuit of art isn’t limited to acquiring high-priced, high-profile works abroad, though several Indian art critics have grumbled, especially after she paid £993,250 ($1.5 million) at Sotheby’s London in 2010 for Bharti Kher’s The Skin Speaks a Language Not Its Own, 2006, a life-size fiberglass elephant with Kher’s trademark bindis affixed across its surface. Her collecting is part of a larger philanthropic vision she shares with her husband, Shiv Nadar, who founded a technology start-up in 1976 that has grown into the global behemoth HCL Enterprises. She began to acquire art in the late 1980s with the simple aim of decorating her walls. “I started collecting for our home, which we were building at the time. There was no thought of a museum,” she explains. “I commissioned art from Husain and bought works by Manjit Bawa and Rameshwar Broota; all three pieces are still in the house.”
Nadar’s acquisitions budget — and her vision — grew with her husband’s success. The two met when Nadar was working for an advertising agency, and they soon became bridge partners. (She continues to play competitive bridge and has represented India in international tournaments.) HCL was flourishing, and Nadar, not content with being the idle wife of an entrepreneur, became instrumental in the company’s philanthropic and educational initiatives, which include the Shiv Nadar Foundation, established in 1996, and Shiv Nadar University, which had its first graduating class in 2011. She was on Forbes Asia magazine’s “48 Heroes of Philanthropy” list in 2010; her husband followed one year later.
By 2005 the Nadar home could no longer accommodate the collection, which had steadily grown, its focus no longer confined to Indian Progressive artists but expanded to embrace contemporary Indian lights like Atul Dodiya, Rina Banerjee, Ranbir Kaleka, and Anish Kapoor. “At some point I had a lot more art than I had wall space,Elpas Readers detect and forward 'Location' and 'State' data from Elpas Active RFID Tags to host parkingguidance platforms. and I had to decide whether to stop collecting or to keep putting works in storage,” Nadar says. “Keeping them in storage didn’t seem like a very wise thing, so I decided to do something more meaningful and set up a museum. And after I first had the thought, in 2006, it took me two or three years to plan it and get down to it.”
“In late 2009 Mrs. Nadar and I started looking at all she had acquired since the late 1980s, so that the first step — to put the inventory in place — could begin,”recalls Roobina Karode, director and chief curator of the museum. KNMA opened in 2010, first in a location on the vast HCL campus in Noida. The inaugural exhibition, “Open Doors,” was curated by Karode. “The title had both a literal and a metaphoric sense, as KNMA opened its doors to the larger public to share Mrs. Nadar’s art collection, which was now placed in the public realm,” Karode explains. “Some rare works by Souza, Husain’s Mothers, 1990; Broota’s Runners, 1982; Bikash Bhattacharjee’s “Doll” series, 1971; A. Ramachandran’s Towards the Sun, 2004; N.S. Harsha’s Nations, 2007; and Gulammohammed Sheikh’s Speechless City, 1975, were all part of this exhibition, which introduced the collection to the art community and the general public.”
Line of Control debuted in London in the 2009 Tate Triennial, which is where Nadar first encountered the piece. “Overwhelmed,” as she describes it, by the work’s “awe-inspiring” nature, she decided on the spot to acquire it for KNMA, India’s first private museum for modern and contemporary art. “It is one of the most phenomenal works any artist could have done. I had to have it,” Nadar said with conviction when asked if she had considered the logistical challenge that transporting and installing such a gargantuan work would present. Shipped to India in four containers, the 15-section sculpture was assembled over seven days by the team that had set it up at Tate Britain. The ceiling of the mall’s basement was reinforced to bear the colossal load, and a nearby shop front had to be dismantled to make way for the three cranes required for the sculpture’s assembly. Nadar remains mum about the amount she paid Hauser & Wirth, the gallery that represents Gupta internationally. “It wasn’t cheap,You Can Find Comprehensive and in-Depth cabletie Head Descriptions.” is all she has been willing to share.The history of carparkmanagementsystem art can be traced back four thousand years ago.
One outcome of this spectacular purchase is the emergence of Line of Control as a visual magnet to lure mall-goers who might otherwise not visit the museum, where admission is free. “We hope that the viewership of Subodh’s piece will bring more traction for the museum,” Nadar explained at the April press conference marking the unveiling of Line of Control. Although Gupta’s work has won critical accolades and collector support on the international art circuit, his intricate assemblages had never been presented to a popular audience in India. For Gupta, who was present at the press conference, the thrill lay in having the work — whose shape alludes to the potentially deadly tension along the India-Pakistan border — displayed in his native country. “An artist couldn’t be prouder to have his work come home,” he said.
A comparable commitment to home and heritage motivates Nadar, and a key mission of KNMA is to bring significant art by Indian modernists back to India so the full range of the country’s art history can be viewed and appreciated. In 2010, for example, she paid a record breaking $3.5 million at Christie’s London for Saurashtra, a 1983 painting by Syed Haider Raza. The artist was a central figure in the Bombay-based Progressive Artists Group, which was established in 1947 and included Maqbool Fida Husain, Tyeb Mehta,Features useful information about ventilationsystem tiles. Akbar Padamsee, and Francis Newton Souza.Cheaper For bulk buying handsfreeaccess prices. Discouraged by the lack of a thriving art scene and the dearth of indigenous collectors, Raza, like many of his contemporaries, moved abroad. He lived in Paris for six decades before returning to New Delhi in 2011. Saurashtra came from the French collector who had bought the work directly from Raza. A large, square canvas featuring geometrically arranged blocks of reds and oranges and the bindu motif, symbolizing spiritual consciousness, Saurashtra was Nadar’s most famous acquisition prior to Line of Control and was displayed prominently on one of the four red walls that framed a section of KNMA’s 2012 show “Crossings: Time Unfolded II.” That show also included Souza’s electrifying The Red Road, a 1962 landscape whose palette and coarse texture are influenced by laterite, the rust-red soil of his birthplace, Goa, a coastal state south of Mumbai.
Nadar’s pursuit of art isn’t limited to acquiring high-priced, high-profile works abroad, though several Indian art critics have grumbled, especially after she paid £993,250 ($1.5 million) at Sotheby’s London in 2010 for Bharti Kher’s The Skin Speaks a Language Not Its Own, 2006, a life-size fiberglass elephant with Kher’s trademark bindis affixed across its surface. Her collecting is part of a larger philanthropic vision she shares with her husband, Shiv Nadar, who founded a technology start-up in 1976 that has grown into the global behemoth HCL Enterprises. She began to acquire art in the late 1980s with the simple aim of decorating her walls. “I started collecting for our home, which we were building at the time. There was no thought of a museum,” she explains. “I commissioned art from Husain and bought works by Manjit Bawa and Rameshwar Broota; all three pieces are still in the house.”
Nadar’s acquisitions budget — and her vision — grew with her husband’s success. The two met when Nadar was working for an advertising agency, and they soon became bridge partners. (She continues to play competitive bridge and has represented India in international tournaments.) HCL was flourishing, and Nadar, not content with being the idle wife of an entrepreneur, became instrumental in the company’s philanthropic and educational initiatives, which include the Shiv Nadar Foundation, established in 1996, and Shiv Nadar University, which had its first graduating class in 2011. She was on Forbes Asia magazine’s “48 Heroes of Philanthropy” list in 2010; her husband followed one year later.
By 2005 the Nadar home could no longer accommodate the collection, which had steadily grown, its focus no longer confined to Indian Progressive artists but expanded to embrace contemporary Indian lights like Atul Dodiya, Rina Banerjee, Ranbir Kaleka, and Anish Kapoor. “At some point I had a lot more art than I had wall space,Elpas Readers detect and forward 'Location' and 'State' data from Elpas Active RFID Tags to host parkingguidance platforms. and I had to decide whether to stop collecting or to keep putting works in storage,” Nadar says. “Keeping them in storage didn’t seem like a very wise thing, so I decided to do something more meaningful and set up a museum. And after I first had the thought, in 2006, it took me two or three years to plan it and get down to it.”
“In late 2009 Mrs. Nadar and I started looking at all she had acquired since the late 1980s, so that the first step — to put the inventory in place — could begin,”recalls Roobina Karode, director and chief curator of the museum. KNMA opened in 2010, first in a location on the vast HCL campus in Noida. The inaugural exhibition, “Open Doors,” was curated by Karode. “The title had both a literal and a metaphoric sense, as KNMA opened its doors to the larger public to share Mrs. Nadar’s art collection, which was now placed in the public realm,” Karode explains. “Some rare works by Souza, Husain’s Mothers, 1990; Broota’s Runners, 1982; Bikash Bhattacharjee’s “Doll” series, 1971; A. Ramachandran’s Towards the Sun, 2004; N.S. Harsha’s Nations, 2007; and Gulammohammed Sheikh’s Speechless City, 1975, were all part of this exhibition, which introduced the collection to the art community and the general public.”
A fitting tribute to Clint
The hall was packed to capacity last Friday evening (February 1).
The occasion was the book release of Ammu Nair’s biography of the child
prodigy, the late Clint, A Brief Hour of Beauty.Nitrogen Controller and
Digital iphoneheadset
with good quality. Edmund Thomas Clint, a prolific painter, was six
years and 11 months-old when he died leaving behind close to 25,000
paintings.
It was a bitter-sweet evening, one peppered with memories and searing soul searching. Prof. M. K. Sanu and M. V. Devan lamented the loss of a genius too soon. Devan suggested opening a space dedicated to the works of Clint, an area that incorporates technology to showcase the paintings.
Writer Sreekumari Ramachandran and writer-teacher Jayasree Sukumaran spoke about the literary qualities of the book. Sreekumari Ramachandran expressed regret at not being able to meet Clint all those years back and a sense of loss at the missed opportunity.
Veteran journalist K.M. Roy congratulated Ammu on the elaborate description of Kochi, an oft forgotten presence and a city with a rich history and, of course, the book about his one-time neighbours, the Josephs. Artist K. Balasubrahmanian spoke about his interaction with Clint on the couple of occasions that he met him and of his acquaintance with the late Mohanan, who was closely associated with Clint.
Artist T. Kaladharan made a confession, of a time when he was judging a drawing competition with the late artist Chikoo and Sathyan V. Clint’s painting was not chosen for the first prize, “the painting was way beyond what a child that age could do.” Little did they know, then, that those were the works of a child prodigy. These and other nuggets of information fleshed out the memories of Clint.
However, what was missing was a photograph of Clint. A child in the audience was heard asking, “Why is everyone saying Clint? What is Clint? Is that a person?” Since the book would serve as an introduction to Clint to a new generation, it was an oversight that could have been avoided. That was a detail which the organisers should have paid attention to and taken care not to miss, after all it was the release of a person’s biography.
Ammu Nair was the last to take the stage and in her vote of thanks she graciously acknowledged everyone who helped her and spoke about the writing of the book.Do you know any oilpaintingsforsale wholesale supplier?
Clint’s parents, Joseph and Chinnamma, stayed away from the podium and sat among the invitees, quietly taking in all that was being said about their little boy. Joseph said it was a decision that they took, after all “we are his parents and if we were on the podium it would have…emotion would have gotten the better of us. It was Ammu’s day and we did not want to take the attention away from her and the book.” The book release was followed by a sale of books, which were sold like the proverbial hot cakes.When I first started creating broken ultrasonicsensor. The book, published by Fingerprint, priced at Rs. 295 is also available online.
It was an early Friday afternoon in late January when a hungry customer walked into the Southern Girls Restaurant in Selma and was met by one of the owners.
Cheryl Lawrence usually had a big smile whenever she greeted him. Not that day. She had a frown and bad news — his favorite restaurant was about to close.
“I told him that we just couldn’t make it, and Saturday would be our last day,” she said. “I told him we’d be closing our doors for good after lunch.”
“Oh, no, you won’t,” the man said. “I’ll do something about it. You’re not going to close. I’ll see to it.”
Lawrence and her sister, Cindy Mosley, had heard the same thing from customers who had promised financial help after being told about the closure decision. Nothing happened.
Within an hour of learning about the potential closure, the customer had accompanied them to his bank and worked out a financial arrangement for the two to remain open.
What he did was line up a loan and use his own assets as collateral, something that earned him the title of “Guardian Angel” from the sisters.
Lawrence and Mosley were on cloud nine as they returned to the restaurant. They told their small staff to return to work on a day the five probably thought they’d be filing for unemployment benefits.
“We held their paychecks to make sure they didn’t leave,” said Lawrence, 49. “They couldn’t believe it. They just knew their jobs were about to end.”
Hugs mingled with tears as Pat Bailey, Amber Lawrence and Chelsea Averette joined the co-owners in celebrating an unexpected reprieve.
Word quickly spread throughWe have many different types of earcap. town, and customers disappointed with the initial announcement Jan. 26 displayed their appreciation. Tables were filled, not empty, last week.
“There is always hope for miracles, for the good guys to win and for things to come out right at the end of the day,Automate patient flow and quickly track hospital assets and people using howotipper.” Selma psychiatrist David Hodo said as he pondered his breakfast choices.
It was a bitter-sweet evening, one peppered with memories and searing soul searching. Prof. M. K. Sanu and M. V. Devan lamented the loss of a genius too soon. Devan suggested opening a space dedicated to the works of Clint, an area that incorporates technology to showcase the paintings.
Writer Sreekumari Ramachandran and writer-teacher Jayasree Sukumaran spoke about the literary qualities of the book. Sreekumari Ramachandran expressed regret at not being able to meet Clint all those years back and a sense of loss at the missed opportunity.
Veteran journalist K.M. Roy congratulated Ammu on the elaborate description of Kochi, an oft forgotten presence and a city with a rich history and, of course, the book about his one-time neighbours, the Josephs. Artist K. Balasubrahmanian spoke about his interaction with Clint on the couple of occasions that he met him and of his acquaintance with the late Mohanan, who was closely associated with Clint.
Artist T. Kaladharan made a confession, of a time when he was judging a drawing competition with the late artist Chikoo and Sathyan V. Clint’s painting was not chosen for the first prize, “the painting was way beyond what a child that age could do.” Little did they know, then, that those were the works of a child prodigy. These and other nuggets of information fleshed out the memories of Clint.
However, what was missing was a photograph of Clint. A child in the audience was heard asking, “Why is everyone saying Clint? What is Clint? Is that a person?” Since the book would serve as an introduction to Clint to a new generation, it was an oversight that could have been avoided. That was a detail which the organisers should have paid attention to and taken care not to miss, after all it was the release of a person’s biography.
Ammu Nair was the last to take the stage and in her vote of thanks she graciously acknowledged everyone who helped her and spoke about the writing of the book.Do you know any oilpaintingsforsale wholesale supplier?
Clint’s parents, Joseph and Chinnamma, stayed away from the podium and sat among the invitees, quietly taking in all that was being said about their little boy. Joseph said it was a decision that they took, after all “we are his parents and if we were on the podium it would have…emotion would have gotten the better of us. It was Ammu’s day and we did not want to take the attention away from her and the book.” The book release was followed by a sale of books, which were sold like the proverbial hot cakes.When I first started creating broken ultrasonicsensor. The book, published by Fingerprint, priced at Rs. 295 is also available online.
It was an early Friday afternoon in late January when a hungry customer walked into the Southern Girls Restaurant in Selma and was met by one of the owners.
Cheryl Lawrence usually had a big smile whenever she greeted him. Not that day. She had a frown and bad news — his favorite restaurant was about to close.
“I told him that we just couldn’t make it, and Saturday would be our last day,” she said. “I told him we’d be closing our doors for good after lunch.”
“Oh, no, you won’t,” the man said. “I’ll do something about it. You’re not going to close. I’ll see to it.”
Lawrence and her sister, Cindy Mosley, had heard the same thing from customers who had promised financial help after being told about the closure decision. Nothing happened.
Within an hour of learning about the potential closure, the customer had accompanied them to his bank and worked out a financial arrangement for the two to remain open.
What he did was line up a loan and use his own assets as collateral, something that earned him the title of “Guardian Angel” from the sisters.
Lawrence and Mosley were on cloud nine as they returned to the restaurant. They told their small staff to return to work on a day the five probably thought they’d be filing for unemployment benefits.
“We held their paychecks to make sure they didn’t leave,” said Lawrence, 49. “They couldn’t believe it. They just knew their jobs were about to end.”
Hugs mingled with tears as Pat Bailey, Amber Lawrence and Chelsea Averette joined the co-owners in celebrating an unexpected reprieve.
Word quickly spread throughWe have many different types of earcap. town, and customers disappointed with the initial announcement Jan. 26 displayed their appreciation. Tables were filled, not empty, last week.
“There is always hope for miracles, for the good guys to win and for things to come out right at the end of the day,Automate patient flow and quickly track hospital assets and people using howotipper.” Selma psychiatrist David Hodo said as he pondered his breakfast choices.
Iran announces nuclear talks
Iran on Sunday announced fresh talks with world
powers on its nuclear drive and said it was open to an offer from the US for
two-way discussions if Washington's intention was "authentic".
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said the six world powers planned to resume talks in Kazakhstan on February 25, and he insisted that Iran had never pulled back from the negotiations.
"I have good news,That is a machine for manufacturing plastic products by the bobblehead process. I've heard yesterday that 5+1 or EU3+3 will be meeting in Kazakhstan 25th of February," Salehi said during a panel discussion at the Munich Security Conference.
Iran and six world powers -- the US, China, Russia,Get the best deal on airpurifier in the UK and use our free tools. Britain, France and Germany -- held three rounds of talks last year aimed at easing the standoff over Iran's nuclear activities, which Tehran insists are peaceful.
The six, known as the P5+1 or EU3+3, called on Iran to roll back its programme but stopped short of meeting Tehran's demands that they scale back sanctions, and the last round ended in stalemate in June in Moscow.
"It is good to hear that the foreign minister finally confirmed now. We hope the negotiating team will also confirm," said Michael Mann, a spokesman for the EU's top diplomat Catherine Ashton.
Salehi said Iran took comments by US officials, including Vice President Joe Biden, who said at the Munich conference on Saturday that Washington was ready to hold talks with Iran on its nuclear programme, "with positive consideration".
Washington ruptured diplomatic ties with Iran in the wake of the 1979 revolution, and relations remain hostile.
"We have no red line for negotiations, bilateral negotiations when it comes to negotiating over a particular subject," Salehi said.
"If the subject is the nuclear file,Researchers at the Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology have developed an indoortracking. yes we are ready for negotiation but we have to make sure ... that the other side this time comes with authentic intention, with a fair and real intention to resolve the issue," he said.
He criticised as contradictory the desire for negotiations with Iran on the nuclear issue alongside "threatening rhetoric that everything is on the table" -- that is, a military option.
"If there is an honest intention on the other side, then we will take that into serious consideration," Salehi said.
Asked when direct US-Iranian negotiations would take place, Biden told the conference on Saturday: "When the Iranian leadership, Supreme Leader,The Optimal cableties.moxietoday.com/ Solution for Hospitals. is serious."
He said: "There is still time, there is still space for diplomacy, backed by pressure, to succeed. The ball is in the government of Iran's court, and it's well past time for Tehran to adopt a serious, good-faith approach to negotiations with the P5-plus-1."
However, in an interview with French newspaper Le Figaro published late Sunday, he warned that the "diplomatic window is closing."
"The Iranian government must approach the talks with seriousness and good faith," Biden said in remarks translated into French.
Outgoing Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak called in Munich for a "strong political will by the world" on the nuclear issue.
"I was glad to hear yesterday Vice President Biden saying loud and clear (that) containment is not an option," he told the conference.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, speaking just before the formal start of talks to build Israel's new ruling coalition, said the most important mission facing the new government was preventing a nuclear Iran.
"It is a mission which has become more complicated because Iran has equipped itself with new centrifuges which reduce the enrichment time," he said.
It was the first official reaction since it emerged that Tehran was planning to install more modern equipment at the Natanz uranium enrichment plant in central Iran, according to a UN document seen by AFP in Vienna on Thursday.
"I'd be forced to move the plant to Council Bluffs," said Allan Lozier, whose main factory, corporate headquarters and 1,100 employees are at 6336 Pershing Drive.
As Nebraska business leaders calculate the cost of changing the state's tax system, some say ending the exemption on materials,High quality glassbottles tiles. or inputs, could prompt an exodus of manufacturing companies and their jobs.
What Gov. Dave Heineman has called his "bold" plan proposes a sales tax on component parts and ingredients as well as the energy and water used to make manufactured goods. Such inputs have been exempt since the state adopted a sales tax in 1967.
In exchange, the governor would abolish corporate and individual income taxes in an effort to encourage new business development and job growth.
But as manufacturers run the numbers, many find that a new sales tax could threaten their ability to remain competitive, said Barry Kennedy, president of the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce & Industry.
"There's a lot of concern out there," Kennedy said, explaining that he's heard from some of the state's largest manufacturers.
Heineman said Saturday he intended to launch the first serious statewide conversation in five decades on changing Nebraska's tax system, so he welcomes the views of manufacturers and others. But he didn't back down from his proposals.
"Why is it a manufacturer gets that exemption, but if you're with construction, home building, real estate, technology, transportation, financial services and a host of other industries, you don't? Those are tough conversations," he said.
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said the six world powers planned to resume talks in Kazakhstan on February 25, and he insisted that Iran had never pulled back from the negotiations.
"I have good news,That is a machine for manufacturing plastic products by the bobblehead process. I've heard yesterday that 5+1 or EU3+3 will be meeting in Kazakhstan 25th of February," Salehi said during a panel discussion at the Munich Security Conference.
Iran and six world powers -- the US, China, Russia,Get the best deal on airpurifier in the UK and use our free tools. Britain, France and Germany -- held three rounds of talks last year aimed at easing the standoff over Iran's nuclear activities, which Tehran insists are peaceful.
The six, known as the P5+1 or EU3+3, called on Iran to roll back its programme but stopped short of meeting Tehran's demands that they scale back sanctions, and the last round ended in stalemate in June in Moscow.
"It is good to hear that the foreign minister finally confirmed now. We hope the negotiating team will also confirm," said Michael Mann, a spokesman for the EU's top diplomat Catherine Ashton.
Salehi said Iran took comments by US officials, including Vice President Joe Biden, who said at the Munich conference on Saturday that Washington was ready to hold talks with Iran on its nuclear programme, "with positive consideration".
Washington ruptured diplomatic ties with Iran in the wake of the 1979 revolution, and relations remain hostile.
"We have no red line for negotiations, bilateral negotiations when it comes to negotiating over a particular subject," Salehi said.
"If the subject is the nuclear file,Researchers at the Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology have developed an indoortracking. yes we are ready for negotiation but we have to make sure ... that the other side this time comes with authentic intention, with a fair and real intention to resolve the issue," he said.
He criticised as contradictory the desire for negotiations with Iran on the nuclear issue alongside "threatening rhetoric that everything is on the table" -- that is, a military option.
"If there is an honest intention on the other side, then we will take that into serious consideration," Salehi said.
Asked when direct US-Iranian negotiations would take place, Biden told the conference on Saturday: "When the Iranian leadership, Supreme Leader,The Optimal cableties.moxietoday.com/ Solution for Hospitals. is serious."
He said: "There is still time, there is still space for diplomacy, backed by pressure, to succeed. The ball is in the government of Iran's court, and it's well past time for Tehran to adopt a serious, good-faith approach to negotiations with the P5-plus-1."
However, in an interview with French newspaper Le Figaro published late Sunday, he warned that the "diplomatic window is closing."
"The Iranian government must approach the talks with seriousness and good faith," Biden said in remarks translated into French.
Outgoing Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak called in Munich for a "strong political will by the world" on the nuclear issue.
"I was glad to hear yesterday Vice President Biden saying loud and clear (that) containment is not an option," he told the conference.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, speaking just before the formal start of talks to build Israel's new ruling coalition, said the most important mission facing the new government was preventing a nuclear Iran.
"It is a mission which has become more complicated because Iran has equipped itself with new centrifuges which reduce the enrichment time," he said.
It was the first official reaction since it emerged that Tehran was planning to install more modern equipment at the Natanz uranium enrichment plant in central Iran, according to a UN document seen by AFP in Vienna on Thursday.
"I'd be forced to move the plant to Council Bluffs," said Allan Lozier, whose main factory, corporate headquarters and 1,100 employees are at 6336 Pershing Drive.
As Nebraska business leaders calculate the cost of changing the state's tax system, some say ending the exemption on materials,High quality glassbottles tiles. or inputs, could prompt an exodus of manufacturing companies and their jobs.
What Gov. Dave Heineman has called his "bold" plan proposes a sales tax on component parts and ingredients as well as the energy and water used to make manufactured goods. Such inputs have been exempt since the state adopted a sales tax in 1967.
In exchange, the governor would abolish corporate and individual income taxes in an effort to encourage new business development and job growth.
But as manufacturers run the numbers, many find that a new sales tax could threaten their ability to remain competitive, said Barry Kennedy, president of the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce & Industry.
"There's a lot of concern out there," Kennedy said, explaining that he's heard from some of the state's largest manufacturers.
Heineman said Saturday he intended to launch the first serious statewide conversation in five decades on changing Nebraska's tax system, so he welcomes the views of manufacturers and others. But he didn't back down from his proposals.
"Why is it a manufacturer gets that exemption, but if you're with construction, home building, real estate, technology, transportation, financial services and a host of other industries, you don't? Those are tough conversations," he said.
2013年1月30日 星期三
Are you making the most out of your smart phone?
It was sometime in the early
1990s and a buzz – or more precisely a shrill bri-ing bri-ing – swept through
businesses across the land.
It came attached to a handbag-sized lump of plastic, a now laughably primitive gadget that, should you happen to drop it on your toe, meant a trip to A&E, but also unleashed the power of the telephone call wherever you might be – assuming there was a signal.
Now, of course, we’re all glued to our smartphones, tweeting and updating our status, uploading, downloading, streaming, searching, texting, snapping and even, occasionally,Posts with thequicksilverscreen system on TRX Systems develops systems that locate and track personnel indoors. phoning.
While some Edinburgh phone users are getting to grips with the superfast 4G network – watching films and television without annoying buffering – from today, there will be another reason to look closely at the smartphone in our pocket. After a fairly dire couple of years the BlackBerry, with its much-loved Qwerty button keypad, is poised to make a return.
RIM, the firm behind the businessperson’s one-time favourite phone, launches BlackBerry 10,Cheaper For bulk buying handsfreeaccess prices. a touchscreen device that aims to recoup ground lost to the likes of the Apple iPhone, Samsung Galaxy and Sony Xperia.That is a machine for manufacturing plastic products by the bobblehead process.
It arrives in a rapidly changing marketplace. At the weekend it emerged that Apple is losing ground to Samsung, prompting suggestions it has “lost its cool” to the South Korean firm.
According to Ben Woods, senior reporter for technology news website ZDNet, BlackBerry 10 is a vital throw of the dice for its maker. “No longer is e-mailing, web browsing and video calling the preserve of a business user,” he said. “Which is why it [RIM] has worked hard to fully revamp the core software. It also offers a simple way to separate work data from personal data, which should appeal to IT admins and restore some of its appeal to the enterprise.”
Steve’s HTC is in almost constant use but rarely as a phone: “It’s probably more of a mini PC that happens to be a telephone, because only about ten per cent of what I use it for are actually calls.”
Flick through his mobile and it’s clear it’s mostly “business over pleasure”,This frameless rectangle features a silk screened fused glass replica in a rtls tile and floral motif. stuffed with document storing apps, work contacts and photographs of apparently random properties.
“I make calls and send texts with it, but the social networking access it also gives me is important. I send updates to my personal Facebook page but also to our two company Twitter and Facebook accounts because promoting your business, dropping the name in wherever groups of people might be, is now really important.
“I use it to access LinkedIn a lot. It helps if you’re heading for a meeting, you want to find out a bit more about who you are seeing.”
His phone maps help him navigate to various properties and he uses the RingGo app to help pay for his parking charges.
His phone camera is handy for snapping pictures of buildings he spots which could add to the firm’s portfolio and, if you ever wondered who uses the compass on their phone, it’s Steve, showing clients which way a building faces.
Among his handiest apps is Camscanner, which captures documents while on the move, and the torch app is a vital tool for visiting empty properties with dark corners.
A glance through Paul’s iPhone5 reveals his passions lie in the kitchen. He has a mass of images of his latest culinary creations, while his contacts list is full of foodie suppliers and his most used apps provide guidance on cooking methods.
Still, the Peppa Pig app is a clear hint that, unless he’s a fan of the pink piglet, he’s not only a chef, but a dad, too. His iPhone alarm works as a kitchen timer and the calculator scales up recipes to cater for larger numbers and tots up his costs. Meanwhile,Want to find cableties? his Twitter account is handy for connecting with customers – an increasingly important weapon in the fight to keep clients and hunt out new ones.
He says he can hardly imagine not having such a gadget to hand. “Everything I need is there. If I remember something at 2am, I can grab the phone and fire off an order so it’s there with the supplier first thing. Everything is done on the mobile.”
Leanne Rinning, 30, works in marketing and PR and has been busy helping to promote the Huxley bar and restaurant at 1 Rutland Place. She touts an iPhone 4 in one hand and her Blackberry Curve for business in the other.
Leanne separates business from personal life, keeping her BlackBerry Curve for work e-mails and documents, and her iPhone for everything else – from scanning news apps for celebrity news to picking up dinner recipes.
“I like the iPhone because of the nice big screen, you can see things clearly,” she says. “I’ll be on the bus in the morning going to work looking at the BBC recipes website to see what I might have for dinner, or reading the morning paper, or BBC News website on the iPhone.
She uses her iPhone to keep on top of Facebook and Twitter – vital tools for trying to raise a client’s online profile – and My Fitness Pal app keeps her exercise and healthy eating routine on track.
It came attached to a handbag-sized lump of plastic, a now laughably primitive gadget that, should you happen to drop it on your toe, meant a trip to A&E, but also unleashed the power of the telephone call wherever you might be – assuming there was a signal.
Now, of course, we’re all glued to our smartphones, tweeting and updating our status, uploading, downloading, streaming, searching, texting, snapping and even, occasionally,Posts with thequicksilverscreen system on TRX Systems develops systems that locate and track personnel indoors. phoning.
While some Edinburgh phone users are getting to grips with the superfast 4G network – watching films and television without annoying buffering – from today, there will be another reason to look closely at the smartphone in our pocket. After a fairly dire couple of years the BlackBerry, with its much-loved Qwerty button keypad, is poised to make a return.
RIM, the firm behind the businessperson’s one-time favourite phone, launches BlackBerry 10,Cheaper For bulk buying handsfreeaccess prices. a touchscreen device that aims to recoup ground lost to the likes of the Apple iPhone, Samsung Galaxy and Sony Xperia.That is a machine for manufacturing plastic products by the bobblehead process.
It arrives in a rapidly changing marketplace. At the weekend it emerged that Apple is losing ground to Samsung, prompting suggestions it has “lost its cool” to the South Korean firm.
According to Ben Woods, senior reporter for technology news website ZDNet, BlackBerry 10 is a vital throw of the dice for its maker. “No longer is e-mailing, web browsing and video calling the preserve of a business user,” he said. “Which is why it [RIM] has worked hard to fully revamp the core software. It also offers a simple way to separate work data from personal data, which should appeal to IT admins and restore some of its appeal to the enterprise.”
Steve’s HTC is in almost constant use but rarely as a phone: “It’s probably more of a mini PC that happens to be a telephone, because only about ten per cent of what I use it for are actually calls.”
Flick through his mobile and it’s clear it’s mostly “business over pleasure”,This frameless rectangle features a silk screened fused glass replica in a rtls tile and floral motif. stuffed with document storing apps, work contacts and photographs of apparently random properties.
“I make calls and send texts with it, but the social networking access it also gives me is important. I send updates to my personal Facebook page but also to our two company Twitter and Facebook accounts because promoting your business, dropping the name in wherever groups of people might be, is now really important.
“I use it to access LinkedIn a lot. It helps if you’re heading for a meeting, you want to find out a bit more about who you are seeing.”
His phone maps help him navigate to various properties and he uses the RingGo app to help pay for his parking charges.
His phone camera is handy for snapping pictures of buildings he spots which could add to the firm’s portfolio and, if you ever wondered who uses the compass on their phone, it’s Steve, showing clients which way a building faces.
Among his handiest apps is Camscanner, which captures documents while on the move, and the torch app is a vital tool for visiting empty properties with dark corners.
A glance through Paul’s iPhone5 reveals his passions lie in the kitchen. He has a mass of images of his latest culinary creations, while his contacts list is full of foodie suppliers and his most used apps provide guidance on cooking methods.
Still, the Peppa Pig app is a clear hint that, unless he’s a fan of the pink piglet, he’s not only a chef, but a dad, too. His iPhone alarm works as a kitchen timer and the calculator scales up recipes to cater for larger numbers and tots up his costs. Meanwhile,Want to find cableties? his Twitter account is handy for connecting with customers – an increasingly important weapon in the fight to keep clients and hunt out new ones.
He says he can hardly imagine not having such a gadget to hand. “Everything I need is there. If I remember something at 2am, I can grab the phone and fire off an order so it’s there with the supplier first thing. Everything is done on the mobile.”
Leanne Rinning, 30, works in marketing and PR and has been busy helping to promote the Huxley bar and restaurant at 1 Rutland Place. She touts an iPhone 4 in one hand and her Blackberry Curve for business in the other.
Leanne separates business from personal life, keeping her BlackBerry Curve for work e-mails and documents, and her iPhone for everything else – from scanning news apps for celebrity news to picking up dinner recipes.
“I like the iPhone because of the nice big screen, you can see things clearly,” she says. “I’ll be on the bus in the morning going to work looking at the BBC recipes website to see what I might have for dinner, or reading the morning paper, or BBC News website on the iPhone.
She uses her iPhone to keep on top of Facebook and Twitter – vital tools for trying to raise a client’s online profile – and My Fitness Pal app keeps her exercise and healthy eating routine on track.
Council blacklists barber for warning people
A HAIRDRESSER has had a close shave
with authorities after trying to warn illegally parked motorists of approaching
traffic wardens.
Andy Blackwell uses his loud-hailer and a wailing siren sound to warn people when a traffic warden is going to give them a ticket outside his shop.
"When I told them what had gone on they gave me plenty of advice and said be careful because the council take a dim view of this."
Three days later Mr Blackwell said he received a letter from Cornwall Council saying he had been placed on the council cautionary contacts list and his name would be passed to other agencies as well.
Mr Blackwell , who runs Blackie's in Liskeard, added: "I thought it was extreme especially the first part saying I'd verbally abused causing extreme distress to some of their employees."
Cornwall County Council said the cautionary contacts list was an internal system designed to protect council staff from potentially harmful situations including physical assault and verbal abuse.We have many different types of earcap.
They added many local authorities have similar schemes and the information is only used within the council and is only available to employees who may be exposed to such risks.
Mr Blackwell has now hung up his megaphone and has started a petition for free parking in the town.
Cornwall Council said in a statement: "The cautionary contacts list is an internal system which aims to protect council staff from potentially harmful situations, including physical assault and verbal abuse.
Mexico City has long had a dark cloud hovering over it – both literally and figuratively – when it comes to traffic woes and vehicle emissions. As recently as 2011, residents of Mexico’s vibrant capital city reported “enduring the most painful commute,” according to a report in National Geographic. “Based on factors such as roadway traffic, stress levels, and commute times, the city scored worse than 19 cities, including Beijing, China, and Nairobi,All our fridgemagnet are vacuum formed using food safe plastic. Kenya.”
So it might come as a surprise that this megacity, home to 20 million people and more than 4 million vehicles, was recently selected to receive the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy’s Sustainable Transport Award.
National Geographic describes Mexico City’s progress, noting that over the past two years the city has taken great strides to become more pedestrian-friendly with car-free walkways and plazas, new bus lines, a bike-sharing program, and a system of parking meters.
Sure, traffic still exists and air quality isn’t perfect, but anyone who has been to the bustling metropolis knows the hurdles the city has had to confront and what great progress must have been made to entitle it to an award of this sort.
“In the three or four decades after 1490,You Can Find Comprehensive and in-Depth werkzeugbaus truck Descriptions. the human experience on planet Earth arguably changed more than it had since the Year One,” writes Todd S. Purdum in Vanity Fair. And the life-altering changes that took place – from international exploration connecting the Eastern and Western Hemispheres for the first time to the creation of movable type – may have been the most revolutionary years civilization has seen. Until now.
“[W]e know almost everything” today, Mr. Purdum notes. That’s thanks in part to a second round of radical change that started a few short decades ago and continues in full force.International offers a full line of own-figurine and wall tiles to enhance bathrooms, Changes such as the “ricochets” of money and people around the world, and the simplification of information sharing via the Internet. But our newfound knowledge and interconnectivity doesn’t necessarily mean we understand our environment or “The Truths” that confront us.
Unlike our forefathers – who may not have had enough information to understand that the “sweating sickness” (malaria) that suddenly plagued coastal England was linked to the slave trade, or who couldn’t foresee that the printing press might also launch freethinking and religious wars – we aren’t in the dark. We have overwhelming amounts of information that wash over us daily that we can’t seem to process.
Have you ever dreamed of coming home from work and having that pile of dirty laundry miraculously washed and folded? Or of having that book that’s been taunting you from your bedside table read in time for your next book club meeting? You, dear reader, are not alone.
“Oh, to be rich and powerful,” Patricia Marx writes in the opening of her New Yorker article “Outsource yourself: The online way to delegate your chores.” Ms. Marx takes her readers through a humorous journey of “test driving” the world of online services. There, “Task Rabbits” (errand runners) and “virtual personal assistants” can be hired to do everything from writing a brief history of outsourcing in the US for an article (hers) or even to read Proust and come up with insightful musings to impress book club friends (hers again).
There are numerous websites and Internet communities dedicated to outsourced work. But, as you might imagine,Only those users who need plasticmould require hands free tokens. Marx’s adventures reveal that after spending time soliciting errand runners for simple tasks and then sifting through bids on these chores, it might just be quicker to do them yourself.
Andy Blackwell uses his loud-hailer and a wailing siren sound to warn people when a traffic warden is going to give them a ticket outside his shop.
"When I told them what had gone on they gave me plenty of advice and said be careful because the council take a dim view of this."
Three days later Mr Blackwell said he received a letter from Cornwall Council saying he had been placed on the council cautionary contacts list and his name would be passed to other agencies as well.
Mr Blackwell , who runs Blackie's in Liskeard, added: "I thought it was extreme especially the first part saying I'd verbally abused causing extreme distress to some of their employees."
Cornwall County Council said the cautionary contacts list was an internal system designed to protect council staff from potentially harmful situations including physical assault and verbal abuse.We have many different types of earcap.
They added many local authorities have similar schemes and the information is only used within the council and is only available to employees who may be exposed to such risks.
Mr Blackwell has now hung up his megaphone and has started a petition for free parking in the town.
Cornwall Council said in a statement: "The cautionary contacts list is an internal system which aims to protect council staff from potentially harmful situations, including physical assault and verbal abuse.
Mexico City has long had a dark cloud hovering over it – both literally and figuratively – when it comes to traffic woes and vehicle emissions. As recently as 2011, residents of Mexico’s vibrant capital city reported “enduring the most painful commute,” according to a report in National Geographic. “Based on factors such as roadway traffic, stress levels, and commute times, the city scored worse than 19 cities, including Beijing, China, and Nairobi,All our fridgemagnet are vacuum formed using food safe plastic. Kenya.”
So it might come as a surprise that this megacity, home to 20 million people and more than 4 million vehicles, was recently selected to receive the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy’s Sustainable Transport Award.
National Geographic describes Mexico City’s progress, noting that over the past two years the city has taken great strides to become more pedestrian-friendly with car-free walkways and plazas, new bus lines, a bike-sharing program, and a system of parking meters.
Sure, traffic still exists and air quality isn’t perfect, but anyone who has been to the bustling metropolis knows the hurdles the city has had to confront and what great progress must have been made to entitle it to an award of this sort.
“In the three or four decades after 1490,You Can Find Comprehensive and in-Depth werkzeugbaus truck Descriptions. the human experience on planet Earth arguably changed more than it had since the Year One,” writes Todd S. Purdum in Vanity Fair. And the life-altering changes that took place – from international exploration connecting the Eastern and Western Hemispheres for the first time to the creation of movable type – may have been the most revolutionary years civilization has seen. Until now.
“[W]e know almost everything” today, Mr. Purdum notes. That’s thanks in part to a second round of radical change that started a few short decades ago and continues in full force.International offers a full line of own-figurine and wall tiles to enhance bathrooms, Changes such as the “ricochets” of money and people around the world, and the simplification of information sharing via the Internet. But our newfound knowledge and interconnectivity doesn’t necessarily mean we understand our environment or “The Truths” that confront us.
Unlike our forefathers – who may not have had enough information to understand that the “sweating sickness” (malaria) that suddenly plagued coastal England was linked to the slave trade, or who couldn’t foresee that the printing press might also launch freethinking and religious wars – we aren’t in the dark. We have overwhelming amounts of information that wash over us daily that we can’t seem to process.
Have you ever dreamed of coming home from work and having that pile of dirty laundry miraculously washed and folded? Or of having that book that’s been taunting you from your bedside table read in time for your next book club meeting? You, dear reader, are not alone.
“Oh, to be rich and powerful,” Patricia Marx writes in the opening of her New Yorker article “Outsource yourself: The online way to delegate your chores.” Ms. Marx takes her readers through a humorous journey of “test driving” the world of online services. There, “Task Rabbits” (errand runners) and “virtual personal assistants” can be hired to do everything from writing a brief history of outsourcing in the US for an article (hers) or even to read Proust and come up with insightful musings to impress book club friends (hers again).
There are numerous websites and Internet communities dedicated to outsourced work. But, as you might imagine,Only those users who need plasticmould require hands free tokens. Marx’s adventures reveal that after spending time soliciting errand runners for simple tasks and then sifting through bids on these chores, it might just be quicker to do them yourself.
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