Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Happy socks for a happy feet



Minecraft X Happy Socks
My birthday wish. hihi.

Minecraft is a sandbox construction video game where players can create anything imaginable by combining blocks. It’s become a global phenomenon with over 11 million users, and now they have their own Happy Socks, which come packaged in a pixelated box.





It's time to knock your old socks off!

Luxury times two

Any stylista or fashion junkie would love to drive this, and I too would kill for this. haha! I just hope it will be released here as well.

Luxury Italian fashion house Fendi and Italian brand Maserati collaborates on a special edition GranCabrio or more known as the GranTurismo Convertible.

It will be officially revealed on the Frankfurt Auto show this month. It will feature special paint job, leather interior and wooden accents. Also, present on the car is the Fendi monogram logo on wheels and on the leather car seat. It also has the Fendi logo on the silver door lining. Truly, luxury is maximized with this collaboration.




It will be officially revealed on the Frankfurt Auto show this month.

In your face 3D!

Previewed during CES early 2011 is the Sony HMZ-T1 headset featuring a display for watching movies and playing games in 3D.

The half-helmet/half-goggle has surround sound around the ears and a 0.7-inch OLED screen for each eye with a resolution of 1280x720 pixels. It runs with its own gaming processor that you attach to your blu-ray player or gaming console.


It is said to come out on November 2011 for the Japanese market and with no confirmed date for the worldwide release.



This gives a whole new meaning to "It's all on/in your head".

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Nerdgasm

My fondest memory of R2-D2 was my KFC tumbler when I was 7, and technology really pushed forward, and i mean waaaaaay forward.

Star Wars themed Xbox? Yep you heard that right.

The first announcement was Holiday 2011 for the release but Microsoft decided to push it back to 2012, leaving nerds and geeks alike will still have to drool a little longer.



Thursday, August 25, 2011

Language, learning, identity, privilege by James Soriano

Another reason for people to talk trash and talk shit. I bet everyone will OVERACT, as usual.
Here's the article, you tell me what to think coz honestly I read and moved on.
Hope you can too!


Language, learning, identity, privilege

By JAMES SORIANO
August 24, 2011, 4:06am

MANILA, Philippines — English is the language of learning. I’ve known this since before I could go to school. As a toddler, my first study materials were a set of flash cards that my mother used to teach me the English alphabet.

My mother made home conducive to learning English: all my storybooks and coloring books were in English, and so were the cartoons I watched and the music I listened to. She required me to speak English at home. She even hired tutors to help me learn to read and write in English.

In school I learned to think in English. We used English to learn about numbers, equations and variables. With it we learned about observation and inference, the moon and the stars, monsoons and photosynthesis. With it we learned about shapes and colors, about meter and rhythm. I learned about God in English, and I prayed to Him in English.

Filipino, on the other hand, was always the ‘other’ subject — almost a special subject like PE or Home Economics, except that it was graded the same way as Science, Math, Religion, and English. My classmates and I used to complain about Filipino all the time. Filipino was a chore, like washing the dishes; it was not the language of learning. It was the language we used to speak to the people who washed our dishes.

We used to think learning Filipino was important because it was practical: Filipino was the language of the world outside the classroom. It was the language of the streets: it was how you spoke to the tindera when you went to the tindahan, what you used to tell your katulong that you had an utos, and how you texted manong when you needed “sundo na.”

These skills were required to survive in the outside world, because we are forced to relate with the tinderas and the manongs and the katulongs of this world. If we wanted to communicate to these people — or otherwise avoid being mugged on the jeepney — we needed to learn Filipino.


That being said though, I was proud of my proficiency with the language. Filipino was the language I used to speak with my cousins and uncles and grandparents in the province, so I never had much trouble reciting.

It was the reading and writing that was tedious and difficult. I spoke Filipino, but only when I was in a different world like the streets or the province; it did not come naturally to me. English was more natural; I read, wrote and thought in English. And so, in much of the same way that I learned German later on, I learned Filipino in terms of English. In this way I survived Filipino in high school, albeit with too many sentences that had the preposition ‘ay.’

It was really only in university that I began to grasp Filipino in terms of language and not just dialect. Filipino was not merely a peculiar variety of language, derived and continuously borrowing from the English and Spanish alphabets; it was its own system, with its own grammar, semantics, sounds, even symbols.

But more significantly, it was its own way of reading, writing, and thinking. There are ideas and concepts unique to Filipino that can never be translated into another. Try translating bayanihan, tagay, kilig or diskarte.

Only recently have I begun to grasp Filipino as the language of identity: the language of emotion, experience, and even of learning. And with this comes the realization that I do, in fact, smell worse than a malansang isda. My own language is foreign to me: I speak, think, read and write primarily in English. To borrow the terminology of Fr. Bulatao, I am a split-level Filipino.

But perhaps this is not so bad in a society of rotten beef and stinking fish. For while Filipino may be the language of identity, it is the language of the streets. It might have the capacity to be the language of learning, but it is not the language of the learned.

It is neither the language of the classroom and the laboratory, nor the language of the boardroom, the court room, or the operating room. It is not the language of privilege. I may be disconnected from my being Filipino, but with a tongue of privilege I will always have my connections.

So I have my education to thank for making English my mother language.

OSome


I am proud to say that i'm friends with THE Paul Jatayna of OS, and it is amazing that they have this event last night at seventh high whgich i was not able to attend. Anyways, here's what you missed, plus FREE drinks!

















Tuesday, August 23, 2011

another reason to celebrate!


I know I have this habit of blogging about my friends and their birthdays, well somehow it became a routine everytime a really close friend celebrate their day. Today is the 24th of august and it's the birthday of one of my closest friend. Chili! We spent your birthday two years ago, now with work and all, I'm wondering how we'll spend this one.


you are awesomely cool and nerdy






like what i said a million times before, i love you two very much!




this was from your birthday 2 years ago, 2009?

with a little surprise gift

and a party



This was your birthday last year, 2010.
our little get together/reunion


surprise cake!
Happy Birthday!

good times, good days!




and celebrating a birthday to come.:)

You know i love you, forever!:)

Happy Birthday!

you are my one and only chili, spicing up my life with our adventures and (more often) Misadventures

"Life will be better for us, dreams will come true"

Thank you for teaching me that great love is really different from right love, for showing me how to get on with lifes awfulness and being happy. I know better days are ahead of us, especially for you who have been blessed with a beautiful angel, amazing family and loving friends. You will always have a reason to be happy, a reason to love and a reason to live. I love you very much and Happy Happy Birthday Chili!

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Secret Fresh at Manila Art


Secret Fresh Exclusive Release of Art Toys by Bjorn Calleja, JP Cuison 
and Christian Tamondong at  Manilart2011 at NBC Tent at The Fort

Secret Fresh will be gracing this year’s Manilart to be held from *August 24 -27 at The NBC Tent at The Fort *and will be releasing a limited edition versions of Bjorn Calleja’s Color Bringer, JP Cuison’s Rizalborg and Christian Tamondong’s Boxboy exlusively for Manilart. 
Bjorn Calleja’s Color Bringer, to be released in mono and in 15 limited editions, takes off from his previous solo exhibit titled as his toy which is a personification of a reluctant rainbow giver to a world that has ceased to thrive in wonder and imagination. While JP Cuison’s Rizalborg, inspired from one of his line of Gigzilla posters, is a refashioning and modernizing of the national hero in response to today’s fast-paced technology-dependent lifestyle. In Cuison’s own words, he considers the Rizalborg as an “upgrade” by which all Filipinos should aspire for to keep up with the quick pace of development and trends.  The Rizalborg has been included in the Yuchengco Museum’s Rizalizing The Future exhibit.  For Manilart 2011, 6 one-off editions of Rizalborg in Pop Pantone colors shall be released. 
Christian Tamondong’s BoxBoy Skrull, to be released in 20 limited editions, is a variation on his previously released Boxboy which was among the first collectible art toys that Secret Fresh has released in collaboration with a local artist. According to Tamondong, Boxboy is an embodiment of a childhood wish to fly and wander to different places and which only his imagination has enabled him to do so. All these art toys would be unveiled at the Gala opening of Manilart on August 24. 
Also at the Manilart, on *Saturday August 27 at 5PM*, Secret Fresh will be having its own toy auction program, to be commenced by a presentation by JP Cuison who will give a talk on his inspiration behind the  Rizalborg and his Gigzilla line of posters, aside from an introduction to the custom art/collectible art toys scene. This will be complemented with a live demo of art toy customizations by fellow FEU alumnus and Pilipinas Street Plan members Whoop and Nemo Aguila, who both have produced collectible art toys with Secret Fresh. One-off custom editions of their toys Mr. Brain Freeze by Whoop and Bochog Manster by Nemo Aguila would be among those that will be auctioned off together 
with other custom Munny toys.
MANILART 2011 is presented by the Bonafide Art Galleries Organization (BAGO) and the National Commission on Culture and the Arts (NCCA) and co-presented by Allied Bank and Contemporary Art Philippines with the support of Bellarocca, Business Mirror, Business, World, Colleen and Derwent Art Supplies, Crown Fine Arts, La Creperie, Las Casas Filipinas de Azucar Heritage Resort, Manila Bulletin, Mercato Centrale, Midas Hotel, Oakwood Premiere, Pebeo Art Supplies, Ronac Art Center, Secret Fresh, Sustain Pro Complex, UNO Magazine, and Uratex Premium.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

PBA draft list


The following are just applicants for the PBA draf, 9 days to go and we'll see who made the cut




1. Powerade

 2.	Air21 
3.	Meralco
4.	Rain or Shine
5.	B-Meg
6.	Alaska
7.	Barako Bull/Petron Blaze
8.	Barako Bull/Petron Blaze
9.	Barangay Ginebra
10.	Talk N Text
In the event Petron wins the 2011
Governors’ Cup title, the Boosters will have the 8th pick, with Barako Bull getting No. 7. 

If Talk n Text wins, Petron takes the 7th pick and Barako Bull the 8th pick.


source: pba atin to