Archive for April, 2010

How Much Would You Pay To Work 1 week like in “The Devil wears Prada”

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

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If you love fashion and more so if you are a Vogue fan, then this post is just the think you need! The famous editor of the fashion magazine Anna Wintour wishes to spend a week with you at their New York office, if only you bid high enough! Proceeds of the auction will be forwarded to RFK Center. The current highest bid reportedly stands at $23,000, so that’s what you need to top. It is widely known that the movie “The Devil Wears Prada” was based on her life. Let’s just hope she’s not so mean after all.

Place your bids!

Apple’s iPhone Causes Worldwide Memory Chip Shortage

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Among the list of things for which Apple

Milan expo blends new flavors in eco-friendly furniture

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

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Considered as the most important design event in the world, the Milan International Furniture Fair attracts the most inspiring and talented from the designing world. So, as the world

Designer Kitchen by Graft

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

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Loft Hamburg, located in a restored building in Winterhude district of Hamburg, is a private 118 square-meter residence designed by Graft. The focal point of the high-ceilinged and otherwise white space is a large pod paneled with walnut. The pod contains the residence?s kitchen and bathroom, hides its central heating, cooling and plumbing, and even provides some cupboards and bookshelves. The owner was looking to use a wide variety of materials, and the walnut pod contrasts beautifully with the soft fabrics, leather and natural stone used elsewhere in the loft.

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Graft is an architecture, urban planning and design company established in 1998 in Los Angeles by German architects (,) Lars Kr?ckeberg, Wolfram Putz, Thomas Willemeit and Gregor Hoheisel, all now in their early forties.

Toshihiko Hazama

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

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We have earlier told you about the office trunks meant for executive on the go, including the luxury mobile offices from Pinel & Pinel and Louis Vuitton. But, designer Toshihiko Hazama from Myfab, has come up with a box office that features aluminum make instead of leather to make it affordable, without compromising on its intended purpose. The cabinet features dimensions of Length 52 x Width 100 x Height 151 cm and it packs a real desk with a chair and storage. The sleek looks make it perfect for the iGeneration and its black and chrome color theme adds to the appeal for the Apple lovers. The box office is priced at approx. $1,800.

Read this: Superbug

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

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Superbug is not about an entomological caped crusader.

It’s more like a grown-up version of Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark.

The bug in question is MRSA, an antibiotic-resistant bacteria that kills more Americans every year than AIDS. Superbug is the story of how we created our own monster-under-the-bed, how it spreads through hospitals and communities, and why it’s damn near impossible to control. If you have a cut or a pimple while reading this book, you are pretty much guaranteed to freak yourself out. And I mean that in the best possible way.

MRSA is the pumped-up version of a ridiculously common bacteria. One in three of us carts around Staphylococcus aureus on our skin or up our noses without ever noticing a difference. It never was benign?S. aureus is still the most common hospital-acquired infection in the U.S., and it can cause everything from rashes to toxic shock syndrome. But S. aureus mostly attacks the weak, people whose immune systems are too sick or too old to hold it in check.

MRSA throws all that out the window. The issue with MRSA isn’t just its resistance to antibiotics. It’s that it attacks the healthy, as well as the sick. And that it can kill the healthy, too.

I was used to hearing about MRSA mostly in the context of hospital-acquired infections. Superbug disabused me of that notion. MRSA may have first been noticed in hospitals, but it can come from the playground as easily as the emergency room, and it’s actually gotten to the point where community-acquired and hospital-acquired strains cross into each other’s territory often enough that researchers aren’t sure such clear-cut categories even make sense anymore.

Written by journalist Maryn McKenna?a “Scary Disease Girl” who used to cover the CDC for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution?Superbug does a great job of explaining how hospital- and community-acquired MRSA evolved, and how they’ve intertwined with our modern way of life, from the doctor’s office to the dinner table. Like any in-depth discussion of bacterial genetics, it does occasionally get mired down in acronym soup, but McKenna handles it well, reminding the reader at the right times what that concept from a few chapters ago means?and managing to do so in a way that doesn’t feel textbook-y.

The book doesn’t offer easy answers, because, frankly, there are none at this point. There are search-and-destroy policies that seem to be able to keep MRSA in check in hospitals, but they’re expensive and difficult to employ in the United States, where MRSA rates are only voluntarily reported and enforcement of sanitary rules varies widely from hospital to hospital. (Countries with socialized medicine?and the standardized policies and consolidated medical records that come with it?have had better luck.)

The important thing here is awareness, and not just of the fact that MRSA exists. That does matter?particularly for doctors who don’t always recognize what they’re dealing with fast enough?but from an Average Person standpoint there are plenty of scary diseases in the world and you’d go nuts if spent too much time worrying about them all. Instead, Superbug’s importance lies in making us aware of how daily choices in familiar places influence the evolution and spread of disease.

When I was 14, I read a book called The Coming Plague that sparked my interest in the stories of science. Its big question: “Where will the next major epidemic come from?” I remember that book being full of locations I thought of as exotic. (Though, to be fair, from my position in central Kansas, “exotic” meant just about anywhere else.) Combine that with reading The Hot Zone around the same time period, and small me was left with the idea that disastrous diseases were things that rose up out of the evolutionary ether in some dark corner of the globe, and swooped in on unsuspecting Americans via international travel or disgruntled research monkeys.

Superbug starts in Chicago.

Where will the next major epidemic come from? According to Superbug, that epidemic is already here. It grew out of our hospitals, our prisons and our high-school locker rooms. We fed it with our demand for antibiotic ointments, prescriptions we didn’t need and factory-farmed cows packed together and pumped full of their own antibiotics. We spread it with unwashed hands. The story of MRSA is more prosaic than tales of tracking Ebola through the African jungle, but that’s exactly what makes it terrifying, and fascinating.

Buy Superbug

Black Elk vodka

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

black_elk_pvjku_12.jpgIf drinking shots is an art, so is presenting. The designer vodka bottles have added to the whole experience for vodka lovers. And, unless you are a vodka connoisseur, a designer bottle is a big appealing factor to decide a purchase. We have recently told you about Medea vodka programmable bottles and the Grey Goose 150th anniversary edition, Gold Elk is the ultra premium version of Black Elk, a premium vodka from the Finnish Lapland. The shape of the bottle is very simple but very sexy, in glass with matte black finish.Read more: http://www.bornrich.org/#ixzz0mPFdM6XW

Fernando Alono’s Thumbs Insured for $14 million

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

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The world has no shortage of celebrity performers insuring their limbs for all they’re worth. Soccer star David Beckham reportedly has a $70 million policy out on his legs and feet. Michael “Lord of the Dance” Flatley’s legs are insured for $39 million. And Heidi Klum’s are insured for $2.2 million. Fernando Alonso, however, went a different route.

The latest reports indicate that the two-time Formula One world champion

Noma Is The New World’s Best Restaurant

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

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Forget El Bulli and The Fat Duck, there’s a new world’s best restaurant, Copenhagen’s Noma. The two Michelin star-rated restaurant on Copehnhagen’s docks won first place in the S. Pellegrino World’s 50 Best Restaurant awards recently. Young chef Ren

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

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Potholes, stray garbage, broken street lamps? Citizens of Eindhoven can now report local issues by iPhone, using the BuitenBeter app that was launched today. After spotting something that needs to be fixed, residents can use the app to take a picture, select an appropriate category and send their complaint directly through to the city council. A combination of GPS and maps lets users pinpoint the exact location of the problem, providing city workers with all the information they need to identify and resolve the problem.

The application covers a wide range of familiar nuisances, from broken sidewalks to loitering youth (who will hopefully respond favourably to having their picture taken by concerned citizens). Compared with lodging a complaint by phone or in writing, BuitenBeter creates a nearly frictionless experience and will no doubt prompt a wider group of people to become active reporters of issues that need the city’s attention.

Besides giving people an easy way to send through detailed reports, city officials also believe the concept will create shorter lines of communication, and will facilitate quicker feedback from local government to citizens. Developed by mobile solutions provider Yucat, the BuitenBeter app will soon be available for Android and Windows Mobile phones, too. Eindhoven has signed on for a twelve-month trial, and Yucat hopes to roll out the system to other cities in the near future.