Stereoscopic 3D seems to be the next big thing, as evident by this year’s CES show at Las Vegas. We had 3D projectors and 3D HDTVs hitting the showfloor then, with the latter being a staple in just about every manufacturer’s press conference. Well, over the past months, more advancements in the world of 3D has been made, including Sharp coming up with a glassless 3D display for the Nintendo 3DS, not to mention 3D-enabled cellphones in Japan as well as 3D lens for digital cameras. AUO has jumped aboard the 3D bandwagon by announcing the world’s first deadzone-free naked eye 3D notebook panel at FPD International 2010. More on this technology can be read up in the extended post.
ޒުވާނުންނޭ ވިސްނާތިބޭށެވެ. އެއީ އެމީހުންގެ ތަރިކަ މުދަލެއްނޫނެވެ
މިރަށުގައި ޗަންޕާ ކުންފުނީގެ ދީލަތި އެހީގެ ދަށުން ދެއްވާފައިވާ ފެންވަރު ރަނގަޅު ފެރީއެއް އެބައޮތެވެ. އަދި ހަފުތާއަކު 4 ދުވަހު މަލޭއާ ރަށާ ދެމެދު ދަތުރުކުރެއެވެ. ފެރީގެ ޓިކެޓުގެ އަގު އެކިފަހަރު މަތިން ބަދަލުވަމުން އައިސް މިހާރުގެ އަގަކީ ކޮޅަކަށް 60 ރުފިޔާއެވެ. ނަމަވެސް ފުރާގިމަތައިން 70 ރުފިޔާއަށެވެ. މިފަދަ ރަނގަޅު ހިދުމަތެއް ރައްޔިތުންނަށް ލިބެމުން ދިއުމީ އަޅުގަނޑުމެން އެންމެންވެސް ވަރަށް އުފާކުރާކަމެކެވެ. އިންސާނީ އަސާސީ ހިދުމަތްތައް ފޯރުކޮށްދިނުމުގައި ފައިދާއަށް ބެލުމަކީ ރަނގަޅުކަމެއް ނޫނެވެ. ދެކޮޅުޖެހޭވަރަށް ކުރުމުން އެއޮތީ ރަނގަޅަށެވެ.
ފެރީއެއް އޮތަކަސް، އިންޖީނެއް ހުއްޓަކަސް އޭގެ ހިދުމަތްތައް ދިނުމުގައި އެންމެން ހަމަހަމަ ވާންޖެހޭނެއެވެ. ވަކިމީހަކަށް އަގު ބޮޑުކޮށް ނުވަތަ ކުޑަކޮށް ހިދުމަތް ދިނުމަކީ ޒާތީވުމޭވެސް ބުނެވިދާނެއެވެ. އަޅުގަނޑު ދަންނަވަން މިއުޅޭ ވާހަކައަކީ މިރަށުގައި މިހާރު ދުއްވަމުންދާ ފެރީގައި އެކިދުވަހު އެކި މީހުނަށް އެކި ގޮތައް ހިދުމަތްދޭ ވާހަކައެވެ. ތެދެކެވެ. ފެރީގެ ނާލުނެގުމުގައްޔާއި ޖާގަދިނުން(ޓިކެޓުވިއްކުން) އަދި މުދާއެރުވުމުގެ ވާހަކަ ތަކެވެ. ނާލުނެގުމުގައި ފެރީގެ ނެވި ކަންތައް ކުރަމުން ގެންދަނީކީ އަޅުގަނޑުމެން އެކަކުވެސް ހިތްހަމަޖެހޭނެ ގޮތަކަށް ނޫނެވެ. ސަބަބަކަށް ވެފައިއޮތީ ނެވި މީހެކޭ ދަތުރުވެރިޔެކޭ ހިދުމަތް ދިނުމުގައި ތަފާތުވެގެން ނުވުމެވެ. ދާދިމިދާކަށް ދުވަހު ފެރީއަށް ނެވިކަލޭގެ ކުރުނބާ އެރުވަރުވެސް ނޭނގެއެވެ. ނަމަވެސް އެނގޭހާވެސް އެއްޗަކީ އެރުވިކަމެވެ. ފެރީގެ ދުވަހު ރިޕޯޓް ނެރުނުއިރު އެއްކަލަ ކުރުނބާ އިހާތަކުގެ ތަފުސީލެއްފެންނާކަށް ނެތެވެ. އަނެއްކަމަކީ ޗުއްޓީގައި ހުނަންނަވާ ނެވި ކަލޭގެ ފެރީގެ ފައިސާއާއި ޓިކެޓުގެ ކަންކަމާބެހުމެވެ. ހަމަގައިމުވެސް އަތާލަންޏާ ދަތާވެސް ލާނެއެވެ. ކިޔުން ކުރިޔަށް ގެންދޭ
Diary (The Service)
“What happened to my family and friends specially the beloved and now(present) betrayed girl friend of mine.”
– isRough’s Pen –
At first we thought it was gunfires but later an instructor came and shouted with his rough voice to run for our lives, I didn’t know what was happening at first, we ran up to the runway, A huge waves of angry sea was coming after us. I felt like we were in a shooting of a Hollywood movie. ކިޔުން ކުރިޔަށް ގެންދޭ
ތަރައްގީގެ ހުރަސްތައް ކުރުކޮށް
– ރަފް –
އަޅުގަނޑުމެން އެންމެންވެސް ގބޫލުކުރަންޖެހޭ ހަގީގަތެއްވެއެވެ. އެއީ އެއްވެސް މުޖުތައެއް އެތަނެއްގައި ދިރިއުޅޭބަޔަކު ކުރިއަރުވަން މަސައްކަތްކޮށްފިނަމަނޫނީ ކުރިނާރާނެކަމުގެ ހަގީގަތެވެ. ރަށެއްގެ ރައްޔިތެއް ކިތަންމެވަރަކަށްވެސް އެރަށެއް ކުރިއަރުވަން މަސައްކަތް ކުރިނަމަވެސް އެކަމަށް އެތަނެއްގައި ތިބޭ ވެރިން ނުވަތަ ބަސްވިކޭ މީހުން އެހީވެދީ ވާގިނުދީފިނަމަ އެކަންވާނީ ފޫނެއް ފަޔައް ފެންފުރުން ފަދަ ކަމަކަށެވެ. ކިޔުން ކުރިޔަށް ގެންދޭ
“eye of maldives” the symbol of Satan
False-Religious use of the Eye
Imagery of an all-seeing eye can be traced back to Egyptian mythology and the Eye of Horus. It also appears in Buddhism, where Buddha is also regularly referred to as the “Eye of the World” throughout Buddhist scriptures (e.g. Mahaparinibbana Sutta) and is represented as a trinity in the shape of a triangle known as the Tiratna, or Triple Gem.
In Medieval and Renaissance European iconography, the Eye (often with the addition of an enclosing triangle) was an explicit image of the Christian Trinity. Seventeenth-century depictions of the Eye of Providence sometimes show it surrounded by clouds or sun bursts.
United States
In 1782, the Eye of Providence was adopted as part of the symbolism on the reverse side of the Great Seal of the United States. It was first suggested as an element of the Great Seal by the first of three design committees in 1776 and is thought to be the suggestion of the artistic consultant, Pierre Eugene du Simitiere.
On the seal, the Eye is surrounded by the words Annuit Cœptis, meaning “He approves (or has approved) [our] undertakings”, and Novus Ordo Seclorum, meaning “New Order of the Ages”. The Eye is positioned above an unfinished pyramid with thirteen steps, representing the original thirteen states and the future growth of the country. The lowest level of the pyramid shows the year 1776 in Roman numerals. The combined implication is that the Eye, or God, favors the prosperity of the United States.
Perhaps due to its use in the design of the Great Seal, the Eye has made its way into other American seals and logos, notably the Seal of Colorado and DARPA’s Information Awareness Office.
Freemasonry
Today, the Eye of Providence is usually associated with Freemasonry. The Eye first appeared as part of the standard iconography of the Freemasons in 1797, with the publication of Thomas Smith Webb’s Freemasons Monitor. Here, it represents the all-seeing eye of God and is a reminder that a Mason’s thoughts and deeds are always observed by God (who is referred to in Masonry as the Great Architect of the Universe). Typically, the Masonic Eye of Providence has a semi-circular glory below the eye. Sometimes the Eye is enclosed by a triangle.
Popular among conspiracy theorists is the claim that the Eye of Providence shown atop an unfinished pyramid on the Great Seal of the United States indicates the influence of Freemasonry in the founding of the United States. This was dramatized in the 2004 Disney film National Treasure. However, common Masonic use of the Eye dates to 14 years after the creation of the Great Seal. Furthermore, among the members of the various design committees for the Great Seal, only Benjamin Franklin was a Mason (and his ideas for the seal were not adopted). Indeed, many Masonic organizations have explicitly denied any connection to the creation of the Seal.
Unlock hotel rooms remotely!
One of these hotels is the Clarion Hotel in Stockholm, and this hotel is currently running a trial program that allows visitors to check in and collect their room key without waiting in line at the reception. In fact, there are no keys, when you make a reservation, you get a message with a link that allows you to open door to your hotel room with your smartphone. You just need to put your phone next to your lock and that’s it, because Near Field Communication will do the rest.
Although this idea is still on trial, it sounds like this is the future for managing hotels and its guests, no mention on what mobile OS this is to work with though.
NFC mobile phones replace hotel room keys in Sweden
A world’s first pilot is starting at the Clarion Hotel Stockholm in Sweden. ASSA ABLOY, Choice Hotels Scandinavia, TeliaSonera, VingCard Elsafe and Venyon, a fully owned subsidiary of Giesecke & Devrient, have joined forces to replace hotel room keys with NFC-enabled mobile phones. The technology makes it possible for hotel guests to check-in and out using their mobile phones. ކިޔުން ކުރިޔަށް ގެންދޭ