Thursday, November 28, 2013

 1:36 AM PST 11/27/2013 by Gavin J. Blair 

More than 26,000 imported and local films and TV shows are available on the Instant Video platform that will compete in the crowded Japanese Web video market.

TOKYO – Amazon Japan launched its 'Instant Video' online platform Tuesday (Nov. 27), offering movies and TV series for streaming, download rental and purchase, with content from all the local major studios and TV networks.
Rental fees for 24 hours begin from $1 (100 yen), with titles from Hollywood studios, local majors such as Toho and Shochiku, public broadcaster NHK and the commercial networks, including Fuji TV, TBS and NTV.
Monsters University, a box office smash in Japan, is being offered at $5 to rent and $25 to buy, while the first installment of The Hobbit trilogy is available to buy only, at $20. Older titles, such as the Resident Evil and Lethal Weapon series are available for $1.
The first episode of the first season of programs including Glee, 24 and local hit drama Boys over Flowers (Hana Yori Dango) are being offered free.
Off the 26,000 titles available, approximately 15,000 are available in HD. Titles can be streamed to two devices, such as a computer and Amazon's Kindle tablet, but downloaded to only one.
The new Kindle HDX goes on sale in Japan tomorrow, and will be offering a $20 (2,000 yen) coupon for Instant Video as a promotional tie-in.
Instant Video will see Amazon, which is already well-established as an online mall in Japan, going up against local operators such as GyaO Corp, Tsutaya TV and NotTV, as well as Hulu and Apple's Japanese platforms. JCOM, Japan's biggest cable network, also offers a VOD service that allows content to be downloaded to multiple devices.
Amazon Japan began selling e-books at the end of last year, already offers more than 25 million songs on its music service, and started to sell over-the-counter medicines in September following partial deregulation of the pharmaceutical market.

http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&linkCode=ur2&tag=globyblogy-20

facebook app
The Launchpad is a series that introduces Mashable readers to compelling startups. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here.
Name: Sanctri
One-Liner Pitch: Sanctri is a Facebook app for creating memorial pages for loved ones who have passed away.
Why It's Taking Off: Facebook doesn't offer specific tools to mourn, but with our digitally intertwined lives there is a need for a virtual destination to remember friends and family.
It's probably happened to all of us. A friend, family member or acquaintance passes away, but the Facebook profile remains.
Jono Milner, founder of Sanctri, had this experience. "It was the most bizarre feeling," he says, describing how he wanted to post on this person's timeline, but it felt strange. Then, someone did post on this person's Facebook page — the mother. A number of people "liked" her post, which also felt weird, as the term "like" has a purely positive connotation.


http://bb431ah6tn-0ap853m87uo8pdi.hop.clickbank.net/
Facebook Apps

Wednesday, November 27, 2013


buschpantopia
(News) Busch Gardens Tampa has announced that when it launches Falcon’s Fury, North America’s tallest freestanding drop tower, in spring 2014, it will also unveil its newest land – Pantopia.
Currently known as Timbuktu, the fully remodeled Pantopia will boast elaborately-jeweled theming and feature rides and attractions, new food and beverage options, entertainment, shopping, a renovated indoor theater and more.
Located in the heart of  Busch Gardens, the centerpiece of Pantopia will be Falcon’s Fury. The one-of-a-kind drop tower will stand at 335 feet and beckon guests from across the globe as it takes riders soaring straight down. At the ride’s highest point there is an element of surprise. Like its bird of prey namesake, riders will pivot 90 degrees in midair to a face-down dive position. An instant later they’ll plunge 60 mph at 3.5 Gs straight down.
In addition to Falcon’s Fury, this completely reimagined land will be a creative haven that has been inspired by centuries of world travelers, offering something for every member of the family.buschpantopia2
“In addition to the power and allure of Falcon’s Fury, Pantopia will celebrate the spirit of animals, welcome adventurers from the four corners of the earth, explore ancient lore and display fantastic architecture,” says Busch Gardens Park President Jim Dean. “Guests will find multiple portals and doorways and learn about the legends that have drawn journeyers from around the world to Pantopia™. Plus, family favorites like the Scorpion, Phoenix, Bush Flyers, Desert Runners and the Kiddie Train will return.”

A couple of years ago, early one morning, I received an SMS advising “resadents to stay indoors because of a nearby insadent”. I was shocked by the spelling, as much as the message. Surely, I thought, if it was a real message then the spelling would be correct. Spelling matters. In a text message from…
A couple of years ago, early one morning, I received an SMS advising “resadents to stay indoors because of a nearby insadent”. I was shocked by the spelling, as much as the message. Surely, I thought, if it was a real message then the spelling would be correct.
Spelling matters. In a text message from a friend teeing up a night out “c u at 8” is fine - but in an emergency warning text from a government agency, I expect the spelling to be standard. But why is it that some people struggle with standard spelling?
Spelling remains the most relentlessly tested of all the literacy skills, but it is the least taught.
Sending a list of words home on Monday to be tested on Friday is not teaching. Nor is getting children to write their spelling words out 10 times, even if they have to do it in rainbow colours.
Looking, covering, writing and checking does not teach spelling. Looking for little words inside other words, and doing word searches are just time fillers. And writing your “spelling” words in spirals or backwards is just plain stupid.
And yet, this is a good summary of most of the current spelling programs in schools today.
So, what should spelling teaching look like?

Finding meaning

Children should know the meanings of the words they spell, and as logical as that sounds - ask a child in your life what this week’s spelling words mean, and you might be surprised by their answers.
If spelling words are simply strings of letters to be learnt by heart with no meaning attached and no investigation of how those words are constructed, then we are simply assigning our children a task equivalent to learning ten random seven-digit PINs each week.
That is not only very very hard, it’s pointless.

More than sounds

English is an alphabetic language; we use letters to write words. But it is not a phonetic language: there is no simple match between sounds and letters.
We have 26 letters, but we have around 44 sounds (it’s not easy to be precise as different accents produce different sounds) and several hundred ways to write those sounds.
So, while sounds - or phonics - are important in learning to spell, they are insufficient. When the only tool we give young children for spelling is to “sound it out”, we are making a phonological promise to them that English simply cannot keep.

How words make their meanings

Sounds are important in learning to spell, but just as important are the morphemes in words. Morphemes are the meaningful parts of words. For example, “jumped” has two morphemes - “jump” and “ed”. “Jump” is easily recognised as meaningful, but “ed” is also meaningful because it tells us that the jump happened in the past.
Young spellers who are relying on the phonological promise given to them in their early years of schooling typically spell “jumped” as “jumt”.
When attempting to spell a word, the first question we should teach children to ask is not “what sounds can I hear?” but “what does this word mean?”. This gives important information, which helps enormously with the spelling of the word.
In the example of “jumt” it brings us back to the base word “jump”; where the sound of “p” can now be heard, and the past marker “ed” , rather than the sound “t” which we hear when we say the word.
Consider the author of the emergency text message at the beginning of this article as they pondered which of the many plausible letters they could use for the sound they could hear in “res - uh - dent”.
If they had asked themselves first, “What does this word mean?” the answer would have been people who “reside”, and then they would have heard the answer to their phonological dilemma.

Where words come from

English has a fascinating and constantly evolving history. Our words, and their spellings, come from many languages. Often we have kept the spellings from the original languages, while applying our own pronunciation.
As a result, only about 12% of words in English are spelt the way they sound. But that doesn’t mean that spelling is inexplicable, and therefore only learned by rote - it means that teaching spelling becomes a fascinating exploration of the remarkable history of the language - etymology.
Some may think that etymology is the sole province of older and experienced learners, but it’s not.
Young children are incredibly responsive to stories about words, and these understandings about words are key to building their spelling skills, but also building their vocabulary.
Yet poor spellers and young spellers are rarely given these additional tools to understand how words work and too often poor spellers are relegated to simply doing more phonics work.

Teaching - not testing

The only people who benefit from spelling tests are those who do well on them - and the benefit is to their self-esteem rather than their spelling ability. They were already good spellers.
The people who don’t benefit from spelling tests are those who are poor at spelling. They struggled with spelling before the test, and they still struggle after the test. Testing is not teaching.
Parents and teachers should consider these questions as they reflect on the ways in which spelling is approached in their school.
Are all children learning to love words from their very first years at school? Are they being fascinated by stories about where words come from and what those stories tell us about the spelling of those words?
Are they being excited by breaking the code, figuring how words are making their meanings and thrilled to find that what they’ve learned about one word helps them solve another word?
Put simply - is spelling your child’s favourite subject?
If the answer is no, then something needs to be done about the teaching.

The Spelling Bee Toolbox  ™

For Grades 3-5 and Grades 6-8

Author

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

by Lloyd Alter


 
Good Design For Living in Small Apartments
 As people migrate to smaller spaces, good design helps a lot. This is something they figured out in Europe long ago, that if you don't have a lot of horizontal room you can go vertical. Tumidei in Italy makes some of the nicest stuff, like this unit with lots of storage under the bed.

This unit just raises the floor high enough for beds to slide under.

This one looks a bit clinical, but has two single beds plus a pull-out double bed in between. When you read in the New York Times that professional couples with children are moving into small one-bedroom apartments in Manhattan and sleeping in closets, perhaps this stuff could be useful.



http://287a85eizrr1atbgbfz2icf-6f.hop.clickbank.net/

The Dacia Duster is proving with the technically new up to date TCe 125 engine. The modern turbo petrol engine with direct injection for the 4×2 Duster 92 kW / 125 HP. The downsized four-cylinder 1.2-liter engine from the Renault range shines with a combined consumption of 6.0 liters of premium petrol per 100 kilometers, which corresponds to CO2 emissions of 140 grams per kilometer. Furthermore Duster 4×2 and 4×4 are ordered with the base frugal petrol 1.6 16V and an output of 77 kW/105 hp.

Duster Duster Economical LPG and diesel variants

The dealers Dacia Duster 4×2 in the four-cylinder as LPG version 1.6 16V LPG 105 with 75 kW/102 hp. However, in petrol mode the Duster LPG mobilizes the full 77 kW / 105 HP. The diesel range of Dacia Duster has two turbo-diesel engine 1.5 dCi family: the 66 kW / 90 PS payable dCi 90 for the front-wheel drive variant and the 80 kW / 109 hp dCi 110 for the Duster 4×2 – the Duster 4×4 this engine delivers, however, the eponymous 81 kW / 110 HP.
Save fuel with the ECO mode in the Duster

Save fuel with the ECO mode in the Duster

The new Renault models and the Dacia Logan MCV and Sandero models control the Duster at the ECO-driving program. As standard, the Dacia Duster consumption be reduced so that at the touch again by up to ten percent. For this purpose, power and torque are reduced, the cooling effect of the parallel from the associated standard Duster Ice air conditioner is restricted. With a powerful step on the accelerator, the driver can the Dacia SUV ECO mode off when needed, for example for an overtaking maneuver.