Sunday, January 9, 2011

FACEBOOK WILL END ON MARCH 15th! What next site after facebook?

press conference

PALO ALTO, CA –Mark Zuckerberg announced that Facebook will be shut down in March. Managing the site has become too stressful.
“Facebook has gotten out of control,” said Zuckerberg in a press conference outside his Palo Alto office, “and the stress of managing this company has ruined my life. I need to put an end to all the madness.”
Zuckerberg went on to explain that starting March 15th, users will no longer be able to access their Facebook accounts.
“After March 15th the whole website shuts down,” said Avrat Humarthi, Vice President of Technical Affairs at Facebook. “So if you ever want to see your pictures again, I recommend you take them off the internet. You won’t be able to get them back once Facebook goes out of business.”
Zuckerberg said that the decision to shut down Facebook was difficult, but that he does not think people will be upset.
“I personally don’t think it’s a big deal,” he said in a private phone interview. “And to be honest, I think it’s for the better. Without Facebook, people will have to go outside and make real friends. That’s always a good thing.”
Some Facebook users were furious upon hearing the shocking news.
“What am I going to do without Facebook?” said Denise Bradshaw, a high school student from Indiana. “My life revolves around it. I’m on Facebook at least 10 hours a day. Now what am I going to do with all that free time?”
However, parents across the country have been experiencing a long anticipated sense of relief.
“I’m glad the Facebook nightmare is over,” said Jon Guttari, a single parent from Detroit. “Now my teenager’s face won’t be glued to a computer screen all day. Maybe I can even have a conversation with her.”
Those in the financial circuit are criticizing Zuckerberg for walking away from a multibillion dollar franchise. Facebook is currently ranked as one of the wealthiest businesses in the world, with economists estimating its value at around 7.9 billion.
But Zuckerberg remains unruffled by these accusations. He says he will stand by his decision to give Facebook the axe.
“I don’t care about the money,” said Zuckerberg. “I just want my old life back.”
The Facebook Corporation suggests that users remove all of their personal information from the website before March 15th. After that date, all photos, notes, links, and videos will be permanently erased.We all be on a look out for a social site that will be captivating like facebook.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Lechariot gathered that One of the 25 pilot whales that died on September 22, 2010 lies in the sand after the whales beached themselves at Spirits Bay, 320 km (200 mi) northwest of Auckland, New Zealand. In the second mass stranding in the area in two months, the Department of Conservation said a pod of 74 pilot whales were found but rescuers were trying to save almost 50 more stranded on the coast. Another 50 whales were offshore and were continuing to strand themselves, regional manager of the Department of Conservation (DOC) Jonathan Maxwell said.

Friday, October 1, 2010

DRESSES FOR EVERY WOMAN BODY TYPE.

Every woman has something
about her body she'd like to
hide, whether it's heavy thighs, a
pudgy tummy or a too-round
bottom. With just a few visual
tricks, your problem areas will
disappear and let your true
beauty shine through!
Bottom-heavy
If your hips are wider than your
shoulders and your thighs are
round, you have a classic pear-
shaped body. Dressing is a snap
if you remember to accentuate
the positives: a shapely waist,
delicate upper body and
attractive shoulders and arms.
Bottoms
Avoid anything too tight.
A-line skirts that hit around
the knee area are ideal
because they draw attention
away from problem areas.
Miniskirts are generally a bad
idea because they accentuate
heavy thighs.
Pant waists should fall
somewhere below the natural
waistline for a better fit. A
straight or slightly bootcut leg
is the most flattering. Avoid
patterned or light-colored
pants. Skip fussy details like
big cargo pockets, rouching or
excessive zippers around the
hip area.
Shorts can be tricky, but for
workouts and casual wear
choose lightweight, loose-
fitting shorts (no bike shorts).
Slimming side stripes on
shorts can give the illusion of
sleekness.
Tops
Avoid too-baggy tops or too-
tight tops: the looser tops will
make you look large all over,
the tight tops will make you
look out of proportion to your
hips. Look for fitted -- not
skintight -- T-shirts
(something with some stretch)
and button-front tops. V-
necks, turtlenecks and open
collars all call attention to the
face, which is always a good
thing.
Jackets and blazers should hit
anywhere but the widest point
of your hips. That could mean
right below the waist to mid-
thigh, depending on your
height. Wear jackets and
blazers open for the best
vertical lines.
Dresses
Look for dresses that nip in at
the waist and slightly flare out
over hips and thighs.
You can pull off a full-skirted
ballgown because it will hide
heavy hips and thighs.
Try sleeveless and strapless
dresses to play up pretty
shoulders and arms.
An empire, or raised waist
dress brings the eye up away
from problem areas. Careful,
though. Sometimes this gets
mistaken for a maternity look
with fuller figures.
Top-heavy
The apple-shaped body is
usually softer around the middle
and has heavier breasts, with
narrower hips and slimmer legs.
Make the most of your womanly
figure by showing off your legs
and great cleavage.
Tops
Avoid too tight (plays up large
breasts too much) and too
baggy (just makes you look
heavier). Opt for fabrics that
skim the body, preferably
knits and wovens with stretch
for a better fit.
V-neck, boatneck, turtle and
mock necks and shirt collars
are your most flattering
necklines.
Play up nice cleavage with a
peek, not a Dolly Parton-sized
slice. Especially appealing: a
pretty lace-trimmed cami
showing under a jacket or top.
Avoid full sleeves or puffy
sleeves.
Bottoms
Balance out a top-heavy
figure with an A-line skirt that
will give you the look of a
waist and more of an
hourglass look.
Choose flat-front, never
pleated, pants that have a
lower rise than the natural
waist.
Five-pocket jeans are your
friend! Front pockets on jeans
help disguise a tummy
problem, while back pockets
can help define a flatter rear
common to top-heavy
women.
Avoid anything too tight --
from pencil skirts to skintight
jeans -- because it will only
accentuate top heaviness.
Play up nice legs with shorter
(an inch above the knee)
skirts.
Dresses
One-piece dressing is tricky
for you. Best bets: A
sleeveless black sheath, a soft
princess seamed dress, a
strapless dress with corseted
top.
Resist the urge to cover up
head-to-toe: showing a little
skin, whether it's bare arms or
shoulders, is much more
flattering.
Body basics for every figure
Wear colors that look great on
you. Not sure what those are?
Grab a trusted friend and
head to the mall. Hold up tons
of colors next to your face
and get feedback from your
friend. Hues that compliment
most complexions: pink, blue,
white (you'll just need to
change the intensity of these
colors to suit your coloring,
i.e. hot pink for darker skins,
carnation for fairer, ivory for
olive tones, etc.)
Nobody looks good in high-
waisted, pleated pants with
narrow ankle openings, but
manufacturers still turn these
out in droves. Avoid!
Don't worry about being
trendy when you look at what
suits your figure: concentrate
on what flatters, and add up-
to-date shoes, handbags and
accessories later.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

RIM unveils a tablet:The BlackBerry PlayBook.

Looks like all those
blackberry playbook
rumors about BlackBerry
maker Research in
Motion coming out with
its own tablet were true
— well, everything
except for the name.
Instead of the
"BlackPad" (ugh), RIM is
calling its 7-inch,
camera-packing tablet
the BlackBerry PlayBook.
CEO Mike Lazaridis
showed off the long-
rumored device during
the keynote of RIM ’s
BlackBerry developer
conference in San
Francisco on Monday.
RIM says its new tablet
will arrive in the U.S. in
early 2011, and in
overseas markets in the
second quarter of next
year. No pricing details
yet.
Expect a 0.9-pound
tablet that ’s 9.7mm (or
0.4 inch) thick, complete
with (as rumored) a pair
of cameras: a 5-
megapixel camera in the
back, and a 3MP lens in
front, both capable of
recording HD video —
nice.
The 7-inch display —
the same size as that on
the just-announced
Samsung Galaxy Tab —
will boast a resolution of
1024 by 600, and yes,
it ’s a capacitive
multitouch display,
good for such multi-
finger gestures as
punching and zooming.
The "no-compromises"
PlayBook will run on a
new tablet OS designed
by QNX Software
Systems, which RIM
acquired back in April,
and it’ll be powered by a
1GHz dual-core
processor, complete
with a whopping 1GB of
onboard RAM
(compared with just
256MB for the iPad).
The PlayBook will also
support multitasking
and Flash (think Flash
Player 10.1), by the way,
as well as multimedia-
friendly HTML5 Web
standards.
As far as data: The
PlayBook will arrive with
Wi-Fi and Bluetooth
support, with both 3G
and 4G (yep, 4G)
versions coming "in the
future," according to
RIM. The PlayBook will
also connect to a nearby
BlackBerry via Bluetooth
for viewing e-mail,
calendar, to-do items or
contacts — meaning,
presumably, that you’ll
be able to tap out
messages on the
PlayBook and fire them
off from your handheld
BlackBerry.
We can also expect
"nonproprietary"
microUSB and micro-
HDMI ports, with the
PlayBook capable of
outputting full-on 1080p
video via HDMI, RIM
says.
A slick promo video for
the PlayBook shows
features such as tabbed
browsing, an app task
bar, threaded
messaging, on-the-Web
YouTube video, and
tablet-sized e-mail and
event interfaces — all
very iPad-like, with the
added twist of the
PlayBook acting as a
BlackBerry companion
(or the BlackBerry
"amplified," as RIM puts
it) in addition to a
stand-alone slate:
All very interesting, but
we ’ll have to wait for
more details on the
BlackBerry PlayBook (not
to mention its new,
QNX-build OS) until
some point "on or
before" the tablet ’s
launch date — which, of
course, we don’t really
know yet.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Cocktail Dress

Silver and Black Slip Dress

Add sparkle with metallic ruched
fabric and flattery with a cool
chevron stripe design with this
Dallin Chase dress

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Colours to choose

Choose a Color:
You could just wear a little black
dress (classy, flattering and
slenderizing), but why not
explore some of the other dressy
options?
Red, bold prints, even gold are
dramatic enough for evening
wear. Pastels, mid-range brights
and soft prints look great for
dressy day occasions.
Blue (from navy to royal), pink
(from cotton candy to fuchsia)
and white (from candlelight to
cream) look great on almost
everyone. Remember that the
"Don't wear white to a wedding"
wisdom is still considered a
fashion don't by most women.
7 Style Secrets from the Red
Carpet
4. Pick a Style:
Catalogs, the internet and
magazines are a great places to
seek special occasion dress
inspiration.
Instead of going with something
trendy, try to find a dress that
reflects classic, timeless
elegance. Remember that you'll
have to look at photos of you in
the dress for years to come.
Classic special occasion dresses
are often deceptively simple, but
they usually let the beauty of
the wearer shine through. A few
examples: the little black dress
(a.k.a the cocktail dress), a
goddess gown (draped and
rouched), a ballgown, a slip
dress.

DRESS FOR EVERY WOMAN BODY TYPE.

Every woman has something
about her body she'd like to
hide, whether it's heavy thighs, a
pudgy tummy or a too-round
bottom. With just a few visual
tricks, your problem areas will
disappear and let your true
beauty shine through!
Bottom-heavy
If your hips are wider than your
shoulders and your thighs are
round, you have a classic pear-
shaped body. Dressing is a snap
if you remember to accentuate
the positives: a shapely waist,
delicate upper body and
attractive shoulders and arms.
Bottoms
Avoid anything too tight.
A-line skirts that hit around
the knee area are ideal
because they draw attention
away from problem areas.
Miniskirts are generally a bad
idea because they accentuate
heavy thighs.
Pant waists should fall
somewhere below the natural
waistline for a better fit. A
straight or slightly bootcut leg
is the most flattering. Avoid
patterned or light-colored
pants. Skip fussy details like
big cargo pockets, rouching or
excessive zippers around the
hip area.
Shorts can be tricky, but for
workouts and casual wear
choose lightweight, loose-
fitting shorts (no bike shorts).
Slimming side stripes on
shorts can give the illusion of
sleekness.
Tops
Avoid too-baggy tops or too-
tight tops: the looser tops will
make you look large all over,
the tight tops will make you
look out of proportion to your
hips. Look for fitted -- not
skintight -- T-shirts
(something with some stretch)
and button-front tops. V-
necks, turtlenecks and open
collars all call attention to the
face, which is always a good
thing.
Jackets and blazers should hit
anywhere but the widest point
of your hips. That could mean
right below the waist to mid-
thigh, depending on your
height. Wear jackets and
blazers open for the best
vertical lines.
Dresses
Look for dresses that nip in at
the waist and slightly flare out
over hips and thighs.
You can pull off a full-skirted
ballgown because it will hide
heavy hips and thighs.
Try sleeveless and strapless
dresses to play up pretty
shoulders and arms.
An empire, or raised waist
dress brings the eye up away
from problem areas. Careful,
though. Sometimes this gets
mistaken for a maternity look
with fuller figures.
Top-heavy
The apple-shaped body is
usually softer around the middle
and has heavier breasts, with
narrower hips and slimmer legs.
Make the most of your womanly
figure by showing off your legs
and great cleavage.
Tops
Avoid too tight (plays up large
breasts too much) and too
baggy (just makes you look
heavier). Opt for fabrics that
skim the body, preferably
knits and wovens with stretch
for a better fit.
V-neck, boatneck, turtle and
mock necks and shirt collars
are your most flattering
necklines.
Play up nice cleavage with a
peek, not a Dolly Parton-sized
slice. Especially appealing: a
pretty lace-trimmed cami
showing under a jacket or top.
Avoid full sleeves or puffy
sleeves.
Bottoms
Balance out a top-heavy
figure with an A-line skirt that
will give you the look of a
waist and more of an
hourglass look.
Choose flat-front, never
pleated, pants that have a
lower rise than the natural
waist.
Five-pocket jeans are your
friend! Front pockets on jeans
help disguise a tummy
problem, while back pockets
can help define a flatter rear
common to top-heavy
women.
Avoid anything too tight --
from pencil skirts to skintight
jeans -- because it will only
accentuate top heaviness.
Play up nice legs with shorter
(an inch above the knee)
skirts.
Dresses
One-piece dressing is tricky
for you. Best bets: A
sleeveless black sheath, a soft
princess seamed dress, a
strapless dress with corseted
top.
Resist the urge to cover up
head-to-toe: showing a little
skin, whether it's bare arms or
shoulders, is much more
flattering.
Body basics for every figure
Wear colors that look great on
you. Not sure what those are?
Grab a trusted friend and
head to the mall. Hold up tons
of colors next to your face
and get feedback from your
friend. Hues that compliment
most complexions: pink, blue,
white (you'll just need to
change the intensity of these
colors to suit your coloring,
i.e. hot pink for darker skins,
carnation for fairer, ivory for
olive tones, etc.)
Nobody looks good in high-
waisted, pleated pants with
narrow ankle openings, but
manufacturers still turn these
out in droves. Avoid!
Don't worry about being
trendy when you look at what
suits your figure: concentrate
on what flatters, and add up-
to-date shoes, handbags and
accessories later.