Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Summer World










Saving the world in 48 hours
30 MAY 2016       AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE       STUART WILLIAMS
ISTANBUL, TURKEY (AFP) -- For connoisseurs of international summitry, it's been high season recently in Turkey.  We enjoyed a G20 summit featuring Barack Obama, a Islamic summit starring the Saudi monarch and last week in Istanbul the first ever World Humanitarian Summit.  For each event, the routine for the media in our security-conscious times is familiar -- get accredited well ahead of time, circumnavigate a vast maze of metal police barriers and metal detectors to get anywhere near the venue and then rush between interviews and press conferences where everything seems to be happening at once.  And it's fair to say that summits have bred a degree of scepticism amongst most reporters, wearly used to seeing leaders arriving with great fanfare but then disappearing before the end and final communiques bringing little more than expressions of hope.
In the near utopian language of UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, the aim was no less than to forge "a different future".  Things had already got off to a tricky start with most key world leaders not showing up, something even the mild-mannered Ban said had left him "a it disappointed". 
I sat myself in the inevitable press centre, saw bow tied-waiters dishing out tea, coffee and food with impeccable Turkish politeness to the assembly hungry hacks, and wondered how this could be reconciled with helping the needs of the world's 60 million displaced people or 130 million in need of aid.  It was not like the problems were particularly far away -- take a few paces outside the labyrinthine conference centre venue, turn left and delegates could find in Taksim Square refugees begging or selling low value goods in the hope of making ends meet. 
Just a couple of the at least 2.7 million Syrians who took refuge in this country alone, every one a life turned upside down with expectations of the future transformed. 
It was not as if there was nothing going on with sometimes a dozen panel events proceeding simultaneously.  A helpful six screen projection in the press centre allowed the keen to follow as much as they could.  Suddenly there was the imposing frame of James Bond star Daniel Craig, an impassioned UN advocate for demining. 
And there was Sean Penn, keeping a low media profile after his film was mauled in Cannes.  On the screen below was UN education envoy Gordon Brown, once UK prime minister.  And on the screen next door International Rescue Committee chief David Miliband, once seen as a potential UK prime minister.  UN officials would announce the times of news conference, cheerfully offering an "escort" to be taken there. 
A huge amount of talking was done and it was interesting to watch harmony emerging on key issues.  There is something wrong with the current aid system.  Much more needs to be done to promote development and sustain communities before conflict erupts to prevent crises.  Aid groups need to cut their bureaucracies, stop competing against each other.  Government and other donors should not burden them with excessive reporting requirements.  Local actors need to be empowered and might stand a better chance on the ground than bigger groups.  Violations of humanitarian law such as attacks on schools and hospitals should be properly punished. 
The diagnosis was made more clearly than ever but one thing was clearly missing -- political commitment.  Politicians were going to need a "kick in the butt", one European official cheerfully told me, if the ideas were going to become reality.  Or as Norwegian Refugee Council chief Jan Egeland put it:  "It's one thing to discuss in Istanbul in a nice venue like this.  It's another thing to get armed men to change their behaviour." Read more



Futuristic Dubai office showcase 3-D printing's potential
1 JUNE 2016       ASSOCIATED PRESS       ADAM SCHRECK
DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES (AP) -- ... "Why 3-D printing?  Because it makes sense in terms of cost, in terms of times-saving, in terms of efficiency," the 29-year-old al-Aleeli said.  "We really believe that this technology will revolutionize the construction, the development sector as well as other sectors, (including) the medical sector (and) consumable products."  
Products made using 3-D printing are first designed on a computer and then printed out using a variety of materials, including metal, plastic and concrete. 
Developers are finding a growing number of uses for the technology as it evolves. 
European aeronautics giant Airbus just unveiled a lightweight electric printed motorcycle made from aluminum alloy particles, while a Wisconsin schoolteacher recently fashioned prosthetic feet for a duck who lost his due to frostbite. 
The technology has been used in other construction projects too, including a Dutch canal housebeing raised in Amsterdam.  But the foundation says its Dubai office is the first "fully functional 3-D printed building," constructed with full services and meant for daily use. 
The Chinese company WinSun Global used a 20-foot tall printer squirting out cement and other materials to produce the 17 building modules for the new Dubai office, according to the foundation.  The pieces were the shipped from China to the Gulf port city, where it took workers two days to piece them together. 
Further work, including the installment of the interiors and landscaping, took another three months.  Designers left open part of the finishing in the foyer so visitors can see how the 3-D printed layers came together, row after squiggly row. 
The building occupies prime real-estate between the city's iconic twin Emirates Towers and the Dubai International Financial Center, which is a stand-in for a futuristic city in the forthcoming "Star Trek Beyond" film. 
The site will serve as the temporary offices for between 12 and 20 foundation staff members for now.  Dubai hopes it will kick-start its plans to transform the sheikhdom into an incubator for emerging technologies.  It has an ambitions goal of using 3-D printing in a quarter of all buildings by 2030. Read More






Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Live, Love, Live








Kepler-62e: Super-Earth & Possible Water World
9 MAY 2016         SPACE.COM         ELIZABETH HOWELL
Kepler-62e is an exoplanet believed to be a water world, orbiting at about the equivalent distance of Mercury in its planetary system some 1,200 light-years from Earth.  The planet is an exciting find to exoplanet researchers because it is close in size to Earth, and also orbits in the habitable region of its star (which is smaller and dimmer than that of Earth's).
The planet is about 16 times the size of Earth and orbits its parent red dwarf star about once every 122 days. It is actually one of two possibly habitable planets in its system. Also present, but farther out from the star, is Kepler-62f, which is about 1.4 times the size of Earth. 
... "Kepler-62e probably has a very cloudy sky and is warm and humid all the way to the polar regions," modeling co-author Dimitar Sasselov of Harvard University stated. "Kepler-62f would be cooler, but still potentially life-friendly." 
... The planets are quite distant from Earth, but as researchers edge closer to finding an Earth 2.0, some scientists speculated that these finds could spur travel that could move faster than the methods that we have available today. Read More



Rafael de Cardenas creates Neon Jungle as Maison&Objet Americas Designer of the Year 2016
11 MAY 2016         DEZEEN         DAN HOWARTH
Mirrored blocks, neon lights and tropical plants are combined to form this "prismatic oasis" by Rafael de Cardenas, who has been named Designer of the Year at the Maison&Objet Americas 2016 fair.
... Its opening yesterday coincided with the first day of this year's Maison&Objet Americas -- a relatively new offshoot of the established biannual Paris trade fair. 
The space is designed to look like a nightclub, complete with a bar and DJ booth, but also sells ice lollies or popcicles. 
"I think Miami is a fitting place for a series of platforms, plants, neon and rum," de Cardenas told Dezeen. 
... In the room, modular black and white blocks form a central two-tiered platform for visitors to lounge on.  Palm trees sprout from  the middle of the deck, illuminated by ever-changing coloured lights.  Read More



Neon Jungle installation by Rafael de Cardenas in Miami Design District

Saturday, May 7, 2016

President Obama Speaks at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner




"I start a picture and I finish it."
-- Jean-Michael Basquiat









"Our truest life is when we are in dreams awake."
-- Henry David Thorerau






"Lady Liberty Goes To Hawaii"
By Marita Wallace (Karen Stone Pa




Every quilt tells a story
"Sharing Her Space"
28 February 2006       The Honolulu Advertiser       Zenaida Serrano
... In addition to exhibiting quilts at the Academy Art Center at Linekona and Mission Houses Museum, Murray has exhibited her quilts at a quilt exposition in Myrtle Beach, S.C., the San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles in California, and the Kokusai Art Exhibit in Japan.
While Murray's collection will be the main display at "Hawaiian Quilt Inspirations" in La Conner, Murray has also invited other Honolulu artists to each display a quilt at the exhibit. 
Charlene Huges of Nu'uanu will exhibit "Na Pua o Hawai'i," a 62-by-56-inch green and white quilt fashioned out of upholstery samples featuring orchids, gingers, plumerias and other local flowers, and embellished with insect buttons.

"I'm really excited about it because anytime an artist is invited to show work, it's validation and recognition of your work, "Hughes said.

Other invited local artists include Gussie Bento, Margo Morgan, Lincoln Okita, Millie Hayden, Sharon Nakasone, Janet Yokoe and Mary Cesar, as well as former Hawai'i resident Sara Kaufman, who will have two quilts on display.

But Hughes said Murray's quilts will be definitely the main attraction. "It's going to knock their eyes out," Hughes said. "She is just a wonderful quilter."

Back in her home, Murray continued to unfold her quilts, smiling like a mother adoring her children with each unveiling.

"This is the pathway that I've chosen to express gratitude for the land and this beauty that surrounds us, and for our ancestors who came before us and honored the land," Murray said. "... It also gives me a way to be happily occupied in these latter years, that I feel purposeful and I can be involved in something." Read More

  

"Scarlet and Indigo"
By Judy Mathieson








Monday, April 11, 2016

Queen Of iHearts













Alberto Vargas -- Pin-up Playing Cards (1950) - "6 of Hearts"








Sunday, April 3, 2016

Water for Knowledge





Water is fluid, soft, and yielding.  But water will wear away rock, which is rigid and cannot yield.
-- Dao De Jing











BABYMETAL (2016)