Saturday, November 13, 2010

Top 10 Survival Tips

Many outdoor enthusiasts love to agonize over what belongs in their survival kit. Here are the supplies that we think belong in a small pack for quick trips into the wilderness. Of course, a GPS unit and a satellite phone would be handy, but this collection is meant to be a cheap backup for times when those items are damaged or inaccessible.
10. High-Calorie Protein Bars
Hunting and fishing may be more trouble than they are worth. You may burn more calories in search of prey than you would gain from eating their flesh. Save yourself from some agony by packing a few snacks.
9. Flashlight
Flashlights can be seen by search and rescue teams from a great distance. They are a great way to attract attention to yourself and could come in handy if you have trouble making a fire.
8. Whistle
When you are lost in the woods, signaling for help should be a high priority. Blowing a whistle periodically requires much less energy than yelling and the high pitch sound may travel further.
7. Backpacker Hammock
In extremely hot or cold environments, protecting yourself from the elements is half the battle. You can always disassemble it to construct a more elaborate shelter.
6. Water Purification Supplies
Drinking brackish water can do more harm than good. By properly filtering and decontaminating your beverages, you can avoid getting in even more trouble.
5. Plastic Trash Bag
Thin and light, they are worth their weight in gold and have a plethora of uses. Use them to catch rain, cut three holes to improvise a rain poncho, or windproof your shelter. Bring several of them. Trash compactor bags are the sturdiest.
4. First-Aid Kit
Medical emergencies are an even bigger deal than being lost. Your kit should contain items to deal with serious injuries — not just cuts and scrapes. Pack some Quick Clot or Celox to deal with serious bleeding, tweezers, a needle and thread, antibiotic cream, a bit of sunblock, and any special medications that you may need.
3. Metal Cup or Can
Staying hydrated is far more important than finding food. With a metal container, you have the option of boiling the water to kill nasty microbes.
2. Butane Lighter and Tinder
Starting fires with a mischmetal flint in a dry climate is easy, but in wet weather, you may need a cigarette lighter and some flammable helpers to get your fire going. Cotton balls covered in wax, solid backpacking stove tablets, or a flask of Bacardi 151 are all viable options.
1. Knife
Never leave home without one. A sturdy blade is essential for building shelters, preparing food, making campfires and countless other tasks.
Article And Picture Thanks To: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2008/03/top-10-survival

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Apple's New MacBook Air



Photo Thanks To: http://bindapple.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/apple-macbook-air.jpg


These days, $1,000 buys a lot of computer, or maybe very little. From Apple, your thousand bucks will get you a sliver of aluminum so thin you could lose it among the papers in your briefcase. The company’s newest MacBook Air is as sleek a laptop as I’ve ever seen. At less than 3 pounds and two-thirds of an inch at its thickest, it’s 
even trimmer than the original version of two years ago.

Like the low-cost netbooks that have sold so well in recent years, the MacBook Air has been stripped of certain luxuries, such as the DVD drive and the Ethernet port. Instead, Apple has stuffed the luxury items under the hood — a more powerful processor, a superthin LCD screen, a glass touchpad with multitouch controls, solid state flash memory instead of a noisy, power-chomping hard drive, and a whole lot of batteries. The result reminds me of a classic British sports car: not the fastest thing out there, but nimble and a pleasure to use.

Apple lent me the 11-inch MacBook Air, which sells for $999 and comes with 64 gigabytes of data storage; you’d pay $1,199 for 128 gigs. A traditional hard drive could hold a lot more data at lower cost, but how much does a laptop user really need? Besides, Apple says it’s the use of flash that enables the MacBook Air to boot up so quickly. Apple engineers were aiming for the kind of quick response they’ve built into the iPad tablet computer, and they’ve just about managed it. The Mac operating system fired up in less than 20 seconds. The Air doesn’t do badly with Microsoft Corp.’s Windows 7, either. It was easy to install a
copy on the Air, and then launch it in about 30 seconds.

Low-end PC netbooks generally run Intel Corp.’s Atom processor, but Apple went for the beefier Intel Core 2 Duo running at 1.4 gigahertz. Still, this is far from state of the art. The entry-level standard MacBook, much thicker and heavier than the Air, also costs $999, but features a 2.4-gigahertz processor. Not to worry — the Air’s got plenty of power for everyday tasks.

Instead of the cheap “integrated graphics’’ processors found on budget machines, Apple went with a higher-quality graphics chip from Nvidia Corp.However, the chip shares the same memory as the main processor, so you won’t get world-class performance. I saw this for myself by running Windows 7 on the Mac and playing the high-end video game Battlefield: Bad Company 2. The graphics looked decent, but moving images were often halting and
jerky enough to get me killed in a few gun battles.

You probably saw the report this week that heat from laptops could pose health risks for male users. If so, the MacBook Air is a computer for real men, and does not get nearly as hot as many other machines. Its full-size keyboard makes for comfortable typing, too. And you’ve got to like the touchpad-mouse. Apple has hidden the mouse buttons below a touchpad that flexes when you push it.

It’s also got the same multitouch capability found on the iPhone. To enlarge or shrink a Web page, just “pinch’’ the touchpad with forefinger and thumb.

Apple boasts that it shrank all the Air’s electronics onto a tiny motherboard, and filled the rest of its aluminum case with rechargeable batteries. The company claims you should see about seven hours of ordinary use. Sounds plausible. I got about five out of it, including a lot of data transfers through the Wi-Fi networking chip, which tends to drain batteries. I also tried streaming movies via Netflix, again using Wi-Fi. Even at high resolution, the show went on for a respectable three hours.

Of course, the Air’s minimalist styling imposes the usual nuisances. It’s harder to install software without a DVD drive, or hook up to a corporate network without Ethernet. Instead of a VGA port for attaching a large monitor or video projector, you get a jack that uses the newer Mini DisplayPort standard. You’ll need a special adapter to connect older video gear. And shouldn’t there be a place to insert SD memory cards, or an HDMI port for plugging the Air into a high-def television?


Well, maybe not. Most of us would want every conceivable option for our thousand bucks. But if you spend the money on a MacBook Air, you’ll get perhaps the best option of all: simplicity.

Article Thanks To: http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2010/11/11/macbook_air_breathes_new_life_into_laptop_design/

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Super Sport sets land speed record at 267.81 mph!


Recently, the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport made headlines by setting a new land speed record, hitting 267.81 miles per hour out on Volkswagen's Ehra-Lessien test track. It may be the fastest production car ever built, but straight-line speed isn't everything, you know. Just ask the Top Gear boys – the standard-spec Bugatti Veyron may be an insanely fast machine, but out on the test track, it failed to earn first (or even second or third) place honors.

Naturally, it didn't take long for 
Top Gear to get the new Veyron SS in the hands of its tame racing driver, The Stig. Captain Slow may have managed the top-rung Bugatti up to 259.11 mph, but how does it fare on the track? Does it take the first place spot, or merely fall somewhere near the top? Hit the jump to watch the video of Stiggy's power lap and find out for yourself.


Photo Thanks To: http://www.autoblog.com/photos/bugatti-veyron-16-4-super-sports-land-speed-record/#3143054
Article Thanks To: http://www.autoblog.com/2010/07/26/video-bugatti-veyron-ss-takes-on-top-gear-test-track-at/

Monday, November 8, 2010

Sick Cars

                                                            Ferrari 458 Italia: $240,000

Ariel Atom $50,000



Sick Cars

Ferrari-458-Italia-1-lg.jpg