Thursday, August 30, 2007

The Pryamid at the Core of the Earth

 
Buffy Sainte-Marie was a graduating college senior in 1962 and hit the ground running in the early the Sixties, after the beatniks and before the hippies. All alone she toured North America's colleges, reservations and concert halls, meeting both huge acclaim and huge misperception from audiences and record companies who expected Pocahontas in fringes, and instead were both entertained and educated with their initial dose of Native American reality in the first person.

By age 24, Buffy Sainte-Marie had appeared all over Europe, Canada, Australia and Asia, receiving honors, medals and awards which continue to this day. Her song "Until It's Time for You to Go" was recorded by Elvis and Barbra and Cher, and her "Universal Soldier" became the anthem of the peace movement. For her very first album she was voted Billboard's Best New Artist.

She disappeared suddenly from the mainstream American airwaves during the Lyndon Johnson years. As part of a blacklist which affected Eartha Kitt, Taj Mahal and a host of other outspoken performers, her name was included on White House stationery as among those whose music "deserved to be suppressed". In Indian country and abroad, however, her fame only grew. She continued to appear at countless grassroots concerts, AIM events and other activist benefits. She made 17 albums of her music, three of her own television specials, spent five years on Sesame Street, scored movies, helped to found Canada's 'Music of Aboriginal Canada' JUNO category, raised a son, earned a Ph.D. in Fine Arts, taught Digital Music as adjunct professor at several colleges, and won an Academy Award Oscar for the song "Up Where We Belong".
Buffy Sainte-Marie virtually invented the role of Native American international activist pop star. Her concern for protecting indigenous intellectual property, and her distaste for the exploitation of Native American artists and performers has kept her in the forefront of activism in the arts for forty years. Presently she operates the Nihewan Foundation for Native American Education whose Cradleboard Teaching Project serves children and teachers in eighteen states.
Deeper background about Buffy Sainte-Marie

Born on a Cree reservation in Qu'Appelle Valley, Saskatchewan, Buffy Sainte-Marie was adopted and raised in Maine and Massachusetts. She received a Ph.D. in Fine Art from the University of Massachusetts. She also holds degrees in both Oriental Philosophy and teaching, influences which form the backbone of her music, visual art and social activism.
As a college student in the early 1960s, Buffy Sainte-Marie became known as a writer of protest songs and love songs. Many of these became huge hits and classics of the era, performed by hundreds of other artists including Barbra Streisand, Elvis Presley, Chet Atkins, Janis Joplin, Roberta Flack, Neil Diamond, Tracy Chapman and The Boston Pops Orchestra.
Buffy '96

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Peru earthquake

A magnitude 7.5 earthquake struck off the coast of central Peru on
Wednesday evening, prompting a tsunami warning for that country, as
well as Chile, Ecuador and Colombia. The Pacific Tsunami Warning
Center also issued a vague warning...
JumpTV Latin America - http://hispanic-tv.jumptv.com/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
relayed by http://evrewhere.com/andrewnewton/

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

gatu

i don't think god would like any of this 'new millennium pop' -- and
when i see him I hope I remember my name let alone this question! :-)
For all things peaceful, Andrew.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Sabre and Amadeus seek joint venture approval

Sabre Holdings and Amadeus have filed with the European Commission for
antitrust approval to create a joint venture concentrating on non-air
items.

The rival Global Distribution System companies said the initiative
would provide "secure, automated payment processing, clearing and
reconciliation solutions" to the global travel industry.

"The intent of the joint venture is to establish an industry standard
solution to improve and better meet the requirements of the travel
industry with payment efficiencies, increased automation, and improved
interoperability," a statement said.

"The joint venture plans to focus on the non-air segments of the
industry such as hotels, cruise, tour, car and rail.

"The joint venture will integrate the existing financial instruments
already used by the travel industry into a best-in-class
multi-channel, multi-GDS platform, which will allow travel industry
players to effectively manage all aspects of their payment needs in a
flexible, easy-to-use solution."

No further details were given, with both companies saying more
information on the joint venture solution will be available upon
approval, but no timetable was indicated.

The move comes as competitor GDSs Galileo and Worldspan conclude
merger arrangements.

Categories: Travel Technology, Travel Agent, Hotel & Resort, Tour
Operator, Airline, Business Travel
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://evrewhere.com/andrewnewton/

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

hmm... Kailua Kona, HI, United States Vacation Rentals

Hale O Pua Lani
  • Apartment
  • 2 bedrooms, sleeps 5
  • 1 bathrooms
  • Beach, Ocean
  • Pool, Dishwasher, Satellite / Cable TV
Rates (shown in USD):
$99 - $150 Per Night
Email Owner    View Availability    Add to Favorites

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://evrewhere.com/andrewnewton/

A Blog Alert for the term: "popular destination" I find interesting

Kill Devil Hills vacation rental
By Daniel B.
Kill Devils Hills, a popular destination for vacation on the Outer banks has many rental homes, hotels around. However, I prefer Kill Devil Hills vacation rental to expensive hotels. These vacation villas are located near the hot spots ...
Blognitive Dissonance - http://blogdiss.weblogs.u

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://evrewhere.com/andrewnewton/

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Aviary’s Incredibly Ambitious Art Project

aviary.png The guys behind Worth1000 and Plime have been tooling away at a new venture called Aviary (although it's confusingly hosted at CreationOnTheFly.com ). With Aviary, the New York based team is aiming at the rather ambitious goal of not only creating a marketplace for multimedia artwork, but a suite of robust collaborative online applications with which to create the works.

The obvious question is "why both tools and a marketplace?" As founder Avi Muchnick believes, both are needed for the other to be successful. They need a marketplace for creators to sell their works and encourage use of the tools. They need tools so they can confirm and maintain the copyright of the works created on the platform.

The lingering question is whether online tools will be of a high enough caliber to produce marketable content. So far, signs are pointing to yes.

When completed, Aviary will consist of 14 online tools of varying complexity: an image editor, color swatch generator, pattern generator, vector-based editor, 3D modeler, audio editor, music generator, video editor, desktop publishing tool, word processor, painting simulator, custom image product creator, photo analyzer, and file system to store it all on. Each of the applications is programmed in Flex, making them ready to meld with your desktop upon Adobe AIR's public release. Adding an artsy twist, each tool will be named after a different bird.

All items created in these programs will be stored on their own file system called Rookry. From there, artists will be able to sell their creations on the open market. Even small pieces, such as patterns or sound effects will be marketable. If the works are made within Aviary, buyers will have the security of knowing they are buying an original work. If they incorporate outside content, they will be flagged as such. From within Aviary's platform artists will also be able also create derivative works while maintaining attribution and royalty rights upon sale.

The team will be releasing the tools as they're completed. They're already showing some pretty serious results with their image editor (Phoenix), Vector Editor (Raven), and 3D editor (Hummingbird) outlined below:

Phoenix

phoenixsmall.png Phoenix is like Photoshop without trying to replace it. You get a lot of the familiar features such as brushes, patterns, stamps, smudging, shapes, blending options, and more.

The Aviary team decided on a core feature set by polling their band of PhotoShop fanatics using Worth1000 to find Photoshop's most frequently used features. The editor can work on an image of max dimensions of 2880 by 2880 pixels.

The editor does support importing and exporting images of familiar formats, but any Aviary work that includes an imported image not created in the suite will be marked as such in the marketplace. This will help alert buyers to the possibility that the creator doesn't have full copyright over the work.

Raven

ravensmall.png Raven is their vector based drawing program. It's based on a lot of the design from Phoenix, but allows artists the flexibility of vector based drawing (e.g. easy scaling/rotation without losing quality). Raven will connect with Phoenix, allowing illustrations created in Raven to be rasterized and edited in Phoenix.

Click on the image to the right for a larger view.

Hummingbird

hummingbirdsmall.png Hummingbird is their 3D editor designed completely in Flex. Right now they've just got a 3D model renderer along with some basic editing tools (element selection/deletion), but are working on a more robust UI for creating new models from scratch.

The hummingbird on the right was rendered with the engine in real time with a metallic gold skin.

Click on the image for a real time demo of the 3D rendering engine.
--
loved by http://evrewhere.com/andrewnewton/

Blog Archive