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Opérateur vidéo âgé de 30 ans, cofondateur du collectif Youpress, qui regroupe neuf personnes (sept journalistes-pigistes, un photographe et lui-même), Stéphane Puccini et certains de ses confrères se sont rendus au salon dans le but de réaliser des sujets sur les exposants à vendre, ensuite, à la presse régionale. Ils ont notamment suivi le parcours du chef de l’Etat pendant 35 minutes.
A l’issue du tournage, Stéphane Puccini est allé visionner ses cassettes dans la salle de presse du parc d’Exposition de la porte de Versailles.
«Sachant que Nicolas Sarkozy inaugurait le salon, on voulait le filmer en train de serrer des mains d’exposants, pour nourrir nos sujets, puis interroger ces exposants, en fonction de leur région d’origine».
Une heure après leur arrivée, le président de la République est annoncé. La sécurité se met en place: un double cordon canalise la foule de part et d’autre de Nicolas Sarkozy, du ministre de l’Agriculture Michel Barnier, et de leurs collaborateurs, et un deuxième groupe de garde du corps dessine une ronde autour du président. Stéphane est en amont du flux, coincé par la foule, caméra dans les mains. «Nicolas Sarkozy s’est dirigé vers moi, raconte-t-il. J’ai braqué mon objectif vers lui. Il s’approche, serre des mains».
Concentré, Stéphane tourne malgré les badauds qui le bousculent. Il filme sans réellement entendre l’échange : «il y avait un bruit de tous les diables». Fin de la scène. Nicolas Sarkozy emprunte des escaliers roulants et se dirige vers la sortie. Puccini lui emboîte le pas. «Quelques minutes plus tard, je suis allé visionner mes cassettes et là j’ai entendu ce qui se disait».
En début d’après-midi, Stéphane Puccini propose son sujet à l’équipe du Parisien.fr. Le montage est réalisé au journal, avec un journaliste du parisien.fr, puis mis en ligne dans la soirée. «Je me suis retrouvé dans une bulle d’air, je ne pensais pas que ça allait prendre une telle ampleur, souffle Stéphane. A Youpress, on n’est pas abonné à ça, on a couvert les mouvements étudiants, on est allé en Haïti… On a saisi le moment sans le chercher».
]]>First up is Tytania. Same director as Legend of the Galactic Heroes? Check. Based on a novel series from the author of Legend of the Galactic Heroes? Check. Oh yeah, this is so at the top of my viewing list. Supposedly a space opera about a rebel force fighting the evil empire, but being from the creator of LOGH I doubt it’s that simple.
Next up is the second season of Gundam 00. As long as it doesn’t pull a Code Geass and completely drop the ball then I’m sure the show will be good. Hopefully we’ll finally get answers to the mysteries of Celestial Being, Allelujah’s past, RIBBONZ!, etc. Despite Saji showing up in the trailer, I really hope he doesn’t appear often, but that’s probably too much to ask when he’s the requisite normal guy in a gundam show.
I’ve read the first couple chapters of Kemeko Deluxe and it’s entertaining enough. The idea of a pretty girl piloting a giant ugly female robot is certainly a worthy premise for a show. As long as it’s a wacky comedy in the vein of Potemayo or Kamen no Maid Guy then I’ll be sure to enjoy.
Yozakura Quartet’s anime adaption is also starting in the fall. I’ve already read the first two volumes of the manga and it’s enjoyable if generic. The real draw of the manga is the excellent art, so it’ll be interesting to see how the anime adapts the story without that. Hopefully it can make it more interesting in the process. The anime character designs do look good, though. The characters look more adult than in the manga, which is fine as far as I’m concerned. The girls are hot either way.
Clannad After Story is the obligatory kyoani show of the season that I’ll join everyone else in watching. Clannad wasn’t that bad but it is definitely the weakest of the key adaptions. Since kyoani only has to work with a straight story this time I expect much better things.
Shikabane Hime: Aka is the Gainax show of the season. Aside from Gainax’s mecha anime I’m really not that fond of their more normal works. This show is about an undead girl who hunts corpses. Certainly a cool enough idea but it could also be executed very generically. The promo image does feature the girl holding a submachine gun, though, so I’ll give this the benefit of the doubt and check it out.
Kurogane no Linebarrel is the Gonzo show for the season, and I can already imagine the screams of hate. Despite Gonzo’s bad reputation I do genially like them. Yes, they’ve gone downhill since Gankutsuou and their efforts are mostly hit or miss, but at least they go out there in animating new stuff. This is also a mecha show, so I’m obligated to give it a shot as a /m/an. “A gigantic robot and the girl of your dreams are what you get…at the cost of your life,” is also a cool tag line.
I’ve already post about how awesome Casshern Sins looks, so of course I’m watching that. Nothing more to say that I haven’t already said really.
Chaos;Head is the adaption of the game of the same name by 5pb and Nitroplus. It looks a lot like a Nitroplus game, but actually they only did the production and technical stuff. 5pb did the actual story and I really don’t know anything about them as a company. Needless to say I’ll check it out cause Nitroplus is involved, but I wish one of their own games, besides Demonbane, was animated instead. I plan to do a primer on Chaos;Head in the next couple of days to give some more background and info on the game.
And that’s it. A good deal more shows worth checking out than the last couple of seasons. Potential for a few stand out hits in there. Hopefully they’ll all be subbed in a timely manner and I’ll have more stuff to blog about in the fall. Cause, really, I’m only watching seven shows that are airing right now, and only two of them started in the summer. That’s pretty pathetic.
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In case you need a reminder:
Now, I should mention that Kamran has been working out every single morning for months and that this picture was taken well before he got ripped, but you get the idea.
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crossing
Originally uploaded by thespeak.
This was made with a wooden box, a piece of thin plastic coated with an emulsion of gelatin and magic pixie dust (heck, I don’t know how they make color film), and a few seconds of time, maybe 30 . . . oh, and the experience and expertise of the guy who carried it all to that spot.
Expensive? Not really. Valuable? I’d say so.
Solution
We already assume that:
So the steps we have to follow are:
ActionMailer::Base.smtp_settings = {
:address => "yourmailserver.com",
:port => 25,
:domain => "your.domain.com",
:authentication => :login,
:user_name => "your_smtp_username",
:password => "your_smtp_password",
:raise_delivery_errors => true}
class VoicemailMailer "application/wav",
:disposition => "attachment; filename=#{file_name}",
:transfer_encoding => "base64") do |attachment|
attachment.body = tmp_file
end
end
end
#!/usr/bin/env /path_to_your_app/script/runner
# get all the voicemails that have not been sent yet
voicemails_to_email = VoiceMail.find(:all, :conditions => 'updated_at is null')
# For all the voicemails we have, send them and update the field date_sent
for vm2email in voicemails_to_email do
# Get the number for the voicemail
number = Number.find(vm2email.number_id)
# check to see if the send to email is set for the number
if number.voicemail_email_set
# Get number details (email_to,email_from etc)
email_to = number.voicemail_email
voicemail_to_send = vm2email.audio
# Set other details
email_from = 'Service@yourdomain.com'
email_subject = 'Please find attached your voicemail message'
email_body = "Received on: #{Time.now} \n for number: #{number.phone_no}"
# Now send the email
VoicemailMailer.deliver_sent(email_to,email_from,email_subject,email_body,voicemail_to_send)
# And update the record's date_sent field
vm2email.updated_at = Time.now
vm2email.save
end
end
0,5,10,15,20,25,30,35,40,45,50,55 * * * * path_to_your_ror_app/lib/email_scheduler.rb
Read about the whereabouts of independent Africa Correspondent Arjen Westra. travelling the continent and reporting on things he sees and hears and…. smells.
Monday evening arrived and things didn’t look promising - plenty of high cloud was obscuring the sky, and I figured that if I couldn’t get a consistent view of Polaris, I would have to abandon the session, as the scope’s alignment routine depends on getting the mount aligned with the pole.
I was just about to give up when the clouds parted and the stars shone forth. I had about an hour before Jupiter was due to swing into view, so I took my time with the mount-alignment, ensuring that everything was set up as near to perfect as possible, then it was time to see the sights.
First up was a view of M8 (Messier 8, the Lagoon Nebula) in Sagittarius, before it went out of sight. Pretty impressive, I reckon. I could have tried to image it, but it escaped behind the house next door.
Next I decided that it was time to get the scope pointing at Jupiter, which was due to hit my field of view within the next 30 minutes. That set, I went in for a cuppa.
When I came back out, Jupiter was dead-centre in the eyepiece with some of the moons lined up like a string of pearls either side of the planet. Io was just grazing the edge of the disc, and later there was the shadow of Io on the face of the parent planet. Nice.
Soon the webcam was in place and it was taking 100-second .avi movies of the planet. I had zoomed right in with the 8mm setting on the eyepiece, this gave a magnification of x125, and I was projecting the image onto the webcam chip about 70mm away. This gave a large image but because the planet was so low, it appeared just above the rooftops, and the heat from them was causing a lot of shimmering. Short exposures would be needed, so I settled for 15 fps. The .avis were processed later, and the best image produced from them so far is this:

Jupiter, with a hint of Great Red Spot (lower-left) and the shadow of Io (upper-left)
After that, I put away the webcam and attached the Nikon D50 instead, still using the eyepiece-projection method, and rattled off a selection of wider-field shots of the planet with some of its moons. I had to use longer exposures to get the moons, and shorter ones to get Jupiter, so the images produced are composites. The best one of these is:

Left to right: Europa, Ganymede, Jupiter, Callisto.
Io is in transit across the face of Jupiter, but it’s lost in the background.
The object in the top-right corner is a star.
After a couple of hours of this, Jupiter passed out of sight so it was time to look at something else before the skies became too light. I had a look at Winstars and figured that Neptune, a planet reluctant to appear before us, might be in shot after a short wait. I slewed the scope to point at it but it was behind some trees. No matter, it was time for another brew anyway.
Neptune’s not visible to the naked eye, so I had a look for it through my trusty binoculars. I found the row of three stars that currently acts as a marker for locating the planet, and, by using averted vision, could just make out a very faint dot of light where Neptune should be. Encouraged by this, I waited until the area was in sight, and took a short series of zoomed-in long exposures of the seemingly-empty area of blackness, hoping that the results would be in focus (none of the marker stars were bright enough to show up in the viewfinder, it was hit-and-hope stuff). I had to stop soon, though, as the sky was just too light, and the morning dew was beginning to form on the optics. The session was over, and I was convinced that I had failed to capitalise on this unplanned opportunity.
I packed away and headed inside to warm up. While swilling down a hot cuppa, I had a quick look at the pics that might have included Neptune, and there it was, a small blue fuzzy ball! It needed a lot of processing to get rid of the noise and other defects caused by the optics and the atmospheric conditions, but I ended up with this, and I’m right chuffed about it:

Neptune (the tiny blue thingy to the right of centre), and 2 of the 3 marker-stars.
Next time out, I’ll try for a better picture. It’ll be easier now that I know where to look and what camera settings to use.
]]>Bipolar disorder is a mood disorder, commonly known as manic-depression. It has only been recently that this illness has been an acceptable diagnosis in children. For the most part children were labeled as problem children and more often than not the parents were just accused of bad parenting. There are a lot of childhood psychiatric illnesses that have freely been recognized for years, such as ADHD, Oppositional Defiant Disorder, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and Tourette’s syndrome, and it is often that Bipolar Disorder is overlooked because of the mixed signals of these other childhood illnesses.
Children don’t exhibit the same bipolar symptoms as those that we commonly think of in relation to adults. In children it seems that they all have several traits in common. They are all oppositional, you say yes, they say no, and them the rage starts. They can go on for hours with screaming and wailing. Nothing stopped it. I learned on my own that it was just best to let them get it out and watch that they were not hurting themselves. This was all before I had ever hear of Bipolar Disorder or any other disorder for that matter. I just thought we had behavioral problems and that I was a bad parent. It is easy to look back now and see what was going on. Most children with BP just can’t switch gears easily, meaning that you can’t just expect them to drop whatever they are doing to go to the mall, the store, school or even the bath. They need time to prepare for it. We still give our granddaughter a count down of sorts. A half hour, fifteen minutes, ten minutes, whatever is necessary and then by the time the countdown ends, she is as ready as she can be. Another one of the symptoms of bipolar disorder in children is the night terrors. My granddaughter would just sit up in bed screaming and crying and you couldn’t touch her. She would look at you with such fear in her eyes, that is was frightening. She would shrink away from you and even try to run, as if you were the monster. It would go on for as long as ten minutes before she would start to calm down. We were never sure if she was really awake during these times, but as the nightmare waned she would slowly allow you to hold her. This was when she was as young as two years old. She would draw pictures during the day of animals with blood coming out of their eyes and ears. Everything was so vivid for such a young child. We can only imagine what her dreams must have consisted of.
Sleeping does not come easily to bipolar children. It is as if they can only sleep for a short period and that is all they need. None of my children ever slept through the night from the day we came home from the hospital. I was so envious of all my friends that had babies that slept all night. I would work hard to keep them awake during the day so maybe they would sleep at night. It never worked. Bipolar children do not seem to require the sleep that others do.
Bipolar kids also seem exceptionally bright from the beginning. They seem to walk early, talk sooner and speak more like an adult than a child. Even as they get older they seem to do things more rapidly than other children. Parents seem in awe of the child, and in so many ways they are like little adults instead of children.
There are many other symptoms of Bipolar Disorder in children. They all seem to have trouble getting along with others as they tend to bully and be bossy. Many of the children seem to have an extreme sensitivity to collars, tags, shoe laces that aren’t tied just the right pressure, in fact change is just not acceptable, and anything that is different just won’t work. Bedwetting is a huge problem and goes on even for years in childhood. Some BP kids suffer from hallucinations and these are not just that the child sees and hears things, they often smell and feel things that no one else does. There are also many children even as young and four and five that have suicidal feeling and will try and harm themselves.
I am not a doctor of any kind. I am just a mother who has witnessed much strange behavior. I am not presuming to diagnose or treat anyone. I just want to tell you what I have learned and give you some of the insight I have found. I am not giving out any guarantees, only the hope that if something isn’t quite right, keep on looking for answers and then look farther. I only wish that I had had someone, anyone, give me a push in the right direction. The answer is out there!
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