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the Mail online | News | 11,300 killed by huge quake

26-Dec-2004 By Jim

the Mail online | News | 11,300 killed by huge quake
Tidal waves from a massive undersea earthquake smashed into coastlines across Asia, washing away whole villages in Indonesia, Sri Lanka and India and dragging sunbathers out to sea and snorkelers across jagged reefs at tourist havens in Thailand.

More than 11,300 people were killed in six countries.

Filed Under: Indian Ocean Earthquake, World

Drive-Through Supermarkets Coming

26-Dec-2004 By Jim

Progressive Grocer:

AutoCart, LLC, said it plans to roll out the world’s first “drive-through supercenter” format, a 130,000-square-foot facility equipped to deliver more than 25,000 SKUs directly to consumers in their cars. The first of the supercenters, designed with 60 ordering/pickup stations, are projected to open in December 2005 in Albuquerque, N.M. and Tucson, Ariz., according to AutoCart.

an 17 classifications of products and services that AutoCart said it will offer at the proposed supercenters are grocery, pharmacy, banking, movie and game rental, bakery, office supplies, florists, photography development, dry cleaning, liquor, and lottery sales.

…excerpt from: www.business-opportunities.biz…

Filed Under: blogosphere

On Being a Photographer – Excerpt

26-Dec-2004 By Jim

Being an amateur photographer, I can appreciate much of what’s said in this; at some level of consciousness, I already knew these things, if only by intuition/instinct. When I go places suitable for photographing — meaning, excluding restaurants, movie theaters, etc — I take pictures of anything that catches my eye and survives some amount of visual scrutiny (to make sure it is what I think it is, because the brain’s visual filter can be a real pain in the ass sometimes), and then I photograph the hell out of it while I can. Occasionally, I’ll take some significant time to plan ahead for what I want to do (usually night photos), and I generally like those photos a lot, for a while, while it’s impossible to be objective rather than prideful; after several months without looking at one of those pictures, I’ll evaluate it again and may or may not still like it. Almost invariably, though, other people prefer the shots I took little or no time to set up, in any sense of the word “properly”, over those which I spent time on tending to the details, or subjects I find visually boring for whatever reason. (My subject matter tends to be, well.. not people.) Anyway, this small article illuminates and enumerates nicely, helping me understand better why pointing the camera “over there” is a good idea.

On Being a Photographer – Excerpt
Bill Jay: When we were discussing some definitions you remarked that photography%u2019s core characteristic was to show what something looked like. I think this is an important point because many young photographers seem fascinated with the medium yet have no idea what to photograph.

David Hurn: That%u2019s true. The fundamental issue is one of emphasis: you are not a photographer because you are interested in photography.

BJ: Explain what you mean.

DH: Many people are interested in photography in some nebulous way; they might be interested in the seemingly glamorous lives of top fashion or war photographers; or in the acquisition and admiration of beautiful, functional machines, the cameras; or in the arcane ritual of the darkroom processes; or in the persona which they could adopt if only they took pictures like . . . whoever. But these interests, no matter how personally enjoyable they might be, never lead to the person becoming a photographer. The reason is that photography is only a tool, a vehicle, for expressing or transmitting a passion in something else. It is not the end result. An analogy would be to buy a car for its status appeal, for the idea that it will improve your sex-life, for the smell of the new upholstery, for the fascination with its beautiful engineering, and so on. But it is useless unless it actually takes you somewhere.

Filed Under: blogosphere, Photography

Starbucks Gossip: Early review of Starbucks’ Chantico chocolate drink: "That stuff is really yummy"

25-Dec-2004 By Jim

Yeah, baby! 8-) But, this sucker’s got 390 Calories in six ounces (21g fat; 51g carbs), which is practically a diet compared to a Cold Stone milkshake (3200 Calories) but still not something you want to be imbibing very often. Nonetheless, I’ll be at Starbucks on Jan 8; count on it.

Starbucks Gossip: Early review of Starbucks’ Chantico chocolate drink: “That stuff is really yummy”
One of the Evanston Starbucks is asking “guests” to sample the new CHANTICO — they call it a chocolate bar in a cup — which is coming out January 8.

Filed Under: blogosphere, General

Claiming my Feedster feed

25-Dec-2004 By Jim

No Need to Click Here – I’m just claiming my feed at Feedster

Filed Under: General

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