Friday, November 2, 2012

Stealth Survival: The Well Dressed Survivalist - Part Two - The ...

Two Color Paracord Bracelet

One of the items that a well-dressed survivalist will always have handy is paracord. The easiest way to do this is to wear a simple paracord bracelet. Unfortunately, not all paracord bracelets are created equal. One of the main things you should look for in a paracord bracelet is ease of deployment. The other main consideration is the type of paracord used to make your paracord bracelet.

Ease of Deployment Paracord Wrap

Many times paracord bracelets will have their loose cords tucked under the braids. This makes it quite difficult to quickly deploy the paracord in your bracelet when you need to use it. When your bracelet is properly tied, your paracord will be readily accessible and it will be easier for you to deploy your paracord bracelet

Fishtail Paracord Wrap

The most common braid used on paracord bracelets is the cobra style of braid. They can also be found in fishtail and gator versions if you want a slightly different look. The gator version will also allow you to carry a greater amount of cordage. Both versions can offer you ease of deployment for your paracord.

Gator Paracord Wrap


There is an excellent tutorial on how to tie a gator here: Paracord also comes in two basic types. There is the regular commercial type of paracord and the mil-spec paracord. The mil-spec paracord is a little higher in cost but offers you the opportunity to deploy significantly more cordage when needed. You can always opt for the kits that are available to save some money by making your own paracord bracelet. Staying above the water line!

Source: http://stealthsurvival.blogspot.com/2012/11/the-well-dressed-survivalist-part-two.html

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Rock Your World Chili Recipe | Budget Savvy Diva

Everyday at 1 pm PST/ 4pm EST Budget Savvy Diva posts a NEW RECIPE :) I might miss this time every now or then ? but I know you understand

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What You Need

1.5? pounds ground beef chuck

1(15 ounce) cans navy beans

1(15 ounce) cans black beans

1(15 ounce) cans kidney beans

1 (28 ounce) cans diced tomatoes with juice

1 (6 ounce) can tomato paste

1/2? large yellow onion, chopped

3 stalks celery, chopped

1 green bell pepper, seeded and chopped

1 red bell pepper, seeded and chopped

1/2 cup beer

1/6 cup chili powder

1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce

1 tablespoon minced garlic

1/2 teaspoon dried oregano

1 teaspoons ground cumin

1/2 teaspoon dried basil

1/2? teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon ground black pepper

1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper

1/2 teaspoon paprika

1/2? teaspoon white sugar

Corn Chips

(8 ounce) package shredded Cheddar cheese

?

What To Do

  1. Heat a large stock pot over medium-high heat. Brown meat and drain off excess grease.
  2. Add beans,, diced tomatoes and tomato paste. onion, celery, green and red bell peppers, and beer. Season with chili powder, Worcestershire sauce, garlic, oregano, cumin,? basil, salt, pepper, cayenne, paprika, and sugar. Blend together and simmer and cover.
  3. After 2 hours ? taste and season to taste. Longer the chili cooks the better it will taste :)
  4. To serve with chips and shredded Cheddar cheese.
  5. Enjoy!

?

Rock Your World Chili Recipe

Prep time: 15 mins

Cook time: 2 hours

Total time: 2 hours 15 mins

Serves: 4- 6

Gluten ? Free

  • 1.5 pounds ground beef chuck
  • 1(15 ounce) cans navy beans
  • 1(15 ounce) cans black beans
  • 1(15 ounce) cans kidney beans
  • 1 (28 ounce) cans diced tomatoes with juice
  • 1 (6 ounce) can tomato paste
  • 1/2 large yellow onion, chopped
  • 3 stalks celery, chopped
  • 1 green bell pepper, seeded and chopped
  • 1 red bell pepper, seeded and chopped
  • 1/2 cup beer
  • 1/6 cup chili powder
  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tablespoon minced garlic
  • 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
  • 1 teaspoons ground cumin
  • 1/2 teaspoon dried basil
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon ground black pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
  • 1/2 teaspoon paprika
  • 1/2 teaspoon white sugar
  • Corn Chips
  • (8 ounce) package shredded Cheddar cheese
  1. Heat a large stock pot over medium-high heat. Brown meat and drain off excess grease.
  2. Add beans,, diced tomatoes and tomato paste. onion, celery, green and red bell peppers, and beer. Season with chili powder, Worcestershire sauce, garlic, oregano, cumin, basil, salt, pepper, cayenne, paprika, and sugar. Blend together and simmer and cover.
  3. After 2 hours ? taste and season to taste. Longer the chili cooks the better it will taste :)
  4. To serve with chips and shredded Cheddar cheese.
  5. Enjoy!

2.2.8

Recipe is adapted from HERE

Source: http://www.budgetsavvydiva.com/2012/11/rock-world-chili-recipe/

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Thursday, November 1, 2012

Engineered particles self-assemble like atoms

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49649941/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Movie review: Girl with A Pearl Earring directed by Peter Webber

Release year: 2003

Screenplay: Olivia Hetreed

Griet: Scarlett Johansson

Johannes Vermeer van Delft ? Colin Firth Catharina Vermeer, wife of Johannes ? Essie Davis Pieter, young butcher ? Cilian Murphy Maria Thins (mother-in- law of Vermeer) ? Judy Parfitt Pieter Van Ruijven (rich patron of Vermeer) ? Tom Wilkinson)?
Synopsis:

Griet is a shy girl living in the Dutch Republic in 1665. Her father, a Delft ware painter, has recently gone blind so he is unable to work any longer. Consequently, Griet is sent to work as a maid in the unhappy, chaotic and impoverished household of the painter Johannes Vermeer where everything depends on the productivity of the master of the house. Who is rather slow in his 'production'. He is an artist, right? Still he has six brats, a wife and a mother-in-law under one roof; the seventh bundle of joy is on its way...

Griet works hard, almost wordlessly, as she occupies the lowest position in a harsh hierarchy, where even one of the Vermeer's children, the devilish Cornelia, treats her spitefully. On a routine shopping trip outside the house Griet meets a butcher's son, Pieter, who is quickly taken with her. However the girl is slow to return his affections. I might risk stating she has other problems on her mind.

As Griet cleans Vermeer's studio they become casually acquainted. Vermeer starts to appreciate Griet?s company, he even gives her lessons in mixing paints and other tasks, taking care to keep this secret from his thin-lipped wife, who would react very jealously if she found out that her husband was spending more time with Griet than with his own constantly enlarging family. In contrast, Vermeer's pragmatic mother-in-law, Maria Thins, sees Griet as useful to Vermeer's career because the girl can make the arduous work of finishing a painting quicker. Vermeer's rich patron Van Ruijven notices Griet on a visit to the Vermeer household and asks the painter if he will give her up to him to work in his own house, a situation which ruined a previous serving girl. Vermeer refuses, but accepts a commission to paint a portrait of Griet for Van Ruijven.?



As Vermeer secretly works on the painting, which is going to become one of the most recognizable portraits of the world, Catharina's growing jealousy of Griet becomes apparent. While Griet suffers through her fascination with Vermeer and his masterful work, she also has to fend off Van Ruijven's attempt to rape her. Soon afterwards, Catharina's mother summons Griet, hands over her daughter's pearl earrings and instructs Griet to finish the painting while Catharina is away for the day. At the final painting session Vermeer pierces Griet's earlobe so she can wear one of the pearl earrings for the portrait. Frustrated girl goes out, looks for Pieter and gives the boy a very tangible proof of her affections. Pieter proposes marriage, but she sadly turns him down. Then Griet returns the earrings to Catharina's mother.

Catharina discovers that Griet used her earrings; furious she accuses her mother of complicity and orders Vermeer to show her the painting he and Griet have been working on. Heartbroken that Vermeer does not consider her worthy of being painted that way, Catharina tries but fails to destroy the painting, then banishes Griet from the house forever. Vermeer cannot find the strength to object so Griet is forced to leave the house.

Later, Griet is visited by the cook from the house, who comes bearing a gift: a sealed packet containing the blue headscarf she wore in the painting, which is wrapped around Catharina's pearl earrings.

My impressions:?

Life sucks and life of a penniless girl sucks doubly. Unfortunately some films which are supposed to be good, intelligent and interesting sometimes suck too.?If I had to assess this movie in three words I would say: beautiful, athmospheric, dull. Hadn?t I read the novel of Tracy Chevalier it was based on before watching I doubt I would have understoood the plot or enjoyed it at all.

This movie had all the makings of a big, fat hit ? it tells beautifully a mesmerizing story (although fictional) of creating one of the greatest and the most mysterious portraits in the history of art; a portrait which is as famous as Mona Lisa but, at least according to me, far more beautiful. The cast is strong, the location- wonderful, the costumes ? awesomely realistic, some scenes absolutely breathtaking?still overall the film is also emotionally disengaging. Almost strangely so.?


Firstly I am sad to say there is very little character development or character at all, in every aspect of the film. Firth's Vermeer is never explored properly; he is simply a man that likes to paint and does it better than others. The movie never tries to explain what moves him or what he is thinking regarding Griet, his art, his family, his patron or anything else. Furthermore, his associations with his wife, children and mother-in-law are never given much treatment; in the first few minutes we are handed the obvious fact that things are not too well in the household but we don?t know why. There is just one pointer ? too little money, too many kids to feed ? but the director never explores the fact that Vermeer became a Catholic as an adult and he married into money but couldn?t keep the fortune, let alone enlarge it.?


I suppose too much was deducted from the original story, written by Ms Chevalier. Only if you read the book you would know that Griet was chosen by Vermeer deliberately (I don?t want to spoil you here so I won?t say anything else) and you would know the meaning of several symbols, scattered around the movie helter-skelter, like that huge compass rose, adorning a square where Griet stands twice, thinking and deciding what to do with her young life. Only the book would convey the real meaning behind the painted tile Griet gets from her father as a good-bye gift and why the fact that it was broken by the evil Cornelia was so meaningful for the poor maid. Also the book provides a much finer, far more nuanced ending than the movie where Griet?s resolution of her situation is handled clumsily, almost as an afterthought. Once again in the ultimate clash between the book and the movie the latter loses spectacularly although nominally it should have much more to offer.

Final verdict:?

Visually it is undoubtedly a feast but when it comes to the plot you can feel as if you were in the middle of a desert. Do yourself a favour and read the book by Tracy Chevalier first ? although that novel is not perfect either after the lecture everything in the movie will really make far more sense. You can even enjoy it like the portrait of our beautiful unknown...

Source: http://booksasportablepiecesofthought.blogspot.com/2012/11/movie-review-girl-with-pearl-earring.html

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Port Authority reopens NY, NJ airports after storm

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Can Halloween Be Postponed, or Does It 'Come Anyway ...

In the wake of Hurricane Sandy come cancellations, not just of classes, but of the all-important school Halloween parties and parades ? and now, for some towns, the eminently practical suggestion that parents, and children, postpone or cancel Halloween itself. On Slate?s DoubleX blog (my former blogging home), Emily Bazelon asks ?Should We Postpone Halloween??

She?s not the first to ask. The Cloud Mom blogger Melissa Lawrence wrote me yesterday that she?ll be taking her kids ?room to room? for Halloween. She watched the hurricane news (in a New York suburb, fortunately with power) with her older sons. ?When one of them protested over Halloween, we told him it just wasn?t that important this year, when others are suffering,? she wrote.

It?s not, of course. Halloween is strikingly unimportant in itself, a minor holiday blessedly without religious defenders. But for children, it?s a highlight of the calendar, on par with Christmas and Hanukkah, certainly outranking Thanksgiving and putting Passover in the shade. It?s sheer, unadulterated fun (if with too much sugar and some angst over costumes).

I, for a whole host of reasons I?ve written about before, love Halloween. And I worry that it?s easy for me to write this, from my rural New Hampshire perch, where one day without school and without power is but a side effect of the still-swirling edge of the storm. But while towns and mayors and governors need to do what?s best for their citizens as a whole, there?s no reason parents who want to can?t do what?s best for their smallest citizens at home.

If you?re feeling even remotely festive, you could grab a few neighbors and set up outdoor trick-or-treat spots in the largest safe backyard. Those teenagers prone to going door-to-door in lame costumes collecting a pillowcase full of candy might be delighted to? carry out a card table and a jack-o-lantern and set up as a mini trick-or-treat house. No one wants children, or traveling families, out on unsafe streets, which means you?ll have to keep it local. Apartment dwellers have an easy indoor option. And if there?s no school tomorrow either, and someone?s willing to host, it?s a pretty good night for an impromptu family party at which I guarantee no one will be judging the quality of the food or d?cor.

I?m a former New Yorker, feeling, I suspect, some of what city exiles felt in the aftermath of 9/11. It?s odd to see images of our old home in Chelsea dark, of the subway stations we know so well full of water. I?m not pushing Halloween on the grieving or those reeling from damage that?s hard to fathom, or encouraging? defying city and town decisions. I?m suggesting that if you love Halloween; if you?ve got a houseful of stir-crazy children; if you might be inclined to empty the cabinets of every piece of orange food and drape some sheets over chairs for ghosts or a trick-or-treat fort; then tonight might be the time to just make Halloween happen.

I?ve said before that part of the fun of Halloween is that there is no spirit of Halloween, no message, no meaning. But I find myself paraphrasing those lines from ?The Grinch Who Stole Christmas:? ?He HADN?T stopped Halloween from coming! IT CAME!? Sandy (not towns and mayors doing their best) is the Halloween Grinch this year, and maybe there is a little bit of Halloween spirit or message to be found. Maybe this Halloween you declare, in the immortal words of Monty Python, ?I?m not dead yet!?

If Halloween isn?t happening in your town, will you muster up a mini-celebration? How?


Source: http://parenting.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/31/can-halloween-be-postponed-or-does-it-come-anyway/

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Sony NEX-5R review: focusing and performance improvements make this cam a winner

DNP Sony NEX5R review focusing and performance improvements make this cam a winner

By some accounts, Sony botched the NEX-F3. Positioned as the successor to the fantastic C3, it replaced that camera's slim profile with a bulkier build, but sacrificed basic display tilt functionality in favor of a front-facing model. Image quality was fine, but focusing speeds fell short. Fortunately, the company has redeemed itself with the $750 NEX-5R. The mirrorless camera you'll read about today represents everything a successful update should: performance has been improved all around, the touchscreen tilts in every which way and the design has changed only for the better.

It's also the first Sony mirrorless cam to feature WiFi, along with the company's new PlayMemories Camera Apps. Wireless connectivity is undoubtedly becoming a popular addition in higher-end models, but that doesn't mean it's a feature users are demanding. With Samsung's upcoming Galaxy Camera, connectivity -- 4G in particular -- makes perfect sense, but how does that web experience transfer to a tiny 3-inch touchscreen? And does it detract from usability overall? Join us past the break for a closer look at this very capable 16.1-megapixel interchangeable lens camera.

Continue reading Sony NEX-5R review: focusing and performance improvements make this cam a winner

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Sony NEX-5R review: focusing and performance improvements make this cam a winner originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Oct 2012 10:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/31/sony-nex-5r-review/

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