Sunday, July 15, 2012

#2 AN INTRODUCTION TO MYSELF





Hmm, so what is the best description that I can give to myself? Am I Responsible? Not quite. Am I Intelligent? I don’t think so. How about lazy? Yes, that must be it.
                So you are thinking now that if I’m lazy, why did I wrote this blog? Simple, it’s because I need to have something to pass in the activity that my subject teacher has given to me. I’m that lazy but responsible guy. I do thing that needed to be done in time but not exerting more effort to do other things that can give me an advantage on my studies. There were already times when I thought of changing my way of handling things like working on my school requirements but I didn’t change because my mind is already used in this kind of setup, to just simply do things that needed to be done without minding on other things. I would just let my brain work if cramming occurs and keeping myself calm and thinking that everything’s gonna be okay in the end.
                So much in my personality, we should go now to my interests and hobbies. Firstly, I am interested on computers. Not interested in the games in the computers but interested on how it really works. From the simple things, on how it operates to its complicated building blocks on why it worked like that. I am just so fascinated that a simple box can do multiple functions in one time and that is why I dig more information on computers. Now let’s go to my hobbies. I love playing football and I’m fond of programming applications in computers. I know that I’m not that very well in playing football but hey, who says I can’t play it? As long as I am having fun on playing it then I will continue doing it. Then on computer programming, I’m not boasting that I’m that very good on programming but I can program many things on computer that can ease that job of a user.
                And I think this is how I’m gonna end on how I describe myself.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

#1 I Stop to Say Thank You To My Parents


  





                Discipline, patience and consideration. These are the values that my parents taught me. They are the ones who provided me the love that I have always wanted. They didn't let me down in times of failures because they always encourage me to do the same task again with the assurance that I will be successful on accomplishing it.
                When I was still a child, I felt the lack of love from my parents because of the childish reason of not giving me all the things that I wanted, like toys. But today, I can see that they still love me no matter what. As I continue to grow up, my parents are still there, guiding me and at the same time teaching me how to discipline myself. They made me realize that not all things can be acquired directly. That there must be hard work to be able to acquire those things that I want for life and being a spoiled brat won’t do well on myself. My parents also taught me to avoid being so dependent on them and explained to me that time will come that they can’t help me anymore and I should stand on my own feet to face my own problems in my life.

              Lastly, they showed and taught me what consideration really is. Even though I have done many mistakes in my life, still they didn't mistreated me for what I've done. They have instill in my mind that there is always a room for improvement and a time to correct my mistakes  because there is no such thing as “too late to change”.

                For all the things that my parents have imparted to me, I would like to give my warmest gratitude and thank you. 

Friday, July 30, 2010

Disney Buys Marvel: One Year Later


Now that it has been almost a year since Disney bought Marvel for $4 billion, we thought you'd like to see some of the projects they have in development.

Beastbi

The Little Rougemaid

Fantastic Four

The Incredibles Hulk

Iron Wall-E

Beauty And The Thor

The Lion Thing

Punisherladdin

Silver Surfer And The Seven Dwarfs

Spiderman Of The Caribbean

Venom Pan

X-Men

Sunday, July 25, 2010


Ethics as a concept suggests the notion of correct or incorrect practices relative to various concerns or fields of study

Hacking or accessing other people’s profile without their permission and make them to be humiliated in public just to make their life miserable is not what the internet made for. Internet was made for the people to interact to each other not to humiliate each other or make their life miserable.

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Saturday, July 10, 2010

End Foundation Day

Mana gyud ang foundation...sus bahala pag na 4th ang blue ug gamay ray mga bag.ong blue league daug gyapun ang lithium sa 2nd day sa foundation day!!

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Google Earth

Columbus and Magellan had it rough. Exploration these days is quite literally an armchair activity, as high-resolution satellite images and tools like Google Earth make it possible for anyone with an Internet connection to pour over the globe with a fine-toothed comb. There are entire online communities devoted to finding and cataloging the most unusual locales worldwide, creating 21st-century atlases of minutiae. It isn't just for hobbyists either — Google Earth has helped scientists find previously unknown ruins and police locate clandestine marijuana fields. Here are ten of the most unusual discoveries.

10. Atlantis Found?

Might these be the ruins of the lost continent of Atlantis? Eager explorers certainly thought so, trumpeting this grid off the coast of Africa as streets in the mythical sunken city. Observers noted the area appeared to be the size of Wales, making such a large grid an impressive feat of ancient urban planning. The real explanation is far less fun: Google Earth engineers soon announced that the grid pattern was merely a digital artifact created by the sonar boats collecting mapping data. Whispers still linger, but it doesn't look like anyone will be dredging up a forgotten civilization anytime soon.

See on Google Maps

9. Firefox Crop Circles

Maybe alien technology isn't so foreign after all. This Firefox crop circle sprouted up in a corn field in Oregon, but its origins are no mystery. In 2006, the Oregon State University Linux Users group created the giant logo — spanning more than 45,000 square feet — to celebrate the Web browser's 50 millionth download.

See on Google Maps

8. UFO Landing Pads, Maybe?

Here's a true Google Earth mystery. These odd formations can be found on air bases in the U.S. and Britain — this one comes from a base outside of Norwich, England. The U.K. Ministry of Defense called it a motorcycle range, but other speculate it may be some sort of calibration tool for satellites. No one really knows — and the military isn't saying anything more.

See on Google Maps

7. Oprah Maze

She's got a massive syndicated show, a magazine called O and was dubbed the most powerful celebrity in the world by Forbes. Why shouldn't Oprah get her own corn maze? An Arizona farmer created this 2004 tribute to the TV talk-show host.

See on Google Maps

6. Secret Swastika

When builders of the Coronado Naval Amphibious Base in San Diego planned this complex in 1967, satellite imagery was probably the furthest thing from their minds. But in 2007 Google Earth sleuths found that four unconnected buildings on the base formed an unfortunate shape when viewed from above: a swastika. The Navy says it's spending more than $600,000 to mask the shape. "We don't want to be associated with something as symbolic and hateful as a swastika," a spokesman said.

See on Google Maps

5. Lost (and Found) at Sea

The SS Jassim, a Bolivian cargo ferry, ran aground and sunk on the Wingate Reef off the coast of Sudan in 2003. Now it's one of the largest shipwrecks visible on Google Earth.

See on Google Maps

4. A Face in the Clay

It looks disconcertingly like a face from above, but this formation in Alberta, Canada is entirely natural. Dubbed the Badlands Guardian, the "face" is actually a valley eroded into the clay. Some say the man looks like he's wearing earphones; that's merely a road and an oil well. Even the Badlands Guardian, it seems, isn't immune to exploratory drilling.

See on Google Maps

3. Iraq's Bloody Lake

This blood-red lake outside of Iraq's Sadr City garnered a fair share of macabre speculation when it was discovered in 2007. One tipster told the tech blog Boing Boing that he was "told by a friend" that slaughterhouses in Iraq sometimes dump blood in canals. No one has offered an official explanation, but it's more likely the color comes from sewage, pollution or a water treatment process.

See on Google Maps

2. Airplane Graveyard

The Davis-Monthan Air Force Base outside of Tuscon, Ariz., is where old planes go to die. More than 4,000 military aircraft are parked on the base, from B-52s to stealth bombers, where they are salvaged for parts and broken down for scrap. It's one of the most popular satellite pictures online, making guided tours of the area are a hot ticket.

See on Google Maps

1. Missile Test?

Google Earth has plenty of examples of planes, helicopters — even hot air balloons — caught in flight, but this cruise missile, thought to be fired during military training exercises in the Utah mountains, might be the most unlikely capture yet. If it is, in fact, a cruise missile. Many dispute the image and say it's merely an airplane. You be the judge, but if you look closely, the "missile" appears to have wings.