Friday, January 29, 2010

An Apple makes a happy Valentine's Day

I'm no tech geek, in fact, if there were a Darwinian scale on tech awareness, I'd probably be hunched right next to the primates, but I'm right on top of Apple's droolworthy Ipad launch. While the $500 gadget is a must have for this year,  here are some other cheaper yet great Valentine's day gift ideas from the Apple Store

1) Personalised I-Gadgets - SFr 7+ (SFr 75-200)- A personalised engraved message on an I-gadget of your choice - the catch here is that you have to buy the Shuffle/Ipod/Iphone itself. If your significant other doesn't have one of these, however, it's worth considering.




2) Ipod+TomTom - SFr 119.95 - A great solution for those stuck with significant others who won't ask for directions, are incapable of understanding directions, or just so disorganised that you don't want them messing around with multiple gadgets while driving.



3) Itunes gift card - SFr5 to 100 - Easily available at most supermarket checkouts, and can be personalised with a message. Practical and non sentimental its a great last minute buy to be presented with a bunch of flowers and a kiss.



More information at The Apple Store, Schwiez.  (all images from Apple Store).
Read more

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Anyone home??

Never let it be said that I wasn't brave enough to venture out to explore the beauties of Switzerland in winter. An impromptu visit by a friend led to a boatride to Evian. She was on a short trip, visiting the thermal baths was not an option, so the experience was... how should I put this... a sleepwalk through a ghost town.












No more Lac Leman boatrides for me till the peak of summer. Meanwhile, this was me after a long boatride back, a shower and a soak.....








Read more

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Avatar - the modern drama

The Chinese government has pulled Avatar out of an estimated 1500 theatres in China, substituting the film with a biography of Confucious. While arguably, cinemagoers are better off with this switch, the motives behind the move are more sinister; many commentators believe that it is an attempt to nip in the bud any unrest that might be building up as a result of popular association of the Avatar storyline with the struggles of Chinese against land grabbing real estate developers. (China's Avatar restrictions cause a stir - Wall Street Journal)

Elsewhere, the L'Observatore Romano, the Vatican mouthpiece, slammed the film as endorsing a return to "neo paganism" , or the worship of nature over God, a view that they say is endorsed by the Pope (the Pope watches movies?? who knew!!.) Not to be outdone, the American conservative media has also jumped on this bandwagon, one reviewer calling the film anti  American in its "... hatred of the military and American institutions, and the notion that to be human is just way uncool.." (John Podhoretz, The Weekly Standard)

James Cameron's Avatar: The Na'vi Quest Seriously?? We are talking about the film with the giant blue people right?? The one you needed to wear those comical cardboard glasses to watch? The one with flying mountains, dragonlike creatures for transport, lack of substantial clothing for the main protagonists and a giant tree as the main point of conflict? The real green metaphor in the film is the amount of moolah that the producers of the film have generated, and the colour of envy in the faces of the competition.
 
The only real risk that this film poses to mankind is the prospect of a lineup of sequels and a slew of knockoffs in which we will be forced to endure cliche-ed storylines and even more dazzling special effects as substitutes for great storytelling and real human emotion.
Read more

Monday, January 18, 2010

Feature - Happiness and Foreigners

It's just the first few weeks of the decade, and already, we seem to be awash with happiness surveys, and satisfaction indices. International Living's recently released Quality of Life Index lists Switzerland as number three among the list of places that offer you the best quality of life, behind France and Australia. Is it realistic, however, to use these surveys as a guiding light towards a career/educational/lifestyle change?

Consider the Quality of Life survey - while the ranking itself is derived from official sources like the UNESCO, WHO, the math is overshadowed by the magazine's own fatuous, touristy take on what it might be like to live in these cities. Here's what they have to say about Paris - " I always wish quality of life indicators could measure a country's heart and soul. But it's impossible to enumerate the joy of lingering for hours over dinner and a bottle of red wine in a Parisian brasserie..."

The writers clearly make more money and have more time on their hands than an average working Parisien. Most foreigners moving into a city like Paris face an intimidating house hunt ahead of them, many students in Paris live there as squatters, or pay absurd amounts of money to camp out on someone's couch. Language acts as another significant barrier to new entrants to France, or indeed most parts of Europe, not to mention artificially imposed barriers on job mobility in a seemingly endless recession.

Can quality of life be pinned down to the bricks and mortar of amenities like health, cleanliness, transportation and technology? Family, relationships, culture, friendships, art - do they count? Perhaps it is impossible to lay out how much we value these in our lives in black and white tables of numbers. Or perhaps it is - Costa Ricans recently ranked their satisfaction with their lives at an average of 8.5 on a scale of 10, putting them on top of a poll comprising 142 countries. Many foreigners living in any single country for an extended period of time choose to deal with cultural isolation through "ghettoising" themselves, they create mini replicas of their home countries, in an attempt to feel more at home, and to help their children relate to their ethnicity.                               


People making the move are not the only ones who face issues, the countries on the receiving end of large scale influx from immigrants are also doing some serious soul searching. Europe's ageing population is increasingly voting in favour of cultural protectionism, as they struggle to keep some part of their beautiful spaces to themselves. Patrick Marnham's recent exploration of Secret Venice for Conde Nast brings out the angst of the local residents" They are everywhere....with their cameras and ridiculous back bags.....Venice is doomed, the city is dying," is the frustrated outburst of a Venetian local.

Setting aside the positive impact that immigration has to their economies, citizens are not just voting to stand up for what they believe are essential components of their individual cultures, but asking newcomers to either put up with "integration" or leave.

Faced with having to interact with foreign culture on a day to day basis also has had the effect of bringing out hidden skeletons; Australian educational institutes recently saw a 46% drop in enrolment of Indian students, in the light of alleged racist targeting of Indians.

Would everyone just be better off where they were, then? Will the next few decades see an emerging trend of "deglobalisation", a contraction in the will people have to leave their home countries? Or will we see the emergence of more "potboiler" cities like Dubai, a fantastic, futuristic, glitzy mishmash of a metro that unabashedly attempts to recreate the best of the world in the middle of the desert?

Soothsaying apart, it is clear that it is not a clash of the civilizations that we need to be worrying about, but a clash within civilizations, a struggle to hold on to cultural icons that are dear to us in a world that has seemingly eased exchange to the point of universal uniformity. Either way, we should count ourselves as lucky to perhaps be the last few generations that will be able to view the world as we know it now.

Reading Picks

       

Read more

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Getting through the Winter boot camp - Romantic Comedies

As if it weren't difficult enough to get through a Swiss winter in case you aren't a skiing, snowboarding, snowshoeing, luging (or some other such sporting activity involving insanely uncomfortable sports gear and launching yourself from a great height) enthusiast, it turns out to be the worst winter in the northern hemisphere in decades. I've chosen the sensible option and chosen to deal with this by staying home, having stocked up on DVD box sets and chocolate enough to last me a few months.

Let's begin with my favorite genre, romantic comedy. The genre has witnessed a revival of sorts this year, just as it looked like it had doomed itself forever to the tastelessness of Will Farrell and the glibness of Matthew Mcconoughey (Death to the Chick Flick). Here then are my picks for the must watch romantic comedies of this decade.

About a Boy (Widescreen Edition)2002 - About a Boy - Will (Hugh Grant)plays the rich, idle,no gooder who decides that single mothers present an easy exit option to dating; that is, until he meets Fiona (Toni Collette) and her son Marcus. (Nicholas Hoult.) Events that follow build up to a heartwarming coming of age story. Watch out for some great moments between Will and Marcus.







Something's Gotta Give2003- Something's Gotta Give - Harry (Jack Nicholson) is the eternal playboy, now in his 60's. He starts dating Marin (Amanda Peet), and accompanies her to her mother's beach house in the Hamptons. Events unfold - they unexpectedly run into Marin's mother (Diane Keaton) there, Harry suffers a heart attack, Marin meets his handsome doctor, loyalties change and affections grow. Diane Keaton is at her element, the screenplay and dialogue by Nancy Meyers is sparkling, the art direction draws you into the upperclass, baby boomer world of classic Americana ( this DVD is currently on discount at  fnac stores across Suisse)

Before Sunrise 2004 - Before Sunset - Sequel to the 90's cult classic "Before Sunrise", the film begins with Jesse (Ethan Hawke) running into Celine (Julie Delpy), in Paris, on a book tour. They spend a few hours together and reminisce on the past and their current life and loves. The script and the cinema both meld together to create an unforgettable ode to all things Parisien - the beauty, the free spirit, the search for love.






Hitch (Widescreen Edition) 2005 - Hitch - I'm sure everyone's seen this at least once. Hitch (Will Smith) plays love doctor to accountant Albert (Kevin James) who is hopelessly love stuck by  his boss (Amber Valetta) , while being pursued by a journalist on the scent of a story (Eva Mendes). The comedy is hilarious (the scene where Hitch teaches Albert to dance is a classic), and the romance is sweet, and the ending is predictably satisfying.


Waitress (Full Screen Edition)

2007 - Waitress - Jenna (Keri Russell), plays a waitress who is pregnant, stuck in a dead end town and trapped in an abusive marriage. She dreams of baking pies and escaping the grim reality of her life. While this hardly sounds like romcom material, writer Adrianne Shelley great script raises the movie above just another American small town flick.





(500) Days of Summer
2009 - 500 days of Summer - Tom (Joseph Gordon Levitt), meets Summer (Zooey Deschanel) at work, and finds himself to be irresistibly attracted to her. The film jumps  backwards and forwards through time, engaging the viewer into this sharply told love story.After a mostly dismal 2007 and defunct 2008, this film has (hopefully), injected fresh life into this genre. It has won most Indie film awards this year and has recently been nominated for the Golden Globes 2009.




So gather up the comforter and the remote, and get ready for some warmth and fuzziness!





Read more

Monday, January 11, 2010

The Starbucks Bibliotheque??

Last week's supposedly cool viral campaigns inviting female facebook users to reveal the color of their bras (to surprising success - I certainly didn't want to know my best friend's penchant for "electric pink with lace"), only reinforces the fact that pretty much anything is "cool" as long as its online. (Facebook's Bra Color Story)


Unhappily, it also means that we accept the decline of institutions that we perhaps should be fighting harder to protect - long form writing, investigative journalism, newspapers, research, informed opinion - these are just a few of the mainstays of thought that look as if they might bite the dust soon, casualties of the shapeshifting, design heavy, limited attention span online audience.

Seth Godin's blog today deals with the decline of yet another beloved insitution  - Libraries. I fully endorse his view that we need to take the initiative to build places where you come to find expertise. Being an eternal optimist, go a step further in saying that the libraries of the future will not only survive, but thrive. Cut to 2040 - you walk across to your neighbourhood library to catch the lecture on how the human race saved earth from extinction through strategic initiatives taken in the early 21st century. After the audiovisual, you browse references online and in hard copy as you sit on a comfortable couch and drink fair trade coffee. Sounds fun? Hell yeah.
Read more

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Ma I want to be a photojournalist!.. Nah, a weatherman is better.

JobsRated recently released its survey on the Best and Worst jobs in 2010. At the top of the worst job list is "Roustabout" (people who work on oil rigs, also used for circus workers). The Best Job is (don't bother twisting your brain, you'll never guess..) Actuary!!! These are the guys who provide statistical, probability based modelling on risk to insurance providers.

This report ranks 200 jobs on various criteria - Income, work environment, physical demands, stress and hiring outooks. Physical risk and income appear to be the top influencing factors for the 2010 outlook. Here's the Top 20 Best and Worst....




All 200 jobs by ranking can be found here. Here's to a safe, stable and ultimately unexciting 2010!
Read more
 

Wide Eyed Gypsy Design by Insight © 2009