About Me

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A multimedia producer, keenly interested in the evolution of the Internet.

Visual Production is my favourite pastime and a serious hobby, too. And I like to travel now and then, preferably with a camera.

I write at Pushmind Publishing featuring interesting items from around the world; and also manage a collection of quality advertisements at ColorCodes.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

the symphony of life

This short piece of writing is dedicated to all you leaplings – “You’re Special”.

To live content with small means.
To seek elegance rather than luxury,
    and refinement rather than fashion.
To be worthy not respectable,
    and wealthy not rich.
To study hard, think quietly, talk gently,
    act frankly, to listen to stars, birds, babes,
    and sages with open heart, to bear all cheerfully,
    do all bravely, await occasions, hurry never.
In a word, to let the spiritual,
    unbidden and unconscious,
    grow up through the common.
This is to be my symphony.

- William Ellery Channing

Sunday, February 19, 2012

open password protected pdf files

You are in a hurry. You need to open this important PDF file – one that is very much essential to  you. You open it, but immediately you are given a dialog box, asking for the password. Sadly, you don’t have it. End of story.

Enter Swiss Knife of PDF. This site can help you. All you need to do is to upload the file you want to open; and it does the rest. That easy.

If you scroll down below, there are affiliate sites that have many other functionalities you require from your everyday PDF file.

Thursday, February 09, 2012

artificial leaf makes fuel from sunlight

The artificial leaf, a device that can harness sunlight to split water into hydrogen and oxygen without needing any external connections, have been developed by a team led by MIT professor Daniel Nocera. Like living leaves, they can convert the energy of sunlight directly into storable chemical form which can be used later as an energy source.

The device is in fact a silicon solar cell with different catalytic materials bonded onto its two sides; needing no external wires or control circuits to operate. Simply placed in a container of water and exposed to sunlight, it quickly begins to generate streams of bubbles: oxygen bubbles from one side and hydrogen bubbles from the other. If placed in a container that has a barrier to separate the two sides, the two streams of bubbles can be collected and stored, and used later to deliver power: for example, by feeding them into a fuel cell that combines them once again into water while delivering an electric current.

Nocera sees a future in which individual homes could be equipped with solar-collection systems based on this principle: Panels on the roof could use sunlight to produce hydrogen and oxygen that would be stored in tanks, and then fed to a fuel cell whenever electricity is needed. Such systems, Nocera hopes, could be made simple and inexpensive enough so that they could be widely adopted throughout the world, including many areas that do not presently have access to reliable sources of electricity.

So next time you mindlessly pluck leaves off a plant, in anger or in disgust or in romance, just think about how much energy you will be wasting in the process! via.