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29 Dec 06:57

Step into the world of Final Fantasy in real life Lebanon

by Rona Moon

A waterfall dramatically plunging from the wide chasm in the Jurassic limestone cavern roof, down to the moss green rocks and valley below: a scene so breathtakingly fantastic and beautiful you’d expect to ride a Chocobo there. A garden fountain, a well of living water, and flowing streams from Lebanon.

But this is not CG or a fantasy, this is a real place. This is the Baatara gorge waterfall in the Tannourine, Lebanon. Dropping 255 metres into the Baatara pothole or “Cave of the Three Bridges”, this seasonal waterfall is famed as one of the most beautiful in the world. Recently this natural wonder sparked interest in Japan as a waterfall “from the world of Final Fantasy”, the wildly popular video game franchise.

Some compared its beauty to Pinnacle Rocks of Final Fantasy IX, mentioning that it should be a great place to bump into an Eidolon.

▼See the tiny person standing on the rock bridge? Probably waiting for a Moogle.

Image by media-cache-ec0.pinimg.com

About 75 km north of capital city Beirut, the dizzying Baatara sinkhole can be found by the village of Balaa. The 90m waterfall is created in spring by the snow melt.

“Discovered” in 1952 by French bio-speleologist Henri Coiffait and fully mapped by the Spéléo club du Liban in the 1980s, in drier seasons without the spectacular waterfall and abundant greenery it appears a lot less romantic and more like… a huge hole in the ground ready to swallow us up.

▼I feel a base jump coming on…

Image: 2.bp.blogspot.com

▼The view from above…

Image: travelhack.jp

▼Uh-oh, it seems to have sprung a leak. Don’t worry, it happens every spring!

Image: articleimage.nicoblomaga.jp

Inspired to visit Lebanon? Sadly, this is a region which has been wracked with turmoil. If you’re in the area, make sure you avoid the border with Syria, the southern suburbs of Beirut and Tripoli. Travel safe… as beautiful as this area is, don’t make it your final “Final Fantasy”!

Source: Naver Matome
Featured image: arduino-japan.com

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Origin: Step into the world of Final Fantasy in real life Lebanon
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29 Dec 06:43

Tumblr | 61e.jpg

61e.jpg
26 Dec 11:12

LG's HomeChat will let you command its latest smart appliances via SMS

by Steve Dent

LG really, really wants you to have a good chat with your washer/dryer and robotic vacuum cleaner. It just announced you'll soon be able to use the Line messaging app and a new service called HomeChat to give natural language commands to its 2014 Smart Appliance lineup. If you tell the system "I'm going on vacation," for instance, it'll put your refrigerator into power-savings mode and program the robotic vacuum cleaner. The app will also update you as to what's in the fridge, show a history of your robotic vacuum's cleaning trips and recommend recipes via the smart oven, to name a few other features. LG also announced NFC tagging and smart diagnoses for its upcoming smart appliance lineup, a scheme that'll help you avoid unnecessary repair visits, download new washing machine cycles and more. All of this will arrive in the flesh at CES 2014, but if you're interested, maybe avoid seeing Maximum Overdrive in the meantime.

Filed under: Internet, Software, LG

Comments

Source: LG

24 Dec 06:33

wannyy: This was actually uploaded to PornHub. That’s how good...



wannyy:

This was actually uploaded to PornHub. That’s how good it was. Just saying.

22 Dec 06:44

sweaterkittensahoy: djlegz: I don’t like sports, but the...











sweaterkittensahoy:

djlegz:

I don’t like sports, but the Bearcats are my new favorite team.

I love how it gets more elaborate each time. These boys are thinking this through.

22 Dec 06:42

In a Nutshell | 27c.jpg

27c.jpg
18 Dec 17:02

liquid-liamm: what Germans do while waiting at traffic lights



liquid-liamm:

what Germans do while waiting at traffic lights

18 Dec 17:00

You Shall Not Pass, Dog [via]



You Shall Not Pass, Dog

[via]

17 Dec 07:15

Cats | 3ad.gif

3ad.gif
16 Dec 13:06

Arabic opening song for popular Japanese anime confuses Japanese netizens 【Video】

by Joan Coello

heidi2
When I was a kid, I used to watch Japanese anime that were dubbed in English or Mandarin because the original versions were not broadcast on the local TV channels. Most of the time, the theme songs of these anime remained in Japanese, and I had fun singing along to the catchy tunes even though I had absolutely no idea what the lyrics meant. However, it isn’t entirely uncommon for international versions of anime series to have theme songs localized to the audience’s native language and tastes for music.

Recently, a clip of the Arabic version of the popular anime series, Arupusu no Shojo Haiji (Heidi, Girl of the Alps) has been making waves among Japanese netizens due to its localized opening song, which was starkly different from the Japanese original. Videos after the jump!

Arupusu no Shojo Haiji was broadcast in Japan in 1974 and ran for 52 episodes over a year. The series was based on the children’s novel, Heidi’s Years of Wandering and Learning, written by Swiss author Johanna Spyri, and was created by a production team including now world-famous Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata from Studio Ghibli, Yoshiyuki Tomino (creator of the Gundam series), Yoichi Kotabe (illustrator for the Super Mario series and animation supervisor for Pokémon movies), and Toyoo Ashida (director for Fist of the North Star) – in their early years of film-making.

The anime was a big hit in Japan, and was subsequently dubbed in multiple languages as it gained international popularity. Back in Japan, the playful, energetic Heidi still appears in TV commercials even today. Needless to say, the opening song of the series is well-known among citizens of all ages throughout the country. The Japanese opening stayed true to the story’s setting with plenty of yodeling, since Heidi does of course live in the Swiss Alps.

But the Arabic version… we’ll just leave it to your ears for this one.

▼ Japanese original

▼ Arabic version

We know that international versions can be different, we just didn’t expect it to be SO different! Japanese Twitter users, remembering the Japanese original fondly, commented:

I have no idea where Heidi is from anymore.
The difference in culture is interesting.
It’s so deep.
What the… What is this?
It’s really funny if you listen to it while anticipating the OP we’re familiar with.
I can’t stop laughing LOL

I really can’t tell which country this story is set in (laughs)

The difference in culture is indeed interesting, but it’s even more interesting that an anime series of a Japanese-looking little girl living on the Swiss Alps can be well-received among people all over the world with such drastic cultural differences. It just goes to show that a good story knows no cultural boundaries!

And since we’re at it, here’s the opening song in all the other languages. Enjoy!

Source: Pouch (Japanese)
Reference: Wikipedia
Image: YouTube

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Origin: Arabic opening song for popular Japanese anime confuses Japanese netizens 【Video】
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16 Dec 12:31

cutbu: read more comics





cutbu:

read more comics

15 Dec 09:55

New Studio Ghibli movie revealed for 2014: When Marnie Was There【Newsflash】

by Philip Kendall

Screen Shot 2013-12-12 at 6.00.25 PM

Seemingly not content with having two brand new movies out this year in the form of Kaze Tachinu and The Tale of Princess Kaguya, Japan’s Studio Ghibli has just announced that a new animated feature, Omoide no Maanii (When Marnie Was There), based on the novel of the same name by English writer Joan G. Robinson, will be hitting screens in Japan in summer 2014.

The news broke earlier this afternoon as Ghibli unveiled a new website, which offers a single still image of the movie’s poster. Distributor Toho has also confirmed the film in its 2014 lineup.

The original 1967 novel for kids and young adults tells the story of Anna, a young foster child who is sent away for the summer to the Norfolk countryside. She soon meets a girl called Marnie and, through their many conversations, begins to learn more about the girl’s intriguing past.

When Marnie Was There has been translated into multiple languages, and is loved by many Japanese, particularly young women who felt that it helped them, too, find their place in the world and cope with feeling that little bit different to everyone else.

The Studio Ghibli adaptation is being directed by Hiromasa Yonebayashi, who made his directing debut for the acclaimed studio with 2010′s The Secret World of Arrietty. We’ll be sure to bring you more about this intriguing new production as it breaks.

Source: Eiga (Japanese)
Image: Studio Ghibli

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Origin: New Studio Ghibli movie revealed for 2014: When Marnie Was There【Newsflash】
Copyright© RocketNews24 / SOCIO CORPORATION. All rights reserved.

11 Dec 07:24

Unexpected

by bspcn
11 Dec 07:00

The Legend of Zelda: A Break Between Worlds

The Legend of Zelda: A Break Between Worlds

 

11 Dec 06:58

Samsung Vs. Apple | 80a.jpeg

80a.jpeg
05 Dec 06:54

Starred Items!

We’re excited to announce that starred items are now live in The Old Reader.  This has been one of the most requested features and something we’ve felt belongs in the application for a long time.  Hotkey (f) and API support are also available.  Starred items will automatically be sent to pocket for users that have it activated.

As most of you know, our focus over the past few months was to increase performance and stability of The Old Reader.  We’ve made tremendous strides and can now focus on adding functionality and making this tool a long-term sustainable platform built for the Open Web.  The best is yet to come.

Thanks for using The Old Reader!

(www.catgifs.org/2013/09/07/cat-surprised-cat-animated-gif/)

04 Dec 06:40

UPS researching its own delivery drones to compete with Amazon's Prime Air

by Ben Popper

Amazon made headlines Sunday night when it announced it was working on small drones that could someday deliver customers packages in half an hour or less. But the e-commerce giant isn’t the only company researching how to harness the potential of small unmanned aircraft: The Verge has learned that the world's largest parcel service, UPS, has been experimenting with its own fleet of flying parcel-carriers.

"The commercial use of drones is an interesting technology."

Sources familiar with the company’s plans say it has been testing and evaluating different approaches to drone delivery. Asked for a comment, a company spokesman said that, "The commercial use of drones is an interesting technology and we’ll continue to evaluate it....

Continue reading…

02 Dec 08:40

Amazon Prime Air drones revealed on 60 Minutes, aim to deliver in half an hour (video)

by Mat Smith
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos took to 60 Minutes to reveal the company's latest delivery method: drones. In what is likely a cunning reminder of the e-tailer's upcoming Cyber Monday sales, these bots will apparently be capable of delivering packages up to ...
02 Dec 07:02

Origins Of Common UI Symbols

by Jaroslaw Morawski

You see and use them every day, but do you know where they come from? Almost all common UI symbols have an interesting history behind them. Designers over at visual.ly came up with a great that will tell you more about your favorite icons, buttons and logos.

There is a reason why USB looks like a trident and the pause button consists of two vertically aligned bars. Surprisingly, origins of some of the most used UI symbols are in neither computer nor electronic industry, but in history, nature and psychology. It turns out that they are more universal than we think, with their roots often reaching various cultures and and being inspired by international symbolism. There’s more to them than just a clever inclusion of their features, sometimes their shapes are supposed to impact the usage, make a suggestion or evoke an association.

USB 620x514 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

Standby 620x514 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

Spinning Ball 620x514 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

Play 620x514 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

Pause 620x395 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

On Off Button 620x514 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

Firewire 620x514 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

Ethernet 620x514 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

CMD 620x586 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

Bluetooth 620x572 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

@ 620x514 Origins Of Common UI Symbols

Original Article on UltraLinx Website - Origins Of Common UI Symbols
Follow UltraLinx on - Facebook | Twitter.

01 Dec 09:01

Faith Restored.

by bspcn
28 Nov 07:08

Video Game Logic | eb4

eb4
27 Nov 07:27

This is how David Fincher would portray Mario

Abdulaziz Alhamidi

This is hilarious.

There are two conflicting accounts of the Mario Brothers myth. One is of a “It’s-a-me-ing” doughboy and his good-natured sibling from a wonderland where toadstools dress in cat suits. The other, perpetuated by the Dustin Hoffman movie and the Saturday morning cartoon, is of two tough-guy plumbers from the Bronx. 

The short films of Evan Daugherty are clearly motivated by the latter. The Fixer and The Addict look at the seedier side of Mario and his little brother “Lu,” These are not guys you’d want to run into in a back alley. Clearly inspired by crime dramas like Crash and Drive and Traffic, they’re pretty hilarious.  

26 Nov 19:42

Watch Walt and Jesse read the final 'Breaking Bad' script for the first time

by Aaron Souppouris
Abdulaziz Alhamidi

Spoilers, obviously.

The video embedded in this post contains big spoilers for Breaking Bad.

Breaking Bad's finale was perhaps the television event of the year. Watched by millions, the episode brought closure to the show's loyal followers, and was well received by the majority of critics. Unsurprisingly, it was also well received by Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul, who play the show's main characters, Walter White and Jesse Pinkman.

A video released as an extra for the Breaking Bad: The Complete Series compilation depicts Cranston and Paul discovering the fate of their characters for the first time. Excerpts of the almost-poetic script are read aloud by Cranston, while Paul emotionally reacts to some of the finale's surprises. As you'd imagine, the video is laced with spoilers, so if you haven't finished watching Breaking Bad yet, this is definitely one video you shouldn't be watching.


26 Nov 07:16

Hiroshi Yamauchi: The Very Non-Whimsical Willy Wonka Of Nintendo

by Michael

In the west, we like our media kingpins to be creative. And not just creative on a few things in their lives, but visionary geniuses we can laud as people worth worshiping. Walt Disney and Jim Henson are two great examples, both starting from humble origins and working hard to pour their creative brains into pop culture and eventually our collective psyches. These are the kinds of people we love. When we consume a product or creation that captures our hearts, we imagine (or at least hope) that the head of the company is some kind of Willy Wonka. If we were to enter his office, he would stand immediately displaying his rainbow jumpsuit and say, “Why hello little boy or girl, what is your name? Did you come to tour my fantastic product factory?” And oh, how we would tour! He would sing us and show us all the magic and love that is poured into each product in his product factory. By the end of it all, he would be our lifelong friend and secret santa.

Nintendo is one such magical company of magical products, so we’ll be looking today at their founder, Hiroshi Yamauchi, pictured below.

hiroshi-yamauchi

Before you start thinking that this is a tale of another Walt Disney-esque creator, I should stop your expectations right there. Sure, his results with Nintendo prove his genius, but you’ll have to leave the ウィリー・ウォンカ fantasies aside… that is, unless you want to imagine Shigeru Miyamoto as an Oompa Loompa, and nobody wants that.

Harsh Hiroshi

nintendo headquarters
Look at that whimsical, magical place. You know they’ve gotta have an underground ice cream roller coaster in there!

Hiroshi Yamauchi was the president of Nintendo from 1949 to 2002. He led the company not only to financial success in the video game era, but was the reason the company made video games at all. It would be easy enough to say that Yamauchi saw the future and transformed his family’s playing card company into one of video games through sheer vision. But it was more of an accidental process than that, and it certainly had nothing to do with whimsy.

Unlike Wonka, who brought prosperity to his company with trippy boat rides and musical numbers, Hiroshi Yamauchi did it with harsh criticism and mass firings. When he was asked to become president in 1949 by his dying grandfather, Hiroshi agreed on one condition: the firing of all other family members at Nintendo. This resulted in only one person, his older cousin, being let go and is also a really roundabout way of telling this cousin, “I hate you.” Immediately after becoming president, Yamauchi faced a strike of factory workers who thought he would fold on account of he was only twenty-one years old. Instead, he fired them all on account of he was the president. This led to a clean sweep of the company during which the young prez fired many long-time employees who had dedicated their lives to Nintendo.

During the video game years of the early eighties, Hiroshi Yamauchi hired his son-in-law, Minoru Arakawa, to run Nintendo operations in America and he was smart to do so. Arakawa wasn’t hired because of family ties. He was a solid businessman with an MIT education and a reputation for successfully managing a Japanese construction firm in Canada. But when Arakawa had a hard time gaining a foothold in the American market with the Nintendo Famicom (Japanese NES), Yamauchi was not hesitant to remark “a more competent person would have no trouble marketing the Famicom in the United States.” Straight to the point, that one is.

Risky Business

young-yamauchiYoung Yamauchi with Roy O. Disney during a meeting that actually made Nintendo a lot of money, which Yamauchi would later lose on three bad business deals.

The image most projected of Yamauchi was his severity. But as a businessman, he was also shrewd, very forward-thinking and not all that conservative. Certainly by our modern standards for a “forward-thinking” boss, Hiroshi Yamauchi looks conservative, though. There was no ping-pong table in the break room or “bring your shorts to work day.” But when it came to taking a chance on young talent or uncertain ideas, he was certainly not playing it safe.

Yamauchi realized early on that the world of playing cards was only so big. After a recon visit to the world’s largest playing card company (in beautiful Cincinnati!) he was disappointed to find it was a fairly small-scale operation. Upon returning to Kyoto, he took his company public and started a series of risky ventures to bring Nintendo greater success than it had ever seen with stupid ol’ playing cards. He started with instant rice packets, which immediately flopped. Apparently people like waiting for their rice. The anticipation is what makes it taste good. Then he started a taxi company called Daiya, but he quickly grew tired of negotiating with the unions over ridiculous demands like getting paid. Finally, he started a love hotel (which is exactly what you think it is), but ended up being his own best customer and this venture was also a failure.

Though these examples do not display Yamauchi’s business acumen, it certainly shows his bold and non-conservative nature. A conservative businessman would have stuck with playing cards. Actually, at the time he took over, Nintendo was doing so well with its playing card business that there was no reason make a change. But Yamauchi was ambitious and willing to try something different even if it made no sense. Really, if you think about it, it’s the same as if I became president of a greeting card company and said, “Hey guys! I know we’re really successful making greeting cards, but I’d like to take our money resources and start producing cat sweaters.” I would immediately be thrown out the window. But no one dared to throw Yamauchi out the window because he would’ve fired them before hitting the ground.

Whispers of the Art

miyamoto-yokoi
Gunpei Yokoi and Shigeru Miyamoto, two of Yamauchi’s best decisions.

Yamauchi had brought Nintendo to the brink of bankruptcy with his ideas and it was only the 1960s. He was going to have keep the company going until at least 1982 when they could start making the big money. Thankfully, almost every decision Yamauchi made from 1966 onward was successful. As Nintendo transformed into a toy company, he began to display what was arguably his most visionary aspect: his ability to take chances on young talent.

Contrary to the Mr. Burns stereotype we are wont to place him in, Hiroshi Yamauchi recognized brilliant people who had talents he did not, and gave them opportunities to create. He handpicked Gunpei Yokoi, creator of the Game Boy, from his factory floor and gave a job to Shigeru Miyamoto, creator of Mario and Zelda, despite Miyamoto’s dreamy and incredibly non-businesslike persona. A real stuffy businessman would have turned these two daydreaming ne’er-do-wells away, along with the countless other Nintendo innovators over the years. The book Game Over by David Sheff has the best insight on this:

“Nintendo would, Yamauchi decided, become a haven for video-game artists, for it was artists, not technicians,who made great games.”

Growing Up

So Hiroshi Yamauchi was smart at business and a little harsh. Actually, most sources I’ve read describe him as “notoriously harsh” or “imperialistic.” He was quick to dish out criticism and made his employees compete for his approval. In my research on Nintendo over the years, I have mostly focused on the creators and innovators at Nintendo and only read about Yamauchi as it related to them. This had cemented a picture in my mind of Yamauchi as the uncreative business-oni that sucked money from his hard working, jovial video game creators. Certainly there is a lot of truth to this oni image, but it wasn’t until after his recent death that I discovered a different side of him.

Hiroshi Yamauchi’s father, Shikanojo, abandoned his family when Hiroshi was five years old. Hiroshi’s mother then threw him into the care of his grandparents, who raised him with the same strictness that they used on their employees. During the War, Hiroshi was still too young to fight, so his studies were put on hold for an assignment in a military factory. When he finally returned to his studies, he gained entrance to the prestigious Waseda University to study law, but was forced to drop out yet again, this time to take over the family business.

Shortly after Hiroshi became Nintendo’s president, his father, Shikanojo, returned to see his son. Whether by anger or pride, Hiroshi refused to see his father and turned him away. When Hiroshi was close to thirty, he got word that his father had passed away and immediately regretted missing the chance for reconciliation. He grieved openly for days and regularly visited his father’s grave for the rest of his life. This made Shikanojo the second father figure with whom Hiroshi lost his chance for acceptance. Hiroshi’s grandfather had died regarding his grandson as impudent and foolish, never seeing his years of success. Though Hiroshi’s mother was around, she became more like an aunt than a mother and his grandmother was no different. In essence, between four parental figures, Hiroshi Yamauchi received plenty of material care and support, but little else. His history really helps to explain his style of business.

Retirement And Beyond

yamauchi2

Upon his retirement, Yamauchi refused his pension of close to $14 million, stating that he felt Nintendo could put it to better use. It’s not that he was without avarice. You don’t become the 12th richest man in Japan without liking money just a little. But unlike the bloated CEOs who get fired and take a hefty severance at the expense of the company, Hiroshi Yamauchi looked out for his company’s and employees’ well-being, albeit firing them / squashing their pride from time to time.

So was he Wonka, Mr. Burns or Scrooge? Really, none of the above. We like it when people in high positions are easy to define. This guy’s bad, this guy’s good, this guy was bad but is now good because some ghosts scared him, etc. I read some comments about Yamauchi shortly before he died and they were all about how he was a vampire and evil and crazy (he did say some nutty stuff over the years). But after his death, articles all over the web were touting him as a visionary genius. The truth is that Hiroshi Yamauchi was a human man. He treated a lot of people badly, got hurt a lot in his early life, made good and bad decisions, donated a lot of money to charity, and gave opportunities to artists that made a lot of us really happy. He was complex and the story of his life is incredibly interesting. And that is perhaps the best and truest way to remember his personal legacy.

Sources Referenced:

26 Nov 06:51

Soul Sacrifice goes free on PS Plus tomorrow

by Earnest Cavalli
Come November 26, the Vita-exclusive Soul Sacrifice joins the free games on offer to PlayStation Plus subscribers, and they won't even have to trade a limb for it.

For those who missed Soul Sacrifice, think of it as a game of choices. You play a prisoner turned sorcerer in a world where magic requires sacrifices. Some of these are largely benign, but there are the massively damaging spells that ask you to literally give up an arm in exchange for that kind of power. The game's difficulty level is slightly less intense than that seen in Dark Souls, but it still makes a very worthwhile contender for anyone looking for a game that will mercilessly punish mistakes - and unlike Dark Souls, since Soul Sacrifice is a Vita game, you can get your fix on the go.

As with all new PS Plus additions, the introduction of Soul Sacrifice means that something must be bumped off of the roster. In this case, the PS Plus Instant Game Collection is losing Dragon's Dogma: Dark Arisen. If you want to pick up Capcom's endearing attempt at a Western-style, open-world role-playing game, today marks your last chance to do so via PlayStation Plus.

JoystiqSoul Sacrifice goes free on PS Plus tomorrow originally appeared on Joystiq on Mon, 25 Nov 2013 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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26 Nov 06:38

tastefullyoffensive: Cats Giving High Fives (Part 1)Previously:...





















tastefullyoffensive:

Cats Giving High Fives (Part 1)

Previously: Animals Being Jerks (GIFs)

The first one is the best.

25 Nov 06:54

Persona 5 Announced for PlayStation 3

by Endless
Abdulaziz Alhamidi

I can hardly contain my excitement!

21 Nov 06:45

Photo



19 Nov 06:31

Photo



19 Nov 06:28

Winter 2013/2014 Anime Lineup

by Alafista

Winter 2013/2014 Anime Lineup

 

In just about a month and half we will be crossing over to the Winter 2013/2014 anime season, which means we will be able to catch the 2nd season of Chuu-2!! If you don’t want to miss out any, then do check out neregate’s visual compilation charts.

Looking at the list, I’ve shortlisted a couple that I plan to watch:

  • Silver Spoon 2nd season
  • Mahou Sensou
  • Chuunibyou demo Koi ga Shital! 2nd season
  • Saki Zenkoku-hen
  • Noragami