October 26, 2011

El Gamma Penumbra , a world class performance!

El Gamma Penumbra, the shadow theater group from Batangas City, could have been the Pilipinas Got Talent Season 3 Grand Champion. The group had a shadow theater performance based on the “Piliin Ang Pilipinas” , Choose Philippines tourism campaign.


El Gamma Penumbra

PGT Celebrity judge Kris Aquino said about their presentation  “timely,” it was different from the rest. The best part of which was when they showed an image that represented peace between Muslims and Christians.


Many people wished to have El Gamma Penumbra as the Pilipinas Got Talent Season 3 Grand Champion. El Gamma Penumbra was the crowd favorite to win during the weekend because their performance showcased not just creativity but nationalism , with Philippine events and historical scenes.


El Gamma Penumbra , a  world class performance!  We hope Department of Tourism appreciates how this group can promote the Philippines. Mabuhay Ang Pinoy... Truly proudly Pinoy!


The Maasinhon Trio was declared the winner during Sunday final night. The Pilipinas Got Talent (PGT) Season 3 Grand Finals winner result created controversy among fans, and El Gamma Penumbra is among the other grand finalists being favored to win.

ABS-CBN has released an official statement regarding this matter.

“The winners of “Pilipinas Got Talent” are determined by the number of text and online votes that they receive during the grand finals. All 12 grand finalists are talented and deserving to win, but in the end, it was the Maasinhon Trio, who got the most votes from the viewing public followed by Khalil Ramos and the Bringas Brothers. ‘Pilipinas Got Talent’ is a celebration of the many talents of Filipinos. The voting public has spoken and let us respect the decision of the viewers. We congratulate the winners and the other grand finalists.”
Bong Osorio
ABS-CBN Corporate Communications Head




El Gamma Penumbra on PGT Season 3 Grand Finals


Philippine Graphic Design Awards 2011

Established in 2010, the Philippine Graphic Design Awards (PGDA) is the first and only programme that awards Filipino designers for their outstanding work in the field of graphic design.


Its mission is to enrich the local graphic design landscape by empowering and inspiring Filipino designers to create cutting-edge pieces of work, and seek support from the design community to nurture and sustain professional practices in the country. Through its activities, the PGDA wants to establish a reference for Philippine graphic design among its regional counterparts.


The competition comprises 13 categories, including identity, direct print, poster, publication, packaging, retail, environmental graphics, applied graphics, outdoor graphics, print advertising, illustration, typography, digital artwork, web, and motion graphics.


Mark your choice for the adobo magazine award (People's Choice) from the 17 professional and 7 student finalists of the Philippine Graphic Design Awards 2011. Like the entry that shows off the best in Philippine graphic design. Share with your contacts. Voting closes at 6pm on October 31, 2011.




























Visit the following facebook website.


http://www.facebook.com/PGDAwards
http://www.facebook.com/adobomagazine




Regular Holiday Throughout the Country, in Observance of EIDUL ADHA on November 7

November 7, 2011 (Monday) was declared a regular holiday in the country. Eid'l Adha is an important Muslim religious holiday and celebrated on this day worldwide. 


Proclamation No. 276:
MALACAÑAN PALACE
MANILA
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE PHILIPPINES
PROCLAMATION NO. 276

DECLARING MONDAY, 7 NOVEMBER 2011, AS A REGULAR HOLIDAY THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY, IN OBSERVANCE OF EIDUL ADHA (FEAST OF SACRIFICE)

WHEREAS, Republic Act No. 9849 provides that Eidul Adha shall be celebrated as a regular holiday;
WHEREAS, Eidul Adha is one of the two greatest feasts of Islam;
WHEREAS, the date of the festival based on the declaration made by Saudi Arabia’s highest religious body is on 6 November 2011;
WHEREAS, the National Commission on Muslim Filipinos (NCMF) recommended that the observance of Eidul Adha be on 7 November 2011 and the Eidul Adha prayer held on 6 November 2011;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BENIGNO S. AQUINO III, President of the Philippines, by virtue of the powers vested in me by law, do hereby declare Monday, 7 November 2011, as a regular holiday throughout the country, in observance of Eidul Adha (Feast of Sacrifice).

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the Republic of the Philippines to be affixed.

Done in the City of Manila, this 20th day of October, in the year of Our Lord, Two Thousand and Eleven.


(Sgd.) BENIGNO S. AQUINO III
By the President

(Sgd.) PAQUITO N. OCHOA JR.
Executive Secretary

Source: Official Gazette, Office of the President of the Philippines




Disclaimer: This is for informational purposes only.

October 25, 2011

The Book Biography "Steve Jobs"


The first authorized biography of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs hits bookstores on Monday.

The 656-page book, titled "Steve Jobs," is based on more than 40 interviews with Jobs over two years. It also includes conversations with his family, friends, colleagues and competitors.

According to publisher Simon and Schuster, Jobs cooperated with the book, but never had the chance to read it before he passed away on Oct. 5, 2011.

Jobs biography is very interesting, because this is the first biography approved officially. This biography also contains excerpts Best Jobs.


The book is written by former CNN chairman Walter Isaacson.

The Steve Jobs Reading List :Books that influenced and transformed the Man


The books Jobs read, particularly as a teen and college student, helped expose him to the ideas and experiences that would serve as Apple's foundation years later.

Walter Isaacson's 571-page biography of Jobs, a copy of which was purchased by The Huffington Post, provides an unprecedented look at the texts -- by writers ranging from William Shakespeare to Paramahansa Yogananda -- that influenced Jobs; "required reading" for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the visionary.

"I like living at the intersection of the humanities and technology," Steve Jobs said once.


Clayton Christensen's 
 "Innovator's Dilemma," which Isaacson writes, "deeply influenced" Jobs.

Ron Rosenbaum's 1971 Esquire article "Secrets of the Little Blue Box," a profile of hackers who could tap into phone networks that later gave rise to Jobs’ first collaboration with Steve Wozniak, who went on to become Apple's co-founder.

LSD, Bauhaus and Zen Buddhism shaped Apple's pioneering products as much as anything that took place on the assembly lines, were among Jobs' greatest influences and they shaped his attitudes toward design, business and innovation.

"I started to listen to music a whole lot, and I started to read more outside of just science and technology -- Shakespeare, Plato. I loved King Lear," Jobs recalled of his teen years. Isaacson notes that "Moby-Dick" and Dylan Thomas' poetry were among Jobs' favorite works at this point in his life.

During his freshman year at Reed College, Jobs befriended Daniel Kottke, who went on to work at Apple, and together they devoured books such as Shunryu Suzuki's "Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind," Chogyam Trungpa's "Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism" and Paramahansa Yogananda's "Autobiography of a Yogi," a book Jobs read and re-read many times during his life.

Throughout his life, Jobs embraced numerous extreme, even obsessive, dietary regimes. He fasted periodically and, at various points, was a vegetarian, vegan and fruitarian, though he made an exception for unagi sushi while in Japan. This attitude toward food began to take shape in college after Jobs read "Diet for a Small Planet" by Frances Moore Lappe in his first year at Reed.

"That's when I swore off meat pretty much for good," Jobs told Isaacson, who adds Jobs became "even more obsessive" about food after reading Arnold Ehret's "Mucusless Diet Healing System."
One book in particular stayed with Jobs his entire life, and Isaacson noted that it was the only book Jobs had downloaded on his iPad 2: "Autobiography of a Yogi," "the guide to meditation and spirituality that he had first read as a teenager," Isaacson writes, "then re-read in India and had read once a year ever since."

Yet no discussion of the artists who influenced Jobs is complete without mentioning the music that made the man.

Jobs called Bob Dylan "one of my heroes" and had over a dozen Dylan albums on his iPod, along with songs from seven different Beatles albums, six Rolling Stones albums and four albums by Jobs' onetime lover Joan Baez.

Jobs likened The Beatles' creative process to Apple's own. While listening to a bootleg CD from one of the band's recording sessions, Jobs remarked, "They did a bundle of work between each of these recordings. They kept sending it back to make it closer to perfect ... The way we build stuff at Apple is often this way."

He also framed his motivations and the principles that drove him forward in terms of Dylan and The Beatles.

"They kept evolving, moving, refining their art," Jobs said of the artists. "That's what I've always tried to do -- keep moving. Otherwise, as Dylan says, if you're not busy being born, you're busy dying."

Jobs found himself deeply influenced by a variety of books on spirituality and enlightenment, most notably Be Here Now, a guide to meditation and the wonders of psychedelic drugs by Baba Ram Dass, born Richard Alpert.

"It was profound," Jobs said. "It transformed me and many of my friends."



LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
enjoying wonderful world