12/02/2015

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3/04/2015

Japanese gravure model Yoko Matsugane in a clip from her video HOUJO





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Botswana’s Okavango Delta from a dugout canoe

The ride out was a little unnerving. As we hummed across the water in the cool of the morning, zipping down waterways only as wide as the motorboat itself, I was mindful of the fact that in just a few minutes, I would be nearly even with the water, paddling through the tall reeds and swaying papyrus in a traditional makoro (canoe)But it wasn’t the riverside foliage that made me nervous; it was the abundant, exotic wildlife that called the murky swamp home.

First, we skirted past a grumpy looking hippo, his head popping above the waterline just long enough to express his displeasure with an angry snort. Then we skimmed past a monitor lizard – harmless, but creepy nonetheless. Finally, we slowed to take in the sight of not one, but two crocodiles. Neither was fully grown, and I shuddered as I took in their white, jagged teeth. They sunk – slowly, silently, menacingly – below the dark, almost-black waterline.
I was on the 60,000-hectare Jao Concession, a vast tract of land – most of it underwater even in the driest part of the dry season – in the heart of Botswana’s famed Okavango Delta. While most travellers come to the Okavango for the ultimate jeep safari, experienced visitors have told me that, in many ways, Botswana is a country that’s best seen from the water. So I was here in what is arguably Africa’s greatest aquatic landscape – where the mighty Okavango River drops from the Angolan highlands, spreading across 15,000sqkm of southern Africa as it flows toward its ultimate end in the Kalahari Desert – to take in its best features from  canoe-level view.
It was here that the makoro was born. A traditional mode of transport long used by Okavango locals, these dugout canoes are small, narrow and rudderless – perfect for navigating waters that routinely ebb to a depth of just a few inches toward the end of late autumn, before seasonal rains turn the landscape into a soggy, green aquatic wonderland. And the Okavango is one of the few places in the world where traditional makoros – carved from the wood of an African ebony tree – are still used. Due to government efforts to save more of these valuable, old trees, modern-day makoros are increasingly made of fiberglass.
We docked the motorboat and I climbed into the makoro, the sides snug around me. My guide, Boikago Wandumbi, paddled he and I out, standing in the back of the canoe like a Venetian gondolier, using a long pole to propel us forward.
The first thing I noticed is that the makoro was rather tippy – the absence of a keel made it easy for the boat to spill from side to side. The second thing was the silence. In a jeep, the engine is always running, drowning out the sounds of the savannah and swamp. Here, the makoro made only the slightest rippling sound. In the background, I heard the chirps and squawks of birds, the buzz of insects, the small, sudden surge of water as a tropical fish jumped into the air for just a split second. No manmade sounds intruded. I was immersed in an environment that had remained fundamentally untouched and unaltered for centuries.
Wandumbi broke the silence by pointing out the amazing array of birds that perched and flew nearby. I looked high into the trees to see solitary fish eagles scoping out their lunch below. I saw red egrets, white cormorants, diminutive but determined kingfishers and the extravagantly ugly marabou stork. As we glided past lily pads and reeds, the beautiful saddle-billed stork with its black-and-white body and tricolour beak swooped overhead; I could almost feel the flap of its wings.
Wandumbi told me about the many ways that the makoro has long been central in the lives of locals. He noted that people have traditionally used the boats to fish for bream, tilapia and tiger fish and to gather fruit to eat, roots for medicine and water sage to weave into mats. They even used the makoro for long distance, multi-day voyages to Maun, the closest town of any size, with families fishing and frying their quarry in the sand-insulated bottom of the boats along the way.
He illustrated his point by paddling into a patch of green undergrowth and pulling out a lily pad, turning its roots into a necklace and the pad into a hat (complete with a rather fetching lily on top), which he wore for the remainder of our trip – a skill his parents taught him as a child. “I have been paddling a makoro since I was nine years old,” Wandumbi said. “It was the school bus of the delta. I used to paddle my younger brothers and sisters to class.”
We angled close to the thick growth along the side of the swamp, drawing close to a sitatunga, an antelope rarely seen outside the deepest, densest parts of the area. With hooves adapted for walking in marshes, the shy animal usually hides deep in the swamp. Today, its horned head and brown back were poking out of the reeds. We watched for a few seconds before it noticed us and loped off, deep into the green.
Almost immediately afterward, we spotted another rare find. Parking the boat in a reed bed, Wandumbi motioned to my right: “That – right there – is the leopard of the swamp.” He was talking about a tiny painted reed frog, head skyward, clinging to a piece of vegetation, carefully blended with its surroundings. It was so small, I would have completely overlooked it exploring the Delta by any other means.
Soon, we left the makoro and headed back to camp in the motorboat. Skimming through the same narrow channels that had carried us there – very close to the shallow waters that we had just paddled – we encountered elephants, two big bulls waving their ears to cool their blood and digging deep into the papyrus plants to eat sweet, sugary roots. I was glad to encounter the large pachyderms in the relative security of the bigger boat.
At the same time, a part of me missed the makoro – the silence and peacefulness, not to mention the great and unique privilege of experiencing first-hand its time-honoured presence in the delta. It helped, too, that in the end, I didn’t tip into the water, forced to flee from the tiger fish and crocodiles.
Practicalities
A number of Expert Africa trips specialise in water-based adventures, including makoro trips. Jao Camp, operated byWilderness Safaris, comprises tented rooms connected by raised walkways, as well as a full-service spa and two swimming pools.

Barcelona will meet Athletic Bilbao in the Copa del Rey final after Luis Suarez and Neymar sealed a 6-2 aggregate win over Villarreal.

Leading 3-1 from the first leg, Barca struck early through Neymar before Jonathan dos Santos levelled.
But after Tomas Pina was sent off for a reckless tackle, Suarez rounded the goalkeeper to put the tie beyond doubt and Neymar added a late header.
Bilbao won 2-0 at Espanyol to win their tie 3-1, setting up the 30 May final.
The final brings together the two most successful teams in the competition's history as Barca, with 26 wins, have three more than Los Leones.
Despite their cup history, Bilbao have not won major silverware since beating Barca in the 1984 final and they will need to be at their very best if they are to stop Luis Enrique's current crop, who have won every leg on their way to the final.
Aritz Aduriz
Aritz Aduriz scored as Athletic Bilbao set up a repeat of the 2012 final with victory at Espanyol
It will be a first final in the managerial career of Enrique, who declared his side were in a "perfect moment" of form ahead of their visit to El Madrigal as they chase glory in La Liga, the Champions League and Spain's domestic cup.
It took only three minutes for those words to be ratified as Lionel Messi's sublime clipped pass over the home defence tempted goalkeeper Sergio Asenjo from his line and Neymar poked in.
Enrique's only concern from the trip to Spain's east coast will be the health of midfielder Sergio Busquets, who was on the end of an ugly tackle by Pina in the build-up to Dos Santos's back-post volley.
The Spaniard's ankle rolled under the challenge and he left on a stretcher before play restarted. He will undergo tests on damaged ligaments on Thursday. 
By the time Busquets emerged to sit with the coaching staff on the bench late on, Pina had been dismissed for tackling Neymar from behind and with a man advantage, Barca were comfortable when Suarez raced clear to round Asenjo.
Pina's aggression ended what was an intriguing contest and it was left to Neymar to meet a Xavi cross with a straightforward header to complete the scoring.
Barcelona beat Bilbao 3-0 in the 2012 final and, with just two defeats in 27 games, will fancy their chances of landing the trophy.
Lionel Messi
Lionel Messi has been involved in 25 goals in all competitions in 2015 (15 goals, 10 assists), at least 11 more than any other La Liga player
Sergio Busquets
Sergio Busquets was badly tackled in the build-up to the equaliser and forced to leave on a stretcher
Luis Suarez
Barcelona have won every leg on their way to the final for the first time since 1926

LINEUP, BOOKINGS (5) & SUBSTITUTIONS (6)

Villarreal

  • 01 Asenjo
  • 02 Perez Martinez
  • 05 Musacchio
  • 15 Ruiz
  • 18 Costa Jordá
  • 06 dos Santos Booked
  • 04 Pina Dismissed
  • 14 Trigueros Muñoz (Gómez Bardonado - 75' )
  • 17 Cheryshev Booked (Campbell - 69' Booked )
  • 08 Uche (dos Santos - 62' )
  • 07 Vietto

Substitutes

  • 09 dos Santos
  • 10 Campbell
  • 16 Dorado Ramírez
  • 19 Gómez Bardonado
  • 23 Moreno Balagueró
  • 24 Bailly
  • 40 Bañuz Antón

Barcelona

  • 01 ter Stegen
  • 02 Montoya
  • 03 Piqué Booked
  • 14 Mascherano (Rakitic - 76' )
  • 18 Alba
  • 12 Alcántara do Nascimento (Xavi - 65' )
  • 05 Busquets (Mathieu - 42' )
  • 08 Iniesta
  • 10 Messi
  • 09 Suárez
  • 11 Neymar

Substitutes

  • 04 Rakitic
  • 06 Xavi
  • 07 Pedro
  • 21 Adriano
  • 22 Dani Alves
  • 24 Mathieu
  • 25 Masip
Ref: David Fernández Borbalán
Att: 23,600

MATCH STATS

Possession64%36%90minsVillarrealBarcelona

Shots

179

On target

65

Corners

55

Fouls

126

2/01/2015

Board games are back, but they look different from what you remember

Board games are back in fashion with an increasing number of Australians hosting get-togethers, but it is not the traditional games like Monopoly attracting attention.


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Regular player Pat Gallagher recently moved house to help accommodate his burgeoning board game collection.
The extra space also meant he could purchase a specialist square table to host large-scale games nights.
At his north Canberra home, spread out on the table are a series of interchangeable streetscapes and menacing grey zombie figures.
"This is Zombicide, and it is the game that got us all started with the resurgence of board games," Mr Gallagher said.
"It was a game that came up on the Kickstarter [crowdsourcing] website about three years ago and we all really enjoyed playing it.
"Zombicide is fairly simple in that you go around trying to kill zombies, and not get eaten but it is very adaptable and different each time, plus it is also a cooperative game, rather than being competitive for individuals."
The annual Canberra gaming convention CanCon boosted its board games tables to 60 in response to growing national demand.
"We were full for the majority of the time we were open and that was really gratifying," CanCon board games librarian Terry Furness said.
"In fact we will be looking at expanding the size again next year."

Re-playability a big factor for modern board games

Do not limit your thoughts about board games to the classics of Monopoly or Scrabble.
Most modern board games have abandoned the traditional model of one dice being rolled for each turn and some even incorporate smart phone apps into the activities.
It changes the outlook of the game, the objectives and the aim of various games. So the game is never the same.
David Cannell, regular board game player
"These days a lot of board games have got shorter play times, no player eliminations and some real meaningful decisions," Mr Furness said.
"Instead of rolling the dice, moving to a location and doing what the board tells you, there are a lot of games now where you are in control of your destiny, and that often makes it a much more enjoyable experience."
Customers have been purchasing games with flexible outcomes and targeting extension packs.
"It is not just the same game that you play over again, and whoever gets the most numbers on the dice wins," regular gamer David Cannell said.
"Now it is so much more about strategy with different cards coming up at different times it changes the outlook of the game, the objectives and the aim of various games.
"So the game is never the same."
Keeping up with the immense number of new games hitting the market has been a challenge.
This year more than 800 games were released at Internationale Spieltage SPIEL in Essen, Germany, which is considered the largest public international convention for board and card games.
There are a generous supply of websites dedicated to board game geeks and even a popular YouTube based show, hosted by a former Star Trek star, has been explaining new titles.
Using the internet, many board game developers are selling direct to consumers using crowdfunding websites rather than approaching large mainstream retailers.
They are also offering smart phone apps so potential customers can try out the game basics before they buy the boxed table-top version.

'There's a board game for everyone'

Despite the online competition from computer games for younger players, board games still appeal to a wide range of age groups.
"Yes, with video games now you can put on a headset and chat, but it is board games that allow you to have your friends over and sit across from each other," Mr Furness said.
"It is a much more social experience, and I can certainly play the board games with my young niece and nephew but also with my parents."
Sarah Hull said her board game enthusiasm had sparked a new Christmas tradition.
"My mother now insists every Christmas held at her home that I bring along the train game, Ticket To Ride," she said.
"She loves it and makes everyone that comes play it.
"It is very different to the games we would have played when we were younger but the modern ones are a lot more interesting."

3D printing ready to revolutionize manufacturing

3D printing ready to revolutionize manufacturing
Items are manufactured using 3D printer at an expo in Shanghai, Sept 29, 2014. [Photo/IC]
After decades of development, 3D printing is now ready to revolutionize manufacturing
In October, the southern Chinese city of Changsha launched an industrial park. What sets it apart from other manufacturing centers is that it is poised to play a key role in the growth of Chinese technology.
The development is China's first hub for 3D printing technology, and was established with an immediate goal to produce 100 3D printers, and to triple the number of devices by 2016. Taking Changsha's lead, the cities of Wuhan and Zhuhai have announced plans to develop similar industry hubs.
Other countries in the Asia-Pacific region are also focusing on this fast-growing technology.
Over the next five years, Singapore plans to invest $500 million to boost skills in advanced manufacturing, focusing heavily on 3D printing.
Companies in Japan are already marketing inexpensive desktop 3D printers, while South Korean conglomerates are widely using the technology.
After decades of development, 3D printing has emerged as a viable and affordable technology, increasingly used by both the private and public sector. While problems remain, it could eventually revolutionize the manufacturing sector that many countries in Asia depend on for economic growth.
"3D printing has been around since the 1980s and has been expanding into mass production and specialized manufacturing since then," says Maria Smith, head of law firm Baker & McKenzie's trademarks practice in Hong Kong.
"The business is growing rapidly. In 2013, the (global) market size was estimated at $2.5 billion. It is projected to reach $16.2 billion by 2018."
3D printing, also known as additive manufacturing, has already been used to produce cars, buildings, guns and even artificial body parts.

"In the medical field, Chinese scientists have gone a step further, using live tissue to create organs and print ears, livers and kidneys," adds Smith.
As it becomes increasingly accessible and affordable to consumers, the technology is making it possible for products to quickly reach the market with less labor-intensive production required.
But these benefits are also a cause for concern. As 3D printing allows for the quick and easy copying of products, it is, in turn, presenting fresh challenges for regulators that have yet to adapt to the technology and for companies seeking to protect their intellectual property rights.
Once prohibitively expensive, the technology that makes 3D printing possible has evolved substantially.
Hewlett-Packard in October introduced a 3D printing technology 10 times faster and 10 times more precise than existing technologies. The Multi Jet Fusion 3D printer is set to launch in 2016.
In November, General Electric announced its plans to invest $32 million in developing an additive manufacturing facility in the United States-a factory that operates using 3D printers.
In Asia, XYZprinting, a company backed by Taiwan's electronic manufacturing conglomerate Kinpo Group, launched the world's first allin-one 3D printer with built-in scanner.
The da Vinci 1.0 AiO, weighing around 20 kilograms and resembling a large microwave, is available to buy for $799 through e-commerce websites including Newegg.com and Amazon.
A 3D printer introduced in late 2014 and developed by China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp is due to be mass-produced and available later this year.
Li & Fung, a Hong Kong-based consumer goods design, logistics and distribution company, has in recent years run a series of 3D printing initiatives. In 2013, it carried out Asia's first in-store 3D printing retail experience at a Toys R Us outlet in Hong Kong. Li& Fung has also explored the possibility of teaming up with other companies like Samsung Electronics Co to drive the technology further.
"With nearly 30 years of development, 3D printing technology is already quite mature," says Luo Jun, secretary-general of the World 3D Printing Technology Industry Alliance.

"It has been widely used for design in creative industries and printing teeth or bones in the biomedical field," adds Luo, who is also executive-president of the China 3D Printing Technology Industry Alliance. "Manufacturing and the aerospace industry use it to print complex moldings and components, or customized buildings."
Paul Shao, CEO of Trustworthy (Beijing) Technology, a 3D printer company that distributes systems developed by brands including 3Shape and Roland, says the region is quickly finding its way with 3D technology.
"In Asia, the markets in Japan, China and South Korea are more mature in terms of 3D printing, but we can see many regions like Southeast Asia and central Asia are joining the game in trading and applications," Shao says.
A country's 3D printing capacity is closely linked with its competitiveness in traditional manufacturing, he adds.
"Compared with the US, Europe and Japan, China is still at an infant stage in terms of innovative design, precision processing and economic power. We have much space to grow in many key technology areas such as laser and materials. But we are getting closer and closer," says Shao.
The evolution of supply chains is also driving the development of 3D printing. More brands are using just-in-time supply chains that make good use of the technology, getting products manufactured more quickly and into the hands of consumers.
In other regional markets, many of which rely on labor-intensive manufacturing for economic growth, the technology is less mature. Examples are Thailand and Malaysia, two middle-income countries moving up the value chain.
Thailand imports all of its 3D printers from the US, Canada or Germany because it lacks the technology to make its own, despite being a prodigious supplier of microchips.
But as Luo points out, the use of 3D technology in the region is likely to gather more pace.
"3D printing technology has been growing fast in China with more than 100 companies involved in industry, biomedicine, creative (industries), architecture, materials and software. China's 3D printing market has seen more than 40 percent growth for two consecutive years," says Luo.
China's Ministry of Science and Technology has included 3D printing technology in the National High-Tech Research and Development Program, which sponsors research in key high-technology fields. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, or MIIT, is accelerating the process to launch support policies.

"The Ministry of Education is planning to bring 3D printers into schools," Luo adds
In September, MIIT announced it was working on a plan to promote the industry.
"We will see greater usage of 3D printing with increased affordability encouraged through government initiatives," says Andy Leck, managing principal and head of the IP practice at Wong & Leow, a member firm of Baker & McKenzie in Singapore.
"Key examples of these initiatives include the Singapore government's Productivity and Innovation Credit scheme and the investment of $500 million over five years as part of the government's Future of Manufacturing program," he says.
All this attention, however, may be creating a bubble. After a boom in raising capital through 2013, many 3D printer manufacturers have performed badly, particularly in terms of their stock price.
The share prices of some major 3D printer producers have dropped significantly over the past year. US-based ExOne fell from $66 in January to $21 in November, Stratasys slid from $134 to $105 and 3D Systems plunged from $96 to $36. In the same period, Germany's Voxeljet dropped from $47 to $12.
A number of linked companies listed in China's A-share market, such as those involved in robotics, have not performed well, either.
One exception is Guangdong-based polymer materials company Silver Age, which saw its value grow from 6.16 billion yuan ($994 million) in January to 17.45 billion yuan in November.

And if IP issues and fears of a bubble are not enough of a concern, the industry in Asia still faces a couple of other challenges including the high cost of materials and a dependence on imports. Another hurdle is the lack of a mature business model for companies in the sector.

Grigor Dimitrov wins opening match at Australian Open

Grigor Dimitrov wins opening match at Australian Open
Grigor Dimitrov of Bulgaria celebrates his win against Jeremy Chardy of France during their men's singles second round match at the Brisbane International tennis tournament in Brisbane, January 7, 2015. [Photo/Agencies]


MELBOURNE, Australia - Tenth-seeded Grigor Dimitrov defeated Germany's Dustin Brown 6-2, 6-3, 6 -2 in a 69-minute first-round match Monday at the Australian Open.
Playing on the second show court at Melbourne Park on a sunny but cool opening day, Dimitrov had little difficulty advancing to the second round and a match against either Lukas Lacko of Slovakia or Maximo Gonzalez of Argentina.
Dimitrov, nicknamed "Baby Fed" because of the similarity of his game to Roger Federer's, won titles on three surfaces last year and reached his first major semifinal at Wimbledon, where he beat 2013 champion Andy Murray in the quarterfinals before losing to eventual champion Novak Djokovic.

Last year at Melbourne Park, Dimtrov reached the quarterfinals before losing to Rafael Nadal.

Brazilian midfielder Conca set to play in China

Rio de Janeiro - Fluminense's Dario Conca will play in the Chinese Super League after the Brazilian club accepted a proposal from Shanghai SIPG for the midfielder, Brazilian media has reported.
Brazilian midfielder Conca set to play in China
Dario Conca is seen in this file photo during the 2013 season in Chinese Super League with Guangzhou Evergrande.[Photo/Xinhua]
The Argentine player will receive 56 million reals for a two-year contract with Shanghai SIPG, which just signed former England team coach Sven-Goran Eriksson, reports Xinhua.
Conca, who came back to Fluminense in 2014 from Chinese club Guangzhou Evergrande, is said to be unhappy at the Brazilian club due to a delay in the payment over image rights after investment group Unimed parted ways with the club in the end of last year.
The image-rights revenue takes up the majority of Conca's salary at Fluminense.
Although the final contract hasn't been signed between the two sides, Brazilian media believed that there is no hurdle in Conca's transfer after Fluminense accepted the proposal. Unimed, who also owns the economic rights of Conca, has already authorised the transfer.
Amid the financial crisis at Fluminense as a result of the withdrawal of Unimed, veteran Brazilian striker Fred, who also face a delay in payment over image-rights, is also set to go to China.
An unnamed Chinese club has made a proposal for Fred and he can leave the club soon. Fred had a lacklustre performance at last year's World Cup, but the 31-year-old was the top scorer in the Brazilian league last year.
Conca traveled in a separate flight back to Brazil Monday after Fluminense ended their pre-season training in the United States. Conca was said to be informed of the offer from China during his stay in the United States.
Conca made a late appearance at Fluminense's Thursday's regular training.
Conca is well known in China after a successful two-and-a-half years spell with Guangzhou Evergrande that ended in December 2013.
He returned to his former club Fluminense last January and scored 16 goals from 59 matches across all competitions.
His move will mark another Brazilian among the growing ranks of South Americans joining the Chinese Super League.
Last week, two Chinese teams announced major signings with Brasileirao's high-profile players.

Brazil international midfielder Ricardo Goulart from Cruzeiro has signed a four-year deal with Guangzhou Evergrande, while Brazil striker Diego Tardelli from Atletico Mineiro signed with Shandong Luneng.