Saturday, 25 January 2014

Japanese Puzzle Box "Very Very" Fun and Secure!! Amazon and Review..!!

Japanese Puzzle Box

This insanely intricate wood veneer box from Japan requires its owner to remember a sequence of exact steps in order to open it and access its contents.

The Japanese puzzle boxes, one type of handmade wooden Puzzle box within our reaches are particularly highly collectible. All have extraordinary detail and display a beautiful art form that challenge you to solve the equation of opening the puzzle box. Each puzzle box ordered will be carefully packaged to make sure that your puzzle box arrives to you safely.


Our 100% Family Owned and Operated Store pledges to continually search out to provide you with a widest selection of Puzzle Boxes that will make it was for you to start or add to your collection.

The traditional Japaneses puzzle box can be relatively simple to very challenging and almost impossible to open unless you follow the exact step by step procedure designed specifically for the particular box. Original instructions are included with all of our Japanese puzzle boxes, secret boxes, and trick boxes. Often these instructions or diagrams are in Japanese, but they are illustrated and easy to follow.
To solve a Japanese puzzle box, one or more sliding parts in one end are moved, allowing the other end to be moved slightly. This partially unlocks a side panel, which allows other pieces to be moved. These, in turn, partially unlocks the top or bottom. This method is continues, moving around the box, until the top panel can slide, opening the box. Some of the more expensive boxes may allow both top and bottom panels to open, or have other secret compartments or drawers within. Interestingly, Japanese Puzzle Boxes have no lock and seemingly no opening. However, each box crafted includes very tricky mechanisms.
Most Japanese personal secret boxes have a variety of difficulties, ranging from 4 to 66 moves. A few large puzzle boxes have exceptional numbers of moves, such as 78, 122, 119, or 125. 






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Thursday, 16 January 2014

Motivation and Inspriation Words...

Think EXTRAORDINARY. Do it NORMALLY...

Designer Philippe Starck on persuading clients: “I’m very good at explaining. I don’t work like a diva. I don’t say, “Oh my God, that must be pink,” and refuse to discuss it… I am cuckoo, yes. I am the king of intuition. But I am also a serious guy. I explain in a clear way. And then, even if it’s something that looks completely different than expected, something completely against mainstream thinking, clients understand. I explain that it might look strange but why, given the two to five years it will take for development, it will for so many reasons be exactly the right thing to do… And then the clients agree, always, 100%.”

Justice Sandra Day O’Connor on having long-term colleagues: “Treat people well. Don’t mislead them. Don’t be prickly. Don’t say things that are aggravating. Try to be as agreeable as you can be. Try to be helpful rather than harmful. Try to cooperate.”

Historian David McCullough on hard work: “When the founders wrote about life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, they didn’t mean longer vacations and more comfortable hammocks. They meant the pursuit of learning. The love of learning. The pursuit of improvement and excellence. I keep telling students, ‘Find work you love. Don’t concern yourself overly about how much money is involved or whether you’re ever going to be famous.’ …In hard work is happiness.”

Hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons on meditating twice a day: “Every creative idea, every second of happiness, is from stillness…. But the way you move around the world has nothing to do with the stillness in your heart. Moving meditation—that’s what we have to practice. It doesn’t mean you have to move slow; you just have to see the world in slow motion.”

Golfer Arnold Palmer on learning humility: “One time at Augusta, I was going into the last hole with a one-shot lead to win the Masters, and a friend from the gallery hollered at me, so I walked over and accepted congratulations. And then I proceeded to make six on the hole and lose. My father had warned me about that. I was told all my life not to accept congratulations until it’s over.”

President Mary Robinson on being frank: “At every stage, it’s [a] passion for human rights that has prompted me to speak truth to power, to stand up to bullies, to be prepared to criticize even the United States after 9/11. People told me it wouldn’t help my career as high commissioner, but it seemed much more important to do the job than to try to keep the job.”

Poet Maya Angelou on courage: “One isn’t born with courage. One develops it by doing small courageous things—in the way that if one sets out to pick up a 100-pound bag of rice, one would be advised to start with a five-pound bag, then 10 pounds, then 20 pounds, and so forth, until one builds up enough muscle to lift the 100-pound bag. It’s the same way with courage. You do small courageous things that require some mental and spiritual exertion.”

Cartoonist Scott Adams on using his MBA: ”When the comic strip first came out, it showed Dilbert in a variety of settings—not just the office. I didn’t really know what was working, because I had no direct contact with readers… So way back at the dawn of the internet, I started putting my e-mail address in the margin of the strip… I found out that there was a common theme: People loved it when Dilbert was in the office, and they liked it a lot less when he was at home or just hanging around. So Dilbert became an office-based comic, and that change made it all work.”

Chef Nobu Matsuhisa on starting as an apprentice: “I was 18 and didn’t know anything about fish. My mentor taught me the basics. For the first three years, I didn’t make sushi; I washed dishes and cleaned the fish. But if I asked questions, he always answered. I learned a lot of patience.”

Saturday Night Live producer Lorne Michaels on hiring: “I wouldn’t choose anyone whose side I didn’t want to be on. It isn’t like we hire 12 and figure six will work. We don’t bring in anybody we’re not rooting for. Sometimes they succeed in week five, but for most people it’s two, three, four years before they become who they’re going to be. You have to allow for that growth.”







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Sunday, 5 January 2014

for those Who Can't able to Speak, CAN SPEAK via VocalID..!! iOS and Android on the way...


VocalID creates a realistic synthetic voice for those who can’t speak
 

It is now entirely possible that Stephen Hawking will one day not have to apologize for his American accent when he meets someone, thanks to an incredible synthetic voice system called VocalID.

Establishing a synthetic voice for someone who can’t speak is relatively easy today, but there are only so many artificial voices out there. Software generated vocal patterns are repetitive and flat, making it difficult to convey nuances or emotion during a conversation, or even to have a voice that is uniquely yours.


There’s a great deal of work in the human body that happens in order to create a unique voice, which is why it is so difficult to simulate through software alone. But the team at VocalID have figured out the best way to give someone who has lost the ability to speak, partially or completely, a human sounding voice again.

VocalID creates its finished product by combining whatever is left of the target user’s voice with voices from surrogate donor voices to create a personalized synthetic voice. This could be recordings of the user’s voice, or actual samples taken from other people (donors). The surrogate donor’s voice is used to capture the sounds that the user is unable to make on their own, but the source features from the user are applied as the dominant set. This means that while the voice may not 100% belong to the user, the same inflections and tone structure that the original voice was capable of delivering would be present in the synthetic version.

Voice ID is currently accepting applications for voice donors, technical expertise donors, and business expertise donors on their website. They are open to just about any form of contribution, and seem quite open about how they create their synthetic voices. Currently their synthetic voices are only available on Windows systems, but support for Android and iOS is on the way.

The long term applications for something like VoiceID are incredible. Even if you move away from the immediate desire to provide a voice for the voiceless, this technology could be licensed for personalized translations from one language to another and make it possible for someone to deliver something other than a robotic tone.

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