Saturday, December 29, 2007

8 Steps to Become a Master Day Trader

By Arindam Chattopadhyaya



Success in any form of trading implies that you are betting your wits against every other person in the market. Every penny you make is on the back of someone else's losses. This is also true for day, future and forex trading.

Day trading is full time job and you want to make your living on day trading in stock or currency, you need to follow followings:

1. It is unrealistic to make profit from day one in stock or currency trading. You will make mistakes and you need to learn from your mistakes. Do not get depressed if you loose money during your initial period.

2. You need to be ready while market is trending. These are great opportunity to make big profits.

3. You need to work hard to limit your losses while day trading. This is more important than make big profits.

4. You should always set yourself a limit on how much you are prepared to lose on any particular trade, and set your stop loss at that level.

5. You should have 100% confidence on your chosen method of trading. Remember that success is nothing but strong desire.

6. It's your success so learn to hold yourself accountable if things don't go the way you want them to. You should be disciplined, determined, persistent, and most of all enjoy day trading in your chosen market like currency, stock or commodity.

7. You need to do intensive study and master all the tools like charting, Fibonacci sequence, and technical analysis to become a consistent trader.

8. Best day trading tips are to manage your fear and greed.

Let's discuss more on trading psychology

The fear of loss and the fear of missing out are two fears for all traders.

If you sell stocks out of fear probably, you will fail to capitalize and recover fully on the trade.

The fear of missing out forces people to abandon their rules so that they don't lose out on another major stock move.

The best suggestion to mitigate these risks is to have a defined entry and exit criteria as a part of your trading strategy.

Other side of fear is greed. Greed comes from overconfidence. Traders need to teach themselves on how not to loss focus from their trading rules.

Day trading is like any other skill, which you need to learn and practice. Only proper study and disciplined practice can make you perfect. First, I suggest you to read an quality book like "Master Trader" to understand all the methods of day trading. You can buy Master trader on line and download it at your computer. Another smart move will be to subscribe to doubling stock newsletter. Now, you will get weekly recommendation of two hot penny stocks per week. You invest some of these recommended stocks using your own day trading rules. You can get other tips on penny stock investment at my blog on penny stock trading information.

Day Trading Stock Symbols - How To Decipher The Cryptic Day Trading Stock Symbols!

By Abhishek Agarwal


Ticking symbols refer to the letter system which are representative of the stocks. They are needed to monitor and find security info. It is useful if you are offering a quote because you might be asked to enter a symbol for the transaction. These numbers and letters contain vital security information

The tick symbol of a mutual fund is composed of five letters that end with an "X". A prime example is FMAGX which represents Fidelity Magellan fund and the VFINX represents Vanguard's Index Five Hundred fund. If this acts as the funds on the money market, three letters ending with an 'X' are used instead..

Stock symbols which are listed on the NYSE or AMEX exchanges consist of three bills of exchange, while the Nasdaq uses four letters. But 5 letters are made use of in the case of Nasdaq when the stock contains more than 1 issue of a common stock, where the fifth letter would have a defined meaning.

The 5th letterticker symbols and what they mean.

A for Class A, B for Class B, C for Class C except for the issuer of qualification, the new edition by D, E on deposits SEC is delinquent, F denotes foreign, the first of convertible bonds G, H second convertible bond , I third convertible bonds, J denotes voting, K denotes Nonvoting , various situations L.

M preferred shares of the fourth class, N the preferred shares of the third class, O on preferred shares of the second class, P denotes preferred shares of the first class, the bankruptcy proceedings Q, R designates rights, S shares of beneficial interest,T denotes rights or warrants, mutual fund X, Y denotes ADR also known as American Depository Receipt, with Z for various miscellany situations.

Some stock symbols seem funny to some of us. It can be confusing when you get these symbols from your exchange.

Some of these are - AFL.BO invest a football locker room, CHIC is a trends stock, and CRZY is a title which is very volatile, CTCO.NS your money is being sought by the city of thugs , GEEK do something to oppose CHIC Stock, DABU.NS Saturday night lives must be avoided or forgotten, BNCO.NS honest focuses on the management of a company by a person.

EMCO.NS more disadvantages on a identity is moving, FUN investing stocks is both fun and play, FUSEX explanation is not necessary, GASEX mutual fund which is fighting flatulent, GODD people investing directly on future sins, suggests careful HIT because a hit decisions could be held in inventory, HUMP forget pump and dumping of stocks regimes, ICSEX speech by saying that it is lot better to see people dead or make love in Alaska, investor or IMAN MAN with a skewed sex, INSEX fund a lot of movement.

LMNE short of a title, because it could go wrong, LUV expression of what's love got to do with it, NEB. As likes stocks, stocks MORE.BO make you sweat, MRB.SN company is need for a BS_er what is good, MRFIX adding portfolio of the fund during breaks, PNSEX mutual funds strange golden shower, RATL toy manufacturer baby SRRY apologies to the stocks invested, URI multiple personalities stock WMNXX money market funds favorite by playboys and WSob stocks are becoming hot like sushi.

A little research will tell you what these symbols really mean. . Be aware, at times these symbols may be modified and changed so do remain up to date.

Abhishek has an uncanny insight into Trading! Visit his website www.Trading-Masters.com and download his FREE Trading Report and learn some amazing Trading tips and tricks for FREE. His tips would save you thousands and make you better at Trading! But hurry, only limited Free copies available! www.Trading-Masters.com

Important Factors You Should Know About Before Venturing Into Day Trading

By Abhishek Agarwal

Winning is not something that comes by fluke. Whatever the business that you are in, planning, patience and diligence is what gets you there, and day trading is no exception to this.

Day trading definitely is risky business, and that is why many traders fear getting into it. There are chances you will lose a huge amount of money in a second, just as there are chances you will make big profits as well. As an indication of profits you have made in the day, a green circle appears on your card, and that's what one loves to see! If you've made losses, they are indicated on your card by the appearance of a red circle, and that means bad news. If you often see these red circles, you need a new plan of action quickly.

Here are some ideas for you if you often see those reds:

Get yourself a mentor

Its great having a guru, someone who has experience in the business of the day trading. It must be someone who knows the ups and downs of the trade . He should be ready to let you in on his secrets. In addition,he needs to be an enthusiastic guide as he puts you on track..

Look for the following factors when you are getting into the business of day trading:

1. Monetary Resources. This doesn't mean you must be an extremely rich individual. You simply need an adequate capital to see you through your initial struggle. In addition, you must also have other means of income. A back up is always good when you are venturing into new territory.

2. Experience. You need a guru who can pass on some of his experience on to you. But it is unwise to rely solely on the judgments on another. Start applying what you learn to make your own decisions.

3. Personality. You must be a go getter and be bold when you enter this competitive business. It is not for the shy and the lazy for sure.

4. Knowledge Gather all possible information and useful on the subject. Get some good books and journals on the trading business. In your time off, look on the internet to get updates on the market. From the information gathered, it is important to select what applies to the stocks you have in hand.

An overload of information is way better than having limited information. Ensure that the information that you receive is applied in your trading.

5. Willingness To Take Risks If you are over cautious it may well work against you. Take a chance here and there, but remember not to go past your personal limit. The best knowledge that one can get is through first hand experience, even if it is a trial and error method.

Try your hand at different strategies to pinpoint what suits you the most.

There is a solution to every problem. If you begin trading with an attitude of positivity and have been properly prepared then you can avoid noticed red circles on the chart.

Abhishek has an uncanny insight into Trading! Visit his website www.Trading-Masters.com and download his FREE Trading Report and learn some amazing Trading tips and tricks for FREE. His tips would save you thousands and make you better at Trading! But hurry, only limited Free copies available! www.Trading-Masters.com

36 Hours in Bali

Published: June 24, 2007
Enjoying the sunset at Ku Dé Ta, a chic Bali nightspot.

Correction Appended

SAY Bali and most people think paradise. There are stunning sunsets, sculpted rice terraces and a temple on almost every corner. And for less-spiritual seekers, this steamy Indonesian island also has great surfing and a rollicking nightlife. Sure, it's gotten pretty touristy, especially on the pub crawl along Kuta Beach, where beer-swilling Australians rule. And while recent terrorist bombings have rattled Bali's blissful pace (it is a Hindu-majority island in a Muslim-majority nation), they have done little to temper its popularity or discourage super-chic resorts from being built. Paradise, after all, is as close as the nearest temple, finding yourself on your knees with a blue flower pressed between your fingertips, asking for blessings from Brahma or one of the other gods.

Friday

3 p.m.
1) MONKEYING AROUND

There's nothing like 200 macaques grooming each other, snuggling together and nibbling on small bananas to make you realize you're not in Kansas anymore. To find the Sacred Monkey Forest Sanctuary (Jalan Monkey Forest, Padangtegal, Ubud; 62-361-971304; www.monkeyforestubud.com) drive an hour north of Kuta Beach to the town of Ubud, often called the cultural heart of Bali. The monkeys, the town's most beloved residents, live in a dense, jungley stretch of green at the southern edge of town, complete with its own temple. A word to the wise: Leave your snacks at home and don't buy any bananas on the way in unless you enjoy being mauled by possibly rabid little tykes. When it comes to bananas, the monkeys will win. Admission is 10,000 rupiah, or about $1.10 at 9,270 rupiah to the dollar.

4:30 p.m.
2) FOUR HANDS BEATS TWO

It's said that labor is cheaper than electricity on Bali, so why not book a four-handed massage at Spa Hati (Jalan Raya Andong 14, Peliatan, Ubud; 62-361-977-578; www.spahati.com), a stone and thatched-roof compound at the edge of town. Add in a lulur body scrub — a traditional Javanese blend of rice flour and herbs — for 90 minutes of rapture (225,000 rupiah). Afterward, the unhurried staff lets you relax for as long as you want in the hot tub, listening to little frogs make big noises in the rice paddy next door. And about that cheap labor: spa profits help support the Bali Hati Foundation, which runs community programs, including a school for local children.

7:30 p.m.
3) DANCE, DANCE, DANCE

Bali is brimming with fire dances, mask dances, trance dances, monster dances and puppet shows, all of which have been refined over the centuries to the point that eyeballs, fingertips and toes all move in elaborate choreographed precision. On a typical night in Ubud you can take your pick from a half-dozen different shows. It's worth ducking into the Ubud Palace (Jalan Raya Ubud; 62-361975057; 80,000 rupiah) to watch good and evil duke it out in the Barong dance. Set in a Balinese-style pavilion, the dance is performed by two fat guys whose choreographed fight scenes draw inevitable comparisons to the WWF.

9 p.m.
4) GO FOR THE GRILL

For tasty Balinese food in a relaxed setting, expatriates flock to Naughty Nuri's Warung (Jalan Raya Sanggingan, across from the Neka Art Museum; 62-361-977547), a cozy hangout opened by Isnuri Suryatmi and her husband, Brian Kenny, who grew up in New Jersey. It does justice to classic Balinese dishes like chicken sate (27,000 rupiah) and nasi goreng — Indonesian fried rice with vegetables and meat (17,000 rupiah). But the main draw of this grubby little warung, or food stall, is the grill. There are succulent pork chops, steaks from Australia and even great hamburgers — and something uncommon in Asia, a good microbrew: Storm Pale Ale (12,000 rupiah).

Saturday

9 a.m.
5) GET DOWN IN THE RIVER

Most of the super-luxury hotels in Ubud are built along the top of the gorge that the Ayung River runs through. There's a good reason for that: the views are gorgeous. Down on the river, climb aboard a rubber raft and watch the thick vines, low-flying swallows and waterfalls go by. Bali Adventure Tours (62-361-721480; www.baliadventuretours.com) runs 90-minute trips down the river starting at $60 for a morning trip that includes a basic lunch of rice and egg rolls.

2:30 p.m.
6) MUSEUM MILE

Ubud's artistic appeal is, for the most part, historical. Its reputation dates to the 1930s when Western artists and intellectuals like Walter Spies, Colin McPhee and Rudolf Bonnet moved in, boosting the local arts scene and sparking foreign interest in this tiny island. To understand that history and see some fine examples of Balinese art, start at the Neka Art Museum (Jalan Raya Sanggingan, Campuhan; 62-361-975074; www.museumneka.com), which was founded in 1982 by Suteja Neka, an art dealer whose son now runs the slick Komaneka Fine Art Gallery (Jalan Monkey Forest; 62-361-976090; gallery.komaneka.com). For some high camp, make a quick stop at the Blanco Renaissance Museum (Jalan Campuhan; 62-361-975502; www.blancobali.com); the only thing grander than the peccadilloes of Antonio Blanco, a Spanish painter who settled in Bali in 1952, was his ego.

5:30 p.m.
7) BEST SHOW IN TOWN

Ubud closes early. By 11 p.m., everyone is home, leaving the streets to bands of marauding but basically harmless dogs. If you want to make a night of it, head south to Seminyak, a sophisticated beachside alternative just north of Kuta. The hour-long taxi runs about 150,000 to 200,000 rupiah ($16 to $22). For a front-row seat for the dazzling sunset, grab a chair at Breeze, a sleek beachside bar and restaurant at the Samaya Hotel (Jalan Laksmana; 62-361-731149, www.thesamayabali.com), and order a glass of wine (about 70,000 rupiah). The teak deck juts out so close to the surf you can almost feel the foam from the breakers.

7 p.m.
8) BUST THAT BIKINI

When the last ray of sunlight has faded, head next door for dinner at La Lucciola (Kaya Ayu Beach, Temple Petitenget, Kerobokan; 62-361-730838), a popular beachfront spot, for rich Italian fare like prawn and snapper pie with truffled potatoes (125,000 rupiah) and orecchiette with pancetta and gorgonzola (80,000 rupiah). There might be a line, but don't worry. Sit at the bar for free hors d'oeuvres and watch the frangipani flowers fall around you.

9:30 p.m.
9) BLING IS THE THING

Ratchet things up among the macramé-clad, flash-bulb popping babes at Ku Dé Ta (Jalan Laksmana 9, Seminyak; 62-361-736969; www.kudeta.net), a modern and trendy spot that faces the surf . It's shamelessly sceney — a DVD is sold showing highlights of the high season. Score a beachfront chaise and watch the waves, illuminated with floodlights, come crashing in. After hours, all roads lead to the Double Six Club (Jalan Double Six, Blue Ocean Boulevard, Seminyak; 62-361-733067; www.doublesixclub.com; 70,000 rupiah admission), which sports a giant dance floor and bungee jumping on weekend nights. But don't show up before 3 a.m.

Sunday

10 a.m.
10) ESPRESSO IT

If for some unfathomable reason you tire of Bali's thick, rich coffee, duck into Tutmak Warung (Jalan Dewi Sita, Ubud; 62-361-975754 ) for an iced latte (14,500 rupiah). It's a favorite of local expatriates — a casual, breezy place that looks out on a scraggly soccer field frequented by local kids.

11 a.m.
11) PARADISE WITHIN PARADISE

The six-hectare Botanic Garden Ubud (Kutuh Kaja, Ubud; 62-361-970951; www.botanicgardenbali.com) opened last summer — a magical park with white fairy lilies, weeping figs, a labyrinth, banana twist orchids and a miniature rainforest. Stay for lunch at the Chocolate House Cafe, which is housed in a 130-year-old jogglo, a traditional Javanese hut made of teak wood. The guava and passion fruit juices (12,000 rupiah) are garden fresh and the chicken kutu kaja, which is cooked slowly in banana leaves and served with red Tabanan rice, is a local specialty (42,000 rupiah). The menu rotates, but if it has it, don't miss the coconut and jackfruit ice puter, ice cream made with coconut milk in a hand-cranked drum.

2 p.m.
12) SARONG AS ART

Ubud is famous for art, which is probably why an awful lot of drek is now on sale. Fear not. For the good stuff, start at the Seniwati Gallery of Art by Women (Jalan Sriwedari 2b, Banjar Taman; 62-361-975485; www.seniwatigallery.com), which Mary Northmore, the British-born wife of Abdul Aziz, a prominent Indonesian artist, founded in 1991 after she was told by several Indonesian art experts that “Balinese women don't paint.” For textiles, stop in at Threads of Life (Jalan Kajeng 24; 62-361-972187; www.threadsoflife.com), which commissions local weavers to make textiles the same ways their grandmothers did, which is to say painstakingly. Even if you're not in the market for a handspun sarong for 4.3 million rupiah, it's well worth the visit.

The Basics

Cathay Pacific flies from Kennedy Airport to Denpasar, Bali, via Hong Kong. A recent Web search showed fares starting at around $1,500. From Ngurah Rai Airport in Denpasar, a taxi to Ubud costs 150,000 rupiah, or about $16 at 9,270 rupiah to the dollar. Taxis can also be hired for half-days or longer; negotiate a price in advance, but it should run about 350,000 rupiah.

Central Ubud can feel like an outdoor mall. If you're on a budget and want rice fields instead of retail, stay south of the Monkey Forest. Alam Shanti and its two sister hotels, Alam Indah and Alam Jiwa are situated along Jalan Nyuh Butan in tranquil Nyuh Kuning village (62-361-974629; www.alamindahbali.com). Rooms are $50 to $175.

For luxurious solitude, try the Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan (62-361-977577; www.fourseasons.com/sayan/). The hotel was built around a rice paddy, and villas come with private plunge pools. The hotel's Jati (Bahasa for teak) Bar is perched on the edge of the Ayung River and an excellent place for a sunset cocktail. Rooms start at $460.

Correction: July 1, 2007

The 36 Hours column last Sunday about Bali misspelled the name of a popular place there for coffee drinks. It is Tutmak Warung, not Tukmak.


36 Hours in Bali

Published: June 24, 2007
Enjoying the sunset at Ku Dé Ta, a chic Bali nightspot.

Correction Appended

SAY Bali and most people think paradise. There are stunning sunsets, sculpted rice terraces and a temple on almost every corner. And for less-spiritual seekers, this steamy Indonesian island also has great surfing and a rollicking nightlife. Sure, it's gotten pretty touristy, especially on the pub crawl along Kuta Beach, where beer-swilling Australians rule. And while recent terrorist bombings have rattled Bali's blissful pace (it is a Hindu-majority island in a Muslim-majority nation), they have done little to temper its popularity or discourage super-chic resorts from being built. Paradise, after all, is as close as the nearest temple, finding yourself on your knees with a blue flower pressed between your fingertips, asking for blessings from Brahma or one of the other gods.

Friday

3 p.m.
1) MONKEYING AROUND

There's nothing like 200 macaques grooming each other, snuggling together and nibbling on small bananas to make you realize you're not in Kansas anymore. To find the Sacred Monkey Forest Sanctuary (Jalan Monkey Forest, Padangtegal, Ubud; 62-361-971304; www.monkeyforestubud.com) drive an hour north of Kuta Beach to the town of Ubud, often called the cultural heart of Bali. The monkeys, the town's most beloved residents, live in a dense, jungley stretch of green at the southern edge of town, complete with its own temple. A word to the wise: Leave your snacks at home and don't buy any bananas on the way in unless you enjoy being mauled by possibly rabid little tykes. When it comes to bananas, the monkeys will win. Admission is 10,000 rupiah, or about $1.10 at 9,270 rupiah to the dollar.

4:30 p.m.
2) FOUR HANDS BEATS TWO

It's said that labor is cheaper than electricity on Bali, so why not book a four-handed massage at Spa Hati (Jalan Raya Andong 14, Peliatan, Ubud; 62-361-977-578; www.spahati.com), a stone and thatched-roof compound at the edge of town. Add in a lulur body scrub — a traditional Javanese blend of rice flour and herbs — for 90 minutes of rapture (225,000 rupiah). Afterward, the unhurried staff lets you relax for as long as you want in the hot tub, listening to little frogs make big noises in the rice paddy next door. And about that cheap labor: spa profits help support the Bali Hati Foundation, which runs community programs, including a school for local children.

7:30 p.m.
3) DANCE, DANCE, DANCE

Bali is brimming with fire dances, mask dances, trance dances, monster dances and puppet shows, all of which have been refined over the centuries to the point that eyeballs, fingertips and toes all move in elaborate choreographed precision. On a typical night in Ubud you can take your pick from a half-dozen different shows. It's worth ducking into the Ubud Palace (Jalan Raya Ubud; 62-361975057; 80,000 rupiah) to watch good and evil duke it out in the Barong dance. Set in a Balinese-style pavilion, the dance is performed by two fat guys whose choreographed fight scenes draw inevitable comparisons to the WWF.

9 p.m.
4) GO FOR THE GRILL

For tasty Balinese food in a relaxed setting, expatriates flock to Naughty Nuri's Warung (Jalan Raya Sanggingan, across from the Neka Art Museum; 62-361-977547), a cozy hangout opened by Isnuri Suryatmi and her husband, Brian Kenny, who grew up in New Jersey. It does justice to classic Balinese dishes like chicken sate (27,000 rupiah) and nasi goreng — Indonesian fried rice with vegetables and meat (17,000 rupiah). But the main draw of this grubby little warung, or food stall, is the grill. There are succulent pork chops, steaks from Australia and even great hamburgers — and something uncommon in Asia, a good microbrew: Storm Pale Ale (12,000 rupiah).

Saturday

9 a.m.
5) GET DOWN IN THE RIVER

Most of the super-luxury hotels in Ubud are built along the top of the gorge that the Ayung River runs through. There's a good reason for that: the views are gorgeous. Down on the river, climb aboard a rubber raft and watch the thick vines, low-flying swallows and waterfalls go by. Bali Adventure Tours (62-361-721480; www.baliadventuretours.com) runs 90-minute trips down the river starting at $60 for a morning trip that includes a basic lunch of rice and egg rolls.

2:30 p.m.
6) MUSEUM MILE

Ubud's artistic appeal is, for the most part, historical. Its reputation dates to the 1930s when Western artists and intellectuals like Walter Spies, Colin McPhee and Rudolf Bonnet moved in, boosting the local arts scene and sparking foreign interest in this tiny island. To understand that history and see some fine examples of Balinese art, start at the Neka Art Museum (Jalan Raya Sanggingan, Campuhan; 62-361-975074; www.museumneka.com), which was founded in 1982 by Suteja Neka, an art dealer whose son now runs the slick Komaneka Fine Art Gallery (Jalan Monkey Forest; 62-361-976090; gallery.komaneka.com). For some high camp, make a quick stop at the Blanco Renaissance Museum (Jalan Campuhan; 62-361-975502; www.blancobali.com); the only thing grander than the peccadilloes of Antonio Blanco, a Spanish painter who settled in Bali in 1952, was his ego.

5:30 p.m.
7) BEST SHOW IN TOWN

Ubud closes early. By 11 p.m., everyone is home, leaving the streets to bands of marauding but basically harmless dogs. If you want to make a night of it, head south to Seminyak, a sophisticated beachside alternative just north of Kuta. The hour-long taxi runs about 150,000 to 200,000 rupiah ($16 to $22). For a front-row seat for the dazzling sunset, grab a chair at Breeze, a sleek beachside bar and restaurant at the Samaya Hotel (Jalan Laksmana; 62-361-731149, www.thesamayabali.com), and order a glass of wine (about 70,000 rupiah). The teak deck juts out so close to the surf you can almost feel the foam from the breakers.

7 p.m.
8) BUST THAT BIKINI

When the last ray of sunlight has faded, head next door for dinner at La Lucciola (Kaya Ayu Beach, Temple Petitenget, Kerobokan; 62-361-730838), a popular beachfront spot, for rich Italian fare like prawn and snapper pie with truffled potatoes (125,000 rupiah) and orecchiette with pancetta and gorgonzola (80,000 rupiah). There might be a line, but don't worry. Sit at the bar for free hors d'oeuvres and watch the frangipani flowers fall around you.

9:30 p.m.
9) BLING IS THE THING

Ratchet things up among the macramé-clad, flash-bulb popping babes at Ku Dé Ta (Jalan Laksmana 9, Seminyak; 62-361-736969; www.kudeta.net), a modern and trendy spot that faces the surf . It's shamelessly sceney — a DVD is sold showing highlights of the high season. Score a beachfront chaise and watch the waves, illuminated with floodlights, come crashing in. After hours, all roads lead to the Double Six Club (Jalan Double Six, Blue Ocean Boulevard, Seminyak; 62-361-733067; www.doublesixclub.com; 70,000 rupiah admission), which sports a giant dance floor and bungee jumping on weekend nights. But don't show up before 3 a.m.

Sunday

10 a.m.
10) ESPRESSO IT

If for some unfathomable reason you tire of Bali's thick, rich coffee, duck into Tutmak Warung (Jalan Dewi Sita, Ubud; 62-361-975754 ) for an iced latte (14,500 rupiah). It's a favorite of local expatriates — a casual, breezy place that looks out on a scraggly soccer field frequented by local kids.

11 a.m.
11) PARADISE WITHIN PARADISE

The six-hectare Botanic Garden Ubud (Kutuh Kaja, Ubud; 62-361-970951; www.botanicgardenbali.com) opened last summer — a magical park with white fairy lilies, weeping figs, a labyrinth, banana twist orchids and a miniature rainforest. Stay for lunch at the Chocolate House Cafe, which is housed in a 130-year-old jogglo, a traditional Javanese hut made of teak wood. The guava and passion fruit juices (12,000 rupiah) are garden fresh and the chicken kutu kaja, which is cooked slowly in banana leaves and served with red Tabanan rice, is a local specialty (42,000 rupiah). The menu rotates, but if it has it, don't miss the coconut and jackfruit ice puter, ice cream made with coconut milk in a hand-cranked drum.

2 p.m.
12) SARONG AS ART

Ubud is famous for art, which is probably why an awful lot of drek is now on sale. Fear not. For the good stuff, start at the Seniwati Gallery of Art by Women (Jalan Sriwedari 2b, Banjar Taman; 62-361-975485; www.seniwatigallery.com), which Mary Northmore, the British-born wife of Abdul Aziz, a prominent Indonesian artist, founded in 1991 after she was told by several Indonesian art experts that “Balinese women don't paint.” For textiles, stop in at Threads of Life (Jalan Kajeng 24; 62-361-972187; www.threadsoflife.com), which commissions local weavers to make textiles the same ways their grandmothers did, which is to say painstakingly. Even if you're not in the market for a handspun sarong for 4.3 million rupiah, it's well worth the visit.

The Basics

Cathay Pacific flies from Kennedy Airport to Denpasar, Bali, via Hong Kong. A recent Web search showed fares starting at around $1,500. From Ngurah Rai Airport in Denpasar, a taxi to Ubud costs 150,000 rupiah, or about $16 at 9,270 rupiah to the dollar. Taxis can also be hired for half-days or longer; negotiate a price in advance, but it should run about 350,000 rupiah.

Central Ubud can feel like an outdoor mall. If you're on a budget and want rice fields instead of retail, stay south of the Monkey Forest. Alam Shanti and its two sister hotels, Alam Indah and Alam Jiwa are situated along Jalan Nyuh Butan in tranquil Nyuh Kuning village (62-361-974629; www.alamindahbali.com). Rooms are $50 to $175.

For luxurious solitude, try the Four Seasons Resort Bali at Sayan (62-361-977577; www.fourseasons.com/sayan/). The hotel was built around a rice paddy, and villas come with private plunge pools. The hotel's Jati (Bahasa for teak) Bar is perched on the edge of the Ayung River and an excellent place for a sunset cocktail. Rooms start at $460.

Correction: July 1, 2007

The 36 Hours column last Sunday about Bali misspelled the name of a popular place there for coffee drinks. It is Tutmak Warung, not Tukmak.


36 Hours in Sarasota, Fla.

Published: December 30, 2007
Feeding the seagulls on Siesta Public Beach.

SET on a sparkling bay, behind a necklace of sandy barrier islands, the resort town of Sarasota was pioneered in the Roaring Twenties by the immensely wealthy John and Mable Ringling of circus fame. The couple didn’t come to get away from the clowns and freaks; they brought the entire circus with them to pass the winter in warmth and style. To this day, this scrubbed, suntanned and artsy little town offers just enough of a city vibe to sustain great food and a little night life. Plus, the circus still comes down in the winter.

Pleasure Without Guilt: Green Hotels With Comfort

Published: December 28, 2007
Screens in the lobby of the Gaia Napa Valley, one America’s greenest hotels, track energy usage.

The Gaia, which advertises itself as “Napa Valley’s first fully environmentally sustainable hotel,” has eschewed the tiny plastic bottles of lotion, shampoo and conditioner, instead using wall-mounted dispensers. I breathed a sigh of relief that neither the collection in our bathroom at home nor the infamous raft of plastic garbage in the middle of the Pacific, which I imagine to consist largely of hotel amenities, would grow larger from this stay.

The idea of luxury has long been intertwined with — even confused with — profligate waste. But with green consciousness making its way to center stage, some hotels are changing their ways. They face a delicate balance: when does greening go so far as to cut palpably into the feeling of luxury?

Conversely, with hotels around the country and the world claiming environmental concern — even when all they may actually be doing is inviting guests to forgo clean towels — how can guests be assured that green claims are sincere?

There is no single system for evaluating a hotel’s environmental friendliness. The best starting point is the so-called LEED certification program (for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) of the United States Green Building Council, a program that evaluates everything from materials to energy use to recycling in the construction and operation of a building. A LEED certificate displayed in the lobby means the establishment is serious about being green. Although only five hotels in the United States have this certification, many in the planning stages are incorporating materials and systems intended to gain it.

Beyond that, the best way to ensure that you are at a truly green hotel is to ask questions. When I stayed recently at four hotels that call themselves green, I found that everyone on their staffs, from managers to maids, was well-informed about the green features.

“You can’t just send out a memo,” Stefan Muhle, the general manager of the Orchard Garden in San Francisco, told me when I called him after my stay. “All the staff have to be included, front to back. Their heart has to be in it.”

Because I live in California — the home of much environmental action, hope and hype — I didn’t have to travel far from home to check out green hotels. Not all of them are LEED-certified, but they all featured green design elements, nontoxic materials and cleaning supplies, low-flow showerheads and toilets, and in-room recycling. I never once saw an incandescent light bulb.

The Ambrose Hotel,

Santa Monica

The Ambrose opened in 2003 and began its green conversion the next year.

“We were nervous about how guests would react,” said Deirdre Wallace, the owner. “But they were relieved. People have been recycling at home for 10 years, so why not in a hotel?”

In a comfortable Southern California-style marriage of disparate design currents, a cozy Craftsman drawing room opens onto a small garden designed for sustainability, with drought-tolerant native plants maintained with rakes instead of leaf blowers. Arching above are big red feng shui banners.

The Ambrose has installed energy-efficient lighting and appliances, economical ventilation equipment and low-flow sprinklers. It has switched to nontoxic cleaning products, paints and sealants, and buys part of its power from sustainable wind projects. It composts and has done away with disposable dishes and cups. Guests can rent bicycles or catch rides to nearby destinations in a biodiesel-powered London-style taxi.

My one true green-inspired inconvenience took place at the Ambrose. I forgot my toothpaste, and the front desk was out of their preferred eco-friendly brand, so I was forced to go on a midnight stroll to Walgreens.

Nonetheless, the hotel has greened itself with virtually no change in the experience for guests (who still enjoy Aveda amenities in those bottles destined, in my mind at least, for the nearby Pacific). The rooms, with comforting dark wood accents, long decks outside sliding glass doors and comfortable furniture, are well suited to the business travelers the hotel attracts.

Ms. Wallace expects LEED certification soon and plans to extend the Ambrose into a green brand by building more LEED-certified hotels.

“There’s an emerging green style,” she said, but added, “Simply not washing sheets and towels does not cut it.”

The Ambrose, 1255 20th Street, Santa Monica, Calif.; (310) 315-1555; www.ambrosehotel.com; rates from $229.

The Orchard Garden,

San Francisco

This is the Prius of hotels: distinctly green, but in a way that enhances the user experience beyond mere eco-karma. Among the features that helped the Orchard Garden earn LEED certification when it opened last year were extra layers of insulation that not only reduce heating and cooling costs, but make the hotel — on a busy downtown street — blissfully quiet. In our room on the eighth floor, we heard no outside sounds and, even though we were next to the elevators, barely a peep from the hallway.

The bathroom, which unfortunately contained more of those earth-destroying tiny plastic bottles, is ample. Blond wood furniture in the room matches the palette of soft greens and khakis. A huge mirror expands the space and lets you gaze at yourself luxuriating in the big, just-right bed.

The Orchard Garden seems all about cocooning. Its public spaces are little more than utilitarian. The small roof deck offers a chance to hear the city noise you’ve been missing; the lobby is little more than a corridor; and the restaurant, which features sustainably produced local food, is unremarkable in light of the culinary delights a block in any direction.

A feature I liked was just inside the room’s door: a slot where a guest slips the key card to activate the lights and temperature control. When leaving the room, guests remove the card and everything turns down. It’s a system common in Europe and Asia, where energy costs are higher, and it has an additional benefit: I never misplaced my key card.

Mr. Muhle, the general manager, said the green features had helped the hotel stabilize its occupancy and earn repeat customers faster than the standard of 18 to 24 months from opening.

“We’re not just another boutique hotel in San Francisco,” he said. “Green had a huge impact on our launch, and that’s money in the bank for the owner.”

Orchard Garden Hotel, 466 Bush Street, San Francisco; (415) 399-9807; www.theorchardgardenhotel.com; rooms from $229.


Friday, December 28, 2007

Amazon partners with fans' online record label

From
December 18, 2007

Sellaband, the fledgling music site which allows users to become 'investors' in bands whose music they like, has been given a major fillip by striking a distribution deal with Amazon.

From January, a dedicated section of the Amazon store will be devoted to music produced by acts that have been discovered on Sellaband, with albums selling for £8.99.

The wholesale price Amazon pays for the music - understood to be about £6 per album - will be split equally between Sellaband, the artists and their 'investors', otherwise known as fans.

Sellaband, based in Amsterdam, is effectively a 'user-governed' record label, which allows listeners to determine which music will be recorded and sold by voting for and investing in bands.

Unsigned bands upload their music, and if fans like it, they can buy a stake in the profits of any future album sales for $10 (£4.90).

Once a $50,000 (£24,500) threshold is reached, Sellaband helps the band produce an album. A fan can buy any number of $10 investments, each of which equates to a one five thousandth stake.

When the album is made, the backers each receive a copy, which they can either keep or sell at a 10 per cent profit on their personal Sellaband page. They also receive a cut of future sales on the Sellaband or other sites, as well as of any advertising revenue when the song is streamed.

Pim Betist, one of Sellaband's co-founders, said that the site was "a label of the future" because of the way it handed two parts of the record industry "value chain" over to consumers.

"First, consumers select which artists will make records, so there's a demand even before production begins. Second, they do the marketing, because there's a financial incentive to promote the artists they believe in."

So far 11 bands have reached the $50,000 threshold, and three, including one in Britain, have made albums.

Sellaband, which is funded by an angel investor in Germany who wishes to remain anonymous, plans to make money from album sales and publishing rights, as well as advertising and sponsorship deals, such as one it recently announced with Heineken.

The site has only been selling albums for three months, but already $25,000 (£12,300) has been transferred to artists and fans, a spokesman said.

The three albums Sellaband has already helped to produce - using well-known names such as 'Bassy' Bob Brockman, who has worked with Christina Aguilera - sell for $3.50 (£1.72) on its site, and at the standard iTunes rate of 99 cents per track in the US and 79p per track in the UK.

Mr Betist said that fans had already invested $1.3 million (£640,000) in the 6,000-odd bands that have uploaded music to their site, though that money is being held in escrow until the bands raise enough to make an album, at which point their investors become eligible to see a return.

"If Amazon passed on £6 for an album sale, then £2 of that would go to the fans, £2 to the band, and £2 to us," he said.

Every band that raises $30,000 (£14,750) will also receive an immediate boost of $1,000 (£490) from Amazon.

Sellaband, which was co-founded by Johan Vosmeijer, a former executive at the Sony BMG record label, has 150,000 unique users a month.

Unlocked in Singapore, iPhones are available on the internet

From
December 8, 2007

It is the world’s most-hyped mobile phone, but Apple’s iPhone could be yours without the rigmarole of changing network provider and being tied into an 18-month contract.

What started as complicated instructions to unlock the device on technical websites has now gone mainstream. British buyers can now buy the iPhone unlocked from Far Eastern retailers and auction websites for little more than the £269 O2, the official UK seller, charges.

Yesterday 700 unlocked iPhones were selling on the British version of eBay, at about £300 each, but without the mandatory O2 18-month minimum contract of £35 per month.

Such is their alarm that Apple has now threatened to sue retailers in Singapore who are unlocking the phones and selling them over the internet. Shopkeepers said they had received letters from Apple threatening to sue for S$1,000 (£340) for every unlocked iPhone they had sold.

The iPhone has been hailed as the future of mobile phones, winning Time magazine’s coveted Invention of the Year award. It is operated using a touch screen and as well as having all the functions of a normal mobile phone, it incorporates an iPod and the capacity to browse the internet.

Phone networks fought hard to win the right to sell the iPhone, with O2 entering into a five-year exclusivity deal with Apple. The network provider has so far refused to reveal how many handsets they have sold since the iPhone’s UK launch on November 10, saying only that sales have been “in line with expectations”. Two thirds of buyers are new customers stolen from other networks.

A spokesman for O2 cautioned that anyone buying a locked phone ran the risk of finding it rendered inoperable by new software updates. He said: “We don’t really understand why anyone would want to buy an unlocked phone. If you’re spending that amount of money on the phone and then unlocking it you run the risk of turning it into a useless brick.

“Every update that Apple releases reverts the phone to a locked state. We’re scratching our heads as to why people would want to run the risk of losing all that money.”

Apple’s exclusivity deals have already suffered challenges in two European countries. Orange, the provider that won the French exclusivity deal, has been forced to sell unlocked handsets in order to comply with French consumer law.

The firm sold 30,000 iPhones in the first five days of sales in France, but despite the network selling the unlocked phone for €749 (£540), €350 more than the two-year contract option, 20 per cent of purchasers opted for the unlocked version.

T-Mobile, who won the exclusivity rights in Germany, were forced to sell the iPhone unlocked after rival Vodafone obtained a court order. But on Tuesday the company managed to reverse the decision in a higher court.

Malam Tahun Baru, Dua Jalan Ditutup

Laporan: Choiruman

Jumat, 28-12-2007 | 18:43:06


BANJARMASIN, BPOST
- Mengantisipasi kemacetan luar biasa di jalan protokol Banjarmasin pada malam pergantian tahun, Satlantas Poltabes melakukan penutupan sejumlah ruas jalan.

Menurut Kasatlantas Poltabes Banjarmasin, AKP Teddi Mukmin Antoro, Jumat (28/12), jalan yang akan ditutup yakni sepanjang Jalan Lambung Mangkurat hingga Jalan Jenderal Sudirman samping Kantor Gubernur Kalsel.

Kedua jalan itu, lanjut Teddi, menjadi tempat warga menyambut tahun baru tanpa membawa kendaraan alias jalan kaki. Kebijakan itu diambil untuk memberi kenyamanan warga menyambut pergantian tahun tanpa harus terganggu lalu-lalang kendaraan.

Seperti diketahui, Jalan Lambung Mangkurat dan Jenderal Sudirman setiap malam pergantian tahun menjadi pusat berkumpulnya massa. Kondisinya demikian krodit karena antara kerumunan massa dengan lalu-lalang kendaraan menyatu.

Awas, Iklan Google Ditunggangi Trojan

Minggu, 23/12/2007 11:39 WIB
Fino Yurio Kristo - detikinet

Frankfurt
- Berhati-hatilah mengklik iklan Google, karena bisa jadi Anda akan diantarkan ke situs yang mengandung program jahat. Pasalnya, virus Trojan baru bernama Trojan,Qhost.WU ditengarai membajak teks iklan Google dan menggantinya dengan iklan dari provider lain. Virus ini diidentifikasi oleh vendor anti virus BitDefender.

Seperti dikutip detikINET dari VNunet, Minggu (23/12/2007), Trojan tersebut akan menginfeksi file host komputer korban. Menurut BitDefender, browser dari komputer yang telah terinfeksi kemudian akan mengakses iklan dari server yang berbeda, tidak dari Google.

"Hal ini adalah sesuatu yang serius. Pengguna terkena efek karena iklan atau link situs mungkin tercemar program jahat. Demikian juga bagi Webmaster karena Trojan ini akan menurunkan jumlah pengakses situs yang mungkin jadi sumber pendapatan mereka," tutur Attila Balasz, analis virus dari BitDefender.

Kabar baiknya, BitDefender menggolongkan ancaman Trojan ini dalam kategori penyebaran rendah meskipun resiko kerusakannya berada di tingkat menengah. Selain itu, software anti virus juga disebutkan mampu menghapus Trojan ini.

Sementara, pihak Google sendiri telah bertindak dengan membatalkan akun konsumen yang mengandung iklan menuju situs berbahaya tersebut.

( fyk / rou )

Siap-siap, iPhone Bakal Digempur Hacker


Kamis, 13/12/2007 11:00 WIB
Fransiska Ari Wahyu - detikinet

Jakarta - iPhone Apple harus bersiap menghadapi gempuran dahsyat dari para hacker. Pasalnya, tahun depan iPhone diprediksi akan menjadi target utama serangan para penjahat cyber. Demikian dikatakan perusahaan keamanan Arbor Network's Security and Engineering Response Team (ASERT).

Menurut ASERT, serangan tersebut dapat berwujud malware yang disusupkan dalam sebuah informasi yang tampaknya tidak berbahaya, gambar atau media lain yang sesungguhnya merupakan aksi berbahaya. iPhone memang memiliki daya tarik bagi para hacker sejak pertama kali diluncurkan tahun ini. Maka tak heran jika para pembajak berebut untuk menjadi yang pertama membajak platform baru tersebut.

Seperti dikutip detikINET dari ITNews, Kamis (13/12/2007), selain memprediksikan tentang target utama serangan hacker, perusahaan keamanan internet ini juga meramalkan bahwa akan ada peningkatan kejahatan di dunia maya oleh Cina.

"Tahun 2007 menjadi tahunnya para pembobol data, spyware, dan serangan ganas worm. Prediksi kami, tahun 2008 akan menjadi tahun serangan bagi iPhone, hacker Cina, spammer dan sebagainya," ujar Jose Nazario, ahli keamanan senior Arbor. ( dwn / dwn )

Awas, Iklan Google Ditunggangi Trojan

Minggu, 23/12/2007 11:39 WIB
Yurio Kristo - detikinet

Frankfurt - Berhati-hatilah mengklik iklan Google, karena bisa jadi Anda akan diantarkan ke situs yang mengandung program jahat. Pasalnya, virus Trojan baru bernama Trojan,Qhost.WU ditengarai membajak teks iklan Google dan menggantinya dengan iklan dari provider lain. Virus ini diidentifikasi oleh vendor anti virus BitDefender.

Seperti dikutip detikINET dari VNunet, Minggu (23/12/2007), Trojan tersebut akan menginfeksi file host komputer korban. Menurut BitDefender, browser dari komputer yang telah terinfeksi kemudian akan mengakses iklan dari server yang berbeda, tidak dari Google.

"Hal ini adalah sesuatu yang serius. Pengguna terkena efek karena iklan atau link situs mungkin tercemar program jahat. Demikian juga bagi Webmaster karena Trojan ini akan menurunkan jumlah pengakses situs yang mungkin jadi sumber pendapatan mereka," tutur Attila Balasz, analis virus dari BitDefender.

Kabar baiknya, BitDefender menggolongkan ancaman Trojan ini dalam kategori penyebaran rendah meskipun resiko kerusakannya berada di tingkat menengah. Selain itu, software anti virus juga disebutkan mampu menghapus Trojan ini.

Sementara, pihak Google sendiri telah bertindak dengan membatalkan akun konsumen yang mengandung iklan menuju situs berbahaya tersebut.

( fyk / rou )

Sudah Spam, Mencuri E-mail Pula


dikutip http://detikinet.com/

Jumat, 28/12/2007 11:36 WIB
Hidayat - detikinet

Jakarta - Pengirim spam kian menyebalkan. Bukan hanya menyebarkan e-mail promosi, kini pengirim spam juga gemar menyebarkan program jahat yang mencuri alamat e-mail.

Program jahat tipe worm bernama Zhelati.air ditemukan oleh perusahaan antivirus Trend Micro. Zhelati menyebar melalui spam dan bisa menginfeksi sistem operasi Windows XP, 98, ME, NT, 2000 serta Windwos Server 2003.

Zhelati akan berusaha mencuri alamat e-mail yang terdapat dalam komputer korbannya. Setelah berhasil, diduga alamat itu akan dikumpulkan dan digunakan sebagai target pengriman spam. Demikian seperti dikutip detikINET dari Softpedia, Jumat (28/12/2007).

Untuk menjaga diri dari serangan Zhelati, pengguna internet disarankan menghindari membuka file lampiran dari e-mail. Selain itu pengguna juga perlu berhati-hati saat mengunjungi situs yang mencurigakan.
( wsh / wsh )

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Renovating a Home to Improve its Resale Value

by Clay Davis

Buying a fixer upper can be an exciting venture. Not only are you possibly starting a new business, but you stand to make a tidy profit if done right. Even simply adding a few cosmetic touches and some healthy cleaning can help you turn an outdated home into a real profit maker. Buying a fixer upper is an investment and the more work you put into it, the more money you can make when you go to resell the home.

A fixer upper home may not be great to look at when you first buy it, but by the time you finish you should definitely be able to see how the improvements will expand your profit. There is a great market for these homes because they are considerably less expensive than buying a home that is new or totally renovated. This usually means more money in your pocket and a happy buyer once the work is complete. There are some ways to maximize the resale value of the home that you are fixing up so you can gain the most from your investment.

Casually looking around and choosing the optimal location is usually the best place to start. Without the right location you will be hard pressed to find a buyer later, no matter how beautiful the house becomes. It is important to determine a location that appeals to many different buyer tastes and is safe and friendly. After preliminarily choosing - but prior to buying - a home, have a professional inspection done to make sure that you know exactly what you are getting into. It is hard to obtain the most for your resale value if you have to put a lot more money into it than expected. On that note, you also don't want to rush any of the improvements to get the house on the market quickly. Taking the time to do quality work will really make the house shine.

The extra time includes making sure you fix the house from the bottom to the top. Problems like ants or mice in the basement may seem insignificant compared to the work performed, but they are more than likely going to turn off potential buyers. (Put yourself in their shoes.) The same can be said about cosmetic deficiencies, such as loose wall paper in the bathroom. People do not want to buy a home that requires a great deal of work after moving in, so you should plan to make all necessary changes before you even think about selling it.

Finally, sell the home during the right time. If the housing market is slowly falling then you may want to hold onto it for a while and consider renting it out until the market changes in the sellers' favor. Fixing up a home for resale is an excellent way to make money if you remain focused on your original goals and take the steps necessary to ensure you are selling a great residence.

Scope of Cyber Cities and Cyber Parks in Haryana

by Vinay Choubey

In the present era of Science and Technology, the working techniques of all fields of the economy are changing very fastly. Advancement in computer technology, automation through remote control system, expansion in the science of communication and software development have brought revolution in modernizing every sphere of the economy.

In town planning profession, this revolution has given birth to colonies of Cyber Cities and Cyber Parks to accommodate the working spaces of highly specialized professionals who requires a special pollution free air-conditioned environment associated with high-level physical and communication infrastructure. The colonies of cyber cities, cyber parks and Information Technology Parks are developed to provide floor spaces to companies engaged in software development activities and Information Technology enabled services.

The software development and information technology enabled services are carried out in virus and dust free air conditioned environment through sophisticated computers of high precision wherein scientific data is processed and analyzed through high speed processors and servers having hyperlinks of signals communicated through global satellites and Radar Net work system. In order to create special environment for the sustaining of working atmosphere of highly specialized professionals, a high quality infrastructure associated with well-landscaped and attractive surroundings is developed around all buildings of cyber cities and cyber parks.

Data processing and analyzing through high speed computers attached with global satellites and Radar Net Work and settling the scientific issues through video conferencings and personal meetings among professionals is a continuous process of all units of cyber cities and cyber parks. The Haryana State has a special privilege of being located very close to the Indira Gandhi International Airport and Foreign Embassies located at New Delhi due to which the professionals of Cyber Cities and cyber Parks are being facilitated to have their frequent meetings with their counter parts with other countries of the world.

The pollution free environment conceived in Gurgaon Development Plan cupped with availability of high level infrastructure is the main reason for the polarization of international level Cyber Parks and Cyber cities at Gurgaon. Today, Gurgaon has become the main choice of all Multi National Companies for the aforesaid purposes. The other towns of Haryana state particularly the towns located within National Capital Region and District Headquarters Towns located on National Highways and Railway Tracks are equally potential for the development of Cyber Cities and Cyber Parks.

In order to have planned development of Cyber Cities and Cyber Parks, the Haryana Govt. has formulated town planning norms and has also laid down the procedures for obtaining licenses for such Cities and Parks under the Haryana Development and Regulation of Urban Areas Act, 1975, the Punjab Scheduled Roads and Controlled Areas Restriction of Unregulated Development Act, 1963 and Development Plans published under the said Act. For obtaining complete knowledge relating to all issues of selection of sites, documents required for licensing, planning parameters, licensing procedure, licensing fee and development charges etc. study of "Haryana Town Planning Guide" and "Development Plans of related towns" which are available at this site is recommended.

Green Washing And Your Real Estate Carbon Footprint

by David Syring

As an internet platform for green, energy efficient and sustainable homes, we have reviewed some interesting and creative verbiage used by some sellers in the real estate marketplace. In the environmental business we call this "green washing".

Green washing is when someone uses "green" terminology to help drive more interest to an otherwise typical (in this case) home for sale, in a currently flat and bloated real estate market.

This "green" terminology could be words such as:

* Solar
* Stewardship
* Eco-friendly
* Environmental
* Healthy environment

We've seen ads that would say "a solar home", when all they really had was a wall that faced south.

Or maybe the home just has CFL's (compact florescent lighting) and not much else in the home. Although minimal improvements help the environment in a small way, there are cool innovative green homes out there that are making heads really turn in a BIG way. includes ( loves to promote) innovative building technologies that we believe will make the quickest (and the biggest) change in the environment regarding the way we live, the homes we live in and the way we build them.

Listed Green

Things we take for granted every day, do have a direct impact on global warming. The toilets we flush, the indoor air we breathe, the utility bills we pay; all these everyday duties affect the environment and our health.

There currently are so many new technologies in sustainable home building, that we could make a huge impact right now, not years later. We can currently heat most of our water with thermal solar and not the black stuff you see on roofs, but innovative glass tubes that absorb UV rays year-round; recycle all our grey water (sinks and showers) and redirect that water to flush our toilets; building design and orientation to take advantage of the natural heating and cooling effects in a particular location; construct living environments utilizing innovative building materials that may come from recycled or renewable sources that also offer a tremendous R-factor.

A one-two punch in not only saving our limited building material resources, but also less requirement from fossil fuels and the like, to heat and cool our homes everyday.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Feng Shui Architecture


Feng Shui is a Chinese philosophy focusing on the relationship between humans and the environment. It is a natural earth science which reveals how people are affected by their immediate surroundings. Since everything is connected, certain geographical, architectural and planetary conditions have the power to either improve or worsen our well-being.

Feng-Shui is based on the laws of nature and provides us theories that explain why certain things happen in our lives. These theories stem from logical conclusions about natural cause and effects that have endured through time The Chinese philosophy dictates that everything is made of chi, or energy which is further broken up into the five basic elements of metal, fire, water, wood and earth. Each of these physical elements has energies that have frequencies with a unique wavelength which react with each other in different ways, either positive or negative. Humans are affected by cosmic and earth energies and feng shui is a way for us to harness this power and use it for our good.

Based on the Taoist philosophies of nature which include the Yin-Yang Theory, Five Element Theory and the Yi-Jing Trigrams, feng shui helps us determine which frequencies work positively with our own personal energy as well as the energies of our family members and co-workers. By using this knowledge we can create an environment of comfort that allows us to live efficiently and progressively. Everything can be designed keeping the principles of feng shui in mind - feng shui decorations, feng shui bedrooms, fengshui living rooms etc.

However, the phenomenon of Feng-Shui as passed down from the generations is complex to understand in its entirety and mastered by only a privileged few.

Today, feng shui is a multi-disciplinary study encompassing architecture, urban planning, geography, astrology, electromagnetism, landscape design, environmental psychology and much more.

Using the ancient science and philosophy of feng shui we can design, build, remodel, and decorate our homes successfully so that they will become environments that support our lives and our well-being. In today’s fiercely competitive world, architects have thus succumbed to the needs and demands of the clients and started incorporating principles of feng shui to harmonize with the spiritual forces that inhabit it, and their application in architecture through planning principles, services, building elements and materials. The architect well versed in feng shui can also use its benefits to match structures and land, forecast development related concerns such as cost overruns, quality issues, worker injuries and trade disputes.

Modern Architecture

Modern architecture is a style found in the buildings that have simple form without any ornamental structures to them. This style of architecture first came up around 1900. By 1940, modern architecture was identified as an international style and became the dominant way to build for many decades in the 20th century. Modern architects apply scientific and analytical methods to design.

Many historians relate the origins of this style of architecture to the social and political revolution of the time, though others see modern architecture as primarily driven by technological and engineering developments. The availability of new materials such as iron, steel, concrete, and glass brought about new building techniques as part of the industrial revolution. Some regard modern architecture as a reaction against ancient building style. Above all, it is widely accepted as a matter of taste.

For the international style, the most commonly used materials are glass for the facade, steel for exterior support, and concrete for the floors and interior supports. The floor plans are functional and logical. But, many people are not fond of the modern style. They find its stark, uncompromisingly rectangular geometrical designs quite inhumane. They think this universal style is sterile, elitist, and lacks meaning.

Modern architecture challenged traditional ideas about the types of structures suitable for architectural design. Only important civic buildings, aristocratic palaces, churches, and public institutions had long been the mainstay of architectural practices. But, modernist designers argued that architects should design everything that was necessary for society, even the most humble buildings.

Architects began to plan low-cost housing, railroad stations, factories, warehouses, and commercial spaces. In the first half of the 20th century, modern architects produced furniture, textiles, and wallpaper - as well as designing houses - to create a totally designed domestic environment. The aesthetics used by modern architects celebrated function in all forms of design, from household furnishings to massive ocean liners and new flying machines.

Modern architecture originated in the United States and Europe and spread across the rest of the world. The characteristic features that made modern architecture possible were buildings, stylistic movements, technology, and modern materials.

Architecture provides detailed information on Architecture, Architecture Designs, Architecture Schools, Landscape Architecture and more. Architecture is affiliated with Residential Architects.



By Kristy Annely

Laminated Glass in Modern Architecture

The usage of glass is inevitable in changing construction trend and modern architecture. The style and elegance of glass are most evident in the design of skyscrapers and modern buildings. The orderly arranged glass walls and steel structures are the characteristics of high tech architecture.

Architectural glass is used as glazing material for the facet of the building, windows and in internal partitions. These glasses are of safety type of toughened, reinforced and laminated glasses to resist environmental stresses like hurricanes, bomb blasts, fire arms, high winds and impact of other objects.

The laminated safety glass plays an important role in protecting these impacts of natural and man made disasters. This laminated glass is a type of safety glass that holds together when shattered and offers resistance to the penetration of objects. It is produced by bonding two or more layers of toughened glass together with a plastic layer inside so that it ensures high impact resistance. It protects people outside or inside the building from consequential damage following an explosion

If the laminated glass had not been invented, most of the modern architecture would not exist. Getting more daylight into buildings has several advantages. Research indicate that increased day light helps the people more productive at work and also aid in physical and psychological recovery in hospitals by allowing daylight into buildings. This new technology of coatings gives high performance, low reflectivity and high transmission of light. This can be achieved by using laminated glass.

In tall buildings the two layers of laminated glass facilitates solar control and natural ventilation. It can also significantly reduce noise from the street as well as control solar energy transmittance. Most significantly, these laminated glasses can reduce up to 98% of UV radiation. Fading away of fabrics, such as curtains, carpeting and furnishings that are exposed to sunlight entering buildings through the windows, are mainly due to the Ultra-violet energy from the sun.

Glass strengthening systems Inc; is the pioneer in this industry and they have more than twenty five years of experience in this field and have distributors in all over the world. They manufacture a micro-thin transparent polycarbonate laminate which turns regular glass into barriers that can resist the force of small firearms, bombs, high impact projectiles, and severe weather such as hurricanes. They are having world wide customers who are very much satisfied with the products and demanding more of the products for their safety and security.

We, GNG associates, are of the authorized distributor for Glass strengthening systems, Inc. We wish for the safety and betterment of the lives of the people residing over India. We are proud to be the distributor of GSS products which have worldwide reputation.

For more product reviews please visit our site http://www.gngassociates.com



By Christopher Devadoss

10 World Wonders Of Modern Architecture

The end of the XXth century was marked with the architectural boom. Grand erections similar to ancient constructions classified as the wonders of the world began to arise one by one all over the globe. Many of them became the places of tourist pilgrimage even while not being completed. Ten of such projects have already gained the worldwide fame.

Great Egyptian museum in Giza.

Great Egyptian museum in Giza is about the same architectural wonder as the Giza pyramids themselves. As a matter of fact, it is the basis of architectural development of modern civilization. It is a massive row of chambers enfolding the scenery, with triangular roofs like in pyramids. The space of the largest archaeological museum in the world exceeds thousands of square meters.

The Tate Modern art gallery in London.

The Tate Modern art gallery in London is the largest-scale gallery in the world. And now the construction of the second 11-story glass building with 23 thousand square meters of space has been started. It is planned to complete the construction in time for the 2012 Olympics. The use of new areas will allow to solve the problem of over-crowding of the gallery that was visited by 4.9 million people in the year 2006. The cost of the project, designed by Swiss architects, is 215 million pound sterling. The expenses for extension to gallery are expected to be comparable to the main construction bill.

Burj Dubai.

The skyscraper in United Arab Emirates pretends to be the tallest building in the world. There will be the fastest elevators and the “highest” communications. When the construction is completed the final height of Burj Dubai will be more than 700 meters, it will have more than 160 floors. Now the builders work at 484.1 meters height. Interestingly: the weight of concrete used in building construction equals approximately the summarized weight of 100 thousand elephants.

Simon Wiesenthal Museum in Jerusalem.

Simon Wiesenthal Center suggested an idea to create the Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem in the year 2002. Famous American architect Frank Gehry developed the model of museum complex. It is situated on the plot of land between “Gan Ha'atzmaut” park and Nahlat Shiva in the West Jerusalem. 120 million dollars were invested in this construction. The museum that is officially called “ Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Museum of Tolerance in Jerusalem” occupies the territory of 14 thousand square meters. It has been built from Hierosolymitan stone with the insertions of titanium allays that is Gehry’s favourite construction material.

The third terminal of the Capital International Airport in Peking.

The country that builds the biggest dam, the longest bridge and the greatest shopping mall just ought to have the most immense construction plot while erecting the largest airport terminal in the hugest airport. The future third terminal will occupy 17 tiers, will stretch for nearly 4 kilometres, will require 35 thousand builders and will be capable of handling 53 million passengers in a year.

Olympic stadium in Peking.

Huge complex will be constructed by the year 2008. Its sizes are impressive: 330 metres lengthwise, 220 metres widthwise, with 62 meters in height, it will hold a 100 thousand persons. Though it is still unclear whether there will be as many lavatories there as for example in the famous Wembley stadium.

Ground Zero Memorial in New York.

Ground Zero is the memorial on the site of the former World Trade Center towers destroyed during terrorist attacks on the 11th of September. The huge construction with the slabs on which all the witnesses and sympathizers sign, now yields in size only to Holocaust memorial. The Tower of Freedom will be as tall as 1776 foots - 541 meters.

MAXXI - National Museum for Contemporary Art in Rome.

Zaha Hadid, the only one lady-architect in the world who won the Pritzker Prize, has designed MAXXI – the Roman Centre for Contemporary Art, it is a sophisticated concrete erection that simultaneously impresses with extravagance and monumentality. It is impossible to measure the length of the building since it has an extremely odd shape; it is even compared to spaghetti.

CCTV - the Chinese Television building in Peking.

CCTV - the Chinese Central Television building - is to be completed by the year 2008. This building – the skyscraper – is impressive due to its unusual shape. Chinese television head quarter will have 500.000 square meters of total space and will become one of the 300 skyscrapers that are to be constructed in the down town of Peking. The estimated cost of the project is 600.000.000 euros. Its infrastructure includes restaurants, hotels and theatres.

The Bishopsgate Tower in London.

It is another skyscraper of unusual configuration. Today it is the largest construction in London’s history. Its height is going to be 288 meters – it was originally proposed to be 307, but civil aviation authority prohibited such height. The tower will become one of the tallest buildings in the whole Europe. Recently the project was renamed The Pinnacle. The date of the construction first phase is planned for the beginning of the year 2008. The building will also be ecological – it will be covered with the solar cell panels.

Iuri Tarabanov writes about interesting travel experiences. His Travel Deals site is http://www.travelime.com



By Iuri Tarabanov

The Use of Glass in Architecture

Acclaimed architect Bruno Taut said, “If we want our culture to rise to a higher level, we are obligated for better or for worse, to change our architecture. And this only becomes possible if we take away the closed character from the rooms in which we live. We can only do that by introducing glass architecture, which lets in the light of the sun, the moon, and the stars”.

A New Architectural Era
Built in Hyde Park, London to house the Great Exhibition in 1851 the Crystal Palace is commonly considered as a significant turning point in architectural history. This magnificent structure built from steel and glass paved the way for further exploration of glass as an architectural element. The glass sail of the new Milan trade fair and Louvre pyramid are other stunning example of the use of glass as a structural as well as a design element. Other examples of glass architecture include the London Bridge, Agbar and Federazija Towers as well as the Tokyo International Forum.

While the use of glass in construction was previously quite limited to grand designs and office buildings it is starting to become a core structural and design element in many homes. Glass facilitates natural light and opens up rooms allowing smaller spaces to look bigger as well as facilitating a natural indoor/outdoor flow which often enhances the tranquillity as well as the value of your home. Glass is also relatively inexpensive and fully recyclable, an important consideration in the current era of heightened environmental consciousness. Glass use in construction has increased dramatically due to the rapid changes in glass production and technology. Previously glass was thought to be quite a fragile building material and many steered away from it because of this. Modern glass, however, is not only spectacular to look through but it is safer, stronger and energy efficient.

Glass in the home
In the past glass was mainly utilized for windows to allow some air and light in to rooms. Today glass is utilized in the construction of several elements of exterior and interior architecture. Exterior glass architecture includes facades, display windows’ skylights, skywalks, entrances, revolving doors, canopies, winter gardens and conservatories. All of which allow homes to be bathed in natural sunlight with gorgeous outdoor views. Interior glass architecture can be used for staircases, elevated walkways and even as traditional walls. There are some houses in which all of the walls are actually glass. Such high quantities of glass previously compromised other aspects such as the heating and cooling requirements. Often glass architecture would incur high heating costs in winter and cooling costs in summer. Fortunately such great progress has been made in the glass industry that we now have access a variety of different kinds of glass each with fantastic benefits. One such example is glass with spectrally-selective qualities, which allows light to stream into the house without being harmful or degenerative to occupants and their belongings.

Caring for your Glass
To keep your glass looking great and streak free you will need to ensure that it is cleaned often. Try a few different cleaning solutions before you decide which one to use, options vary from store bought to home made solutions. Many use products such as ammonia, vinegar, borax, alcohol or Epsom salts to clean glass. An important point to remember is that when using your own solutions never combine an acid and an alkaline, for example vinegar and ammonia, as they neutralise on another. After washing use a dry cotton towel rather than paper towels or newspaper as they tend to disintegrate and leave deposits on your glass. For a great shine a dry blackboard eraser can be used.

To keep frost from accumulating on exterior windows during the winter, add two cups of antifreeze or rubbing alcohol to each gallon of wash water. For deposits of paint, resin or glue wet the surface and then scrape them off using a razor blade scraper. Take care to scrape in one direction only in order to avoid scratching the surface.

Another option, and a fantastic one at that, is the breakthrough technology that has brought us self-cleaning glass. An ultra-thin coating is applied to the glass during the manufacturing process; this coating has two highly beneficial effects on the glass. First organic residue on the glass broken down by the ultraviolet wavelengths in sunlight then when it rains the dirt is washed off. As the coating is hydrophilic when rain hits the glass, it doesn't form droplets and in turn eradicates streaking. Rain water flows down the glass in a sheet and washes the dirt away. If you don’t have time to wait for the rain a simple garden hose will be just as effective. Self-cleaning glass is making the lives of homeowners far easier and is giving home owners absolutely no reason to hesitate to use of glass in the construction of their homes. What could be better than bright, open rooms with excellent outdoor views facilitated by huge sheets of glass, without having to spend your days cleaning them?

Modern day architectural trends have elevated the way we think about the use of glass in our own homes. It is no longer simply a material for windows and the occasional sliding door; it is a design component in its own right.

With each passing day glass becomes a more important element in architecture not only in grand public structures but also in the lives and homes of families across the world. The beauty of glass lies in its simplicity, it enables us to be enveloped by nature while living comfortably in doors.

Many architects, designers and construction companies recommend Pilkington when it comes to glass. Having been in the glass industry for 179 years, Pilkington is recognised as the world's technological leader in glass. Out of all of their innovative products, Pilkington Activ™ - the world's first self-cleaning glass is one of their greatest products and is an ideal material in glass architecture.