06/05/2008
New ideas take flight in the City of Angels (06-03)
04:00 PDT Los Angeles -- Four postcards from Los Angeles - where the roadside attractionsinclude oil derricks, office towers, ocean views and a Rodeo DrivePlastic Surgery billboard that promises "We treat everybody like acelebrity." For those of you who find San Jose's Santana Row too gritty, Irecommend a visit to Americana at Brand in downtown Glendale. Or sosay the street signs. From where I sit - outside the CheesecakeFactory, across from a vast kidney-shaped lake amid stores on theground and apartments in the air - all I see is a stage-managedworld unto itself. Four-to-six-story buildings curve around the lake, blocking anyhint of the low-slung sprawl usually associated with Los Angelesand its suburbs. The storefronts are ornate, architecturally themedfor such tenants as Tiffany and Armani A/X; the residential floorsabove are purposefully bland, paper-thin hints of some vaguehistoric epoch. They're designed to be a backdrop, not adistraction. The Bay Area has pods of instant urbanity as well: Santana Row forthe South Bay social scene, Bay Street in Emeryville for East Bayteens deprived of enclosed malls. But the Americana's voluptuousattention to detail would make Walt Disney smile. Gas flamesflicker from stained-glass streetlamps. The entrance to the parkinggarage resembles the library of a private club, complete with achandelier. At 10:30 in the morning, jets of water in the lakespout in time to Dean Martin's "Ain't That a Kick in the Head." The May 1 opening bash featured Jay Leno as emcee and Gov.Schwarzenegger as a guest. Next to the Cheesecake Factory stands a curvy diner with a 1950slook - the one nod to Southern California's long love affair withautomobiles. Except, of course, for the 3,500-car parking garage. Lest you think big-name architects are infallible, gaze upon theelevator inside the Broad Contemporary Art Museum, Renzo Piano'stravertine-clad addition to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Piano's big move harks back to his Pompidou Center in Paris: at theBroad he moved nearly all the circulation systems outside thethree-story box, which contains 60,000 square feet of exhibitspace. You enter via an open-air escalator that takes a full minuteto transport you to the third floor. Inside, you're supposed tovisit lower-floor galleries via a glass elevator that holds 30people and is likened by Piano to a "moving room." "It's the materialization of the idea of levitation," theever-quotable Piano purred in a pre-opening interview about theelevator. "You just push a button." But when the museum opened in February, the lift would stall ifpassengers weren't distributed evenly inside. After tinkering andtests, it was shut down in April while a new piston was ordered.Levitation 2.0 should be ready to go this week, but when I visitedit was taped off like a crime scene - forcing museumgoers into asmall service elevator. For the record, Piano also designed the California Academy ofScience's new home in Golden Gate Park, which opens in September.Yes, it has stairs. Like many Bay Area cities, Los Angeles and its constellation ofsmaller communities are adding dense new housing to existingneighborhoods. The difference is that down here, the new stuffoften is the best thing around. Certainly that's the case on Gardner Street off Santa MonicaBoulevard in West Hollywood, where architect Lorcan O'Herlihyshowed me a 10-unit condominium complex he designed. The next-doorneighbor is a beige apartment block topped with Garage Floor Tiles in acrude stab at Santa Barbara lite. Across the alley is theconcrete-block backside of a retail building. And O'Herlihy's 1050 Gardner St.? Shaped like a sleek U, it snapsaround a courtyard that's visible from the sidewalk and is as lushas a jungle. Gauzy glass veils the main staircase. Aluminum windowframes painted blue and red knife out along the alley. Cedar slatssoften the modern lines. We also visited a building where workers are installing an outerskin of corrugated steel. It serves as a rain screen, shieldswest-facing units from the afternoon sun - and takes its vivid redhue from a Chinese restaurant at the end of the block. "This is a fascinating city. You discover incredibly interestingpieces when you least expect it," said O'Herlihy, whose 16-personfirm resides in an industrial patch of Culver City shadowed byInterstate 405. "In Los Angeles you can experiment. ... The contextis, there's no context." I feel very far from home. A final vignette from Topanga Canyon, a rugged remnant of thegeography that existed before Los Angeles transformed itself from ahamlet into the nation's second-largest city. Tucked between Malibu and I-405, this respite from sprawl is hometo 11,000 residents and a 13,000-acre state park. The commercial"district" is larger than our Inverness or Pescadero, but not bymuch. The new Sunset magazine hails it as a tie-dyed oasis from theworld outside. But at the Topanga Canyon Market, which shares a parking lot withZenbunni Gallery and Topanga Psychic, I find something Sunsetdidn't mention: a stack of Daily Varietys, the bible of theentertainment industry. Los Angeles is anything you want it to be. But it's still a companytown.
11:56 Posted in Books | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this
Harmony woman to share love of fabric painting
Your IP Address or perhaps someone from the same painting on tile geographical areaas you has been tracked visiting one or more websites andrequesting large amounts of content in a short amount of time. Thishas caused your IP Address to be flagged as a possible bot, spider,crawler, spyware, or some other malware. In general, we do notallow bots, spiders, or crawlers to access our websites. This is not meant to accuse you of anything. If you are alegitimate user and feel that you have reached this page in error,please complete the form below. Our staff will review theinformation that you provide and determine what options areavailable.
11:29 Posted in Books | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this
Abit had quite unique thing on the floor at Computex
ABIT HAD ONE quite unique thing on the floor at Computex, and it makes so muchsense that I am shocked that no one else has done it before. Theidea is a digital photo frame with integrated printer, and Abitcalls it the FunFab. Abit FunFab frame/printer It seems like such an obvious thing to do, but not only is Abit thefirst, they also patented it. It just makes sense though, you havea picture on the frame, and the infirm grandmother over for theholidays really wants a copy. The 'old way' meant going to a PC,finding the pic, and printing it out on your inkjet withquestionable results. With a FunFab, you hit the print button on the remote, and a 3x5pic slides out the side. Grandmother is happy, you have far lesswork to do, and Abit shareholders are happy. The one pictured above is the P80, but there are several othermodels. This one is the larger screen, the smaller screen is justto the left. Both are 600*300 rez, and the printer is a 300 DPI dyesublimation unit that produces high quality prints. You can get newcartridges of course, and given HP's balance sheet, it should be alucrative business for Abit. You can also interchange the bezels to change the look, there iseverything from wood picture frames to carbon fiberesque finishes. Thefirst FunFabs should be out next month, they should sell for about200 Euros. μ
11:28 Posted in Books | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this
05/13/2008
Sterling Biotech sees 35 pct profit growth in 2008
Tag: Pharmaceutical Gelatin MUMBAI (Reuters) - Pharmaceutical gelatin maker Sterling Biotech Ltd expects 30-35 percent growth in net profit
and revenue for two years, as it expands capacity to meet rising demand, a senior company official said on Monday.Mumbai-based Sterling,
which follows a calendar year, last week said first-quarter profit jumped 45 percent to 550.9 million rupees. Profit for 2007 rose 36 percent
to 1.8 billion rupees on a 50 percent revenue rise to 9.1 billion rupees.Sterling plans to spend $100 million to raise manufacturing capacity
of gelatin and CoQ10, a co-enzyme used to treat a variety of diseases that the company started making recently, said Shashikant Jadhav, vice
president, corporate strategy."Our capacity additions will keep on giving us this kind of growth," Jadhav told Reuters in an interview. "Our
capacities are fully booked."CoQ10 capacity will be doubled by December while gelatin production will be raised 10 percent to 18,000 tonnes
by early 2009, he added.He declined to give the current production figures for CoQ10, citing competition, but said its contribution to total
revenue will rise to about 15 percent in 2008, from about 10 percent last year. By 2009, this will rise to 25 percent.Gelatin, which made up
for 90 percent of revenue last year, is a protein extracted from animal bones that is used to make capsule coverings.In 2008, profit margins
will be maintained at 22 percent for the company, he added.
22:45 Posted in Books | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this

