Susie Vaillancourt

June 30, 2010

Keilbach Obstschale ARCHITEC

Filed under: Architec — Tags: , , — deokeytp @ 9:35 am

Keilbach Obstschale ARCHITEC Keilbach:

  • Obstschale, Skulptur …
  • Maße: 35 x 33 x 10 cm, Gewicht 1,7 kg
  • Material: lackierte Bucheleisten, Edelstahl
  • Designpreis: DesignPlus 2010
  • Design: Peter Keilbach
ARCHITEC von Keilbach ist eine Obstschale? Oder eine Skulptur? Oder ein Spielzeug für Architekten? ARCHITEC lässt sich spielerisch (nicht nur von Architekten) verändern. Es entstehen dabei elementare architektonische Formen, Mikroarchitekturen oder Skulpturen.
Natürlich kann ARCHITEC auch als Schale für Obst oder als Ablage für den Schreibtisch verwendet werden.

Keilbach Obstschale ARCHITEC

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Quicken Home & Business 2010

Filed under: Microsoft Money — Tags: , — deokeytp @ 6:27 am

Intuit 409944 Unstable software – MP – Jacksonville Beach, FL United States
Frequent hangs.
Quicken support’s “workaround” is to reinstall. I guess that is to get around poor programming.
If it wouldn’t hang so much, it would be decent software.

: Read More…

Quicken Home & Business 2010 Intuit 409944

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Quicken Home & Business 2010 Intuit 409944

Intuit 409944

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June 28, 2010

Point of Entry

Filed under: Metal Point — deokeytp @ 9:10 am

Point of Entry Ein unterschätztes Juwel! – S. Herrmann –
Was für ne geile Scheibe!

In Ibiza aufgenommen schwappt die Party-Stimmung dieser Platte auch heute noch zum Hörer rüber. Wer auf die extrem harte Seite von JP steht, dem wird die Scheibe vielleicht nicht so gefallen. Für ne prima Grill-Party taugt das 81er-Werk bestens – da eingängig und “gute-Laune-erzeugend”! Auch das Cover passt gigantisch dazu!

Find die CD vom ersten bis letzten Song gelungen: Also Scheibe kaufen und ran an den Grill!
: Sie sitzen am Frühstückstisch, blicken auf einen viel zu grauen Himmel,plötzlich brandet “La Isla Bonita” oder “It never rains in Southern California”aus dem Radio, und schon ist er da, der Sonnenhunger. Der Reisewetterkompasswurde entwickelt, um Ihnen zu helfen, die Sehnsucht nach Bikini, Badehoseund blauem Himmel spontan zu stillen. Um die alles entscheidende Frage”Wann scheint wo die Sonne?” zu klären, benötigen Sie nun keine umfangreichenRecherchen in ziegeldicken Katalogen mehr, sondern nur noch dieses schmale,übersichtliche Handbuch.
Point of Entry

Point of Entry

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Point of Entry

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Thinking of Adding Space to Your House? Hire an Architect

Filed under: Architec — Tags: , , , — deokeytp @ 8:26 am


Image : http://www.flickr.com

There are some common misconceptions about architects, perhaps the most typical being that architects are only hired for designing a house from the ground up. Even then, you might be tempted to shy away from using an architect thinking that they’re all of the Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier or Mies van der Rohe ilk (either that or you’re thinking, “Who are these people?”).

Architects, despite their whimsical nature, are very practical and skilled professionals. If you want to make your home bigger by building an addition, adding another floor or expanding the attic, an architect can turn your dream into reality, all the while taking into account the current building’s structure, designing the addition to scale and blending it with the original building.  Steven Lindy of Lindy Consulting Limited says that “all major remodeling projects can benefit from the design help of an architect because with thoughtful evaluation and design, architects can meet and often surpass your expectations.”

But architects won’t just design “another pretty addition,’” there’s substance there too. Lindy says, “it’s the architect‘s job to design the project to satisfy building codes and meet specific structural demands. And striking that balance between aesthetic beauty and structural safety is no easy task.” Another advantage to using an architect is his ability to “troubleshoot” when problems arise during construction. An architect can work with the contractor to rework any structural versus design issues that might arise.

Flexibility in service: Architects can be hired for as little or as much of the project as you need. They can draw up a set of detailed plans from which a contractor can provide a quote and leave it at that, or they can be hired to follow the project right through to completion to make sure plans are being followed accurately.

Architects can deliver “Green Design: Many architects are becoming “LEED” Accredited Professionals (LEED stands for “Leadership in Environment and Energy Design”). This means that their knowledge of green design methods, energy efficiency and more “eco-friendly” materials can deliver you a home that costs less to run, more energy efficient, with better indoor air quality.

Cathy Rust writes a weekly column featuring new products from counter tops to flooring, energy efficiency and green building products and services. See http://blog.homestars.com for more articles.
HomeStars.com is a free website where you can read and write reviews on home improvement companies in your neighbourhood. http://www.homestars.com

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June 27, 2010

Duravit Architec Urinal Screen (0050421000)

Filed under: Architec — Tags: , , , , — deokeytp @ 3:01 am

Duravit Architec Urinal Screen (0050421000): Duravit: Duravit Architec Urinal Screen (0050421000)Duravit’s sophisticated European bath fixtures offer world-class design features that can turn any bathroom into a bath suite. Duravit’s German designed products are distinctive, award winning, and comply with the highest demands of shape, color and function.Duravit Architec Urinal Screen (0050421000) Features:; Urinal Screen for 0830350000 Urinal – read more.

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June 24, 2010

The Place of a Home Extension Architect in a Home Extension Project

Filed under: Architec — Tags: , , — deokeytp @ 10:53 pm


Image : http://www.flickr.com

If you are considering extending your home soon, then chances are that you will need the services of a home extension architect. The home extension architect is one of the emerging specialists in architecture, alongside the likes of the environmental architect, the residential architect and so on. These are typically professionals with strong backgrounds in general architecture, who then go on to specialize, through further training and extensive project involvement, in the respective areas.

The need to involve an architect comes as ‘news’ to many people going on such projects. But the truth of the matter is that the home extension – if it is to be properly hacked – may actually call for more skill than what was involved in the first building of the property; hence the need for a specialized architect.

What is worth noting about the involvement of a home-extension architect in the project is that this is not just about the aesthetics of the project, but also about the safety of the extension. Indeed, in many legal jurisdictions, it becomes a mandatory requirement – because there have been cases of what were initially very sound structures ending up being compromised during extensions, so that they become unsafe. And an unsafe structure as we all know, is not only dangerous to the owner, but to the general public as well; for there is no knowing when it could come tumbling, and who it could end up falling on.

So like the architect who is involved in the initial design of the building, the roles of the home extension architect can be seen as two-fold. On the one hand, this is the professional who (perhaps in concert with the structural engineer) will ensure that the structures that make the extension possible are safe – that they won’t come tumbling the very next day. And on the other hand, this is also the professional who will ensure that the structures are aesthetically appealing, for there have also been cases of otherwise beautiful buildings ending up completely messed up during extension, when the extension projects are not properly thought out.

In the face of the unique challenges involved in home-extension projects, it is not unheard of architects who are otherwise very highly experienced in general architecture (in the designing of absolutely new buildings, that is) expressing reservations about going on home extension projects. Their advise to you, when you approach them with such a project will be that you should go to a home extension architect.

An encounter with a home extension architect will usually start with a visit to his or her office, where you get to brief them on what you generally want. The second step would be for them to visit the site, and make a professional assessment of the project. And the third step would be for them to work out the specifics of the project in their studio, with the end result of this step being the drawings they develop and hand to the builders who are to be involved in the actual project. After this, the role of the home extension architect is reduced to a supervisory role – to ensure that the blueprints they developed for the project are followed, so as to come up with both a structurally sound, and aesthetically appealing building.

Saki is a leading Sydney residential architect. He has also been widely involved in home extension projects, so much that his very name has come to be seen as being synonymous with the phrase home extension architect Sydney which he uses as his the tagline for his architecture firm.

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June 23, 2010

Microsoft Money 2007 Deluxe [OLD VERSION]

Filed under: Microsoft Money — Tags: , , — deokeytp @ 7:53 pm

Microsoft 860-00433 : Read More…

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Designer Zaha Hadid

Filed under: Architec — Tags: — deokeytp @ 3:37 pm


Image : http://www.flickr.com

Iraqi born designer and architect, Zaha Hadid, studied at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London, forming a close working relationship with her tutor, Dutch architect, Rem Koolhaas with whom she worked with during the 70′s. In 1980, she opened her own practice in London.

It is without doubt that Zaha Hadid has a reputation for remarkable design and architecture equally matched by her remarkable character and temperament. Her vivacious imagination began at age 11, and now transcends to her striking furniture and object design and particularly in her architectural design.

Her strong and often single-mindedness, allowing for little compromise, has resulted in some of her best works remaining unbuilt. (Cardiff Bay Opera House was spectacularly lost) However, this same uncompromising spirit has also seen Hadid become, arguably, the most successful female designer and architect in the world. Immortalised as the first ever woman to win the Pritzker Prize for Architecture in it’s 26 year history, Hadid, or “the diva” as her critics refer to her, has risen triumphant in a field which is traditionally domineered by men.

Her designs are completely untraditional and challenging, which is what makes them so dramatic. Clients for which she has designed furniture and objects for, include Swarovski, Dupont, Sawaya & Moroni, and Alessi.

Hadid’s ‘Moraine’ sofa was commissioned by the renowned

Italian company Sawaya & Moroni. Covered in red ‘Fantasy Leather’, the ‘Moraine’ breaks new ground in its radical curvilinear asymmetrical form, a piece of furniture that is both sculpture and seating, abstract and functional.

Dupont were said to be delighted with Hadid’s ‘Z Kitchen Design’ which features the company’s remarkable design material Corian

to perfection. Made in Glacier white the kitchen features 2 Islands

- Fire (for cooking) and Water (for washing). The futuristic design

comes equipped with numerous features such as embedded heating membranes, touch control panels, sound activators and scent dispensers, LED lighting and a multimedia entertainment system.

A limited edition “Tea and Coffee Tower” was created for an Alessi project where 22 renowned designers were asked to create a “tea and coffee object”, given total freedom. Hadid’s sterling silver sculpture splits into four elements: teapot, coffee pot, milk jug and sugar bowl. This exceptional piece of artwork behaves like a three-dimensional puzzle, sitting within a tray that guides the user through the multiple configurations.

In 2006, she created an Aqua Table for Established & Sons, which she describes as “like flying over water”.

Using a translucent silicon gel, contours formed over the smooth tabletops, creating a liquid color which draws the eye of the viewer. Once again Hadid was able to establish yet another ‘first’ when the table sold for a record breaking amount at a New York Auction.

Similarly, the “Seamless” range of modern furniture, again for Established and Sons, has a liquid quality featuring 9 designs made of painted polyester resin. The New York Times stated that Hadid gives ‘liquidity’ a whole new meaning.

The total fluidity is also prevalent in her interior design and architectural projects which have an indescribable ‘movement’. In fact, Hadid herself has expressed that her ideal home would have ‘moving walls’, so the kitchen could actually move and the bathroom would not need to be fixed in one place. In 2007, she exhibited “My Ideal House” at International Furniture Fair, Cologne, Germany, a creation which literally ‘morphed’ into each living space.

She has created interiors for the Guggenheim Museum in New

York, the Vienna Kunsthalle, and the Hayward Gallery in London.

By all means, her architectural feats are most notable, both for their strikingly vivid presence and ambitious structural accomplishment. Creating structural space was certainly a stuttering start. Her first big success, The Peak, a spa planned for Hong Kong, was never built. Nor were buildings on Berlin’s Kurfürstendamm, or an art and media centre in Dusseldorf.

Hadid’s first built project, The Fire Station at the production complex of the Vitra office furniture group, was a formal success but not a functional one. The fire service moved out and the building was converted into a chair museum. And the public opposition to her unconventional vision for the Cardiff Bay Opera House in the 1990′s is now notorious, but history.

This became a turning point and architectural successes followed. These include the BMW Plant, Leipzig – Germany. The Central

Building is the active nerve-centre or brain of the whole factory complex. Mind Zone at the London Millenium Dome, completed in December, 1999, Zaha’s largest construction so far. Rome Contemporary Arts Centre, the first national museum for contemporary art in Italy. The Bergisel Ski Jump, situated on the

Bergisel Mountain overlooking downtown Innsbruck, the ski jump is a major landmark. The Wolfsberg Science Centre, the first of its kind in Germany, and a landmark project. The Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Art in Cincinnati, Ohio. The New York Times described it, without overstatement, as “the most important new building in America since the Cold War.” Zaha explains her style as a ‘virtuoso of elegance’. Explaining that

personal investigation and research

is laden with so many ideas that one cannot extrude a single one, so there is no formal repertoire.

“It’s like a pianist constantly practicing – it’s the same level of intensity. It increases the repertoires immensely – it’s unpredictable”, she says.

Inspiration is drawn from many influences including Erich Mendelsohn, Mies van der Rohe, and le Corbusier. While she respects many contemporary designers and architects, she states that, “Many are too obsessed by method. It becomes a dogma.”

By all means, Zaha has not followed any methods, instead keeping focus on her goals, she has rigidly stormed through her career, leaving a string of international awards, prestigious titles and accolades in her wake.

She is currently Professor at the University of Applied Arts Vienna in Austria and her work will be on show in a major exhibition at London’s Design Museum throughout 2007. 

Zaha Hadid has accomplished recognition both as a modern furniture designer and architect as well as a woman. In a field where woman have to work that much harder to make a difference, her work is often more surprising, in more subtle ways.

Rafael Montilla – I work as a SEO marketer and also a writer, oil painter, I like to meditate, Learn something new from anyone from 7 year old to 115 years old. I think everyone has something to teach so I try to have my mind open most the time.

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June 22, 2010

Coby Bluetooth Wireless Stereo Earphones with Dongle CVE162 (Black)

Filed under: Bluetooth Dongle — Tags: , , , , , , — deokeytp @ 8:23 am

Coby CV-E162 : Product Details

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June 21, 2010

The Competitive Advantage of the Architect

Filed under: Architec — Tags: , , — deokeytp @ 4:00 am


Image : http://www.flickr.com

When writing about competitive advantage, one immediately thinks about Michael Porter. When extending his field of analysis one could wonder whether some professionals have competitive advantage over others. For example: does an architect have a competitive advantage over a business consultant or an advisor?

The first question is than to ask where both (architect versus business consultant or management advisor) compete? Their domains seem so different at first hand.

Yet a closer look shows that this is not completely true. Both work with organizations, are contracted by a manager who is the sponsor of their project. The architect has an advisory role during the early stage of the project where he is to advise about the solution. In most cases the solution is to build a new office or let’s say: a hospital.

The management advisor is engaged in this process advising the manager on what to do best. He may develop a few scenarios where a new hospital is one of the solutions, but other scenarios may not involve bricks and mortar.

The competitive advantage of the architect resides in:

1. His profession. Architects are professionals that have studied, received a degree and are sealed into their career the same way as lawyers are. This whole trajectory offers business sponsors confidence that when hiring an architect they can trust on the outcome of the process. Obviously there are many examples where buildings are not functional, leak at delivery or other malpractices, but that is universal and not confined to the architectural profession or industry. The title of architect is a protected title only real architects can use.

Business consultants or advisors on the other hand may have an academic background, yet their expertise is less focused and their title is … just what it is.

2. Building and construction.

Buildings and constructions are imaginative. When contracting an architect a business sponsor most often already knows that he wants a new hospital. The only question is how and what exactly. A new building can service innovation easier than a reorganization could, and even when the effects of a new building do last only temporarily the solution to build wins in an emotional decision taking process. It is just what people want. It’s sexy and new (young) is better than old.

3. The language of the architect.

A third competitive advantage of the architect lies in the domain of language. The architect is able like no other (business consultant or advisor) to speak a language that everyone in the company understands. It is a language of future design, but also one of today’s reality, of solutions and style where all stakeholders can have their say. And everybody may have an opinion on.

In both cases (architect versus consultant) the language is about building; building a hospital, team building, building relationships, etc…

Yet. Both business consultants as well as advisors are limited in their language usage. They are too focused on a specific element of the solution (the design of the organization in case of the advisor) or the design of the new business (for the business consultant). Both areas however never really meet.

The architect can build the bridge between the two domains.

© copyright 2009 Hans Bool

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