Uma posta de Bucharest, Romania... amanha volto para os Barbaros.
Hoje vou jantar aqui... e eu que me esqueci do fraque. E pior da estoria, e que estou a falar a serio.
Uma posta de Bucharest, Romania... amanha volto para os Barbaros.
Rubrica: Tu metes nojo!
Etiquetas: mete nojo
Saudade...
BLOG DA TERCEIRA SECÇÂO/ACANAC (Acampamento Nacional)
E a minha sina e andar em mudancas...desta vez vou para BRIXTON SW9 (la dizia o outro, Guns of Brixton)
Directed by: | Quentin TARANTINO |
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Country: | USA |
Year: |
Directed by: | Christophe HONORÉ |
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Country: | FRANCE |
Year: | 2007 |
Directed by: | WONG Kar Wai |
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Country: | HONG KONG (CHINA) |
Year: | 2007 |
Directed by: | Joel COEN, Ethan COEN |
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Country: | USA |
Year: | 2006 |
Directed by: | Gus VAN SANT |
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Country: | USA, FRANCE |
Year: | 2007 |
Directed by: | Emir KUSTURICA |
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Country: | SERBIA - MONTENEGRO, FRANCE |
Year: | 2006 |
Directed by: | David FINCHER |
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Country: | USA |
Year: |
Um dos meus filmes preferidos de sempre...
One of cinema's greatest classic adventure stories is director Victor Fleming's Captains Courageous (1937). It is an adaptation of English novelist Rudyard Kipling's 1897 work of the same name, and advertised: "As Great as Mutiny on the Bounty" with exciting action sequences, and a heart-felt story of the emerging relationship between an over-privileged and bratty young boy and a humble, common fisherman.
The classic MGM, coming-of-age children's film acquired four Academy Award nominations (Best Picture, Best Film Editing - Elmo Veron, and Best Screenplay - Marc Connolly, John Lee Mahin, Dale Van Every) with Spencer Tracy taking home his very first Best Actor Oscar (he experienced back-to-back wins when he also won Best Actor the following year for Boys Town (1938)) for his heart-warming performance.
A spoiled, rich 12-year old boy, Harvey Cheyne (first-billed child actor Freddie Bartholomew), the only child of a widowed millionaire business tycoon, leans too far over the rail of a luxury ocean liner (the Queen Anne) to Europe with his father Mr. Cheyne (Melvyn Douglas), while vomiting after consuming six ice cream sodas. He falls into the ocean - unbeknownst to anyone. He is rescued by a crusty, but likeable and kindly Portuguese fisherman with curly-locked hair named Manuel (Spencer Tracy), who works as a doryman on a Gloucester, Massachusetts fishing vessel off the Grand Banks [in the North Atlantic Ocean S/SE of Newfoundland]:
He brings the water-drenched boy back to his fishing boat on his skiff. Manuel tells his shipmates: "I bring you new kind of feesh...He got no tail. He got pads on his dorsal fins."Fifteen years I've been fisherman. First time I ever catch a fish like you.
After Harvey wakes up aboard the schooner named We're Here, he arrogantly tells Captain Disko Troop (Lionel Barrymore) to take him to shore, but is told that he cannot be brought back to land until they have filled the boat with fish - in about three months time. The captain's obliging son, Dan (Mickey Rooney) attempts to be friendly, and lends the boy clothes, but is put off by the bratty, obnoxious kid who complains: "These are the worst clothes I ever saw. This stuff itches."
At first, Harvey stubbornly refuses to help do any of the work, and threatens the crew with jail-time as kidnappers. He is told he must work as part of the crew in order to eat. Because Manuel rescued him, Manuel is given the duty of looking after his "leetle fish," and though he is reluctant and at first calls his catch "bad luck," Manuel takes a paternalistic interest in the boy and wins his confidence. Manuel tells stories and sings sea chanties, accompanied by a vielle (an old Portuguese instrument). He enjoys his singing, feeling good inside:
Say, sometimes a song so big and sweet inside, I...I just can't get him out, and then I look up at stars, and maybe cry, it feels so good.
Gradually, Harvey takes to working in the galley, moves up to deck duty and stands watch. Manuel begins to teach Harvey about life and the ways of the sea - how to cut fish and other fishing techniques, human values and honesty. One day, he begs to go out on a fishing trip with Manuel and is taken along. Manuel gives him fishing advice: "That fish, he have meeting down below. He tell other fish there something not so funny going on." Manuel's young helper catches a big halibut:
My leetle feesh catch feesh beeger than he is... Manuel and hees leetle feesh, they beat everybody. We make fisherman out of you, huh lettle feesh?
But Manuel teaches him a lesson and puts the halibut back in the sea, when he learns that his "lettle feesh" has cheated (fouled the troll line of other fishermen) in order to win. Harvey earns Manuel's respect when he admits to his deed and feels ashamed. He takes his place as Manuel's dory mate apprentice during fishing excursions. In a tribute to Manuel's care and support of his "lettle feesh," and realizing that he will soon be returned to his real father, Harvey tearfully asks: "I want to be with you Manuel, please."
In the climactic race back to Gloucester port against a rival schooner, the Jennie Cushman, Manuel volunteers to climb to the top of the mast to furl the sail, but tragically is mortally injured when the mast cracks and he is plunged into the water, caught in the tangled rope and the topsail canvas. Just before he is cut loose of the ropes to sink below the surface to his death, he delivers a memorable, sentimental, and tearful goodbye to Harvey:
Now listen to me, leetle feesh. I go now...We had good times together, eh, leetle feesh? We laugh. We sing. So you smile...Manuel - he be watching you. You be best fisherman ever lived.Reunited with his father, Harvey is distraught over the loss of his fishing friend. During a memorial service for Gloucester men who have perished in the sea, Harvey throws a flowery wreath into the water when Manuel's name is called. His father, understanding his son's loss, throws a second wreath in the water. The final shot shows Harvey comforted by his father, the two silently, arm in arm, watching the wreaths float away together in the outgoing tide.
Citando um homem da ferrovia, um condutor do cavalo de ferro, as mulheres de hoje estão estragadas, não tem nada na cabeça, são futeis...
Faz hoje 10 anos que o Deep Blue derrotou (ou nao) o Grande Gary Kasparov (recentemente desafiou Putin, mas ele preferiu prende-lo)
Deep Blue was then heavily upgraded (unofficially nicknamed "Deeper Blue") and played Kasparov again in May 1997, winning the six-game rematch 3.5–2.5, ending on May 11th, finally ending in game six. Deep Blue thus became the first computer system to defeat a reigning world champion in a match under standard chess tournament time controls.
The project was started as "ChipTest" at Carnegie Mellon University by Feng-hsiung Hsu; the computer system produced was named Deep Thought after the fictional computer of the same name from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Hsu joined IBM (Research division) in 1989 and worked with Murray Campbell on parallel computing problems. Deep Blue was developed out of this. The name is a play on Deep Thought and Big Blue, IBM's nickname.
The system derived its playing strength mainly out of brute force computing power. It was a massively parallel, 30-node, RS/6000, SP-based computer system enhanced with 480 special purpose VLSI chess chips. Its chess playing program was written in C and ran under the AIX operating system. It was capable of evaluating 200,000,000 positions per second, twice as fast as the 1996 version. In June 1997, Deep Blue was the 259th most powerful supercomputer, capable of calculating 11.38 gigaflops, although this did not take into account Deep Blue's special-purpose hardware for chess.
The Deep Blue chess computer which defeated Kasparov in 1997 would typically search to a depth of between 6 and 12 ply to a maximum of 40 ply in some situations. An increase in search depth of one ply corresponds on the average to an increase in playing strength of approximately 80 Elo points.
Deep Blue's evaluation function was initially written in a generalized form, with many to-be-determined parameters (e.g. how important is a safe king position compared to a space advantage in the center, etc.). The optimal values for these parameters were then determined by the system itself, by analyzing thousands of master games. The evaluation function had been split into 8,000 parts, many of them designed for special positions. In the opening book there were over 4,000 positions and 700,000 grandmaster games. The endgame database contained many six piece endgames and five or fewer piece positions. Before the second match, the chess knowledge of the program was fine tuned by grandmaster Joel Benjamin. The opening library was provided by grandmasters Miguel Illescas, John Fedorowicz and Nick De Firmian. Deep Blue's programmers tailored the computer program to beat Kasparov by studying in great detail prior games Kasparov had played. When Kasparov requested that he be allowed to study other games that Deep Blue had played so as to better understand his opponent, IBM refused. However, Kasparov did study many popular PC computer games to become familiar with computer game play in general.
After losing the match, Kasparov said that he sometimes saw deep intelligence and creativity in the machine's moves, which he could not understand. He also suggested that humans may have helped the machine during the match, based on the fact that other computer programs at that time could not find some of the strong moves that Deep Blue did, particularly 37. Be4, in the second game. However, recent computer programs such as Rybka and the Computer Assistant Project did find this move. In addition, Kasparov said the program made a human-like mistake on move 44. Kf1 in the same game. However, recent programs also make the same mistake. Kasparov demanded a rematch, but IBM declined and retired Deep Blue.
In 2003 a documentary film was made that explored these claims. It was titled Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine and implied that Deep Blue's heavily promoted victory was a plot by IBM to boost its stock value. Clearly coverage in the popular press was a goal of the effort and this did not hurt the sales of IBM supercomputers.
The rules allowed the developers to modify the program between games. Deep Blue was modified between games to understand Kasparov's playstyle better, allowing it to avoid a trap in the final game that the computer had fallen for twice before.
One of the two racks that made up Deep Blue is on display at the National Museum of American History in their exhibit about the Information Age; the other rack appears at the Computer History Museum in their "Mastering The Game: A History of Computer Chess" exhibit."(wikipedia.org)
Ontem foi o cortejo universitário desta "Lusa Apenas"
"When the routine bites hard
Joy Division
Following the success of this gig, the Sex Pistols were invited to return. This second concert on July 20, 1976, saw the live debut of Buzzcocks and was attended by many more people."
"
(Francis) George Steiner (born April 23, 1929, in Paris, France) is a prominent literary critic.
Steiner is the son of Dr Frederick George and Mrs Else Steiner; he was educated first at the Lycée "Janson-de-Sailly" in Paris and then at the French Lycée in New York after the family moved to the United States in 1940.
In 1955 he married Zara Shakow, to whom he had been introduced by friends in 1952. They have one son (David, Dean of the School of Education at Hunter College) and one daughter (Deborah, Professor of Classics at Columbia).
He gained his BA from the University of Chicago, an MA from Harvard and a DPhil from Oxford (Churchill College, of which he became an Honorary Fellow in 1995). Between 1952 and 1958 Steiner taught at Williams College in Massachusetts.
Steiner had been active on undergraduate publications while at University and in 1952 he joined the staff of The Economist, in London, (1952-56). He returned to America in 1956 to attend the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University, (1956-58) where he also lectured (1959-60). He held a Fulbright professorship in Innsbruck (1958-59), and in 1961 became a Founding Fellow of Wolfson College, Cambridge, to which he was elected an Extraordinary Fellow in 1969. In 1974, after several years as a freelance writer and occasional lecturer, he accepted the post of Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Geneva, which he held until 1994, becoming Professor Emeritus on his retirement. He has since held the positions of Weidenfeld Professor of Comparative Literature and Fellow of St Anne's College, Oxford, (1994-95) and Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard University (2001-02).
His field is comparative literature. His work as a critic has tended toward exploring cultural and philosophical issues, particularly having to do with translation and the nature of language and of literature. His work has influenced intellectual discourse on popular culture and scholarly popular culture studies. Steiner's best-known book, After Babel, was an early contribution to the field of translation studies.
He is a regular contributor of reviews and articles to journals and newspapers including the New Yorker, the Times Literary Supplement and The Guardian.
Steiner's career has been graced by many honours including:
He has also won numerous awards for his fiction and poetry.
A list of his published works is to be found here
Rubrica: Hoje fui à bola
Etiquetas: Hoje fui à bola
After Vermeer? Han van Meegeren!!!
Van Meegeren paints the Jesus amongst the Doctors for the benefit of the court
Cartoons matinais
Etiquetas: eu me confesso
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