November Morning – New video on vimeo

After considering to buy one of the DSLR cameras in addition to my JVC-100 for several months and after watching all the beautiful videos on vimeo produced with the d5 and d7 cameras I still decided to buy Panasonic’s GH1. Although it has not a full-frame sensor, the camera is much (half) lighter, smaller and cheaper than the Canon models and especially the handling is great. The viewfinder is very bright and sharp, the LCD display is sharp and foldable, the various camera settings are easy to access and you can instantaneously switch from still shooting to HD recording. And I had never such detailed White Balance settings on any camera. As a former user of the older Lumix still photography models I learned the basics in one evening and was out this morning for a first test shooting at my home place in Switzerland. I mostly used automatic settings and the stock lens. The soundtrack is by my American friends Kodanda and Premik. Enjoy the result!

New timelapse movie on the Swiss Alps by Michael Rissi

Swiss Videographer writes on his new video on vimeo: A new series of timelapse movies which I recorded this summer and autumn in the Swiss Alps. Most locations are only reachable on foot, some need alpine hikes of 3-5 hours. I spent several weekends in cottages of the Swiss Alpine Club (SAC), where I shot these clips.  The music is from Beethoven’s great 7th Symphony, 2nd movement. Locations are: Diavolezza (Bernina Range, Graubünden), Gleckstein, upper Grindelwald Glacier (oberer Grindelwaldgletscher), Flüelapass (between Davos and Engadin), Schwyz, Rigi, Triftgletscher, Glärnisch.

First NZ Impossibility Challenger World Records Games took place

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A frenzy of record-breaking took place at the 16th Impossibility Challenger, with 11 Guinness and 7 world records broken. The event was held on 14 November 2009 in Auckland’s Trusts Stadium in New Zealand, the first time it has ever occurred outside of Europe. Swiss weightlifter Albert Walter, who already participated in various editions of the Impossibility Challenger Games in Switzerland and Germany,  set two Guinness world records for ripping a 1440 page phone book in 6:83 sec and breaking a 30cm long  and 9.5 mm wide carpenter’s nail in 3:24 min, both with his bare hands. He especially traveled to New Zealand for this event. Alastair Galpin, one of the most prolific Guinness record breakers in the world, set nine new Guinness records in the same day, including the most high-fives in a minute and the furthest distance spitting a ping pong ball. Four employees of New Zealand tyre company Frank Allen Tyres smashed the world record for the fastest 4 wheel tyre change on a car, reducing it from 2 min 30 sec to 1 min 25 sec. 20 people constructed a 270.3 metre balloon chain in one hour, beating the previous world record of 216 metres. Plenty of new world records were set including the fastest mile pushing someone in a supermarket trolley (8 min 14 sec), the furthest distance traveled by a balloon powered car, the tallest hat made from balloons (3 metres 20 centimetres) and the world’s largest dot to dot drawing.

The Impossibility Challenger was founded in 1982 by the accomplished weightlifter and runner Sri Chinmoy (1931-2007) to promote self-transcendence, the ideal of challenging limits and going beyond previous accomplishments.  More news on the NZ event on the website: www.impossibilitychallenger.org.nz

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Hubble Telescope reveals new pictures of our Milky Way Galaxy

A never-before-seen view of the turbulent heart of our Milky Way galaxy is being unveiled by NASA on Nov. 10. This event will commemorate the 400 years since Galileo first turned his telescope to the heavens in 1609. In celebration of this International Year of Astronomy, NASA is releasing images of the galactic center region as seen by its Great Observatories to more than 150 planetariums, museums, nature centers, libraries, and schools across the country. The sites will unveil a giant, 6-foot-by-3-foot print of the bustling hub of our galaxy that combines a near-infrared view from the Hubble Space Telescope, an infrared view from the Spitzer Space Telescope, and an X-ray view from the Chandra X-ray Observatory into one multiwavelength picture. Experts from all three observatories carefully assembled the final image from large mosaic photo surveys taken by each telescope. This composite image provides one of the most detailed views ever of our galaxy’s mysterious core. Participating institutions also will display a matched trio of Hubble, Spitzer, and Chandra images of the Milky Way’s center on a second large panel measuring 3 feet by 4 feet. Each image shows the telescope’s different wavelength view of the galactic center region, illustrating not only the unique science each observatory conducts, but also how far astronomy has come since Galileo.

The composite image features the spectacle of stellar evolution: from vibrant regions of star birth, to young hot stars, to old cool stars, to seething remnants of stellar death called black holes. This activity occurs against a fiery backdrop in the crowded, hostile environment of the galaxy’s core, the center of which is dominated by a supermassive black hole nearly four million times more massive than our Sun. Permeating the region is a diffuse blue haze of X-ray light from gas that has been heated to millions of degrees by outflows from the supermassive black hole as well as by winds from massive stars and by stellar explosions. Infrared light reveals more than a hundred thousand stars along with glowing dust clouds that create complex structures including compact globules, long filaments, and finger-like “pillars of creation,” where newborn stars are just beginning to break out of their dark, dusty cocoons. The unveilings will take place at 152 institutions nationwide, reaching both big cities and small towns. Each institution will conduct an unveiling celebration involving the public, schools, and local media. (Source: NASA)

Sri Chinmoy: 170 instrumemts in one concert

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On September 11, 2005, Maestro Sri Chinmoy chose the village of Interlaken in the Swiss Alps to offer a concert performing on a record number of 170 musical instruments from around the world. This is an excerpt with a sample of 8 different flutes. It is now available on www.srichinmoy.tv

New invention: Battery made from Salt and Paper

nanobatteryA new thin-film flexible battery has been developed by researchers at Uppsala University in Sweden, consisting of two common, non-toxic materials: salt and paper. This discovery could be the cheap, easily manufactured, and green solution for portable rechargeable power. “We introduce a novel nanostructured high-surface area electrode material for energy storage applications composed of cellulose fibers of algal origin individually coated with a 50 nm thin layer of polypyrrole. Our results show the hitherto highest reported charge capacities and charging rates for an all polymer paper-based battery.” The salt solution acts as the electrolyte, and the polymer coated paper (pressed cellulose fibers) becomes the electrodes. Suggestions for real-world applications are medical diagnostics devices or sensors on packaging materials or embedded into fabric.

According to the researchers, “You don’t need advanced equipment to make the batteries, so they could be made on site in developing countries. The aqueous-based batteries, which are entirely based on cellulose and polypyrrole and exhibit charge capacities between 25 and 33 mAh g−1 or 38−50 mAh g−1 per weight of the active material, open up new possibilities for the production of environmentally friendly, cost efficient, up-scalable and lightweight energy storage systems.”

The research paper, Ultrafast All-Polymer Paper-Based Batteries, is published at NANO Letters.

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