Doesn't matter where is at, this is "my" home sweet home!
-by People in the pix(not me)
Tuesday, October 31, 2006
What colour are yours?
Pick one, if interested to have colorful life.
"Introducing the first safe color specially formulated for the hair down there.
Colors naturally, covers gray, and enhances to match your glorious locks above.
Whether you're blonde (be a true blonde now!), radiant auburn, brunette, or black,
our easy-to-use, no-drip formula gives you the perfect
finishing touch.
From now on, when you highlight or color your hair, don't forget your betty color for the hair down there."
Thursday, October 26, 2006
Proof of reverse evolution
"Backward evolution" spawns ape-like people
http://www.world-science.net/exclusives/060221_unertanfrm.htm
Friday, October 20, 2006
The future is Now
Isn't it super cool? Yeah.. its really really awesome.
"This cool house concept, called the Colani Rotor House, from Hans Hause let you have a living room, a kitchen, a bedroom, a bathroom and a separated toilet within 36 square meters. The main secret is a rotary cylinder that let you switch the kitchen, bedroom or the bathroom via a remote controller."
Designer site
Separated at birth
- saddam setting a trend?
Haha chelsea 1 barca 0 !
- that carpet rug must be growing inwards affecting the brain warghahaha
- one potrayed a super cool bad ass
- the other turned out to be an ass (vid showing vulgar sign to the public)
Perfume is a mixture of fragrant essential oils and aroma compounds, fixatives, and solvents used to give the human body, objects, and living spaces a pleasant smell. The amount and type of solvent mix with the fragrance oil dictates whether a perfume is considered a perfume extract, Eau de parfum, Eau de toilette, or Eau de Cologne.It is impossible to describe a perfume according to its components because the formulas are kept secret. Even if the formulas are known, the ingredients are often too numerous to provide a useful classification. Cognoscenti can, however, generally get a handle on the principal ingredients. On the other hand, it is possible to group perfumes into olfactive families and describe them through the notes that appear as they slowly evaporate. Perfumes can also be classified according to their concentration.A mixture of alcohol and water is used as the solvent for the aromatics. On application, body heat causes the solvent to quickly disperse, leaving the fragrance to evaporate gradually over several hours.Perfumes oils, or the "juice" of a perfume composition, are diluted with a suitable solvent to make the perfume more usable. This is done because undiluted oils (natural or synthetic) contain high concentrations of volatile components that will likely result in allergic reactions and possibly injury when applied directly to skin or clothing.Although dilutions of the perfume oil can be done using solvents such as jojoba, fractionated coconut oil, and wax, the most common solvents for perfume oil dilution is ethanol or a mixture of ethanol and water.Before perfumes can be composed, the odorants used in various perfume compositions must first be obtained.In recent years, celebrities have signed contracts with perfume houses to associate their name with a signature scent, as a self-promotion campaign. The scents are then marketed; the association with the celebrity's name usually being the selling point of the campaign. Such products generally do not have the longevity of classic fragrances.
Perfume is a mixture of fragrant essential oils and aroma compounds, fixatives, and solvents used to give the human body, objects, and living spaces a pleasant smell. The amount and type of solvent mix with the fragrance oil dictates whether a perfume is considered a perfume extract, Eau de parfum, Eau de toilette, or Eau de Cologne.It is impossible to describe a perfume according to its components because the formulas are kept secret. Even if the formulas are known, the ingredients are often too numerous to provide a useful classification. Cognoscenti can, however, generally get a handle on the principal ingredients. On the other hand, it is possible to group perfumes into olfactive families and describe them through the notes that appear as they slowly evaporate. Perfumes can also be classified according to their concentration.A mixture of alcohol and water is used as the solvent for the aromatics. On application, body heat causes the solvent to quickly disperse, leaving the fragrance to evaporate gradually over several hours.Perfumes oils, or the "juice" of a perfume composition, are diluted with a suitable solvent to make the perfume more usable. This is done because undiluted oils (natural or synthetic) contain high concentrations of volatile components that will likely result in allergic reactions and possibly injury when applied directly to skin or clothing.Although dilutions of the perfume oil can be done using solvents such as jojoba, fractionated coconut oil, and wax, the most common solvents for perfume oil dilution is ethanol or a mixture of ethanol and water.Before perfumes can be composed, the odorants used in various perfume compositions must first be obtained.In recent years, celebrities have signed contracts with perfume houses to associate their name with a signature scent, as a self-promotion campaign. The scents are then marketed; the association with the celebrity's name usually being the selling point of the campaign. Such products generally do not have the longevity of classic fragrances.
Thursday, October 19, 2006
Chew you food well before swallowing
World's Heaviest Human Being
Carol Yager (1960-1994) holds the distinction of having been the most obese person ever to live. When she died in 1994 at the age of 34, she weighed about 1200 pounds. Some estimates place her weight at as much as 1600 pounds at her peak, but these are unverified. At death, she was 5'7" tall, and able to fit through her custom-built 48" wide front door, although some sources claim she was more than 5 feet wide.
World's Heaviest Man
Leno's Toys
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Mars Horizon : The true meaning of clarity
God is the greatest.
This is what you might see, if and only if you could stand (or fly, whichever first) on the lovely Mars.
Pics by NASA