Archive for December, 2009

Choosing the Right DVD Player

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Ever since my Dvd player stopped working, I have been scouting on the internet & elsewhere for another one. The one I had is more than eight years old and what I have been able to figure out with my little search until now is the fact that the DVD technology has surely come a long way. Earlier there was no concept of stuffs like dual layer DVD or even lightscribe media. I bet some people still have got no clue as to what lightscribe media is. But thankfully that number is in minority. It’s important to keep abreast with the latest technology or else there is a real chance that you might miss out on something quite useful & in fact mandatory in today’s fast changing world. As far as my search for a new DVD player goes, I am looking for something which is value for money. However, it does not imply that I would settle for something which is not the top of the line. By all means I would want something that can handle all the latest DVD media & can play it smoothly. I mean the last thing I would want is my movies to keep hanging or worse not playing.

A good idea of formal dress

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Attending the official parties for ladies is just a part of their lives. But it is very important for all of them to look presentable because most of them are facing the new customers for the company. The shopping list of cosmetics and office wears goes on increasing every six months because usually ladies are prone to get bored with the older stuffs they have and they are always thinking to buy something new which they feel as the latest trend in the market. I found women’s shoes are most important part of their official wears because they are not their regular shoes which they wear in personal lives.

Their formal dresses are not just the clothing but it include their purse, shoes, mobile phones and other related electronic devices. In one of the official parties I attended recently, I saw one beautiful lady carrying a leather purse from Gucci with a nice looking black colored cell phone of Nokia. She was exposing her shoes more frequently since according to her they were most expensive shoes available in the party. Truly, womens shoes are really important gift for any woman who is a working professional and want to look better than others in the party.

Guide to County Louth in Ireland

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Louth is located just south of the border from Northern Ireland on the east coast of the country. It is the smallest county in Ireland with an area of just 820 square kilometres, but with a population of 111,000 it is actually Ireland’s fourth most populated county despite having no cities within the county.

However, the county’s two main towns of Dundalk and Drogheda are classified as Ireland’s second and third largest towns. Dundalk lies just 5km from the now invisible border with Northern Ireland, part of the UK, and is situated where the Castletown River enters Dundalk Bay. With a population of around 30,000 it is officially the largest town located entirely within Louth.

There is some argument as to the correctness of this statement because Drogheda’s population is growing faster than Dundalk’s, and repeated recent county boundary changes make the former’s current claim to superiority hard to defend. Drogheda is centred on the River Boyne which used to be the boundary between Louth and Meath, thereby splitting the administration of a growing town. Southern areas of the town centre have been transferred to Louth’s sole control quite recently. If some Drogheda suburbs which still lie within neighbouring County Meath are included in the statistical debate, then Drogheda is clearly the more popular residency of recent years. This has happened due to the completion of the M1 motorway within the Republic which will eventually link Dublin and Belfast. High speed rail and road links to Dublin, just 35 miles away, make Drogheda an ideal commuter town for those preferring to live outside of the city.

If you enter Louth from the south via the spectacular River Boyne cable-stayed bridge on the M1, you will then be able to explore the county’s other towns which include Ardee, Baltray, Carlingford (on the banks of the scenic Carlingford Lough inlet), Castlebellingham, Kilsaran, Clogherhead, Collon, Dromiskin, Dunleer, Jenkinstown, Knockbridge, Louth, Omeath (again by Carlingford Lough), Tallanstown, Termonfeckin, Tinure Cross Roads and Tullyallen.

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Newgrange

Friday, December 25th, 2009

The Boyne Valley and its surroundings, situated in a loop of the River Boyne, some 20 miles north-west from Dublin, a few miles west of Drogheda, County Meath, is one of the most important Irish locations as far as historical heritage is concerned, from newgrange_irelandpre-celtic to medieval times. In this area you can find the pre-celtic tumula of Newgrange, Knowth and Dowth, the Hill of Tara, where the ancient Irish kings settled their kingdom (actually, there is not much to see in Tara nowadays, but the site is inspiring), Monasterboice with its High Crosses, the Mellifont Abbey, and many other interesting things.

Newgrange is the best known Irish passage tomb. It was constructed around 3200BC, this makes it more than 500 years older than the Giza Pyramids in Egypt and 1,000 years more ancient than Stonehenge. It is about 80m in diameter and is surounded by a kerb of 97 stones. Some of these are elaborately carved. Inside the mound is a passageway lined with roughly-hewn stone slabs, which leads to a cross-shaped chamber.

The entrance to the passage is a simple doorway formed by two upright slabs and a horizontal lintel. Above the doorway is a hole known as the roofbox. The passageway has an amazing feature: although built from roughly-hewn rock, it is aligned in such a way that the rising sun shines through the roofbox, down the passageway, and lights up the central chamber on the morning of the Winter Solstice (21 or 22 December). This amazing fact was only discovered during the 19th Century and verified scientifically around 1960. While initially dismissed as coincidence, it is now generally accepted that the mound was designed with this in mind. It shows that the people of 5000 years ago were far more sophisticated than we generally think.

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