SAN FRANCISCO — The high-tech industry has been working itself into paroxysms of excitement lately over an idea that is not exactly new: tablet computers.
Quietly, several high-tech companies are lining up to deliver versions of these keyboard-free, touch-screen portable machines in the next few months. Industry watchers have their eye on Apple in particular to sell such a device by early next year.
Tablets have been around in various forms for two decades, thus far delivering little other than memorable failure. Nonetheless, the new batch of devices has gripped the imagination of tech executives, bloggers and gadget hounds, who are projecting their wildest dreams onto these literal blank slates.
In these visions, tablets will save the newspaper and book publishing industries, present another way to watch television and movies, play video games, and offer a visually rich way to enjoy the Web and the expanding world of mobile applications.
spoo, Finland - Nokia today marked the next phase in the evolution of Maemo software with the new Nokia N900. Taking its cues from the world of desktop computing, the open source, Linux-based Maemo software delivers a PC-like experience on a handset-sized device. The new Nokia N900: Computer-grade performance in a handset
The Nokia N900 has evolved from Nokia’s previous generation of Internet Tablets and broadens the choice for technology enthusiasts who appreciate the ability to multitask and browse the internet like they would on their desktop computer.
Running on the new Maemo 5 software, the Nokia N900 empowers users to have dozens of application windows open and running simultaneously while taking full advantage of the cellular features, touch screen and QWERTY keyboard.
"With Linux software, Mozilla-based browser technology and now also with cellular connectivity, the Nokia N900 delivers a powerful mobile experience," says Anssi Vanjoki, Executive Vice President, Markets, Nokia. "The Nokia N900 shows where we are going with Maemo and we’ll continue to work with the community to push the software forward. What we have with Maemo is something that is fusing the power of the computer, the internet and the mobile phone, and it is great to see that it is evolving in exciting ways."
Designed for computer-grade performance in a compact size, Maemo complements Nokia’s other software platforms, such as Symbian, which powers Nokia’s smartphones.
Powermat will release a wireless charging mat that allows iPhones, iPods, BlackBerrys, Sony PSPs and Nintendo DSi’s to power up without the need for proprietary connectors.
The new system sees a mat, costing £70, accompanied by various add ons and new covers for the electronics devices that mean all you need to do is chuck the device onto the pad to will wirelessly charge it.
An RFID chip on the device can be read by the mat, which will then supply power. When full, the mat drops back to standby mode, consuming a small amount of milliwatts of current, making it far more efficient than a standard mobile phone charger.
Read Hands on: TechRadar tries the magical wireless charging Powermat There’s a portable version of the device as well, retailing at £70 when released, which features all the same elements of the larger version but folds down to a 100mm x 100mm x 35mm footprint with magnetic carrying case.
For the BlackBerry Powermat has developed a back cover with the wireless charge pad in, costing £30, but for the iPhone (which doesn’t have a changeable cover) a silicon skin is used with the receiver, and costs £35, apparently due to Apple demanding royalties for anything to fit its devices.
Powermat also has a slimmer skin for the iPod touch, as well as forthcoming options for the DSi and PSP prior to a Q4 launch in the UK, Italy and the US.
Phones or PMPs without a dedicated Powermat case can use the Powercube, which has a variety of interchangeable tips to power different devices. These will also be available for £30 as well.
Wireless furniture
The company also told TechRadar it is looking into integrating the technology into other devices too, such as powertools, laptops and even furniture, meaning you could just place your iPhone on a worktop and have it charge wirelessly.
Powermat is also set to show off an Apple workstation at CES in 2010, with wireless charging zones for a Macbook and an iPhone, with wireless synchronisation between the two, as well as speakers for multimedia content.
Other territories, such as Germany, France and Benelux, will get the Powermat system in Q1 2010.
Hutchison Whampoa’s mobile handset subsidiary INQ Mobile today unveiled two new low-cost devices, both of which incorporate Twitter and are aimed at bringing mobile social networking to the mass market. The INQ Chat 3G is the company’s first Qwerty phone and includes free push Gmail.
The INQ Mini 3G is a slimline device and billed as "an entry-level social mobile ideal for the price-sensitive market." Both phones feature ’always-on’ Internet-based Twitter, Facebook, Skype and IM clients and have plug-and-play HSPA modems. In addition to these features, the new phones will allow users to sync their phones with their iTunes or Windows music players through a deal with San Francisco-based startup doubleTwist.
The two devices will be launched in the UK in 4Q09 this year, exclusively by Hutchison’s 3 UK, according to reports. A further five 3 markets will launch the device this year, with a US launch pegged for 2010.
Bluetooth headsets have never really been the epitome of style. Presenting The Ripple - coming from the designer Ilya Fridman, this headset is a small, circular disk with ‘ripples’ emitting from the center which is also a small button used to control the device.
Without knowing what it actually was, most people would just assume it’s a very modern and very large earring, but part of the circle flips outwards to reveal the microphone and when a conversation is over, you can press the center button to keep the headset active for listening to music.

King Eagle, A Live Improvisation, will be webcast from International Arts Movement on September 24 at 8:30pm (EST) and will be available free of charge at www.InternationalArtsMovement.org. The IAM Global event will feature IAM’s founder Makoto Fujimura and avant-garde percussionist Susie Ibarra.
Fujimura and Ibarra have collaborated together several times in the last four years, most notably onstage at Carnegie Hall with the American Composers Orchestra in 2007. Additional venues include The Kitchen (for Ibarra’s modern opera, Shangri-La) and Le Poisson Rouge.

Experience the Rhythm, Energy and Passion of Latin America at the 4th Annual Byron Latin Fiesta. A weekend feast of Latin music and dance held at Byron Bay, NSW, Australia.
Experience the Rhythm, Energy and Passion of Latin America at the 4th Annual Byron Latin Fiesta. A weekend feast of Latin music and dance held at Byron Bay, NSW, Australia.
Save the dates 6th – 8th November, 2009 and book your tickets now as this Latin festival is sure to fire up your senses! With a reputation of being one of the best Latin dance events in Australia, this festival attracts people from all over the world to the gorgeous North Coast of NSW to enjoy the unique attributes of Byron Bay with a generous serve of spicy Latin flavour!


I Am Because We Are is the companion volume to the acclaimed forthcoming documentary film directed by Nathan Rissman and written and produced by Madonna. This book of images by award-winning photojournalist Kristen Ashburn—culled from her work in Malawi and Africa over the past seven years as well as from her specially commissioned photographs for the film—provides an intimate look at the lives of eight Malawian children featured in the film and reveals the harsh reality of the AIDS pandemic throughout southern Africa.
The title is derived from the concept of “Ubuntu,” an idea in African spirituality that states that all of humanity is connected, that we cannot be ourselves without community, that an individual’s well-being is dependent upon the well-being of others.

NEW YORK - Japanese pop star Utada is hoping it’s third time lucky as she tries again to crack the U.S. market with a new album that she is convinced has a stronger voice from her divorce after four years of marriage.
Hikaru Utada, 26, better known overseas by her stage name Utada, is returning to her roots in mainstream pop in a bid to make a name for herself in the lucrative American marketplace where Asian stars have always struggled to succeed.
Utada is one of Japan’s top artists after with her debut album, "First Love," sold 9 million copies in 1999 and became Japan’s biggest selling album ever, earning her superstar status at home. She has now sold over 50 million records in Japan.


European independent film channel launches today at the european independent film festival (Écu) 2009 in paris announcement to take place at the Écu press conference tonight.
‘We are really excited to be working in conjunction with The Independent Film Channel to encourage the promotion and screening of independent films,’ says Scott Hillier, President of The European Film Festival and Academy Award Honoured filmmaker. ‘Partnering with The European Independent Film Channel for the launch is an ideal match. It’s all about discovery, screening and promotion of the best cinema in the world.’

Ape on the Moon is a weblog by illustrator Alex Mathers focusing on the best in contemporary illustration styles, artists and techniques. It is for illustrators, designers, artists and anyone interested in cutting edge illustration.
This brand new blog is updated four to five times per week with the latest in contemporary and modern illustration. The blog is unique as it is concentrates solely on fresh new talent and styles in the illustration world, with a particular focus on artists that are new to the scene.



Last week we discussed the scandal sparked by the release of a controversial film in Morocco. Now, another film has been axed in Lebanon. The reason is pretty much the same: sex.
"Help" is the tale of a teenager, Ali, who lives in a van in Lebanon. His life suddenly turns upside down when he meets Thuraya, a prostitute living with a gay man. "Help" is the first feature film by the young Lebanese director Marc Abi Rached. Lebanese authorities initially gave it the green light on two conditions: that it be restricted to viewers 18 years old or older and that an image of female genitals be blurred.

Belle du Berry, better known as the voice and the lyricist of the group Paris Combo, presents a new collection of songs, co-written with trumpeter-pianist David Lewis. They have put aside a hectic schedule of touring and recording for a while in order to create this intimate repetoire, their own secret "garden of delights".
Belle du Berry, plus connue pour être la plume et la voix du groupe Paris Combo, livre une collection de chansons nouvelles, co-écrites avec le trompettiste et pianiste David Lewis.


Cette exposition du célébrissime photographe américain est la plus vaste et la plus complète jamais organisée en France. Près de 200 oeuvres y seront exposées.
Cette exposition sera l’occasion pour le public parisien d’admirer en exclusivité la série Déluge, qui dévoile la complexité du travail de David LaChapelle.
Outre les clichés les plus connus de l’auteur, comme les portraits des grandes célébrités ou les images réalisées pour les revues de mode, seront exposés les nouveaux travaux de l’artiste rarement présentés tels que : Museum, Statut, Cathédrale et le cycle de Awakened.

The point may soon come when there are more people who want to write books than there are people who want to read them.
At least, that is what the evidence suggests. Booksellers, hobbled by the economic crisis, are struggling to lure readers. Almost all of the New York publishing houses are laying off editors and pinching pennies. Small bookstores are closing. Big chains are laying people off or exploring bankruptcy.
A recently released study by the National Endowment for the Arts found that while more people are reading literary fiction, fewer of them are reading books.



DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Art in Iran over the past three decades has mirrored the realities of life; as their country suffered from the international isolation brought on by the country’s Islamic revolution, Iranian artists labored in relative obscurity.
Now, bustling, manic Dubai — a place where a reverence for unbridled commerce coexists with Islam — is providing those artists a bridge to the world. At art auctions here over the past two years, some by Christie’s, Iranian artists have found an eager market for their work.

Revisiting French Film is the major film program of the Arts Rendezvous 2009 and has an impressive festival line up of over 150 films across Australia through the month of July.
The program includes a retrospective of Louis Feuillade and a selection of the top twenty all time greats of French cinema including: Abel Gance, Francois Truffaut, Jean Renoir and Jean Cocteau.
Also Included will be CineMix, a program of silent films mixed to the latest dance sounds from the Paris Underground.

PARIS — French television is getting a face-lift as older news anchors and executives get the boot only to be replaced by younger, prettier faces as part of a nationwide, government-initiated makeover of the country’s news industry.
Things have been shaken up at TF1, where veteran primetime anchor Patrick Poivre d’Arvor, widely known as "PPDA" in Gaul, recently was unceremoniously fired after two decades in the high-profile hot seat. He was immediately replaced by a glamorous blond bombshell named Laurence Ferrari.

East-west fusions have been going on since at least the early 1960s when Indian sitarist Ravi Shankar sat down with musicians like jazz saxophonist Bud Shank and classical violinist Yehudi Menuhin. That cross-legged crossover hasn’t stopped and one of the latest iterations comes from the Bombay Dub Orchestra.
Bombay Dub Orchestra put out their first album in 2006, and it redefined the east west landscape. It was created by two veteran English musicians. Garry Hughes and Andrew T. Mackay. Hughes had put out a pair of solo electronic CDs in the 1980s and went on to work with Björk and helped launch the band, Euphoria. Mackay was a journeyman musician playing keyboards and doing orchestral scoring. They got together on a session that took them to Mumbai, India and the idea of Bombay Dub Orchestra, to combine Bollywood string orchestras, Indian solists and electronics, was born.



Why is it that experiences are etched in memory only through partial traces? The tune of a song, touch of a hand, the warmth of the sun or blueness of the sky - such are the residues that mark significant events. The mind cooperates with the sensate body to filter and store only the strongest impressions, registering sensations such as beauty or surprise.
This phenomenon has never been lost on artists, particularly painters of the landscape. Early depictions of newly colonised lands envisioned frontier territories as untouched and verdant, sublime nature awaiting inhabitation and cultivation. Paintings contributing to the forging of a national and cultural identity in the nineteenth century relied on a pictorial language that survives to the present day. The turbulence of Turneresque storms invoked by Thomas Cole or Albert Bierstadt to inform the ’Awful Grandeur’ of America, project the establishment and values of Empire as clearly as the sweeping terra nullius of Eugene von Gerard or heavenly light aglow in the skies of the ’father of Australian landscape painting’, Louis Buvelot. ii

Paint what you really see, not what you think you ought to see; not the object isolated as in a test tube, but the object enveloped in sunlight and atmosphere, with the blue dome of Heaven reflected in the shadows - Claude Monet
One of the finest exhibitions of Impressionist art ever held in Australia will open at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in October until January 2009. Sydney will be the only venue in Australia.


Le musée national de la Marine vous invite à une plongée exceptionnelle dans le mythe et l’émotion maritimes à travers l’exposition « Le mystère Lapérouse, enquête dans le Pacifique sud ».
Une incroyable enquête à travers les siècles, qui permet de revivre l’expédition de Lapérouse voulue par Louis XVI, l’incroyable voyage jusqu’à sa disparition tragique restée longtemps restée mystérieuse, au milieu du Pacifique Sud.

Chanson (French for "song") refers to any song with French words, but more specifically classic, lyric-driven French songs, European songs in the cabaret style, or a diverse range of songs interpreted in this style. A singer specializing in chansons is known as a chansonnier; a collection of chansons, especially from the late Middle Ages and Renaissance, is also known as a chansonnier.
The very latest of the internationally successful chanteuses is Carla Bruni.Carla has released two albums and is is also now connected with the new French President, Nicholas Sarkozy.

Let us be friends until death" - Zurga & Nadir, Act I
Who would have thought that a duet between two men, pledging eternal friendship over the love of a beautiful woman, would have become the one operatic moment thousands of Australians cannot live without? ’In the depths of the temple’, Number one song in the ABC Classic 100 Opera is set to ring out from the inimitable Michael Lewis as Zurga with Henry Choo making his role debut as Nadir.
Zurga is leader of the Pearlfishers and Nadir is his young protégé. One day, as they gaze upon Léïla, the pearlfishers’ virgin talisman, they vow never to let love come in the way of their friendship. But this is opera at its most romantic, so in spite of their vow, Nadir and Léïla fall foolishly, dangerously and inevitably in love.

"Carmen has an iconic sensuality but, most of all, she is a free spirit." Francesca Zambello
Who is that woman? The way she moves, those eyes, that voice… Is Carmen the ultimate femme fatale?
Opera Australia is thrilled to present a new production of Bizet’s most famous opera, directed by Francesca Zambello, and conducted by Opera Australia’s Music Director Richard Hickox. Zambello’s production, created for the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, is gritty and exotic, while Bizet’s seductive score somehow taps straight into the heart of gypsy song.

Life may not be easy, but it is beautiful in this tale of young love in Paris. Ever since its first performances Puccini’s La bohème has been adored. A chance meeting by moonlight, a street-side café and the artists’ garret – they all come alive through Puccini’s music, which delicately captures love at first sight, youthful exuberance and the sorrow of loss. This really is musical storytelling at its best.
Opera Australia presents a bohème for now – romantic as ever, but with the buzz of a contemporary setting and an outstanding cast. Let yourself be carried away by the soaring voices of some of Australia’s finest artists under the baton of brilliant young Italian Giovanni Reggioli.

Doing for Paris what Woody Allen did for Manhattan, actress Julie Delpy has created – as writer and director - a zippy, romantic comedy with 2 Days In Paris.
Delpy (Before Sunset, Three Colours White, Killing Zoe) has cast herself as the free-spirited Paris-born photographer Marion, who lives most of the year in New York with boyfriend, Jack (Adam Goldberg), a shaggy, heavily tattooed interior designer.

The renowned French film director Abel Gance was born outside of wedlock in 1889. His parents encouraged him to begin a career as a lawyer, but from an early age Gance was attracted to the theatre. He made his stage debut as an actor in Brussels at the age of 19, and then took his first film role, in the 1909 film Molière.
He continued acting and script-writing before forming his own production company in 1911. That year, he made his first film, La Digue, which, like many of his early films, was not successful. His five-hour play, Victoire de Samothrace, in which he was to appear with Sarah Bernhardt, was cancelled with the outset of World War I.


Digby Wren, CEO of the French Rendezvous, today launched the 2007 Book Fest Programme with the announcement that this years program will concentrate on the most read contemporary French authors of the 21st century and the inaugral childrens program.
Running from 1 July to 1 August, and with many authors participating in over 20 events, this year’s French Rendezvous Book Fest will be the most international ever with francophone countries being represented for the first time.

Born in 1959 in Paris from parents artists (his father is an artist engraver and its mother poetess), Dahmane discovers very young person the charm of the female forms, and as of the 15 years age its passion for photography associates it.
This union will give rise to thousands of images, exploring the infinite resources of the sensuality which a body of woman with naked half in the intimacy can release or, conversely, exposed taking into consideration passer by in public places.

A #1 bestselling author in France, Fred Vargas repeatedly captivates her many admirers across the globe with suspenseful mysteries featuring Commissaire Jean-Baptiste Adamsberg, "a Gallic cousin to Ruth Rendell’s Chief Inspector Wexford" (The Washington Post).
In the same way that Donna Leon’s Commissario Brunetti and Andrea Camilleri’s Inspector Montalbano have won countless fans on this side of the Atlantic due to Penguin’s robust commitment to the best international mystery writing, Vargas’s Commissaire Adamsberg is poised to conquer Australia in a series of novels that are "truly original . . . like nothing else in contemporary fiction" (The Sunday Times, London), beginning with "Wash This Blood Clean from My Hand"

Adam Zamoyski has written the story of the Congress of Vienna [1813-15], which was to bring about the political reshaping of Europe and whose legacy affected international relations for a century.
In the wake of his disastrous Russian campaign of 1812, Napoleon’s imperious grip on Europe began to weaken, raising the question of how the Continent was to be reconstructed after his defeat.