Panasonic's Swipe & Share photo sharing feature gets a surprising
twist with Swipe & Share 2.0. The feature still lets users fling
photos from their mobile devices to their Panasonic HDTVs, but the
addition of a new touch-pen stylus will let users modify and draw on
photos right on the HDTV screen. A stylus that works on an HDTV seems
like it could be useful for more than drawing on pictures, but we'll see
how the touch pen is handled in new Viera screens. Currently, Panasonic
has only said the touch pen will be for annotating photos, and will be
an optional accessory for the company's plasma HDTVs.
Viera
HDTVs will also get Panasonic and the Home Shopping Network's new Shop
By Remote service, an online shopping app on upcoming connected HDTVs
that combines online shopping with streaming video from HSN. It lets
shoppers browse through the products available on HSN, watch videos
related to them, read additional information about them, and even flip
through them in a custom HSN channel containing specific product types
set by the user.
Besides connected HDTVs, Panasonic is rolling
out new streaming media players with many of the same technologies found
in Viera HDTVs. The DMP-MS10 and DMP-MST60 are standalone media hubs
that use Viera Connect to make online services and apps accessible even
without a connected Viera HDTV. They also have Miracast wireless display
technology to let users stream content from their mobile devices and
computers to their HDTV. The DMP-MST60 features a Web browser in
addition to the other features. Panasonic's new BDT-230 Blu-ray player
also features Viera Connect and Miracast, along with Blu-ray Disc
playback.
Panasonic announced 32 new HDTVs over its multiple
lines, split between 16 LED and 16 plasma HDTVs. This continues a
surprising trend of cold cathode fluorescent lamp HDTVs being completely
phased out by HDTV manufacturers. Vizio has replaced its low-end CCFL
HDTVs with LED-backlit screens, and Panasonic is following suit. CCFL
screens seem to be a thing of a past, while plasma continues to be one
of Panasonic's pillars in the HDTV market.
My parents are
conservative, first-generation immigrants from India—hovering,
hyper-vigilant, you-can’t-go-to-the-mall-without-me parents. I spent my
teen years obeying the rules; recklessness was something I always
admired in my classmates but never dared myself. I didn’t have a sip of
alcohol until my last semester of high school, and my parents never even
bothered to give me a curfew. I was always home.
At 17, I was
accepted into the journalism program at Ryerson University, a school
with enough legitimacy that my parents were okay with letting me move to
a faraway city unsupervised. For me, it meant an opportunity to finally
rebel. And yet, when I arrived at Ryerson, I mostly kept to myself. I
got into a relationship with the first boy who looked at me twice and
rarely left his side. I called my parents once, sometimes twice a day.
When
my boyfriend dumped me at the beginning of second year, I was
devastated. For the first time in my life, I was truly alone—living and
working alone, making decisions alone. I started visiting bars by
myself, chatting with strangers to pass the time. More and more, I
shirked people my age in order to drink with older acquaintances I
thought were my friends.
One night, while out at a nondescript
bar on Yonge Street, I had a drink with a close-talking French-Canadian
man who looked to be in his late 30s. I excused myself to go to the
washroom, and then downed my drink when I came back. Almost immediately,
I felt fuzzy and uneasy. I looked at him and his face started to swim
in front of me. I excused myself again, this time taking all my things. I
planned to splash some water on my face and walk home.
Looking
in the bathroom mirror, my last thought was lucid: “I can’t stand.” And I
couldn’t. My knees locked, and my next thought was how cool the floor
tiles felt on my face. Moments later, a woman peeled me off the ground.
She dragged me outside, saying, “You’re okay, you’re okay,” and tried to
find out where I lived. The French-Canadian man followed, telling her I
was with him.The howo truck
is offered by Shiyan Great Man Automotive Industry, “Okay,” the woman
said, “so what’s her name?” I don’t remember giving her my address, but I
do recall her telling the cab driver to call her once I got home.
The
next thing I remember is waking up at 8 a.m. in pyjama bottoms and a
sequined vest from the night before, face down on my kitchen floor,
lipstick on my eyelid. I still had my phone, ID, money. The woman had
paid for my cab home. Instead of feeling afraid, I felt invincible.
I went out again the following week,Our technology gives rtls
systems developers the ability. visiting some -acquain-tances in
Cabbagetown. While walking home around 1 in the morning, I was grabbed
by a stranger on the sidewalk. He pinned me down on the pavement, his
forearm on my trachea. This, I thought, is how I’m going to die. I’m
going to die in a Corona promo T-shirt on a Wednesday morning two weeks
after my 20th birthday. But I got lucky again—a man walking by scared
him off and escorted me home. I called my parents, only to lie when they
asked how I was doing.
They watched as the balance in my
chequing account ebbed away, perplexed by how I could spend $130 in one
night on what I swore were dinners out and expensive coffees. “I’m just
really into cappuccinos right now,” I’d tell them. Their trust was
absolute. They sent more money; I set it on fire. They sent more money; I
set it on fire.
By the summer before my third year, I was broke
and unemployed, and my parents were calling me home. I felt that I had
more to burn in the city, and more to see.
By then I was
spending a lot of time with Mike, a friend of one of my professors. One
night he invited me to a bar. When I arrived, he was on the patio with
five 30-something men, all chain-smoking and griping about their
ex-wives. Instinctively, I knew the night would be a mess, but I wanted
to be brave, so I stayed.The howo truck
is offered by Shiyan Great Man Automotive Industry, They carted me off
to another bar, then to someone’s friend’s house, and finally,Trade
platform for China crystal mosaic manufacturers at 4 a.m., to an after-hours club in the basement of a Chinatown fruit market.
I
hit my head on the low ceiling on the way in. We passed a few girls
sitting on a pool table covered in stains, and a couple slumped
motionless against the wall. “If you hear gunshots, just get down on the
ground,” Mike told me, yelling over the blaring music and rowdy crowd. I
could barely see his face through the smoke. I turned away for a
second, surveying the dancers, and when I turned back he was gone. A
drunk girl in a short lace dress rushed up to me with a big hug. I asked
her if she needed any help. She twisted my nipple and stumbled away. A
man offered me a hit of powder off the tip of his key. Soon Mike was
back and in a jacked-up state.
Seeing him so wired made me feel
nervous and out of place, the way I felt when I first started going out.
Now, I was tired. I was tired of being grabbed and lured by people who
couldn’t remember my name. I was tired of being the younger curiosity,
the hanger-on. It all stopped being fun, my invincibility was fading,
and I wanted my old life back.
Around 5:30 a.m., Mike told me he had to work in two hours, so he offered me a ride home. On the way,Our technology gives rtls
systems developers the ability. he stopped at a Tim Hortons to grab a
coffee and we sat in the parking lot, watching the sun come up. I saw
his creased face in the light for the first time, ravaged by drugs and
booze and regret. He told me about the last girl who broke his heart,
and about his dogs like they were the only things that mattered to him.
It started to rain, and my phone lit up with the third email from my mom
that night, asking if I was okay. Mike turned to me and smiled. “So.
Ready to go home?”
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