I’ve been following Steve’s vicissitudes since 98% of the people i know didn’t even know what Apple was.
Today a cycle, a phase of my life ended. IT and the Internet are not that great frontier anymore, that something esoteric, but a sort of household appliance. Also thanks to Steve, also because of Steve.
I remember i damn wanted a Mac, but my budget allowed me to buy a Commodore 64 instead (but i’ll have loved it anyway!). I still can see that shopping windows with that 512k making a fine show of itself.
And then, suddenly, came my first Powerbook and Ipod (2003 at last!) and so on.
I already wrote about Steve’s vision of Life and today thousands of people are copying+pasting his words into their e-walls, so there’s nothing much more to say except for “Goodby Steve, great man”.
The TEN-T Info Day 2011 took place in the Borschette Conference Centre in Brussels, Belgium. The event presented the priorities for the 2011 TEN-T Multi-Annual Calls, which focus on:
May 20-22 saw me wandering trough woods and Hills and creeks and… whatever. I attended a Camp on wolves with the C.S.D.L. Centro per lo Studio e la Documentazione sul Lupoguys. Well i learned a lot about wolves and i put my 55-250mm lens to the test. Have a look at the pictures.
Along with raptors...
If you wanna know more about the Camp have a look here. Below is a video captured with a trail camera.
Thanks to CSDL team (Giuseppe Paris), Paolo “Mezuluvu” Rossi, and the Beigua Park Staff.
Thanks to all the teachers which gave me very very much troughout these two days: Emanuele Biggi - Naturalist & Wildlife photographer (anura.it) Francesco Tomasinelli – Science Nature & Travel Photographer (isopoda.net), Roberto Malacrida – Nature photographer (robertomalacrida.com).
And of course to the Workshop deus ex machinaMichele Pregliasco (digilands.it) and all the park staff which gave us many and very interesting informations about geology, flora and fauna.
Glocalisation (or glocalization) is a portmanteau word of globalization and localization. By definition, the term “glocal” refers to the individual, group, division, unit, organisation, and community which is willing and able to “think globally and act locally.” The term has been used to show the human capacity to bridge scales (local and global) and to help overcome meso-scale, bounded, "little-box" thinking. 'Glocals' is a term often used to describe a new social class: expat managers who travel often and switch homes often, and are therefore both global and local.