New Featurette on Disney's A Christmas Carol
Yahoo! Movies has debuted this new featurette on Disney's A Christmas Carol, opening in conventional and IMAX theaters on November 6th. Written and directed by Robert Zemeckis, the film features the captured performances of Jim Carrey, Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, Bob Hoskins, Robin Wright Penn and Cary Elwes.
Top Sexy Vegetables
Sexy vegetables can turn the sexy models crazy as they did in a 30-second ad by PETA in January this year. Some certain Vegetables and fruits have exotic and sexy appearances along with their special components to provide us with extra excitement.
Many of the fruits and vegetables fall in the category whose pictures can have a very dramatic affect on you and your young children in particular! So if we use the special components of these fruits and vegetables to say ‘change our moods,’ lets try to look at them with a different perspective for a change.
Believe it or not, there are a number of amazing and astonishing vegetables in the world around us that leave their viewers deep in thoughts whether they’re looking at mere daily use vegetables or…… sex toys! The exotic looks and some particular ‘posture’ like angles of a lot many fruits and vegetables are rare to watch.
Although a 30-second video clip by the North-folk Virginia animal rights organization “People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)” in the month of January 2009, was not all about these miraculously incredible sexy eatables, but one could see the impact of the ‘stuff’ on our models purposefully used in the ad. However, the NBC immediately imposed a ‘BAN’ on the ad felony; sexuality beyond standards.
In the thick rainforests of Arizona, in Canadian vicinity or in the far-off African lands, around Asian shores or some hottest wilderness of barren desserts, there are countless species of fruits and vegetables which the mankind has been benefiting from in many ways already. Now the focus seems to be on strikingly colorful and surprisingly ‘narrative-featured’ eatables as the internet offers a range of photograph as well as latest information on sexy vegetables such as their origin etc.
Here are the pictures of sexy vegetables.
Chasing online pirates is a gold mine!
Busting people who download pirated content and claiming damages is 150 times more profitable than selling it legally on the internet. Pirate-hunting has now turned into a lucrative business.
Pirate-hunting companies generate their revenue by identifying alleged pirates and sending them notifications, demanding to pay damages for illicit acquisition of copyrighted content. Violators often pay out of fear of legal action, which allows the firms to hand over part of the cash to the copyright owner and leave the rest for themselves.
The relatively new scheme is used mostly in Germany and the UK due to the legislative opportunity there. A presentation by one of them, Germany-based DigiRights Solutions, reveals how profitable this business actually is, reports TorrentFreak news website.
DigiRights Solutions says it claims an average $650 per offence from an alleged pirate, i.e. per pirated song. About 25% of recipients agree to pay, and the company gets to keep four fifths of the money, or $520, while $130 goes to copyright owner.
The document goes on to compare this to the revenue generated by online music shops. With prices of tracks being around 90 cents, pursuing filesharers turns out to be astounding 150 times more profitable than selling actual music.
Each month, DigiRights Solutions says it is able to pursue 5,000 people per title. With a quarter of those resulting in a $130 payment, it would take 150,000 online sales for the copyright owner to have comparable revenue, the report says.
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Does your social class determine your online social network?
But soon she felt too old for the social-networking site, and the customizable pages with music that were fun at first began to annoy her. By the time she graduated from the University of Puget Sound, Owens' classmates weren't on MySpace -- they were on Facebook.
Throughout graduate school and beyond, as her network began to expand, Owens ceased using MySpace altogether. Facebook had come to represent the whole of her social and professional universe.
"MySpace has one population, Facebook has another," said the 26-year-old, who works for an affordable-housing nonprofit in San Francisco, California. "Blue-collar, part-time workers might like the appeal of MySpace more -- it definitely depends on who you meet and what they use; that's what motivates people to join and stay interested."
Is there a class divide online? Research suggests yes. A recent study by market research firm Nielsen Claritas found that people in more affluent demographics are 25 percent more likely to be found friending on Facebook, while the less affluent are 37 percent more likely to connect on MySpace.
More specifically, almost 23 percent of Facebook users earn more than $100,000 a year, compared to slightly more than 16 percent of MySpace users. On the other end of the spectrum, 37 percent of MySpace members earn less than $50,000 annually, compared with about 28 percent of Facebook users.






















