Savours of Switzerland

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343861

Savours of Switzerland

lifestyle April 25, 2018 01:00

By The Nation

If you’re planning a trip to Switzerland, time it around the much-loved Food Zurich festival, which returns to the banks of the Limmat River and runs around Zurich from May 24 to June 3.

The 11-day event will celebrate culinary culture in all its facets – from street food and slow food to haute cuisine – as experimental Swiss dishes meet traditional recipes and international trends while seasoned restaurants serve it up at surprising new venues.

This year’s programme will be conducted by more than 200 producers, up-and-coming chefs, restaurateurs and retailers offering guests hands-on experiences, new tastes and discussion on the latest scientific innovations.

Find out more at http://www.Bauraulac.ch.

Lost in nature

ShellSea Krabi beats the summer heat by offering special deals for Thai residents and expatriates from now until October 31.

Room rates start at Bt4,600 for a Garden View Room with breakfast for two and those booking a three-night stay or more will be rewarded with a complimentary 45-minute aroma massage treatment. During the day, guests can enjoy outdoor activities on the famous Fossil Shell Beach or explore the hidden beaches, tiny islands and forest trails.

Reserve your room by calling (075) 819 519 or email info@theshellseakrabi.com.

Service with a Thai Smile

Thai Smile has won the TripAdvisor Travellers’ Choice’s awards for the second consecutive year and is now saying thank you to its loyal customers with the special promotion Fly as a Couple.

Dound-trip domestic routes start from Bt1,980 and from Bt3,080 for round-trip international routes. Book by April 30 for travel between May 1 and October 31.

Check out the flights at http://www.ThaiSmileAir.com.

Stay and save with Shilla

The Shilla Stay hotel chain in South Korea is offering a raft of privileges for Shilla Rewards members who book up to 30 days in advance.

Room rates start at KRW 65,880 (Bt1,920) per night and members can take advantage of complimentary welcome coffee, access to the fitness centre and bonus membership points. Those booking 10 nights or more will also get one night free.

Schedule your stay at http://www.ShillaHotels.com/membership/offers/pack/memListRewardsPack.do.

Saying ‘I do’ in Hainan

Perfect for those wishing to tie the knot, the Sanya Edition hotel in Hainan celebrates your special day with a Wedding Accommodation Package that’s available through next April.

Starting at RMB 188,888 (Bt943,000), the package includes a two-night stay in the Penthouse Suite, a two-night stay for all guests in an Ocean View Room (up to 25 guests) and various options for banquets or cocktails.

Marriott Hotel Reward members can earn up to 100,000 points when booking a package before December 31.

Find out more details at http://www.Edition-Hotels.cn.

Leading lights of 2018

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343779

  • Basic Teeory
  • Patipian
  • Nuaynard
  • Nympheart

Leading lights of 2018

lifestyle April 24, 2018 01:00

By KUPLUTHAI PUNGKANON
THE NATION

2,561 Viewed

Thailand’s got superb talent in design, and the push is on to give it global prominence

THREE POPULAR annual trade fairs – BIFF & BIL, BIG+BIH, and TIFF – were combined for the first time last October into one massive event that clocked up Bt3.5 billion worth of sales among 52,000 visitors from around the world. The figures aren’t in yet for the second edition, “Style April 2018”, which just ended yesterday, but it was another major success.

Hosted by the Commerce Ministry’s Department of Inter- national Trade Promotion, the mega-fair pooling design talent in fashion, housewares and furniture took place at Bitec in Bang Na.

The department’s “Talent Thai” project, inaugurated in 2004, has seen plenty of impressive lifestyle products designed by young, creative minds. But what’s still in short supply is the long-term support to ensure them a place in the international market.

The designers have plenty going for them, including common ground and shared values, such as concern for the environment, giving heritage crafts a modern twist, and developing new materials.

Nawat Saksirisilp and Korawut Kanchanabunmalert of the home-decor brand Moreover have devised a way to “soften” hard materials like steel – by folding them as if they were paper, in the style of Japanese origami.

Nawat likens each piece to a work of art crafted to enhance the home in harmony with various styles of interior design.

“We like to explore creative functions,” he says. “We see more and more in the designs, and that’s why we named the brand Moreover.

“For example, our new Season collection takes its inspiration from the beauty of nature and the changing seasons. The way sunlight is reflected in water in the summer is literally ‘mirrored’ in our small accessories, pens, rings and so on. We have the Early Bird key holder and the Winter Forest can hold necklaces, earrings and more.

“We’ve tried to capture the outdoors in indoor items by combining multiple materials, including metal, wood and stainless steel.”

Another Bangkok-based brand, Nympheart, transforms salvaged wood – pieces of no use to woodworkers – with fine craftsmanship and clever applications.

Teerapol Tanamontal and Pleankan Traikhumpun, both King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology Latkrabang architecture graduates, build jewellery, clocks and cases for mobile phones.

“Salvaged wood like driftwood isn’t hard enough to make into furniture,” says Teerapol. “But I apply furniture-design technique while using epoxy cement that’s normally used to fix holes in furniture. I can create a new form of accessories retain the wood’s natural grain patterns, so they’re really one-of-a-kind products.

“The challenge is that everything is made by hand and you need very skilful woodcraft, and that makes the process expensive. The finishing is also difficult due to the natural curves in the wood, but it has to seamlessly fit the different shapes of our designs.”

Worrachai Siriwipanan of Basic Teeory has been making eco-friendly jewellery out of paper since 2014 and now sells his wares at Siam Discovery and has several foreign customers.

“I got into jewellery design because I found what was on offer in the market boring, but I also believe that everything around us has value. So I decided to use materials that are usually overlooked, and first I tried many different types of reused materials, thinking that making jewellery out of paper would be impossible.

“But paper’s weakness turned out to be its selling point. I use a coating technology that makes the paper jewellery more durable, even if it gets wet. I use several techniques, such as folding and cutting, to create necklaces, bracelets and earrings, but I’ve found that rolling the paper tightly into beads is quite promising, and you can have a lot of fun stringing them together.”

In one day Worrachai can make 300 to 500 beads. Each necklace takes 120 to 150 beads. His latest collection, “New Eyes of Memphis”, evokes the art of the 1970s, with the beads painted by hand to create textures as well as colours.

Kajee Wongpanich and Sukanya Amornpraphatheerakul’s Mirror Mirror, another brand that’s internationally recognised, recently presented a showcase in Paris. It’s fine jewellery in food themes – a lobster earring, bangles that look like packets of chocolates, brooches like crisps, and others.

Brands Patipian and Nuaynard both delve into Thailand’s long and envied heritage of craftsmanship with modern product designs that re-imagine their roots.

Specialising in home decor, Patapian takes its name from a traditional toy – a fish made of woven plant fibres. Varongkorn Tienparmpool and Supattra Kreaksakul share a passion for art and weaving and combine excellent craft

skills with contemporary aesthetics. The Snail Mirror collection that put them on the map extrapolates on the movement of a snail, creating overlapping geometric forms.

“We tend to get our inspirations from everyday experiences,” Varongkorn says, showing a set of hanging lamps. “This idea came from the phra prang, the beautiful corncob-shaped pagoda seen at some temples. I’ve woven plant fibre and added copper and brass to create a new material, and it’s all woven up from bottom to top in the same way Thais walk around the pagoda when making merit.”

At Nuaynard, Nanpat Poonsawat, Pakasit Netnakorn and Pattrawan Sukmongkol make soaps, fragrances and skincare products by hand using only natural resources, such as fresh rainwater and spring water.

Based in the village of Baan Sub Sri Chan in Nakhon Ratchasima, Nuaynard enjoyed considerable success with its Chuen Jit-Chuen Jai collection inspired by traditional Thai fragrances.

They aim to revive the wisdom of the past in skincare products, such as the cooling, cleansing cologne nam ob, made of rainwater and herbs.

“This is part of our commitment to the rural community and local efforts to use sustainable resources and create a modern strategy for earning income,” says Nanpat.

Interest is increasing in pet products. Several dedicated brands have arisen that are designing clever and compassionate items, such as Sunday Dog, which creates dog houses unlike any you’ve ever seen before – comfy, modern and easy-to-clean structures that fold up like origami.

FIND THEM ONLINE

http://www.MoreoverDesign.com

http://www.NuaynardHandcraft.com

http://www.N-ever.wix.com/nympheart

http://www.MirrorMirrorBrand.com

http://www.Patipian.com

sundaydogshop@gmail.com

basicteeory@gmail.com

Idols on the move for Comic Con

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343775

  • Necopla
  • Akishibu Project
  • JKT48
  • Lovely Doll
  • NGT48
  • Milcs
  • Manekikecak
  • Papirosier

Idols on the move for Comic Con

lifestyle April 23, 2018 15:32

By The Nation

2,182 Viewed

Japan’s Tokyo Idol Festival joins up with Bangkok Comic Con this week as the biggest pop culture festival in Asia returns to Royal Paragon Hall from Friday (April 27) to April 29.

Also coming to town is the J-pop idol festival, which marks its first overseas experience by flying in Akishibu Project, Lovely Doll, Manekikecak, Milcs Honmono, Necopla, Papirosier, Take Have Fun and NGT48 as well as JKT48, an overseas sister group of AKB48 from Jakarta in Indonesia, and Thailand’s BNK48.

Akishibu Project was formed by ex-BiS member Ichigo Rinahamu with the aim of connecting the male-focused Akihabara culture with the female-focused Shibuya culture. The fusion idol group will shortly make its debut on King Records with the recruitment of four new members.

Lovely Doll is very popular not least for their cute faces and powerful performances. Known affectionately as “Love-Doru”, the idol group released their debut single in 2014 on Nippon Crown Music and have since hit the charts with “Yoakemae, Nijigasasu” and “Hikari no Symphony”.

Manekikecak, which was formed with the goal of appearing on the famous Japanese TV programme “NHK Red and White Year-end Song Festival”, has built its reputation on singing ability and songs. This idol group will hold a solo show at the Nippon Budokan in September and organisers say tickets have already sold out.

Milcs Honmono from Hokkaido, who were in Bangkok earlier this year for the Japan Expo Thailand 2018, and also formed part of the 2017 Hokkaido’s Sensation at Siam Discovery, broke onto the idol scene when they won first prize at a anime-song cover contest in 2015.

Necopla, formerly known as “Neco Plastic”, is best known for their energetic music and intense performance while Papirosier is a cool, hard, and beautiful idol unit formed on the concept “A butterfly (Papillion) dancing upon a rose (Rosier)”. Task Have Fun debuted in 2016 and released their first single “3WD” in May the following year.

NGT48, sister group of AKB48 from Niigata Prefecture in Japan, has three singles to their credit and is part of the cast of television series adaptation of “Higurashi When They Cry”.

JKT48, another overseas sister group from Jakarta, Indonesia, will also be answering present. The 60-member oufit have opened their own theatre at Jakarta’s fX Sudirman Mall.

Bangkok Comic Con also features a talk by Hollywood actress Kelly Hu of “The Scorpion King” and “X-Men 2: The Tournament” plus a show by Japan’s comic artist and international cosplayer Hidetaka Tenjin. There’ll be pre-release activities related to movies “Deadpool 2” and “The Nun”, as well as from our very own m Sahamongkolfilm’s “Khun Phan 2” and Cartoon Network’s “We Bare Bears”.

Booths will be brimming with Gunpla and Tamashii Nation and collectible toys while the interactive game segment brings “Legend Sports Heroes”, card games “Magic: The Gathering” and a cosplay contest.

Tickets for Bangkok Comic Con cost Bt200 and are on sale at http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com. For Tokyo Idol Festival’s concerts, visit http://www.eventpop.me/e/3165-bccxtcc2018.

Recycling to save our home

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343772

Recycling to save our home

lifestyle April 23, 2018 15:22

By The Nation

Bangkok-based social enterprise Bnow.org marked Earth Day, which fell yesterday (April 22), by launching RecycleNow.Asia, a website that aims to encourage and promote ways in how people can reduce, reuse and recycle their trash.

This one-stop website is designed as a platform to educate and inform people about the importance of recycling and the positive impact it has in the world we live in. It will provide information related to recycling in Bangkok and other provinces in Thailand, including lists of related organisations, recycling centres, communities which organise recycling activities, second-hand shops, tips on how to recycle used household items, DIY ideas to recycle garbage into creative and useful things and more.

“Our goal is to promote benefits of recycling and ways on how you can reuse and properly dispose garbage from your homes and offices. Recyclenow.asia brings together like-minded people who want to make a difference to the world we live in plus make it green and healthy for the future generations,” said Pacharee Pantoomano-Pfirsch, founder of Bnow.org and a staunch supporter of recycling.

She believes that recycling is everyone’s social responsibility and should be part of one’s daily life.

“I grew up in the US where each house separated garbage and recyclables. Unfortunately, this is not the case in Thailand and the recent flood in Bangkok was largely caused by garbage such as plastic bags, bottles and foam boxes clogging the drainage system. There is little awareness about the plastic pollution and the importance of recycling. We only have one earth and together we can help to make a healthier environment,” she reiterated.

Bangkok is notorious for its poor implementation of recycling trash, segregation and waste management. According to Thailand’s Department of Environmental Quality Protection, Bangkok is producing more waste than the previous years. It is estimated that each Thai person produces 1 kg of trash every single day.

Recyclenow.asia is run by volunteers and Pacharee invites both individuals, organiSations and companies to support this initiative by sharing resources related to recycling. She hopes the website will inspire more people to make recycling part of their life. Using refillable cups when buying coffee, carrying a cloth bag to carry your groceries and recylicing papers and envelopes are some of the simple things you can do, she shared.

“Earth Day is an annual event held worldwide to demonstrate support for the environmental protection. By launching Recyclenow.asia on this day, we aspire to be part of the global movement and encouraging Thais to reduce, reuse and recycle,” she added.

Sports – sedentary style

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343596

LGD’s team, left, on stage ahead of a LGD’s match in the League of Legends Pro League (LPL). / AFP
LGD’s team, left, on stage ahead of a LGD’s match in the League of Legends Pro League (LPL). / AFP

Sports – sedentary style

lifestyle April 22, 2018 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
Hangzhou, China

2,192 Viewed

As eSports grow, China teams make themselves at home

TUCKED AWAY in a nondescript furniture mall, LGD Gaming’s multimillion-dollar eSports home venue may not bring to mind Old Trafford or Yankee Stadium, but it could represent the future of sport.

The 400-seat arena in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou packs in pumped-up fans several times a month for LGD’s matches in the League of Legends Pro League (LPL), a 14-club professional eSports competition that this year began playing in purpose-built home venues.

ESports is booming in China, driven by popular games such as League of Legends and Dota2, raising hopes of eventual Olympic inclusion and turning young players into rich celebrities.

 LGD’s team, left, on stage ahead of a LGD’s match in the League of Legends Pro League (LPL). / AFP 

Specially designed eSports arenas are appearing in the United States and China to accommodate growing crowds attending multi-team tournaments.

But the LPL’s “home stadiums” put China ahead of the curve, industry insiders say.

“Home venues let the club localise its fan base,” explains Yang Shunhua, LGD’s general manager.

“It gives fans more opportunity to meet the athletes and clubs. It’s the future of eSports.”

Beginning play in 2013, LPL matches were staged in Shanghai.

But Chinese internet giant Tencent, the league’s owner, is encouraging teams to lay down local roots.

Three clubs now have home arenas – the others are in the southwestern cities of Chongqing and Chengdu – and more are planned, Yang says.

Supporters of LGD react during a LGD’s match in the League of Legends Pro League (LPL). /AFP

Whether the strategy proves successful remains to be seen, but there is no shortage of ambition at LGD’s flashy facility, which cost 30 million yuan (Bt149.2 million).

Occupying 2,200 square metres, it features press conference venues, fan zones, practice spaces, a bar, gift shop and high-tech control rooms where squads of young technicians coordinate web broadcasts to millions of spectators.

On stage, LGD’s five-man squad sit like astronauts at futuristic consoles, controlling avatars who battle a team from the city of Nanjing on a seven-metre wide screen above them. Announcers breathlessly call the action, play-by-play.

In the stands, around 400 fans, sitting in chairs with massage functions, bang thundersticks and roar whenever the on-screen action – a frantic brawl in a fantasy world – heats up.

Yao Jian, 23, used to stock up on snacks and binge-watch eSports on his phone or computer at home in the city of Wuxi. Now he regularly makes the several-hour trip to Hangzhou.

“The atmosphere at the stadium is explosive,” he says, adding that even an “introvert” like him ends up cheering.

“Home stadiums give us a sense of belonging.”

Chinese eSports is increasingly resembling big-time sports in other ways as well.

LGD’s full squad is mostly Chinese but includes two Korean imports and Yang says transfer fees for top LPL players have reached several million dollars.

The global professional eSports industry will grow 38 per cent in 2018 to $906 million in revenue, industry analyst Newzoo has forecast, with China representing 18 per cent of that, third behind the US and Europe.

Around 380 million fans worldwide will watch professional eSports events this year, Newzoo said.

US-based Allied Esports has built several venues in the United States, Europe and China, where it also organises competitions.

Chief executive Jud Hannigan says Allied Esports, a consortium of Chinese sports and entertainment companies, is talking with several other cities in China, hoping to add to its arenas in Beijing and Shenzhen.

“Previously you had to find space to rent, plus equipment and people. You could spend millions of dollars to set up a space over five days, only to rip it down. It’s not very efficient,” he points out.

“We are having a lot of interesting conversations with cities that recognise this is where the future is and they are saying ‘how do we bring this to our town?’”

Top Chinese LPL players earn as much as $1.5 million per year, Yang said.

 LGD’s 23-year-old captain Chen Bo /AFP

“It gives our youths more choices. It’s not like before when all you could do was study. Now there are other roads,” he says.

LGD’s 23-year-old captain Chen Bo admits he was a truant, blowing off school to play computer games – to his parents’ dismay.

But mum and dad feel better now that his growing earnings bought them a previously out-of-reach house and car.

A home stadium brings committed, adoring fans.

But Chen, whose player handle is “Pyl”, eschews the female supporters who send gifts and dating requests.

At LGD’s match, several of them held illuminated screens with messages of support for their heroes.

Chen admits fan-player romances are common, but says the pro game’s high-stakes pressure, in which one weak performance can cripple a career, leaves him little time for that.

“When playing professionally it can be pretty hard on the woman because there is so little time to spend with them,” he says.

Headsets to another world

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343595

A group of gamers wearing virtual reality headsets at Zero Latency Singapore, in Singapore. / AFP
A group of gamers wearing virtual reality headsets at Zero Latency Singapore, in Singapore. / AFP

Headsets to another world

lifestyle April 22, 2018 01:00

By Agence France-Presse
Singapore

2,623 Viewed

Arcades seek to take virtual reality gaming mainstream

GAMERS WEARING headsets and wielding rifles adorned with flashing lights battle a horde of zombies, letting out the occasional terrified shriek.

The virtual reality arcade in Singapore is part of a wave of such venues being opened as backers of the technology seek to shake off teething problems and break into the mainstream.

The buzz around virtual reality (VR) gaming has seen Taiwan-based HTC, Sony and Facebook-owned Oculus VR battling to woo consumers with a range of headgear.

But it has been slow to really take off, partly due to the hefty price of top-end headsets, beginning at around $350, and the challenges in setting up complex VR systems at home.

But VR arcades, which have been springing up around the world, particularly in Asia, are now giving people the chance to try it out more easily and for a fraction of the price.

“Given the complications of at-home, PC-based VR systems, pay-per-use, location-based entertainment venues can fill the gap,” wrote Bryan Ma, from International Data Corporation (IDC), a consumer technology market research firm, in a recent note on the industry.

A group of gamers wearing virtual reality headsets at Zero Latency Singapore, in Singapore. / AFP 

 

Several VR gaming companies have made forays into Singapore, seeing the ultra-modern, affluent city-state that is home to hordes of expatriates as a good fit.

The zombie fight-out was taking place at a centre where participants stalked a room with a black floor and walls.

“I did paintball before, it’s quite fun… but I think the whole scene is much more interesting here,” said Jack Backx, a 55-year-old from the Netherlands, who was playing with colleagues from the oil and gas industry on a work day out.

The location is run by VR gaming group Zero Latency, which started in Australia and has expanded to nine countries. It uses “free-roam” virtual reality – where gamers move around in large spaces and are not tethered to computers with cables.

It’s not all intense, shoot-’em-ups – VR group Virtual Room has an outlet in Singapore that transports gamers to scenarios in the prehistoric period, a medieval castle, ancient Egypt and even a lunar landing.

A group of gamers wearing virtual reality headsets at Zero Latency Singapore, in Singapore. / AFP 

 

VR arcades have been springing up in other places. China was an early hotbed for virtual reality gaming although the industry has struggled in recent times, while they can also be found in countries across the region including Japan, Taiwan and Australia.

Many key industry milestones over the past two years have been in Asia but arcades have appeared elsewhere – London’s first one opened last year while there are also a few in the United States.

Consumer spending on virtual reality hardware, software and services is expected to more than double from $2.2 billion (Bt68.75 billion) in 2017, to $4.5 billion this year, according to gaming intelligence provider SuperData Research.

For the best-quality experience, it can be relatively expensive – a session in Singapore costs S$59 (Bt1,400).

“The equipment here is not cheap,” said Simon Ogilvie, executive director of Tomorrow Entertainment, which runs the Zero Latency franchise in Singapore.

The industry faces huge challenges.

China offers a cautionary tale – according to IDC, VR arcades have struggled there after expanding too quickly.

There have also been warnings that improvements in home-based technology may eventually lead to VR gaming centres suffering the same fate as traditional arcades that were once filled with Pac-Man and Street Fighter machines.

“The rise and fall of coin-operated videogame arcades in the 1980s suggests that such VR arcades may eventually fade in relevance as home-based computing power and prices fall within mass consumer reach,” said the note from IDC’s Ma.

Rebecca Assice, who runs Virtual Room in Singapore, said one challenge was getting people interested in the first place as many still did not know about the arcades.

“VR is still a really new industry,” she said. “A lot of people just don’t know this sort of activity exists.”

Those Beats just got better

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343565

Those Beats just got better

lifestyle April 21, 2018 01:00

By Paisal Chuenprasaeng
The Nation

Not a note is missed with cool, comfy Studio3 Wireless headphones

Beats Studio3 Wireless overear headphones can add more fun to music listening on your iPhone or iPad with powerful bass and effective noise cancellation.

You can count on long battery life and fast charging, as well as technology that makes it easy to connect to your Apple devices.

Studio3 Wireless is powered by an Apple W1 chip that ensures seamless setup and switching between devices.

When I put the headphones near my iPad Pro 10.5-inch, a dialogue box appeared on the tablet’s screen asking if I wanted to connect them. Then I just followed the instructions to complete the setup.

Once your all hooked up, it’s easy to switch to other devices running on the macOS Sierra, iOS 10 and watchOS 3 – as long as they’re linked to your iCloud account and you’re using the same Apple ID.

 

The Studio3 Wireless headphones deliver a premium sound experience with Pure Adaptive Noise Cancelling (Pure ANC) blocking external sounds and realtime audio calibration to preserve clarity, range and tone.

It continuously pinpoints external sounds to block while automatically optimising output, so you always hear the music as the recording artists intended it to sound.

I found that the Studio3 Wireless is particularly good for rock music because it reproduces the heavy bass and you get superb clarity in the mid and high ranges.

 

As for the battery life, when Pure ANC is turned on, it can last up to 22 hours, and if Pure ANC is off, you can get 40 hours. Fast Fuel technology also allows for three hours of play on a 10-minute charge.

The headphones are designed for long-term comfort. The soft overear cushions feature advanced venting and signature ergonomic pivoting, so there’s a custom, flexible fit for any head shape.

The light weight means you can wear them for hours without discomfort.

 

Connected to your iPhone, the Studio3 Wireless can control music playback. Press the “b” on the left earcup once to pause or play playback. Press twice to skip ahead a track and three times to skip backwards.

Press the “b” twice and hold to scan forward through a track, three times and hold to scan backwards.

To control the playback and phonecall volume, there are buttons above and below the “b”. Press and release Volume Up or Volume Down or press and hold to increase and decrease the volume continuously.

You can also use the Remote Talk cable to control playback volume.

 

For phone calls, press the “b” once to answer or end a call and press again to answer a second incoming call and put the first call on hold. When two calls are active, press “b” again to switch between them. You can reject an incoming call by pressing and holding the “b” for one second.

To stop listening through your headphones and send the call to the phone, press “b” twice.

To activate Siri on your iOS device or the voicecommand feature on another device, press and hold the “b” until you hear a chime, then say what you wish.

 

You can check the battery level and charging status on the Fuel Gauge by tapping the power button.

Pure ANC is enabled by default each time you power up the Studio3 Wireless, but you can turn it off by double-pressing the power button while connected to your device. You can turn it on again by repeating the process.

The package includes the 3.55mm Remote Talk cable that can be used for listening to music and controlling playback. The cable has a centre button that functions like the “b” on the earcup.

There’s also a hard carrying case that the headphones fold into for convenient transport.

The Beats Studio3 Wireless is available in Shadow Grey, Porcelain Rose, Matte Black, White, Blue and Red for Bt12,500 at http://www.Apple.com/th.

Key Specs

– Form Factor: Over ear

– Connections: Bluetooth, Wireless

– Batteries: Rechargeable lithiumion

– Height: 18.4cm

– Weight: 260g

– In the box: Headphones, carrying case, 3.5mm Remote Talk cable, Universal USB charging cable (USBA to USB MicroB), Quick Start Guide

Three cameras on the go

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343578

Three cameras on the go

lifestyle April 21, 2018 01:00

By THE NATION

2,685 Viewed

Huawei’s smartphone arsenal now includes the P20 Pro with a three-camera setup for the rear camera – 40MP RGB, 20MP monochrome and 8MP 3x telephoto – using a Leica lens.

You get 6GB of RAM and 128GB of storage running on an Android 8.1 OS, a 6.1inch OLED Full View Display and a Huawei Kirin 970 CPU octacore processor. It retails for Bt27,990.

Enjoyable pokes in the ear

Jabra’s Elite Active 65t true-wireless earbuds are built for wearing while playing sports. There’s a secure fit, an integrated accelerometer for tracking via the Jabra app and protection against sweat, water and dust. Count on five hours of listening time on one charge. Get them in navy/copper for Bt6,990.

Sound goes vertical

Sony’s HTZ9F is a 3.1-channel Dolby Atmos/DTS X soundbar with the company’s new Vertical Surround Engine that fits perfectly in any home. Three front speakers reproduce “vertically”, creating virtual surround sound that seems to come from all around. Advanced digital processing converts audio into immersive sound. With power output of 400 watts, it sells for Bt26,990.

Good God, gamers!

The Nitro NP5155188BC notebook computer from Acer is plenty powerful for gaming. An eighth-generation Intel Core i78550U processor running at 1.8GHz, 8GB of RAM, a full terabyte on the hard drive and the Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 adapter with 4GB of video memory will get you through anything. It’s in stores for Bt37,990.

Office mates will ‘Flip’

The 55-inch digital display on Samsung’s Flip phone lets you effortlessly connect and interact in the workspace. Up to four people can introduce content or annotate simultaneously in real time just by drawing or writing with a pen directly on the UHD-resolution screen. Flip users can write up to 20 pages per file. Expect to pay Bt129,000.

One box, lots of options

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343563

One box, lots of options

lifestyle April 21, 2018 01:00

By Paisal Chuenprasaeng
The Nation

A new IPTV box from GMM Z makes watching iflix series and movies a dream

Watching content streamed by iflix on your big screen TV just became a whole lot easier with the release of the GMM Z Stream, an Android OS-base IPTV box.

Before, tuning into the TV series and movies available through the iflix service on your large-screen TV meant attaching a Google Chromecast to your TV then “casting” from the iflix app to the Chromecast.

Now the GMM Z Stream, which runs on Android 6.0 operating system, can run the iflix app and thanks to its HDMI output, plays iflix movies directly onto your TV.

The box is a powerful multimedia hub. It’s powered by AMLOGIC S905X quadcore 64bit cortex-A53 processor with a clock speed up to 2 GHz and uses a pentacore MALI450 processor to handle graphics tasks.

 

It has two gigabytes of working memory or RAM and 8 GB of storage for installing apps. The box is capable of decoding and outputting up to 4K video at the rate of 60 frames per second. It also supports decoding 1080P video at 60fps.

The IPTV box comes with two USB ports and a microSD card reader, one HDMI port, and one optical digital output as well as a LAN network port. It also supports wireless connectivity with dual Wi-Fi bands of 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz. With the builtin Wi-Fi connectivity, the box supports DLNA, AirPlay and Miracast multimedia streaming.

In fact, the box is just like an entertainment computer for playing Android games and apps with output to your TV. You can connect a keyboard and a mouse to its USB ports to use it more conveniently than through its remote control alone.

During the test, I used a Logitech wireless mouse to navigate and interact with apps on the box. I could click the onscreen keyboard to log on to my iflix and Google accounts effortlessly. The box streamed movies and TV series from the iflix server with good 1080p quality and excellent sound without any performance hiccups. I tested it using LAN cable connection as well as with True Online’s SuperSpeed Fibre 50/29 Mbps package. The iflix movies streamed beautifully and both sound effects and dialogue matched the pictures perfectly.

Using the wireless mouse, I could conveniently browse through iflix’s vast library of popular international, Asian and local TV shows and movies, while selecting audio language and subtitle options.

I could also browse TV series and movies by category – movies, TVs, kids and studios, for example. The TV series currently include Top 200, Korean, Chinese, Thai, Thriller and Horror while the movies category has Top 200, Action, Animation, Chinese, and Korean.

The GMM Z Stream box is also pre-installed with YouTube, Atime-Online, OneHD 31 and GMM 25 apps.

The YouTube app allows you to conveniently watch YouTube clips on your large screen TV while the One 31 and GMM 25 apps get you live content from the two TV stations, streamed via the Internet. The Atime-Online app lets you listened to Internet radio stations from the Atime Media, including Chill89, Hot915, 94EFM, and Greenwave 106.5.

Since the box supports a mouse and keyboard, you can use the builtin web browser and a Chrome browser to browse websites just as you would with a computer and mobile phone.

You can also use Google’s Play Store to download and install more games or apps that support Android 6.0 to run on the box.

Another option is playing Full HD 1080p movies stored on external hard drive or USB flash card. Several apps are pre-installed for playing movies, including Kodi 16. During the test, I tried using the pre-installed Kodi 16 to play Full HD 1080p movies on a flash drive connected to one of the USB ports. The movies played smoothly and it was easy to select both soundtracks and subtitles.

iflix is currently collaborating with GMM Z Trading to allow buyers of the new GMM Z Stream box to enjoy three months of unlimited access to iflix content.

GMM Z Stream is distributed by Z Trading, a subsidiary of GMM Grammy, for Bt2,490 and is on sale at GMM Shops, PowerBuy, MegaHome, JIB, O Shopping, Big C, HomePro and Amorn Electronic shops.

Key Specs

– OS: Android 6.0

– CPU: Amlogic S905X QuadCore 64bit CortexA53

– GPU: Penta Core ARM Mali450 GPU up to 750MHz+ (DVFS)

– Memory: DDRIII 2GB

– Flash: EMMC Flash 8GB

– Wi-Fi: 2.4G + 5G (Dual Band)

– Video: UHD 4K, FHD 1080P, VP9 HW decoding

– Audio: MP3, AAC, WMA, RM, FLAC, OGG, AC3, Dolby

– Picture: jpg, JPEG, MJPEG, PNG

– Multi Screen: DLNA, AirPlay, Miracast

In the green and under the blue

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/lifestyle/30343576

  • Through the camp, the children learn about the species of fish that populate Southeast Asian waters.
  • “Save the Marine Life” is one of many camps offered by the Environmental Education Centre Thailand.
  • Alex Rendell teaches kids how to dive.
  • Youngsters have fun bathing an elephant.
  • Kids walk along the nature trial.

In the green and under the blue

lifestyle April 21, 2018 01:00

By Kitchana Lersakvanitchakul
THE NATION

3,004 Viewed

A young actor seeks to pass on his passion for the forests and the sea by taking youngsters on environmental camps

The Environmental Education Centre Thailand, an organisation set up by English-Thai actor Alexander Simon “Alex” Rendell to provide direct education on environmental conservation, is helping the Tourism of Thailand Authority “Go Local” by taking young people as well as their parents on camps in various parts of the country and getting the messages over through a host of fun activities.

 

“Go Local”, the TAT’s latest campaign, aims to promote 55 secondary tourist destinations nationwide while better balancing the distribution of tourist arrivals between urban and rural areas, evening out the seasonality factor between the months of travel, and encouraging more travel during weekdays to reduce pressure on the weekends. Its targets are young people, families and the so-called Generation Y.

 

“Gen Y refers to the young people who prefer to travel alone, or sometimes with friends or family members and use the social media to post and promote the beautiful tourist destinations they have discovered. Gen Y takes selfies and talks about their finds with others. These youngsters play an important role in attracting other generations to tourist destinations. This is the second year that we are focusing on tourism in the secondary provinces, and it is to these places that we would like Gen Y to travel, spend time in the communities and help keep the environment clean and safe. So we have joined with Alex, who is passionate about environmental protection, to encourage these young people to share his love for the environment and take care of nature,” says Somradee Chitchong, executive director of TAT’s northern region.

 

“People are travelling more than ever, and they are choosing to spend time either in forested areas or under the sea. Natural or green tourism industry is growing and scuba diving is now so popular that you have book a place on a boat well in advance. Social media has done a lot to promote the beauty of the waters off Thai shores and two of the top ten dive sites are in Thailand,” Alex adds.

 

“My aim is to build a platform that educates people about the environment, as I firmly believe that education is key to sustainable tourism. There are two groups of participants who are interested in our camps. The first is children who love nature and animals, and the second is the parents who sign up their kids for camps. That’s important because we don’t advertise the camps but rely on word of mouth,” he explains, adding that the partnership with TAT covers 15 camp activities and continues through September.

 

“I’m a single mother of two and am involved in the ‘New Generation Tourist Pays Attention to Environment’ campaign presented by Tik Jesdaporn,” says Somradee. “After taking part in a culture camp and a birdwatching camp, my kids lost interest in playing games on their mobile phones all the time. They had a great time at both camps and really enjoyed learning. I find they have a lot more self-discipline. Alex’s activities aren’t created just for children but also for parents and other adults. I think these activities help family relationships.”

 

Alex concurs. “One of our popular activities is the ‘Elephant in the Mist’ camp, where we take children walking along a nature trail in Khao Yai National Park in Nakhon Ratchasima and use instructional media for learning and analysing elephant housing and elephant saltlicks as well the history of relationships between pachyderms and man. We tell the kids to collect elephant dung and they analyse it under a microscope. Our experience shows that the youngsters develop emotional strength from this kind of outdoor activity and cultivate an environmental awareness that they will pass on to others. We also took children to a Moken village in the South and they were fascinated. They instinctively understood it was not the place to take selfies. Conservation isn’t only about the forest and sea but also about humanity.”

Set up slightly less than a year ago, Alex says he was inspired to create the Environmental Education Centre Thailand by his happy memories of some 18 years ago.

 

“When I was young, I got to know khru Alongkot Chukaew, an elephant expert and now a highly esteemed member of the EEC Thailand family. At that time, I went with him to the forest to help a wild elephant that had injured its leg. When we came back, we helped raise funds to purchase medications. When I grew up, I met khru Alongkot again and watched him use an elephant in the development of blind children with multiple disabilities. It was a lovely scene and made me determined to support elephant conservation. Then I had the idea of setting up a centre to educate people about conservation and as a stage to teach kids about giving. Now my aim is to mix environmental education with tourism,” he explains.

 

“The main focus is organising camps but we also want to promote environmental education through the social media and through collaborations with government and private organisations. We don’t expect all kids to be environmentalists but we hope to build a conscience about environmental protection. Some children tell us they want to become veterinarians or marine biologists, or maybe work with the UN. We try to help their dreams come true by facilitating innovative science camps,” he continues.

A certified divemaster, Alex instructs, tests and awards diving certificates and serves as the MC for other camps.

“With the number of celebrity influencers around, I think this year will see many more people take up scuba diving. It’s not hard to master and Thailand’s dive sites are too good to miss.”

Dig a little deeper

For more information about EEC and a schedule of upcoming camps, visit http://EECThailand.com/en/.