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The Best Celebrity Hairstyles of 2010

Monday, 3 January 2011

With so many award ceremonies in Hollywood, how is there not a well-coiffed golden statuette for great hair? We haven’t made the trophy, but we have made the call: These are the best celebrity hairstyles of the year.

Julia Roberts: Best Highlights
Blonde streaks just at the ends (not root to tip) give Roberts's beachy waves a sun-kissed look.


Solange Knowles: Best Natural Hair
Knowles embraces her natural curls, combing them up, up, and away for ample volume, bounce, and shine.


Marion Cotillard: Best Pompadour
Cotillard's pompadour has just the right amount of texture and poufiness to look young, fresh, and decidedly un-Snooki.


Michelle Williams: Best Pixie
Side-swept fringe makes Williams's pixie look even sweeter


Kim Kardashian: Best Bangs
 Blunt, brow-length bangs call attention to Kardashian's eyes—and her ponytail looks sleek and formal, not athletic.
Drew Barrymore: Best Roots
On Barrymore, a few flyaways and intentionally dark roots look rock-and-roll, not rolled-out-of-bed.

Penélope Cruz: Best Chignon
 Anchored slightly to the left, Cruz's braided chignon looks less severe than a ballerina-style bun, and is more easily captured on film. (Remember that for the next night out with your camera-happy friend.)
Nicole Richie: Best Center Part
Richie's center part is unfussy in a way that perfectly complements her asymmetrical ponytail's air-dried appearance.
Taylor Swift: Best Throwback
Swift channels a 1920s starlet with glossy finger waves and her long hair pinned underneath into a faux bob.


Diane Kruger: Best Accessory
Hair accessories can sometimes look costumey or childish, but Kruger's elegant leaf adds the perfect finishing touch to a soft updo.
Blake Lively: Best Half-Ponytail
 Lively's lightly teased half-ponytail has great volume—and her humdrum hair elastic is cleverly hidden by a loop of hair pinned around the base.


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15 most spectacular solar-powered concept cars of 2010

 While electric car manufacturers kept rolling out electric vehicles throughout the year, there was no dearth of analysts who believed that the electric car revolution would need the grids to deliver more electricity, which won’t always come from renewable sources of energy. Trying to solve the problems associated with electric cars, the year 2010 saw some auto designers come up with concept vehicles that would be able to power themselves using solar-generated electricity. Here we have compiled a list of 15 of the most interesting concept vehicles that will be able to power themselves in a sustainable way.

• YEE Concept Car
 is an ingenious vehicle that is capable of transforming into a flying machine instantly. Simply by upturning the front wheels sideways and rear wheels to the outside back, this interesting concept vehicle would take you away from a hectic traffic jam. The concept car has been envisioned to be powered by solar panels spread over its roof.
• Opel Flow concept car
 The Opel Flow concept car was designed by Miika Heikkinen to represent Opel in the year 2049. The single-seat zero-emission vehicle allows people to navigate through the city in a relaxed and clean way. The vehicle is intended to be made using lightweight materials and includes clear solar panels as the main power source, which fuels the onboard batteries. In addition to generating solar power for recharging the batteries, the vehicle’s chassis also collects energy from the body’s movement.
• Touch Down Concept
 The Touch Down Concept is the brainchild of designer Guo Ke, and was awarded the Silver Award of Best Harmonious Beauty at the First “Science & Future” International Concept Car Design Contest. The completely zero emissions car runs on batteries charged by solar or wind power plants. Touch Down’s rear is equipped with a battery tank which contains a total of six high-capacity batteries that can be removed and recharged independently.
• Nissan iV
 Designed by a team of Mazda designers, the Nissan iV will weigh less than 1000lbs and can seat up to four passengers. Aimed to be driven in the year 2035, the super-lightweight concept car will be made from an innovative photovoltaic material that will be 99 percent lighter than glass. The canopy has been designed to harvest solar energy, while providing open-air views to the occupants. The solar generators power a set of bio-batteries that will provide the vehicle a range of about 1200 miles.
• Volkswagen solar-powered supercar
 Auto designer Peter Wilkins came up with a concept supercar for Volkswagen that features a zero-emission hydrogen fuel cell powered engine that can also run on solar energy. The upper external surface of the car features integrated photovoltaic cells. The cells produce renewable solar energy and provide power to the car’s four in-wheel motors. Since the concept is a luxury supercar, it will only be built in limited number of about 200 units.
• Fluxion Transport
 The Fluxion Transport by designer Slave Popovski has been conceptualized for use in the year 2100, when a new breed of vehicles will be needed. Powered by magnetic flux ion engines that are included in each of the four wheels generate about 200KW of power, which can propel the vehicle to a top speed of 500kph. The vehicle seats four passengers in utmost luxury. Power to the vehicle’s propulsion system is provided by the onboard solar skin array.
• AXA Solar Powered Concept Car
 The AXA is the brainchild of auto designer Marian and has been designed for busy urbanities of the future. The elegantly designed vehicle features a rooftop array of photovoltaic panels that provide power for the vehicle’s onboard batteries.
• O2 Concept Car
 Conceptualized by Argentine designer Leonardo Achilli, the O2 is a concept car that relies on solar energy and atmospheric carbon dioxide for propulsion. The roof of the concept car is laden with photovoltaic panels that generate electricity on the move. The concept vehicle will generate hydrocarbons – its energy source – and will ooze oxygen into the environment.
• Indoor Solar Car
 The Indoor Solar Car by designer Ehab Omaro is a zero-emission vehicle designed to offer a convenient way to travel short distances in particular areas and lanes of a city. The car features an energy-efficient engine that runs though electric energy accumulated from direct charging points and by solar cells.
• Car of Light
 The Car of Light by designer Jong Won Lee integrates roof-mounted solar panels and a sun roof that allow the roof to generate renewable electricity and also illuminate the interiors with natural light. The zero-emission concept is powered by electric motors and the entire design is informed by the sun.
• Mo-Du-Lo Concept
 The “Mo-Du-Lo” concept car by designer Thierry Dumaine is a modular car that can be operated in three different versions to suit individual requirements. The vehicle is powered by electric batteries, which are juiced up by energy generated by roof-mounted solar panels. This version is suited for long distance travel as the electric motors, solar panels and batteries are pooled to achieve more range.
• Solar Coco Concept EV
 Designers Jin Yuanbiao, Gang Tang and Su Sha teamed up to create a futuristic vehicle that gets powered by renewable solar energy. Dubbed Solar Coco, the zero-emission concept electric vehicle features a compact, round-shaped surface that includes an array of solar panels. The onboard photovoltaic panels not only power the car on the move, but also help in recharging onboard batteries when the vehicle is parked.
• SAIC-GM YeZ Concept Car
 Designed by a joint venture of SAIC and GM, the YeZ concept vehicle has been developed for the year 2030 and will rely entirely on energy generated from natural resources. The YeZ car features solar panels on its roof and small wind turbines that are located in the wheels. The vehicle also includes an innovative system that captures carbon dioxide from atmosphere and releases fresh oxygen.
• HXO Solar-powered Concept Car
 The HXO is the brainchild of designer Wang Yanchao and Zhang Zhizhen and is a futuristic vehicle with no operating costs. The super-efficient vehicle harvests solar energy on the move and utilizes it to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. Hydrogen generated by the onboard system is used to power the vehicle, promising a truly green ride.
• Green Cab
Conceptualized by designer Hazman Malik, the Green Cab concept electric vehicle aims to reduce pollution levels on busy streets. The vehicle hasn’t been designed to provide a luxurious ride, but meets the demands of a simple tourist vehicle. The electric batteries onboard the vehicle can be recharged by an array of solar panels and kinetic energy generators which harvest energy from the wheels.


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The Top 10 Box Office Movies of 2010

Sunday, 2 January 2011

 In 2010, talking toys, mad hatters and super-armored comic book heroes dominated the box office, with moviegoers ringing up over $10 billion in ticket sales. Here are the top ten highest grossing films at the domestic box office this year
THE KARATE KID
 Domestic Total Gross: $176,591,618


HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON
Domestic Total Gross: $217,581,231




SHREK FOREVER AFTER
Domestic Total Gross: $238,395,990


DESPICABLE ME
Domestic Total Gross: $250,588,005


HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS - PART 1
Domestic Total Gross: $274,392,000 (and counting)


INCEPTION
Domestic Total Gross: $292,517,082


THE TWILIGHT SAGA: ECLIPSE
Domestic Total Gross: $300,531,751


IRON MAN 2
Domestic Total Gross: $312,128,345


ALICE IN WONDERLAND
Domestic Total Gross: $334,191,110

TOY STORY 3
Domestic Total Gross: $415,004,880



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The Most Revealing Psych Experiments

Psychology is the study of the human mind and mental processes in relation to human behaviors - human nature. Due to its subject matter, psychology is not considered a 'hard' science, even though psychologists do experiment and publish their findings in respected journals. Some of the experiments psychologists have conducted over the years reveal things about the way we humans think and behave that we might not want to embrace, but which can at least help keep us humble. That's something.
1. 'Lord of the Flies': Social Identity Theory
The Robbers Cave Experiment is a classic social psychology experiment conducted with two groups of 11-year old boys at a state park in Oklahoma, and demonstrates just how easily an exclusive group identity is adopted and how quickly the group can degenerate into prejudice and antagonism toward outsiders.Researcher Muzafer Sherif actually conducted a series of 3 experiments. In the first, the groups banded together to gang up on a common enemy. In the second, the groups banded together to gang up on the researchers! By the third and final experiment, the researchers managed to turn the groups on each other. 
2. The Stanford Prison Experiment: Power Corrupts
This infamous experiment to plumb the depths of evil in human hearts ended up affecting its lead researcher as much as its subjects. Psychologist Philip Zimbardo divided his participants into two groups labeled "prisoners" and "guards." It was conducted in a mock-up prison in a Stanford University basement. The prisoners were subjected to arrest, strip search, de-lousing, head shaving and other abuses. The guards were given clubs.The prisoners rebelled on the second day, and the reaction of the guards was swift and brutal. Before long, the prisoners were behaving meekly and with blind obedience, while the guards fully embraced their roles by taunting and abusing their charges. This one might be scientific confirmation of the idea that humans harbor evil tendencies. The planned 14-day experiment was halted after only 6 days due to increasing levels of abuse.



 3. Obedience to Authority: Human Capacity for Cruelty
In 1963 psychologist Stanley Milgram set out to test people's propensity to obey authority when ordered to hurt another person. The world was still wondering what happened in Germany during WW-2 that caused so much horror. Milgram's subjects were told they were to be the 'teachers' of a 'learner' (who was secretly in on the experiment). They were to deliver electric shocks to the 'learner' if he or she got an answer wrong. Worse, they were told to increase the shock if the 'learner' continued to get the answers wrong.Despite the screams and moans of pain from the unseen 'learner', the subjects continued to deliver ever more severe shocks if ordered to do so by the experimenter in the lab coat. They continued even when told they had rendered the 'learner' unconscious! The conclusion? Looks like we humans are quite easily able to set aside moral and ethical considerations when ordered by authority to violate them.
 4. Conformity: Not Believing Your Lying Eyes
From social identity theory psychologists got a handle on group dynamics and prejudices, how natural it is for groups to elicit conformity among their members. In 1951 Solomon Asch set out to identify just how much individual judgment is affected by the group.In a test environment in which undergrads were asked to render a judgment after other subjects gave deliberately wrong answers, 50% of people gave the same wrong answer when their turn came. Only 25% of test subjects refused to be swayed by the false judgment of the others, while 5% always went with the crowd. The finding was that a third of people will ignore what they know to be true and go with a falsehood if they're in a group that insists on the falsehood being true. What else will people do under influence of the group?
5. Lying to Ourselves: Cognitive Dissonance
One might begin to suspect that people must be pretty good at either ignoring their own feelings, beliefs and desires, or flat out lying to themselves (and getting away with it). In a classic 1959 experiment psychologists designed an experiment with level upon level of deceit to see just how much a person will ignore their own experience, even to the point of helping to convince someone else of something they know is not true.The human capacity for sustaining cognitive dissonance has since been confirmed in many other well-designed experiments. This capacity is linked closely with our desire to join and fit in with a group, adjusting our own values and beliefs about things to align with those of others. Perhaps, knowing about these propensities, we can learn to avoid believing our own lies too much.
6. Memory Manipulation: Do You Really Know What You Saw?
In 1974 researchers designed an experiment to test the reliability of memory, and whether it could be manipulated after the fact. 45 people watched a film of a car accident. Nine of those people were then asked to estimate how fast the cars were going when they "hit." Four other groups were asked an almost identical question, but the word "hit" was replaced with the words "smashed," "collided," "bumped" and "contacted."Those whose questions included the word "smashed" estimated the cars were going 10 mph faster than those whose word was "contacted." A week later participants were asked about broken glass (indicative of more serious accident), and those whose trigger words were more forceful said they remembered broken glass even though the film had depicted none. Looks like something so subtle as a single descriptive word can manipulate memories of an event!
7. Magic Memory Number: 7

Psychologist George Miller wrote in 1956 that he was "persecuted" by the number 7, which kept intruding on his mind while contemplating data or reading journals. Sometimes it was slightly higher, sometimes slightly lower, but always it hovered around 7. Miller theorized that this 'magic' number represents the number of items we are able to hold in our short term memory at any given time. Plus or minus 2.More recent studies have demonstrated that people are able to 'group' items in short term memory - thereby being able to hold more individual items - yet even there the total if groupings are considered units, the number comes out to 7. Plus or minus 2. Maybe this is why human cultural belief systems historically considered the number 7 to be especially important to the gods!
8. Anatomy of Mass Panic: War of the Worlds
Orson Wells broadcast an adaptation of H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds on radio in 1938, causing panic in nearly 3 million of the 6 million people who listened to the broadcast. Princeton psychologists later interviewed 135 New Jersey residents about their reactions to the broadcast.A surprising number of frightened people never bothered to check out the validity of the broadcast, and some highly educated individuals believed it was true just because it was on the radio and thus "authoritative." We like to think we're more sophisticated today and wouldn't fall for such an obvious dramatization, but don't be too sure, Media manipulation of our emotions and desires is a regular art form these days. Just ask Madison Avenue!
9. The Bargaining Table: Threats Don't Work
Luckily, the behavior of individuals is both less deceptive and less violent than the behavioral 'norms' of groups. In the area of diplomacy among individuals and groups, people attempt to get concessions they want or need from others. Usually without having to give up too much in exchange. Researchers Morgan Deutsch and Robert Krauss tested two factors involved in the crafting of agreements between humans in 1962: communication and threats.This complicated economic experiment found that cooperative relationships between the bargainers are more beneficial to both parties than threats, either unilateral or bilateral. Not exactly a rousing endorsement of capitalistic winner-take-all competition, but in view of the current economic situation perhaps the results of this experiment should be kept in mind as we craft a recovery!
10. Risky Behavior: Prospect Theory
Speaking of the economy, researchers Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky studied decision-making in risky situations and developed a theory about it that garnered a Nobel Prize and has been used to develop predictive economic models and influence marketing campaigns.Turns out that it's all about framing. People behaved differently depending on how the situation was presented. If considered in terms of losses, people were more likely to take risks. They were less likely to take a risk of the situation was presented in terms of what they stood to gain. This seems strangely opposite of what we'd tend to guess, so it's something to bear in mind next time you're trying to bluff at the poker table.


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