Posts Tagged ‘Another’

Another free diving extreme Sport

We have often discussed one of our favorite pastimes-diving, but there is an extra dimension of apnoea diving. Snorkeling is an extreme sport where competitors are trying to achieve the great depth in a single breath-without the aid of a respirator underwater. However, this is not just a competitive sport. A simple definition of freediving is “an inch and a breath”-or else … in inches under the water on a breath of air. You don’t have to be an athlete to enjoy apnéiste, because sport is more the mentality, and force-balancing.

Divers are eligible, but it is an important element of samples that separates the divers (the leave)-apparently join you a feeling of relaxation and ease under water. You live at present, so absorbed an hour under water (obviously not all at once if you dive free!) per week for concern knew …

Wikipedia definition of sleep apnea is one of various aquatic activities that share the practice of diving breath-holding. Examples of contests of launches, fishing, scuba diving, freediving photography-free characterization and, to some extent, snorkelling. Activity that is more attention is competitive apnea, an extreme sport in which competitors attempt to reach great depths, time or distances on a single breath without direct assistance of breathing independently underwater (diving).

The record holder for free diving, sports an extremely dangerous, Patrick Musimi, who is risen an astounding 687 metres on a breath. It was under water for nearly three minutes.

Patrick record is incredible. OK-3 incredibles … but how awesome his record! The decision to exit the competition apnéiste and not to go in the category “no limit” him as a man extroadinary. For him, this category should be considered as not used as a sport!

His research led him to “dive.”

In June 2005, 3 weeks and only 10 dives in the Red Sea, Patrick Musimu marked the history of diving sequence 100, 136, 153, 170, 185 m and 26 June, finally gained the mythical mark of 200 meters.

30 June 2005, exhausted his body requires to stop after a dip to $ 209,6 million, the deepest human performance recorded by erupted about 40 metres. His record was finally beaten by Herbert Nitsch, June 14, 2007, with a dip of Mr. 214 more info in this article …

Musimu is very targeted. Hear his thoughts on how he obtained his dive: “during a freediving I feel my thoughts separately from my body.” As I already said the merger of the maritime world, I separated the idea, which I fixed myself. Nothing is absolute and barriers are only hypotheses. Little by little, I am convinced that there is no limit. In this quest, scuba diving is my instrument, playing as a virtuoso in the world of the silence of great depths. »

There is no need to dive to 200 m., after all, it’s dark out there … A second dive to about 30 ft 45 is generally quite deep enough. Most of the colours of the ocean and the animal’s life is within 30 meters of the surface is therefore little reason to dig some more. 45 seconds is usually enough time to take some pictures, chill out with fish or shoot your dinner. Better than the average person can be this kind of diving in about two weeks without precious money to spend on expensive kit master. Your essentials-mask, snorkel, fins, and combination packaging easily separable into a tub sports bag.

You have a romantic vision of the scope, or you’re trying to accomplish, see depth similar to 1988 Patrick Musimu-first film “the big blue”. Nothing but the tragedy will be your reward just for the sake of heaven, others admire and adhere to the point where there is light at the ocean! -unless of course it is right, follow the instructions, etc. etc. etc.

Another article on the science of all team game

What makes the people of games, is because I’m tired of the mundane life and wants to challenge their brains? It must be something, the reward system in the brain that obtained from human beings want to play video games for hours in the extreme. Perhaps this is the challenge, and several brain waves are versions of chemical excited and so on.

Physiologically and philosophically speaking not is no reason that a species that sit down and play all day. But, surprisingly, human beings aren’t the only animals that enjoys playing. Dolphins enjoy, learn how chimpanzees. And we know that other animals loves to play, but it is interesting that they like playing computer games.

Therefore, it must be something innate and something to do with the brain. What other people spent many hours in a day to play when they could do things that would be most useful.? There was an article long passing interesting in PhysOrg (dot) come from a website called; “” What players are games “from Lisa Zyga 9 December 2010,”the world of warcraft.”, is one of the most popular games in the world, says the article;”

“Creation of Wikipedia so far has about 100 million hours of work, while people spends twice many hours playing World of Warcraft in one week, Jane McGonigal, a developer of video games and researcher at the Institute for the future.” McGonigal has written a book published soon called “reality is broken: which games are best and how you can change the world.” “

Perhaps you heard of engineering that have tried to capture more time people resort to the tasks of the media in Google software and games. You have to admit that it is brilliant. Also through social media online and games rewards, often between a person against the rewards of another program and competitive people to answer questions and earn points or make its content to a kind of socialeDando or more reward program points.

The merger of the world of gaming to the world of reality, in this way is almost a form of social engineering, it’s almost like the theory of diplomacy. “always someone to get your way” – you know, as Tom Sawyer may have a contest to see who can paint the fastest closure. In fact, I hope that you will think pray here and take into account what had to say and recognise when they are absorbed by a game and a little experimenting on yourself and ask why you are because you’ve heard right to do so. Please, think at all.

Another World

For a few years now, there’s been this assumption that massively multiplayer online games are the logical future of not just PC gaming, but all gaming. World of Warcraft’s 11 million subscribers and the slew of imitators that followed it seemed to promise an endless money fountain.

They’ve taken a lot of revenue out of the game industry in general and concentrated it into a few specific areas. For instance, in the ‘old days’ the demographics were that 20% of the PC gaming population represented 80% of the revenue of PC games. But now, a good chunk of that hardcore are subscribed to an MMO and are no longer buying six to 12 games a year, but buying two to three games a year, which is a huge hit.

Other publishers smelled gold and a ton of big-name MMO launches appeared: War-hammer Online, Age of Conan, Hellgate and Tabula Rasa. Two of those are dead already. The smart money thinks Conon’s on borrowed time. And, just a few weeks back, EA revealed that Warhammer’s promising near-million subscribers have fallen to 300,000. Suddenly the future’s not so bright. On the other hand, there are two opposite poles of MMOdom in the pipeline. On the big budget, mass-appeal end of the scale is Bioware’s Star Wars: The Old Republic, which could be the first mainstream MMO to truly move beyond the World of Warcraft model. On the other is mesmerizing one-man art-project Love, which is a heartening signal that MMOs have a lot of new places to go.

On a third hand, MMOs continue to do absolutely stonking business in Korean and China, and as well as that more casual, kid-charming games such as Maple Story and Neopets have massive player bases. The former, across all its various global variants, has a startling 50 million subscribers. So while Warcraft clones might be in shorter supply than anticipated over the next few years, there’s a good chance that browser-based and/or low-spec casual MMOs will do far more to define the future of PC gaming.