Anniversary of Bernard Bujold



LeStudio1.com and his team are pleased to offer their best birthday wishes to the creator of their website, Bernard Bujold. The little party organized for the occasion, June 28, 2010, was on theme of the number 4. This choice was motivated by the fact that there are four mascots and the number four is also contained in the date of birth of Bernard (28: 8 divided by 2 = 4). There was thus four categories of gifts consisting of four gifts by category. A category of 4 books, a category of 4 DVD, a category of 4 wines and a last category of 4 photos selected by Bernard himself (his favorite). Bernard Bujold has also written special text on the art of staying young in 2010!
Happy Birthday Bernard!

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Conrad Black was right...



The former media baron Conrad Black had his conviction for financial fraud overturned by the U.S. Justice which shall question his detention in prison. The businessman has always challenged its guilt and he appealed the decision. Great historian and newspapersman, Black is the founder of The National Post of Toronto. He said he was very pleased by the new development...

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Edouard Manet's self-portrait sells for £22.4 million at Sotheby's

Sotheby's employees display Edouard Manet's self-portrait earlier this month






A rare self-portrait of the artist Edouard Manet holding a palette and paintbrush sold for £22.4 million ($33.2 million), at Sotheby's in London on Tuesday.
The 1878-79 painting, "Self Portrait of Manet, A Bust (Manet and a Palette)," broke the artist's auction record. It also anchored Sotheby's £112.1 million evening sale of Impressionist and modern art and kicked off London's two-week round of summer art auctions.
Sotheby's total more than tripled the £33.5 million the auction house got at a similar sale last June—a sign the art market is on the mend. But fresh jitters in London over the country's recession-related debts may have taken a toll as few collectors seemed eager to bid above the house's high asking prices, particularly for the sale's priciest pieces. The Manet, for instance, was priced to sell for between£20 million toand £30 million.
Bidding was more brisk for Andre Derain's candy-colored Fauve landscape, "Trees in Collioure," which sold for £14.5 million, inching over its £14 million high estimate. Henri Matisse's Moroccan-inspired view of two women, "Two Women Playing Odalisques," also sold for £10.5 million, just over its £10 million low estimate.
Chaim Soutine's cherry-colored portrait of a valet, "The Room Servant," sold for £7.8 million, over its £7 million low estimate. And a still life by Manet, "Bouquet of Peonies," sold for £7.7 million.
A pair of calm-inducing drawings that Pablo Picasso made of his mistress Dora Maar in 1937 fared surprisingly well, with "Portrait of a Pensive Dora Maar" selling for £993,250 and "Portrait of Dora Maar Sleeping" selling for £1.2 million—twice their low estimates. A drawing by Matisse, "Study for 'Rose Nude,' " also sparked a lively bidding war, with a telephone bidder getting it. It sold for £5.9 million. It was priced to sell for as much as₤£2.5 million.
But the night had its wincing share of casualties, led by Claude Monet's "Flowers at Vetheuil." The artist's 1881 riverbank pastoral was expected to sell for at least £4 million but found no takers. Neither did 15 other works by artists like Paul Cezanne, Kees van Dongen, Wilhelm Lehmbruck, and Joan Miro.
Rival Christie's counters Wednesday with its eveningsale of Impressionist and modern art.

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Christie's Sells Picasso's "Portrait d'Angel Fernandez de Soto" for $51.2 Million

Andrew Lloyd Webber's charity sold a haunting Pablo Picasso portrait for GPB 34.7 million ($51.2 million) at Christie's in London on Wednesday, four years after heirs of the artwork's first owner claimed the painting had been sold under pressure by the Nazis.


The Andrew Lloyd Webber Foundation was given permission to offer up the 1903 work, "Portrait d'Angel Fernandez de Soto," after settling privately with the heirs of German banker Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy a few months ago. Mr. Webber paid Christie's $29.1 million for the Blue-Period portrait of the artist's friend in 1995. This time around, the auction house priced it to sell for at least £30 million, or $44 million.


The painting lent its moody tone to Christie's £152.6 million ($226.5 million) evening sale of Impressionist and modern art. The overall total nearly quadrupled the house's $60.4 million sale last June, but the sale felt deflated because 16 of its offerings went unsold. These included a Claude Monet waterlily work, "Nympheas," that was expected to sell for over £30 million along with works by Kees van Dongen, Marc Chagall, Paul Klee and Balthus.
Collectors are still reconciling their expectations about how quickly art prices should rise amid the recovering art market, dealers say. Sellers want prices to return to their boom-era levels overnight, yet buyers remain wary of anything deemed overinflated. This disconnect also beset Sotheby's £112 million sale on Tuesday, in which a similar number of works went unsold.
Bidders still competed hard for the rarest works in Christie's sale, including Gustav Klimt's brightly colored 1917-18 "Portrait of Ria Munk III" that sold for £18.8 million, just over its high estimate. Picasso's Astroturf-green depiction of a loving couple, "The Kiss," also sold for £12.1 million, its high estimate.
Vincent van Gogh's 1889 view of a rustling cypress tree on his asylum grounds, "Park at the Saint-Paul Hospital," sold for £9 million. It was priced to sell for at least £8 million.
Surrealism—a recent favorite of newly wealthy Chinese collectors— enjoyed a strong showing at Christie's sale. Rene Magritte's row of trees formed with giant leaves, "The Mysterious Barricades," sold for £5 million, well over its £4 million high estimate. Salvador Dali's "The Knight of Death" fetched £1.6 million, within its £1.5 million to £2 million estimate.
Alberto Giacometti's pieces have also soared lately, but he isn't invincible to the vagaries of the marketplace. A foot-high bust of the sculptor's brother, "Diego (Head and Collar)," cast in 1980—14 years after the artist died—was priced to sell for at least £700,000 but found no takers.
Overall, 46 of the sale's 62 found buyers, helping the sale achieve 74% of its presale potential. Next week Sotheby's, Christie's and Phillips de Pury & Co. will hold sales of post-war and contemporary art in London.

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Barack Obama is the real boss..



President Barack Obama has demonstrated to General McChrystal who is the boss! The American soldier has ridiculed the president and his entourage in a report just released by Rolling Stone Magazine. Even before the magazine hit the newsstands, through the Internet, the fate of General was sealed ... Proof that the power of journalism is far from being dead!

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The Quebec judge accused of murdering his wife is free to go...


It is a former commissioner with the Bastarache's group who paid part of the bond ($ 50,000 deposit) for the liberagtion of Judge Jacques Delisle accused of murdering his wife. Delisle is accused of using a firearm to kill his sick wife ...

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The summer 2010 begins today...


Summer 2010 officially begins today Monday, June 21. The summer temperature has however been very warm since early April (Montreal has experienced the feast of Easter on April 4 in the summer temperature ...). Is it global warming? I am not really conviced because when I grew up in the Gaspé, our summer season also began early and sea temperatures began to cool towards the beginning of July ... Happy summer!
Picture: Ulysse the Dog, Bernard Bujold and a cargo ship from Halifax

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Apple iPhone 4 vs. HTC EVO 4G

from Digital Trends

We compare the Apple iPhone 4 vs. the HTC EVO 4G. The gloves are off as Apple’s latest creation goes up against the first 4G smartphone in America.
With the curtain now officially lifted on Apple’s iPhone 4, hoards of Apple devotees have already made plans to ditch their well-worn 3G S models and move onto the next iteration. But if you’re not wearing a heart-shaped locket with Steve Jobs inside, does the move to the iPhone 4 make sense? Where previous iPhone releases have towered over the competition in every way, this year’s release faces stiffer outside competition than ever before. Does Apple still have what it takes to reign supreme in the smartphone market? We stacked the iPhone 4 specs side by side with those of its most intimidating competitor, HTC’s Android-powered EVO 4G, to find out.

Display

Winner: Apple iPhone 4
With this year’s Android offerings moving to ever higher resolutions and screen sizes, it was clear that the iPhone would need a major overhaul to compete. And Apple provided it. The 3.5-inch, 960-by-640-pixel LCD screen on the iPhone 4 quadruples the amount of pixels from the last-gen screen to 614,400. By contrast, the 4.3-inch screen on the HTC EVO 4G is physically larger, but at 480-by-800 pixels, the total pixel count of 384,000 still pales in comparison. More pixels in a smaller screen will also give the iPhone 4 astounding clarity and sharpness due to the pixel density. The bifocal crowd might prefer the EVO 4G for its larger size, but most users will probably prefer the sheer detail and clarity of the iPhone 4.

Portability

Winner: Apple iPhone 4
That 4.3-inch screen naturally boosts the footprint of the EVO 4G significantly, and this size 14 monster can’t compete on any level when it comes down to the denim. Besides being taller and wider, it’s also 0.5 inches thick compared to just 0.37 inches on the iPhone 4, and weighs 6 ounces compared to just 4.8 on the iPhone 4. No contest.

Processor

Winner: Draw
Both the iPhone 4 and EVO 4G sport top-of-the-line processors. The iPhone 4 uses the same capable A4 processor as the iPad, and the EVO 4 uses the hotrod Qualcomm Snapdragon running at an impressive 1GHz. You’ll have to wait for the iPhone 4 release to see head-to-head benchmarks, but AnandTech pitted the iPadagainst the EVO 4G and found a 37.6 percent real-life performance gain in page load times. Of course, different operating systems and a range of other variables make this far from scientific, and Apple could underclock the model in the iPhone 4 for battery life, further throwing a wrench into the works. Bottom line: Until the iPhone 4 makes it to the wild, it’s too early to tell how it will perform beside the EVO 4G.

Storage

Winner: Apple iPhone 4
We’ve always found Apple’s neglect for microSD expansion slots irritating, and that hasn’t changed with the iPhone 4. But at the end of the day, the iPhone 4 offers the same maximum storage as the EVO 4G, and for less money.
The EVO 4G comes with an 8GB microSD card preinstalled, but you can potentially expand it up to 32GB with a larger card. Unfortunately, 32GB models remain quite rare and you’ll need to drop at least $200 for one. By contrast, the least expensive ($200) iPhone 4 comes with 16GB of built-in memory, and it only costs $100 to upgrade to 32GB. As of press time, a smartphone owner who wanted the maximum memory would pay $300 from Apple, and or $200 from HTC plus $200 from SanDisk for a total of $400. A user who wanted the minimum would pay the same ($200) on both devices, but get 16GB on the iPhone 4 and only 8GB on the EVO 4G. The iPhone 4 wins on all accounts.

Camera

Winner: HTC EVO 4G
Both the iPhone 4 and EVO 4G sport both back cameras for snapping photos and front cameras for video conferencing. The EVO 4G gets the sharper vision on primary cam, shooting at 8 megapixels to Apple’s 5 megapixels, and on the front-facing cam, which shoots 1.3 megapixels to Apple’s VGA (0.3 megapixel) cam. Higher resolution doesn’t always mean a better camera, but we’ll have to give the EVO 4G the upper hand until launch time. The EVO 4G also sports a dual-LED flash rather than a single-LED flash, potentially making it more potent for night-time shooting.
For video, both cameras are capable of high-def 720p recording, but the iPhone 4 can shoot at a full 30 frames per second while the EVO 4G can only do 25.

Connectivity

Winner: HTC EVO 4G
That “4G” in the EVO’s name isn’t just for kicks, although we happen to think it rolls off the tongue nicely. It’s actually the first phone in North America to ride on a blazing fast 4G network, potentially putting an end to the molasses-slow loading we typically associate with browsing on a mobile phone.
How much faster? HTC claims 10 times, but that’s based on comparing the very slowest end of average 3G speeds (600 Kbps to 1.7 Mbps), to the high end of its own 4G claims (3 to 6 Mbps). We managed to hit 3 Mbps once in a while in our own 4G network tests, but it was the exception, not the rule, and we typically got much slower. PCWorld’s speed tests of the EVO 4G confirmed the same type of network performance on the EVO 4 when testing around the Pacific Northwest.
That said, even 3 Mbps is more than you could ever hope to wring from most 3G phones, and the EVO 4G can do things that the iPhone 4 just won’t, like videoconferencing without a Wi-Fi connection. “Ten times faster” is an obvious marketing exaggeration, but with think most consumers would be plenty happy with “twice as fast,” which is speed you might actually be able to achieve, depending on location.
Even if you discount the 4G capability for its battery life, the EVO 4G also pulls an interesting trick that should leave iPhone 4 owners jealous: it functions as a Wi-Fi hotspot for sharing its connectivity with other devices – like laptops, tablets, and even other cell phones.

Battery Life

Winner: Apple iPhone 4
Battery life has never been a strong point for Apple’s notoriously thirsty smartphone, but the company claims to have improved it this time around, and the same 4G modem that gives the EVO 4G its leg up in connectivity is its Achilles heel here. HTC hasn’t released complete battery life estimates for the EVO 4G, but we managed to get six hours of only on-and-off 4G data usage, while Apple claims the iPhone 4 will do six solid hours on 3G. Talk time also seems to suffer, with HTC claiming 360 minutes on the EVO 4G and Apple claiming 420 on the iPhone 4.
It’s worth noting, of course, that the EVO 4G sports a replaceable battery while the iPhone 4 has a sealed internal battery, eliminating the possibility of battery swaps. Although we don’t know too many cell owners who would carry around a replacement to swap out halfway through the day, long distance travelers who spend plenty of time away from outlets will certainly appreciate the possibility.

Operating System

Winner: Draw
We could run a keyboard into the ground spelling out the differences between the newly dubbed iOS and Android, but we value our previous keys, so let’s just say they each have their own advantages.
Apple’s iOS undoubtedly lacks the flexible open ecosystem of Android, which allows software like game console emulators that Apple has banned, but Apple holds the upper hand in selection, boasting 225,000 third-party apps to Android’s 70,000 or so, at last count. The latest release also alleviates some of the most frequent complaints about previous versions, like the lack of multitasking and folders for apps.
While techies will undoubtedly appreciate the lack of censorship and restrictions on Android, more mainstream consumers will find plenty to like about Apple’s overflowing App Store and ease of use, making this issue largely a matter of taste.

Overall Winner: Apple iPhone 4

Impressive as both phones are, Apple’s iPhone 4 appears to be a better deal coming out of the gate than HTC’s innovative EVO 4G. Why? HTC’s biggest bragging point – 4G connectivity – proves to be less of an advantage in real life than on paper after factoring in real-life network speeds and issues with 4G battery life. It also has a small leg up on the iPhone 4 in camera resolution, but less fluid 25fps HD recording also helps diminish that minimal edge. Meanwhile, the iPhone 4 is substantially smaller, has a higher resolution screen, and offers more storage for the money. We’ll wait to get the iPhone 4 in our hands before issuing a definitive verdict, but based on specs, the iPhone 4 truly does hold the upper hand.

Check out our other smartphone comparisons:

Also check out our full HTC EVO 4G Review and Apple iPhone 4 Review.

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José Saramago, Nobel Prize-Winning Portuguese Writer, Dies at 87


Portuguese author and Nobel Prize winner José Saramago, whose chilling Ensaio sobre a cegueira was published in English as Blindness, and later made into the movie of the same name, died today at his home in the Canary Islands. Usually, his stories analyzed human behavior in the face of incredible circumstances, such as the plague of sudden "white blindness" that hits an unnamed city in Blindness. Saramago outlined the disintegration of society as both the inability to see and the accompanying wave of uncertainty sweeps through the population, with the book being much more disturbing and graphic than the film.

The movie version, released in 2008 with Julianne Moore and Danny Glover, was filmed mostly in São Paulo because of the city's relative lack of distinguishable landmarks (for most people outside of Brazil), which supports an atmosphere of urban placelessness that is the reason for Saramago's omission of proper nouns in the novel; the events portrayed could essentially happen anywhere.

Like Gabriel García Márquez, Saramago was a master of magical realism, making fantasy tangible in the lives of his protagonists, but unlike Gabo's fanciful Caribbean dreamscapes, Saramago danced around the fringes of nightmare and sometimes crossed over into the darkness. 

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The Cardinal Marc Ouellet would go back to Rome...



Cardinal Marc Ouellet has never hidden that he would have liked to stay in Rome and never to be named Cardinal in Quebec. He had accepted the appointment by respect for his bosses in Rome but Cardinal Marc Ouellet did not want to come to Quebec because he preferred to work in the Vatican where his nickname is the "Preacher". An intellectual who believes that God is also the Church of Rome. But he is a close friend of the actual Pope and it seems that his friend Benloit XVI will repatriate him. To be continued...

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Jaroslav Halak will leave Montréal


The goalie of the Montreal Canadiens Jaroslav Halak was traded to the team of St. Louis. Halak had raised the Habs fans spirit during recent playoffs but he will not return in front of Les Canadians's net. Sad departure! The team chose to bet on Carey Price ...

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A dog is in love...


A neighbor told me recently that she have been very shocked when her best friend told her last Christmas that she had more love for her two dogs than for her (the friend)! The two women have stopped seeing each other and they no longer speak since.
The son of a rich American had worse story: his mother (Gail Posner - 67 years) bequeathed one million dollars in legacy to him and left the rest of her fortune to her dog Conchita ($ 3 million in cash plus a $ 8.3 million house). The son asks the Court in Miami to cancel the will.
The mascot of LeStudio1.com, Ulysse, wants match with Conchita. He says she is very attractive ... (A Love Dog)

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The war of Barack Obama...






Barack Obama is at war and he is like the character of Homer's Odyssey. He fought against the enterprises of his own kingdom. His address to the nation of Tuesday, June 15 was definitely an attack against major industrial companies such as BP oil. But does Obama have the statutory authority and will American support him to win this war? The future of the American President depends on this issue.
Photos from top to bottom:1 and 2. Barack Obama's Speech to the Nation; 3. Barack Obama on Casio Beach, Florida; 4. Lighthouse on a rock at sea.

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