History Of The Space Hopper

The first ever hoppity hop / retro space hopper was called PON-PON, and was the invention of an Italian who was called Aquilino Cosani. And was based at Ledragomma, Italy.

In 1968 Cosani patented the PON-PON in Italy, and in 1969 was introduced to the United Kingdom through an advert putin the Cambridge Evening News paper. Cosani patented the PON-PON in 1971 in the United States of America. The USA already had a space hopper type toy that people used to bounce on, and this toy was created by the Sun company, and was called Hoppity Hop. All hoppers of this type are called Hoppity Hop or Hippity Hop these days, which was due to the popularity of the earliest hopper distributed and produced by the Sun company.

In the Britain the Space Hopper (UK name) was distributed and produced by Mettoy, which was later to become Mettoy-Corgi. Another company created a different version of the bouncing ball, but this ball had handles that were smooth for the rider to hold, whereas the earliest had opted for ribbed handles for better grip. The other company was called Wembley.

Initially the Space Hoppers were made up of a handle in the shape of a ring on the top of the space hopper type toy which was gripped by the rider for stability, and they were constructed from rubber. These toys were supplied in a choice of just a couple of colors, either red or blue. Sun created themed versions of their Hoppity Hop during the 1970s, which had a hard plastic head fixed to the ball in the shape of some favorite fictional character. A couple of the popular fictional characters used were Micky Mouse and Donald Duck.

The hoppity hop / space hopper was very popular during the 60s and 70s, with a resurgence of interest in the UK during the 1990s, thanks to the rave culture of the time, where the balls were recognised asa neccessary part of the scene. In the United States of America due to an incursion of competition by foreign creators of the toy the Hoppity Hop’s popularity severely faltered and finally the production of the north American version of the bouncy ball came to a halt.

Initially the USA version of the hopper, known as the Hoppity Hop, was aimed at both adults and children, but due to the limited size of the biggest version, it was not really useable by adults except for those close to a kid in size.

Europe of the 1990s brought a version of the bouncy ball went by the name of the Hop, and was created by the Italian company Ledragomma. These were created from a well-liked ball used for exercise at the time called Gymnic exercise balls. These hoppers had a maximum size of 26 inches..

Modern day retro space hoppers – Sizes for adultshave become very popular in later year and can be found in sizes of 120cm, 100cm, and 80cm. They are commonly more robust than the original balls, having much thicker skins

and as a rule built from vinyl rather than rubber.

Comcast – First Choice For Entertainment & Home Telecommunications

When you shop around for telecommunications services for your home, there are probably three major things that you’re looking for: TV, Internet (Broadband), and phone service. In the past getting all three of them meant shopping around and eventually deciding on three different companies. Now though, you can get all three of those services from Comcast . The fact that all three different services are bundled together and all offered by the same company means that you save money by having all of them combined and only have to deal with paying one bill for all three every month.

Comcast’s TV service is especially impressive because it’s transmitted over cable and is completely digital. That means you’ll receive a crystal clear picture no matter what the weather is doing. It also means that you can receive a lot more channels than you could from older cable TV providers in the past. In fact, Comcast can provide you with well over two hundred and sixty five of the best channels available today. These channels include your local channels, movie packages from all of the biggest names in cable movie channels, HDTV channels, and digital music channels. The HD channels are really impressive because of the fact that they carry programming in High Definition Television which is the TV format of the future. High Definition (HD) programming will bring the theater experience right into your living room with it’s high resolution, wide screen picture, and incredible Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound! Along with all of those other channels, you’ll receive all of the most popular national cable channels currently available.

Another advantage that Comcast offers you is the ability to choose your cable TV programming package. Programming packages from Comcast range in size from very basic packages with your local channels and the music channels all the way up to the most massive programming package possible. In between are a variety of packages of other sizes so that you can always find something that meets your needs and budget.

Comcast ‘s phone service is just as impressive as its digital cable TV service. The phone service is actually based on digital technology just like the TV, which means that it provides you with excellent sound quality and plenty of extra features included at no extra charge. For example, with Comcast’s digital voice service you can make as many calls as you want anywhere in the US and Canada and talk as long as you want without any increase in your phone bill! Another great benefit of digital phone service is that you’ll have access to all of the features that other phone companies invariably charge extra for, but you’ll get them at no extra charge!

The high speed Internet access that’s provided by Comcast is also really impressive because it offers download speeds that can be up to one hundred times faster than what you can obtain with dial up. With that kind of speed, the Internet will be your playground, literally, with the access to virtual online worlds like Second Life and WarCraft. You’ll also be able to download movies from YouTube, CNN, and other sites that provide free video content. You’ll also be able to watch streaming online versions of your favorite TV shows and download movies and TV shows to watch whenever you like. Comcast will also help you protect yourself and your family from the hostile elements of the Internet by providing a variety of security software programs.

In general Comcast is your first choice for telecommunications and entertainment at home. The current Comcast promotional offers are fantastic. It is time to switch to the best cable company in with the best cable deals.

Broadcasting Pioneer Dzrh Turns 69 By Susan Isorena-arcega

years ago, at exactly 6 in the morning, announcer Hal Bowie took his seat before a microphone in a little studio at the top of the Heacock Building in Escolta, and bid his unseen audience good morning. Thus was born the fourth commercial radio station to operate in Manila. In just a few years, with the entire Philippine archipelago caught in the maelstrom of the Second World War, the fledgling station – which took the call sign KZRH – would buck the challenge of history and remain as the only surviving radio station in the country.

Its auspicious beginnings as the mouthpiece of one of the largest department stores in the Pacific must have laid the groundwork for the stations commercial viability all these years a major factor in the survival of the so-called stepchild of media arts.

New as it was, KZRH management led by Bertrand Silen was not just armed with the technical know-how in radio operations, but likewise had fundamental marketing knowledge down pat. They knew what radio listeners liked and disliked.

Musical variety shows, comedy skits, and short newscasts were the order of the day. Jazz and ballads became standard fare. Together with American wit, the English language spread. KZRH found itself as an advertising medium, with sponsors like Purico underwriting specific shows which carried their names. Apart from 15-minute blocktime sold to advertisers, commercial spots mixing announcements with music were also produced. KZRH found itself amidst lucrative times.

Then came the grim shadow of war. The Japanese Imperial Army took over the sophisticated equipment, which eventually got blown sky-high by the Americans. And while Silens staff considered the best in the Far East found themselves either in Bataan, at the internment camps of Santo Tomas and Los Banos, within the guerilla movement, or simply felled by enemy bullets, plans for the rebirth of KZRH upon liberation were kept alive.

Upon being released, Silen sought help from the National Broadcasting Company in New York to secure new transmitters, and with the Elizalde family financing the new operations at the Insular Life Building on Plaza Cervantes, KZRH was back on the air under the auspices of Manila Broadcasting Company on July 1, 1946 just in time to cover the inauguration of the new Republic.

Soon after, the International Telecommunications Union adjusted the call letters of Philippine radio, and all allusions to the western United States through the letter K were removed. Until today, all radio stations in the Philippines begin with the letter D.

What followed in the next three decades is now collectively known as the golden years of Philippine radio. Programming flourished and a new breed of radio personalities became cultural icons. As the recording industry grew, the live orchestras of yore soon gave way to music on vinyl. Cover versions and Disc Jockeys came into being. Radio dramas hit an unprecedented boom, eventually translating to the celluloid screen.

Lina Flors immortal Gulong ng Palad, which debuted in 1949, led a slew of soap operas that filled the airlanes in the mornings and afternoons. Because they had the housewives and sometimes the rest of the domestic mnage as captive audiences, these dramatic serials were strongly supported by major advertisers whose sales messages got very close attention through each saga. Radio dramas picked up on domestic relations, but also featured action, adventure, horror, and even murder-mysteries. Appealing to the imagination as well as to real-life need, DZRH secretaries fondly remember some callers even insisting on speaking to Ginang Hukom herself.

Indeed, DZRH easily adopted the habit of setting trends and institutionalizing them. Sportscasting dean Willie Hernandez, the networks comptroller in the mid-fifties, lent his voice to sports coverages and in so doing, made legendary Filipino basketeers like Carlos Loyzaga, Francisco Rabat, and Luis Lorenzo household names.

The feisty commentator Rafael Yabut, also had his sterling years with DZRH. Starting out as the station electrician, he rose through the ranks to become the stations PR man. Loyal fans kept glued to their radios when he hosted the game show Ruleta Musikal. On the top-rating Tayoy Mag-aliw, Yabut dwelt on government and politics, family values, trivia, and entertainment.

But it is easily Dely Mapayo who has been – up to this day – the most widely known personality behind the microphone at DZRH. Her easy chatter, contagious laughter, and sparkling wit won her sponsors and hosts of listeners through her careers work. From the PMC-backed Tugtugin Natin to Himig Panghapunan in vintage years, and eventually the starkly simple Tiya Dely, which DZRH still airs today, the lady and the station have remained synonymous for over 50 years. Radio quiz shows also emanated from the DZRH studios. In Spell-to-Win, household appliances were at stake for someone who could spell words like bouillabaise. On Best of the Band, popular crooner Bimbo Danao tried to stump the audience with his original game format a-la name that tune. And on Palmolives Knowledge Unlimited, even listeners contributed questions such as what war took place in 1812?

The Vicks Variety show opened doors for a new program format that addressed Tagalog-speaking audiences with pop-concert presentation of Philippine music. Singer Jimmie Navarro who won the DZRH radio popularity poll, replaced Mystery Singer Cecil Lloyd and teamed up with Priscilla in performing a new romantic duet every week. While listeners wrote to request old favorites, new compositions were also introduced to the public.

Letter-sending, has indeed, contributed greatly to the way DZRH developed over the years. Ira Davis, who produced the long-running programs of Philippine Manufacturing Company, patiently read through thousands of letters that came in every week. The notes were routed to management and gave them firsthand information on what sort of radio entertainment even commercial copy that listeners preferred. And the advertisers took note of those market preferences.

In later years, DZRH received more immediate feedback — through the telephone, through pocket pagers, through mobile technology, and today, through cyberspace. But the formula remains the same: innovate…improve…listen…keep the pulse. And decades hence, the station which survived the horrors of war is also surviving the competition. DZRH as the flagship station of Manila Broadcasting Company is proud to be the purveyor of news as it should be delivered, adhering to the highest standards of broadcasting excellence in the country. It continues to be a witness to Philippine history as it unfolds, and yet remains faithful to the mandate of fair and responsible journalism. In 1986 it was the only station that aired nationwide a detailed account of the ouster of President Ferdinand Marcos. Three years later, DZRH reporters found themselves risking life and limb to keep the public abreast of the attempted coup detat, and manifesting its spirit of compassion to wounded rebel soldiers.

DZRH today boasts of veteran radioman Joe Taruc anchoring the DZRH team in defining the public affairs program genre from the Pinoy perspective. Despite the seeming erosion of the morning news by the telemagazines, Taruc remains confident that nothing beats the immediacy of radio.

DZRH News Director Andy Vital, on the other hand, has taken new media by the horns for the stations benefit. Internet radio and live chats are used to maximize the stations accessibility to audiences both here and abroad. He has also encouraged popular DZRH announcers like Ruth Abao and Rey Sibayan to maintain individual blogs. And with his iconic colleague Lakay Deo Macalma seemingly attuned to the secret lives of public figures and celebrities alike, vigilance in good governance through reports from his bubwits is still in keeping with the stations mien for popular entertainment. But perhaps it is in the field of public service where DZRH has truly earned its merits. Through Operation Tulong – the stations socio-civic arm first launched in 1978 — corporate social responsibility and anonymous Samaritans work hand in hand. Armed with their credo of Serbisyong Bayan, DZRH responds to the needs of the ordinary man-on-the-street with the same compassion and determination it devotes to massive disaster-relief operations, through networking support from advertisers, NGOs, and government agencies.

On its 69th anniversary, DZRH will conduct a medical-dental mission in cooperation with the Philippine Medical Association, Gat. Andres Bonifacio Medical Center, the Department of Health, the Philippine Air Force, the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office, PAGCOR, and other generous donors. DZRH has also invited the Optometrists Association of the Philippines to provide free eye examinations, with MBC donating 500 free eyeglasses. Teaming up with Islands Exhibit Link, the station will likewise hold a two-day Job Fair, with more than 40 participating companies and recruitment firms providing domestic and international work opportunities. DZRH has also invited the Public Attorneys office, Batas Barangay, and their network of lawyers to provide free legal assistance. And for those availing of these public service offerings, DZRH is also serving free porridge (lugaw) as a gesture of unity with the masses who have supported them all these years.

Over a decade ago, the station embarked on a One Nation, One Station initiative, expanding its coverage to an unprecedented 97% of the Philippine archipelago. To date, DZRH is the only station in the country that is on the air nationwide 24/7 on stereo-quality, simulcast via satellite to relay stations in key provincial cities. Through all these, DZRH and the top brass at Manila Broadcasting Company have remained fully cognizant of their target listeners and have used this to master their programming thrust. They have convinced advertisers to support their efforts at activation and integration in reaching mass audiences. DZRH taps into the consciousness of the Pinoy, takes inherent socio-cultural phenomena like fiestas, raffles, and machismo sports. . . and actively makes them tick. At the same time, through creative thinking by the staff and high-quality execution by their announcers, DZRH has translated traditional broadcasting techniques like talk-radio and soap operas into productive and impacting forms of integration or product placement that have become increasingly more efficient in moving brands across a complex media landscape.

But it is the way DZRH announcers today relate to their listeners that truly spells the difference. It is a legacy handed down through generations of broadcasters who knew their audiences. It is foresight brought about by the changing of the times. It is a style acquired through personal interaction with the man-on-the-street. And it is a mantle of leadership, new experiences, and empathy toward mankind brought about by having made it through 69 years.
Congratulations, DZRH kaunaunahan sa Pilipinas!

Online Education (bachelor’s Degree In Telecommunications)

A bachelor’s degree program in telecommunications management provides technical training on telephone and computer system components, as well as integration operations, coupled with non-technical training on project management. You can also find related programs in telecommunications network management, telecommunications technology and telecommunications systems management. Telecommunications management programs are available online and on-campus.

What Will I Learn?

Since modern standards of telecommunications management may involve coordinating various kinds of voice, data and video communications technologies or components, your curriculum would typically consist of varied levels of training on two or more technologies.

For example, training on voice technologies may include coursework on topics, such as wireless communications, switching systems and fiber optics. Coursework on data systems could cover computer programming techniques, database administration and data networking.

You may also train on electrical and electronic systems, as well as LAN and internetworking, network design, computer/telephony integration, broadband systems and network security. Your non-technical training that pertains to project management can focus on speech communications, management science, economics and business plan development.

A bachelor’s degree program in telecommunications explores the broadcasting and communication of data, video and voice through phones, computers and other media technology. Depending on the school and concentration chosen, study may focus on either telecommunications technology or mass media such as TV and film. A bachelor’s degree program can be completed in four years.
Most telecommunications bachelor’s programs do not have specific prerequisites for admission. Some programs may include courses that can be completed online.

Program Coursework

The curriculum in a telecommunications bachelor’s program will depend on whether its focus is in media or technology. Media-oriented programs feature classes in subjects such as television production and scriptwriting. Programs in telecommunications technology may include courses in data networks and data traffic. Both concentrations can offer internship opportunities. Other possible courses include the following:

History of journalism
Group psychology
Information technology
Art criticism
Signals systems

Popular Career Options
Undergraduate education in telecommunications can lead to employment in an array of industries, like entertainment, broadcasting and journalism. Those studying telecommunications media can prepare for jobs such as:

Copy editor
Media buyer
News writer
Research analyst
Newscaster

Computer network and telecommunications technology students can find installation, repair or management jobs in phone, satellite or other broadcasting companies. Graduates who focused on computers can work as network administrators or technicians in corporate information technology departments.

Continuing Education Information

After receiving a telecommunications bachelor’s degree, some individuals choose to get a graduate education in business, law or the media arts. A Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree can lead to an accelerated career in the telecommunications and entertainment industries. A doctorate degree in a field related to telecommunications can create opportunities in academic administration, research and education.

You May Qualify For Financial Aid.

Sony Ericsson G705 Review

Suitable and appropriate design and incorporate features. That is shown by the time Sony Ericsson launched their latest mobile phone, the Sony Ericsson G705. They appear with the typical design of classic Sony Ericsson slider plus features that are currently applied by some more modern phones, like GPS, HSDPA via Internet, access to technology on the Wi-Fi. For photography fans features, Sony Ericsson mobile phone products also provide features camera with resolution of 3.2 Mpix with support image editing and video.

Sony Ericsson G705 measures 95 x 47 x 14.3 mm and weighs 98 grams which is available in two colours : Silky Gold and Majestic Black.It is quite compact and relatively slim, and the brushed plastic is utterly immune to fingerprints. Above the screen is a ear speaker, light sensor and video call camera, and the navigation, selection, activity menu, call and end call buttons lays on the below.

As to the keypad, the numeric keypad uses quite soft rubber and is sized in accordance with the fingers which make us comfortable when typing an SMS message. When in standby, the keypad locks automatically upon sliding the phone closed.

Sony Ericsson G705 sports a 3.2 MP camera with fixed-focus and LED flash. You can take photos in up to 2048 x 1536 pixels with average file size of about 1MB|The 3.2 MP camera has fixed focus and a LED flash. The snapper is capable of maximum image resolution of 2048 x 1536 pixels with average file size of about 1MB}}}. The lack of atuofocus and limited camera features may make you doubt the image quality, but we see quite good potential in the image quality from images we got using a pre-released version. Sony Ericsson G705 is also capable of video recording but is limited to low resolution at 15fps recorded in mp4 format.

The GPS feature is one of advantage features of this series. When combined with the camera, the facilities geotagging. To enjoy this GPS, Sony Ericsson provides a map of Wayfinder Navigation.

Sony Ericsson G705 runs the flash-based Media Center where you can find the Music Player 3.0. Across the Media Center menus, you can enjoy screen auto-rotation. The player supports numerous file formats, including MP3, AAC, AAC+, E-AAC +, WAV, WMA, M4A and MIDI plus the MegaBass equalizer preset and Stereo widening.