What is the main objective of having The olympics? Answer: This policy has two main objectives: • it strives to promote Olympic Games which respect the environment and meet the standards of sustainable development. • it also aims to promote awareness among and educate the members of the Olympic family and sports practitioners in general of the importance of a healthy environment and sustainable development. It is based on the principles enshrined in the The Olympic Charter (Chapter 1, The Olympic Movement and its Actions: Mission and Role of the IOC): • to encourage and support a responsible concern for environmental issues, to promote sustainable development in sport and require that the Olympic Games are held accordingly; and • to promote a positive legacy from the Olympic Games to the Host cities and the Host countries. The IOC policy also finds its roots and scope in the Olympic Movement's agenda 21 which is another major reference document in this field.

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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The Flip Camera Is Finally Dead—Your Smartphone’s Got Blood on Its Hands




Today, we pay our respects to an old, departed, obsolete, redundant friend. Here lie the remains of Flip, a product nobody needed anymore or cared about. So, its creator decided to destroy it. Now let us bow our heads. Phew!
So, now that the sad stuff's out of the way, let's get real. Cisco just axed Flip, yeah, but the blame should be aimed squarely at the smartphone in your pocket. Well, really, thepraise should be aimed at your phones. There was a time when having a dedicated digital camcorder made sense. Point and shoot cams recorded crap, DSLRs were available within the budgets of minor deities alone, and video from a phone was hilariously bad—minuscule, riddled with artifacting, and looking like a streaming movie from 1998. More Inside Yo
That time ended a while ago. Last June, while evaluating the iPhone 4's terrific camera, we noted "there's no reason to carry a separate cheap camcorder ever again." It was true then, and Cisco's realized it now. The video quality possible via iPhone 4 (and other smartphones, for that matter) precludes justifying another plastic thing in your bag or pocket. It's redundant. It's wasteful. Yes, the top of the line Flip Ultra HD had a couple things my iPhone 4 doesn't—image stabilization and 60 fps shooting powers, namely. But I'm willing to take a little quality cut if it means I can use one object, instead of two—the image the Flip whipped up just wasn't good enough to stand alone as a separate product. Baby lens HD is baby lens HD, whether it's coming from a phone or a Flip. Convergence wins out (I can't remember the last time I used a dinky point and shoot for stills), and, given a little more time, smartphones will feature-beat the Flip Ultra HD.
So as much as this is a dark day for the alleged 550 Flip-related employees getting the axe, it was a day we all saw coming. Like putting down an old blind mule with no hooves, in 2011, killing the Flip is killing something useless.

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