Shanghai Estate

今天走了十几公里的路,把意向范围中的一些楼盘看了遍,呜呼,上海的房价依然是如此的坚挺,继续上涨的趋势依然不减。看到那些簇拥在远离市中心依然开出每平米8400均价房源前的人们,不禁感叹,上海的有钱人真多啊。对那些付出一家六口人的收入来买一套房子的人真得很担忧,如果有一天税费加征,利息增加,他们还能承受得起么?

给自己算了笔帐,按照目前的收入,买一套总价80万,首付20%并用20年还贷的话,还是可以继续保持目前的生活状况,并且每年还可以存下3-4万的余钱。若是再高一点,买套100万的,会略显得有些吃力,而且首期的装修费用必须向家里人借了,而我,是不希望自己给家人添加这样的麻烦。

期待着,可以出来新的政策,将房价控制下来。

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How to creat website for multi language ?

如何去建设一个多语言版本的网站呢?在制作过程中我们应该考虑哪些方面的问题?在实施完成了几个全球性的网站以后,原先比较困扰心里的问题渐渐明晰起来。

对于全球性的多语言版本网站,其用户来源是具有多重性的。从基本上来说,我们需要根据用户所在的IP地址及其的浏览器和系统语言版本来确定用户来自于哪个地区,并了解他的母语是哪个语种,然后,我们可以通过技术手段让用户访问网站的时候自动切换到他所熟悉的语言版本。

然而,这只是一种最普通的浏览方式。如果一个用户不仅仅想要了解自己所在地区和语种的网站信息,还希望能够了解其他语言版本的网站信息,这时候,我们就需要为用户添加一个页面,将所有可能的语言版本罗列其中,需要注意的一点是,这里所列出的是语言版本而不是根据国家进行的选择,因此使用国旗来表示语言是不合理的。可能的话,可以再为语言版本分成不同的国家和地区。这样的一个页面是必需的,不仅仅为了用户浏览的方便,而且也会便于搜索引擎机器人的查找。因为,在第一种情况下,由于页面作了跳转,对于搜索引擎机器人而言,它只会搜索到一种语言版本的页面,比如英文版,而不能将其他语言版本的页面收集到数据库中。而有了一个所有语言版本选择的页面,搜索引擎机器人就可以循着这个页面的链接找到其他语言版本的页面数据。

为了让用户在其他不是讲自己母语的国家访问网站时,不至于被满页的看不懂的文字所困扰,这个链接到所有语言版本的按钮,需要醒目,而且需要用英语来标示 (因为,目前看来,英语是最大众化的一种语言了) 。另外,为了方便用户的浏览,还可以在页面上放置一个直接指到英文网站的链接。

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Memory in Hometown

在大城市里呆久了,总是有想要逃出这样的围城的感觉,也有着迫切希望与自然亲近的渴求。想念儿时那无所忧虑的生活。那时,住的不是什么大房子,吃的也不是山珍海味,但是,心里感受到的是快乐。

家乡的城市中心有一座高不足百米的小山,以前上中小学的时候,每每都以爬上山顶作为早锻炼的标准,只是,少时的我经常为自己找各种理由不进行早锻炼,印象中,早上去爬山仅有寥寥几次而已。有那么一次,冬日里,在放学后,和几个同学一起去山上玩耍,刚下过雪,山坡上还积了一层薄薄的雪,几个人正在往山上走的时候,突然发现不远处有个小动物在雪地里蹲着,尾巴长长的,像狐狸又像是黄鼠狼,还没有等到靠近,它就很快的飞奔而去了。现在,家乡也变得繁荣起来,小山上原有的原生松树由于经过一次松毛虫灾后全部都改种成人工林了,那些野生的小动物们也已经看不到踪迹了。

记忆也只能珍藏在心里,慢慢地品味。

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Cool Site - Diesel Submit Yourself

西方中世纪古典的风格,将一个个用户留言以精美装饰的挂牌展现出来,同时采用穿入式的浏览方式,带给人一种梦幻般的感觉。其每一个文字,每一处装饰,无不体现了古典的风格和韵味,是一个值得借鉴的网站。

View Site [Diesel Submit Yourself]

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Cool Site - Moto Colors

很有创意的想法,访问网站的用户可以随意在页面中点击或拖动鼠标,就会随机产生不同的图案和花纹。如果,鼠标一段时间没有移动,产品列表菜单和颜色选择框就会浮现出来,其产品按照颜色的不同排列。访问者也可以将自己所描绘的图案保存下来,发给朋友或者作为屏幕保护程序和桌面壁纸。

View Site [Moto Colors]

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Cool Site - Nike Air

其实这个网站去年就已经引起很多人的关注了,不过,还是值得再次提起。整个网站多处采用了视频效果,按钮的Over效果,场景开篇,以及最值得一提的通过键盘调用不同的预先做好的视频片断,达到一种视频混合的效果,给人以耳目一新的感觉。其视频的切换的方式很值得学习。

View Site [Nike Air]

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Pictures for Valentine’s Day

Just visited a nice site with lots of hand draw working. The owner is a woman with over 10 years’ experience in design. For the past Valentine’s Day, she draw 150 pictures with heart shapes for all her friends over the world, a very big project.Below is some shapes.

For more information, you can visit the [Marian Bantjes].

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Cool Site - Paolo Santambrogio Photography

时尚的摄影风格,大画面图片的布局,给人以很好的视觉享受。循环滚动的图片列表,使浏览变得轻松简洁。

View [Paolo Santambrogio Photography]

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Cool Site - Epson Stylus Pro 3800 Minisite

看似简单的界面,却通过生动的动画效果——纸张飘动的效果,三维框线与实体照片切换的效果,以及每个元素出场的模糊光晕效果——等等,使整个画面活跃起来。

View [Epson Stylus Pro 3800]

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10 Things Your Blogger Won’t Tell You

1. “Hardly anybody reads me.”

If you believe the hype, blogs — those online journals where peoplewrite about everything from politics and sports to their personal lives— will soon be the only thing most people read.

2. “The more companies pay me, the more I like their stuff.”

Companies looking for ways to profit from theblogging phenomenon have tried everything from buying ad space on blogsto infiltrating discussion forums with hired PR shills. They’ve evencreated fake blogs to hawk their products.

3. “Did I mention I’m not a real reporter?”

With major newspapers including “The WashingtonPost” routinely hosting blogs for columnists and reporters, blogging isgaining credibility. But beware: Even those associated with mainstreamnews outlets aren’t subject to the same prepublication safeguards —editing, fact-checking, proofreading — that print publications use.

4. “I might infect your computer with a virus.”

Most web surfers know better than to click on alink promising free money or a trip to the Bahamas. But blogs cancontain malicious code just like any other site.

5. “I’m revealing company secrets.”

When Mark Jen started working at Google in 2005,he was so excited about his new job that the newly minted associateproduct manager started a blog about it, describing orientationmeetings, comparing Google’s pay and benefits package with that of hispast employer, and recounting a company ski trip. Though Jen revealednothing earth-shattering, his blog soon drew an audience eager for apeek inside the tight-lipped firm. Two weeks later Jen was fired. Heisn’t sure just what he wrote that prompted his dismissal, but “wastold somebody at the top wanted me gone,” Jen says.

6. “Just because my name’s on it doesn’t mean I wrote it.”

In 2005 New York City mayoral candidate Fernando Ferrer’s web log mentioned he’d attended public schools; in fact, Ferrer received most of his education in private Catholic schools. When confronted with the error, his campaign admitted the blog was written by a staffer. Ferrer’s predicament was hardly unusual: Politicians, business leaders and other public figures routinely employ ghostwriters to produce books, speeches and, more recently, blogs. One survey conducted by PR consultant David Davis found that only 17% of CEOs who blog do all their own writing.

7. “My blog is just a stepping stone to bigger and better things.”

In some blogging circles, scorn for the mainstream media, or “MSM,” is a virtual religion. Nonetheless, many bloggers have proven eager to join it when the opportunity arises.

8. “I can control what you see on the Internet.”

When search engines like Google calculate their search results — the list you get when you type in specific words — one of the biggest factors in determining order is the number of other sites that link to a given web page. The reasoning goes that it’s a good measure of how useful the content of a web site is to readers — and it often works in favor of blogs.

9. “Blogging just about ruined my life.”

In 2004 Oregon resident Curt Hopkins was getting ready to fly to Minnesota for a job interview at a radio station. But before he got on the plane, the station canceled the meeting. The reason? His blog, Morpheme Tales. Hopkins had made some harsh remarks in it about the Catholic Church a few weeks before the scheduled interview, remarks he suspects sank his chances of getting hired.

10. “I’m already obsolete.”

How long can the blog bonanza last? There are already signs of a slowdown: The growth rate of blogs let up for the first time in third-quarter 2006, and overall daily postings fell to 1.3 million in September from 1.6 million in June, according to Technorati. “There’s a certain faddish quality to what’s going on,” says technology writer Nicholas Carr. “We’re probably at or near the peak of popularity of writing blogs.”

Need more information? Please visit the source article .
And you can find more interest of the other 10 things. Such as 10 Things Your Fitness Club Won’t Tell You. Did you have an iPod? Maybe you need look at 10 Things Your iPod Won’t Tell You. And don’t forget to view 10 Things Your Eye Doctor Won’t Tell You , maybe useful for your eyes. :)

Just have a fun.

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