sábado, 17 de setembro de 2011

Always on my mind.

Source: http://www.englishexercises.org/makeagame/viewgame.asp?id=1770


All credits of this exercises for Teacher Angeles,thank you so much for sharing with us. 




Complete the text
 
Maybe I didn't treat 
Quite as good as I should 
Maybe I didn't  you
Quite as often as I could have
things I should have said and done
I just never took the 

You were always on my 
You were always on my mind

Maybe I didn't hold you
All those lonely, lonely times
And I guess I  told you
I'm so happy that you're 
If I make you feel second best
Girl, I'm sorry I was 

You were always on my mind
You were always on my mind

Tell me, tell me that your love hasn't died
Give me, give me one more 
To keep you satisfied, satisfied

Little things I should have said and 
I just never took the 
You were always on my mind
You are always on my mind
You are always on my mind
 
Maybe I didn't you
Quite as good as I should have
Maybe I didn't  you
Quite as  as I could have
 
Maybe I didn't hold you
All those , lonely times
And I guess I  told you
I'm so happy that you're 

Maybe I didn't love you
Quite as  as I could have 

sexta-feira, 16 de setembro de 2011

Julianne Moore

Language level ADVANCED
Standard: American accent
Speaker: Chuck Rolando



Julianne Moore

Now aged 50, Julianne Moore (real name Julia Anne Smith) first came to attention with her role in Robert Altman’s Short Cuts (1993). Since then she has appeared in a range of memorable movies. Examples include: Surviving Picasso (1996), Boogie Nights (1997), The Great Lebowski (1998), Cookie’s Fortune (1999), Blindness (2008) and A Single Man(2009). Her latest film, The Kids Are All Right, is about family life, with a difference (see interview, opposite). Family life is important for Julianne Moore, who lives in New York with her husband and two children. She has reached the stage in her career where she can afford to choose the films she makes. As she says: “I want to be with my family as much as I can. I try to work in New York, or I work in the summer, when my family can come with me.”

Julianne Moore’s own childhood was conventional but nomadic. And this has helped her acting: “My dad was in the army so I was always new in school. I think if you’ve ever done that, you know what it means to not matter in a room. I think it’s a good experience for everyone to have, to feel like they’re not noticed because it teaches you to be empathetic.”

ALL IN THE FAMILY (INTERVIEW)

SPEAKER: CHUCK ROLANDO
STANDARD: AMERICAN ENGLISH
LANGUAGE LEVEL: C1 ADVANCED



With for Academy Award nominations to her name, Julianne Moore is one of the film industry’s most respected actresses. The storyline for her latest movie. The Kids Are all Right, which is directed by Lisa Cholodenko, is certainly original. Julianne Moore plays Jules, while Annette Bening plays Nic. Jules and Nic are lesbian couple. They have two teenage children: Jules is the biological mother of one child, while Nic is the biological mother of the other. The children were conceived by artificial insemination and the identify of their biological father is unknown. But the problems start when the children contact him and he enters the family’s life. The character’s name is Paul and he is played by Mark Ruffalo. Julianne Moore talked about the movie.


Jullianne Moore
Standard: American accent
I think what I love about the movie too is the characters’ resilience, how much…I always talk about this, about the elasticity of love, that, when you love somebody, a lot can be allowed, a lot can be forgiven, you know, people get…you know, you watch the kids get angry with their mums, you watch the mums get angry at each other, you watch them all get angry at Paul, you watch all this kind of stuff happen, but, at the end of the day you’re left with this feeling like, you know, the kids are all right, those kids are going to be all right, the mums are going to be all right, everybody’s going to survive it because that family is going to be intact.

AT HOME

Julianne Moore’s own domestic life is more traditional. She and her husband, director Bart Freudlich, have two children. As she says, family life is important:

Julianne Moore

It’s the place where we base ourselves, we kind of come from families, and then we grow up, move away, and then we sort of start them. It’s the way we navigate our world and it’s the place where you’re hopefully, most at home.

But she enjoys making movies:

Julianne Moore

I think it’s a something that I enjoy doing, I think that I like the story-telling aspect very much of film. I think it’s about behavior and people kind of go to it to see their lives reflected, and we have a desire for that. That’s what I’m drawn to, more than anything else, is the kind of the telling of our own stories, really. 
  


English with Susan's website



Today's tips is about Sunsan's website it's a great English resource which provides a great self-studying You'll find out useful videos, games, quizzes, songs, radio and much more. As English tips blog, please telling to someone about this awesome website. Surely, since I started out to write some English tips, more and more people, in particular students and also teachers have been accessed and got some knowledge and use the most podcasts at classroom. I glad to hear from you, what do you think about English tips commenting and give your suggestion. Susan's Website Address can be found, from now on LEARNING ENGLISH, on the main menu on English tips blog. Check out on  http://english-with-susan.weebly.com

Living in a World With Facial Recognition



Source: http://www.voanews.com




Or download MP3 (Right-click or option-click and save link)
Computers are beginning to recognize faces. Alessandro Acquisti is a professor at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He did a study to see how this will affect people’s privacy.
Professor Acquisti says social networks like Facebook and LinkedIn have some of the world's largest databases of identities. He thinks facial recognition software will threaten people’s privacy.
Recognition systems measure things like the size and position of a nose, the distance between the eyes, and the shape of cheekbones. The software compares lots of images to try to identify the person.


Facial recognition programs are used in police and security operations. But the software is increasingly popular in other uses, including social media sites.
For the study, the Carnegie Mellon researchers used software from Pittsburg Pattern Recognition, or PittPat. Google bought that company in July. The software can recognize faces in photos and videos.
The researchers did three experiments. First, they collected profile photos from a dating website. Its members try to protect their privacy by not listing their real name. With the software, the researchers could identify one out of ten people on Facebook.
In the second experiment, the researchers asked permission to take pictures of students on campus. They compared these photos to photos on Facebook. This time they correctly identified one-third of the students.
In the third experiment, they tried to see how much they could learn about people just from a photo. They found not only names but birthdates, personal interests, and even locations, when people listed them. And Professor Acquisti says the technology is only improving.
“Because face recognizers keep improving accuracy, because cloud computing keeps offering more power, and because more and more images of ourselves are going to be online, we are getting really close to this future where what we did as a proof of concept will be possible to do by anyone on a massive scale.”
In June, Facebook launched a facial recognition system to help users "tag" or list the names of people in photos. In June, Germany became the first country to say this software was a violation of privacy. 

quinta-feira, 15 de setembro de 2011

Mr. Duncan Interesting English course

Due the internet world became smaller and day after day people around the world looking forward to learn English, new opportunities to improve the life condition, and it provides a great opportunity to contact with different culture, accents and make friends worldwide. 

In order to make easier, English tips provide to you important tips in order to develop your English listening skill, see one more important tip...Watch the Mister Duncan's video. 




Why do you study English?



Commonly I've heard people commenting...I love to learn English, I spent at least 3 hours learning a lot English. I started out to practise English since I was 9 years old I became interested to learn and speak fluent when I was 14 years old. I never attended school since I was 37 years old, after a long time teaching by myself (Self-taught). I had no choice, no hope to learn, and the way I was looking for, definitely it was not a great method, I used to listen to BBC's Radio I stayed tuned for about 3 hours listening to BBC's programmes by short waves station. My parents didn't have no money in order to attend an English course. 


After a couple of years teaching by myself, I started to guide tourists from different parts of the world, my first teachers were the Tour guides from the capital and the tourists. Next, in 2010 I went to SENAC, a great Brazilian Institute, I got a Scholarship, by Laumir Barreto, Daniela Tinoco helped me out in order to get it. My first teacher in Express 1 was Teacher Leonardo Guimarães, a great ESL teacher, by the way. I started out in Elementary level, next I attended the Express II, and Rebecca was a teacher of mine there. Excellent ESL teacher. 
In conclusion I have stopped to attend at Senac course because it was really expensive to me, I had to abandon the course. 
Everything I've learning in my lifetime I decided to pass it on for Children and Teenagers in the project "Living and Learning. 
In conclusion, I would say to you that, you have the opportunity to learn real English through Facebook and the other social networking sites, and never give up, keep the spirit. Thank you for being friends and SHOUT OU English tips blog for friends. 

Aviation Hall of Fame Members...What about include Santos Dumont in the hall of fame?


Aviation Hall of Fame Members...What about include Santos Dumont in the hall of fame?

Consider the father of aviation
Wright Brothers
Source: www.manythings.org/voa/people
This is Doug Johnson. Today on EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English we tell about some men and women who are members of the Aviation Hall of Fame. They have been honored for what they did for flying.
The National Aviation Hall of Fame is in Dayton, Ohio. It opened in nineteen-sixty-two. Since that time, the Hall of Fame has honored one-hundred-seventy-eight men and women for their work in aviation. Four more will be honored this year. Those honored will include Harriet Quimby, the first woman pilot in America.
The first two people chosen as members of the Aviation Hall of Fame were Orville and Wilbur Wright. They lived and worked in Dayton. The Wright Brothers were the first humans to make and fly a powered aircraft.
Their story is well known. Another early member of the Aviation Hall of Fame is Charles Lindbergh. His record-setting flight across the Atlantic Ocean began on May twentieth, nineteen-twenty-seven.
Neil Armstrong is another member of the Hall of Fame. He was the first human to walk on the moon. The story of the Apollo Eleven landing on the moon is also well known.
Today, Mary Tillotson and Steve Ember tell about other members of the Aviation Hall of Fame who are not as famous.
(MUSIC)
Have you ever heard the name Edwin Link? Probably not. Yet many pilots know him. Mr. Link was a pioneer in flight training. He invented a machine that helped teach new pilots to fly.
Edwin Link was born in nineteen-oh-four and died in nineteen-eighty-one. He became a member of the Aviation Hall of Fame in nineteen seventy-six.
The device he invented is called the Link Trainer. Link Trainers did not really fly. But they were designed to copy flight. New pilots could use flight controls and instruments as if they were inside a real plane. A new pilot learned how to fly in the air by flying a Link Trainer that never left the ground.
The Link Company improved their trainers over time. More experienced pilots used them to learn to fly using only flight instruments to find their way. Edwin Link made it possible for many pilots to learn difficult skills in complete safety.
Just south of the city of San Diego, California is a small hill that looks toward the Pacific Ocean. A huge airplane wing rises out of the ground there. It is a monument to John Montgomery, another member of the Aviation Hall of Fame.
Not many people remember John Montgomery now. Yet many aviation experts believe he was the father of basic flying. He flew in gliders...aircraft that have no power.
John Montgomery built gliders for more than twenty years. He died in a glider accident in nineteen-eleven. Mr. Montgomery made most of his flights before anyone understood how to control an aircraft in flight.
Montgomery's study of flight and his attempts at flying led the way for the many others who followed. He became a member of the Aviation Hall of Fame in nineteen-seventy-three.
(MUSIC)
Giuseppe Bellanca is another name you probably do not know. He became a member of the Hall of Fame in nineteen-ninety-three. He came to the United States from Sicily before World War One. Mr. Bellanca designed and built airplanes for the Wright Aircraft Company in the eastern state of New Jersey.
Charles Lindbergh decided to fly across the Atlantic Ocean in nineteen-twenty-seven. He wanted to use a Wright-Bellanca aircraft. Lindbergh met with Giuseppe Bellanca. Mr. Bellanca said his airplane could make the flight. He was very excited about Lindbergh's plan. The Wright company, however, did not approve of him using one of the company's planes. Company officials thought Lindbergh might fail. Charles Lindbergh had to find a different airplane to make his famous flight.
Later, a Wright-Bellanca airplane was the first to fly the Atlantic Ocean in both directions. And, in nineteen-thirty-one, Giuseppe Bellanca designed and built an airplane that became the first to fly across the Pacific Ocean without stopping. It was called the Miss Veedol. It flew from Samishiro Beach, Japan, to the town of Wenatchee in the western state of Washington. Clyde Pangborn was the pilot of Miss Veedol. He is remembered more in Japan than he is in the United States. He became a member of the Aviation Hall of Fame in nineteen-ninety-five.
(MUSIC)
Only a few aviation experts can tell you about Charles E. Taylor. His friends called him "Charlie." He became a member of the Aviation Hall of Fame in nineteen-sixty-five.
On December Seventeeth, nineteen-oh-three, Orville Wright became the first human to fly in a powered aircraft. Orville and his brother Wilber designed and built the aircraft. Charlie Taylor built the small gasoline engine they used.
The three men designed the engine. They drew pictures on pieces of paper. Then Charlie Taylor built the needed part. He made the complete engine in only six weeks using almost no equipment. Today, you can see the Wright airplane when you visit the Smithsonian's Air and Space Museum in Washington D-C. Just to the left of the controls is Charlie Taylor's very important engine!
(MUSIC)
In nineteen-ten, a newspaper publisher offered fifty-thousand dollars to the first pilot to fly an airplane across the United States. He said the trip must be made within thirty days. Many pilots tried. All failed.
No one was able to collect the prize. But one man did succeed in flying across the United States. His name was Calbraith Perry Rodgers. He became a member of the Aviation Hall of Fame in nineteen-sixty-four.
Calbraith Rodgers started his famous flight on Sunday, September Seventeenth, nineteen eleven. He took off from Sheepshead Bay, New York, on the eastern coast of the United States. Bad luck followed him all the way. He crashed several times.
Each time the plane was rebuilt. The weather was often terrible and kept him on the ground for days. The thirty days he was supposed to fly to collect the prize passed, but Rodgers continued the flight.
His plane crashed nineteen kilometers short of the Pacific Ocean. He was badly hurt. Newspapers said he had successfully completed the flight. Rodgers did not agree. Four weeks later, he was helped into his airplane and flew the remaining distance to the Pacific Ocean. He landed December Tenth on the beach, the tires of his airplane wet from the Pacific Ocean. The trip had taken eighty-four days to complete. Calbraith Rodgers had succeeded in becoming the first pilot to fly across the United States.
(MUSIC)
Jacqueline Cochran was chosen as a member of the Aviation Hall of Fame for many reasons. She was the first women to pilot a jet airplane faster than the speed of sound. She won a top prize for flying racing planes.
She also won the highest award given to a pilot in America -- not once, but fourteen times. During World War Two, she helped organize a group of women pilots who flew military airplanes to help in the War effort. For this work, she became the first civilian ever to be given Americaąs Distinguished Service Medal.
In the early nineteen-sixties, Jackie Cochran was a test pilot for the Lockheed Company. She flew a fighter plane two-thousand-two-hundred-eighty-six kilometers an hour. That is more than two times the speed of sound. It was at that time the fastest speed ever reached by a female pilot.
Jackie Cochran died of a heart attack in nineteen-eighty. At the time of her death, she held more flying records for speed, distance and height than any other man or woman in aviation history.
(MUSIC)
Many of the men and women in the Aviation Hall of Fame designed, built and flew different kinds of airplanes. Some are honored for their service to the United States in time of war. Some are honored for the famous aircraft they designed. Others for the aviation companies they started.
Members of the Aviation Hall of Fame helped make flying safe for the public. Some were killed in their efforts to improve aviation. And some of those honored have led the way to the exploration of space.
(MUSIC)
This Special English program was written and produced by Paul Thompson. This is Mary Tillotson. And this is Steve Ember.