Welcometo the 21stCentury.Youmay experience a slight senseofvertigo CHAPTER 11Usability as common courtesy Why your Web site should be a mensch CHAPTER 12Accessibility and you Just when you think you’re done, a cat floats by with buttered toaststrapped to its back CHAPTER 13Guide for the perplexed Making usability happen where you live AcknowledgmentsI ndex Preface: About this edition People come and go so quicklyhere! —DOROTHYGALE(JUDYGARLAND)INTHEWIZARDOFOZ(1939) I wrote the first edition ofDon’t Make Me Thinkback in 2000. By 2002, I began to get a few emails a year from readers asking (very politely) if I’d thought about updating it. Not complaining; just trying to be helpful. “A lot of the examples are out of date” was the usual comment. My standard response was to point out that since I wrote it right around the
Anthropology of Tourism Madli Tuvike Anthropology and Tourism Female Adventure Tourism This essay will explain what significance culture has in adventure tourism. There are five paragraphs in this essay, where definitions of adventure travel and human culture are given. First, paragraph will look and define what culture, anthropology and adventure tourism are. Second paragraph will examine how different cultures impact female adventure travel. Third paragraph will point out the problems in adventure tourism. The forth paragraph will give recommendations for the future and some of the possible future problems in female adventure tourism will be looked at. The last paragraph will be a summary of the key findings and recommendations.
Scholarship on backpackers speculates some individuals may extend backpacking to a way of life. This article empirically explores this proposition using lifestyle consumption as its framing concept and conceptualises individuals who style their lives around the enduring practice of backpacking as ‘lifestyle travellers’. Ethnographic interviews with lifestyle travellers in India and Thailand offer an emic account of the practices, ideologies and social identity that characterise lifestyle travel as a distinctive subtype within backpacking. Departing from the drifter construct, which (re)constitutes this identity as socially deviant, the concept of lifestyle allows for a contemporary appraisal of these individuals’ patterns of meaningful consumption and wider insights into how ongoing mobility can lead to different ways of understanding identities and relating to place. Keywords: lifestyle consumption; backpacker; mobility; drifter; identity INTRODUCTION
Põhiline essential Toime tulema To cope Tõuklemine, kiirustamine hustle Eakas, vanur an elderly person Korrapäratult laiuv linnamaastik Urban sprawl Elujõuetu Frail Mahajäetud, peremeheta derelict Hooldekodu Care home 1. In what kind of facilities do people live in towns/in suburbs/in the country? People live in terraced houses or tower blocks in the town centres or semidetached houses near town centres. In the suburbs, people usually live in detached houses and larger detached houses in the countryside. 2. Are these facilities rented or owned? Most of the facilities are owned, only three out of ten in Britain are renting. 3
(Train, car, boat, plane) Set sail boat, a cruise boat, traffic jam car, compartment train, fast lane car, indicate, commuter train, take off plane, pull in car, bonnet car, fasten your seatbelts car/plane, rush hour train, customs plane, voyage boat, go aboard plane/train/boat/car, boarding cards boat/plane. Exercise 2. Read the text and translate the words and expressions in bold. AIR TRAVEL This is the usual sequence of activities when you travel by plane. First you go to the check-in desk where your luggage is weighed and your ticket checked (not controlled). Your luggage allowance is usually 20 kg and if you want to takes heavier bags you have to pay excess baggage. You also receive your boarding card with your seat number on it and then you may proceed to the passport control. After your passport and hand-luggage
mentally accepted the fact that you can have it. —Robert Collier ■ THE TRUTH ABOUT YOU You are a thoroughly good person.You deserve a wonderful life, full of success, happiness, joy, and excitement. You are entitled to have happy relationships, excellent health, meaningful work, and finan- cial independence. These are your birthright. This is what your life is meant to include. You are engineered for success and designed to have high levels of self-esteem, self-respect, and personal pride. You are extraordi- nary; there has never been anyone exactly like you in all the history of mankind on earth.You have absolutely amazing untapped talents and abilities that, when properly unleashed and applied, can bring you everything you could ever want in life.
British Cuisine Some people criticize English food. They say it's unimaginable, boring, tasteless, it's chips with everything and totally overcooked vegetables. The basic ingredients, when fresh, are so full of flavour that British haven't had to invent sauces to disguise their natural taste. What can compare with fresh pees or new potatoes just boiled and served with butter? Why drown spring lamb in wine or cream and spices, when with just one or two herbs it is absolutely delicious? If you ask foreigners to name some typically English dishes, they will probably say "Fish and chips" then stop. It is disappointing, but true that, there is no tradition in England of eating in restaurants, because the food doesn't lend itself to such preparation. English cooking is found at home
............................................................................114 Abundance..................................................................................................116 Knowing Yourself and Knowing About Yourself.......................................117 Chaos and Higher Order.............................................................................118 Good and Bad.............................................................................................119 Not Minding What Happens.......................................................................120 Is That So?..................................................................................................121 The Ego and the Present Moment .............................................................122 The Paradox of Time...................................................................................124 Eliminating Time.......................................................................................
Kõik kommentaarid