Audubon 200 Optic Lens Cleaning Kit
Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010 at
4:16 pm

Buy Audubon 200 Optic Lens Cleaning Kit at Amazon
Product Description
For safe and effective cleaning of your binoculars, our kit offers a complete assembly of cleaning tools. It includes a blower brush for removal of coarse debris (dust, salts, and other small particles), a pack of 30 oversized cleaning tissues, as well as a bottle of cleaning fluid and large cleaning chamois for safe and effective removal of eyelash oils, water spots, and fingerprints. The Audubon cleaning kit is a great way to keep your equipment in tip-top shape and can be used when at home or when out in the field!
Buy Audubon 200 Optic Lens Cleaning Kit at Amazon
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US $14.04



“By Jolene Tan | 2 February 2010, 17:34 In my gleamingly modern home town of Singapore, trading in women has been refined to a stomach-churningly efficient art. The women in question are foreign domestic workers (FDWs), locally known as “maids”, who travel from poorer countries – principally but not only the Philippines and Indonesia – to live in private households and provide cleaning, cooking and care services. So ubiquitous is their hire – in the hundreds of thousands, in a country of 5 million – that online portal bestmaid.com.sg confidently declares, “In Singapore, maid is not a luxury, but a necessity.” Fortunately, “maid agencies” are to hand to assist with procuring these necessities. Visit one of the offices that dot the island and you can see FDWs displayed like so many wares, often in uniform haircuts and agency-branded T-shirts. To determine if you’re getting value for money, you can’t engage with the woman in front of you – you have to fill in a form with your preferences so that the agency can consult their comprehensive catalogue, neatly enabling you to locate a maid with the desired height, build, nationality, age, skin colour, religion, marital status, number of children and other vital qualifications for the job. But I’m behind the times – rather than making this trip you could also consult maidlibrary.com, the “maid search” function of which helpfully divides into “married” and “not married” columns by default. One sought-after trait, which sadly cannot yet be reliably gauged by even the most competent businesses, is quiescence. The maid mustn’t get ideas above her station, like thinking she is entitled to one day off a month, or considering changing employer if her current post isn’t working out, or – worst of all – eating biscuits, thus forcing you to beat her. Savvy employers sometimes pick Indonesian workers because FDWs from the Philippines are reputed to be more knowledgeable and assertive about their rights, as well as being likely to speak English, the local lingua franca. “It’s when they speak English that the problem comes,” one employer said to me confidingly. “That’s when they start to make friends.” At a loss, I replied, “God forbid anyone should have friends.” She hastily clarified: it wasn’t friends she was worried about, it was boyfriends. Particularly the foreign men who carry out the vast majority of Singapore’s manual labour and typically come from poorer Asian countries, such as Bangladesh. This brings us to one of the less endearing features of Chinese Singaporean racism – and you might have guessed the competition is fierce – namely the hypersexualisation of foreign workers with darker skin. There is no other way to put this: the nation is obsessed with the possibility that some of these people might shag. Given that having sex is all that foreign women might conceivably wish to do with themselves, to prevent this horrifying contingency, they must not be allowed to communicate with anyone, ever. Ostensibly, this fixation arises because FDWs are forbidden by law to give birth in Singapore, but in a country where contraception is freely available and abortion is perfectly legal up to 24 weeks of pregnancy, there’s clearly something else going on here, psychologically, with employers. Human Rights Watch documents the results: “I can write letters but I can’t make phone calls, I have to do it in secret. I’m not allowed to have a boyfriend. My employer wouldn’t like it, she would send me back to Indonesia.” … Many domestic workers are forbidden from leaving the workplace unless they are in the company of their employer or, for those who are so lucky, on days off. Some domestic workers interviewed by Human Rights Watch reported being locked in their workplace from the outside. More commonly, domestic workers reported that their employers discouraged or prohibited them from talking to neighbors, other domestic workers, or to friends on the phone. … Almost all of the domestic workers that Human Rights Watch interviewed were required to obtain permission to leave the household where they worked. Many domestic workers were not allowed out of the apartment unless they were in the company of their employer, even to go to the market.Some employers locked the phone so domestic workers could not use it during the day. … “They would lock me inside the house with the baby. I was not allowed to make phone calls or send letters to my family. I wasn’t allowed to say anything or talk to the neighbors, I had to just keep quiet.” … “If I left the flat to throw out the trash, I had to return in exactly three minutes.”… “They don’t give me more off days, because they’re worried that I will get a boyfriend.” … Singaporean progressive blog Barnyard Chorus also picks up on one employer’s – not unrepresentative – letter to the local papers, bemoaning the willingness of agencies to arrange the transfer to another employer of a FDW who appeared to have formed social relationships with men. The baffling idea that this ought to disqualify her from employment is remarkably widely shared. Much of this racist abusiveness and dehumanisation is closely related to Singaporeans’ fear and anxiety over the country’s post-colonial survival. The national narrative has us plucked from the jaws of devastating poverty by good governance and hard work (both presented, with varying degrees of explicitness, as specifically Chinese virtues), and positions Singapore as a unique success story in a region of backward societies whose misfortunes are testament to, and constitutive of, the unreality and insignificance of their inhabitants. Thus, Human Rights Watch documents a case where an employer justified withholding wages for eight years of a FDW’s work with: “I’ve done a lot for you. Because of me, you got to breathe the air in Singapore. I gave you a luxurious life. Whatever we have done for you is enough.” In other words, because she came from a poorer country, slavery was the best she could legitimately hope for. Lee Kuan Yew, who was Prime Minister for 25 years from independence and whose son is now Prime Minister, has brandished maidhood as part of the ultimate threat to the nation’s well-being: if the 45 year-long dominance of the ruling party were to end, he cautioned, “your asset values will disappear, your apartment will be worth a fraction of what it is, your jobs will be in peril, your security will be at risk and our women will become maids in other people’s countries”. I suspect that for many Singaporean women, abusiveness towards FDWs is also connected to fear and anxiety about our own place in society. Patriarchal attitudes simultaneously devaluing and gendering care work and domestic work are well-ensconced in Singapore, but the prevalence of FDWs staves off, to some degree, arguments about the role of Singaporean women in private and public spheres, by replacing the grossly undervalued labour Singaporean women would have been expected to do with grossly undervalued labour that foreign women are made to do. The hierarchy and unfairness remain in place; we’ve just changed the demographic on whom the worst burdens fall. Which is, of course, from a humanitarian perspective, little change at all. We need a rethinking of exisitng ways, and an understanding that care work and domestic work are work, and the people who perform this work, whomever they may be, should be accorded proper respect and status. Instead, we have imagined into being a hellish necessity: that there must be maids, who must be subjugated; and only by meting out the ill-treatment that defines this degraded role can we reassure ourselves of our own precarious superiority over it. *** Although this is a particularly stark issue in Singapore, many of the forms of abuse and dehumanising attitudes discussed are also highly relevant to migrant domestic workers in the UK. Please read Kalayaan’s 2008 report (previously linked by The F Word here) to find out more. Your Comments Leonie said: Thanks, this is one of the most interesting and perceptive pieces I’ve read about the employment of foreign domestic workers. I’ve previously encountered in a Middle Eastern context, where in Syria for example maids are often known simply as “srilankiyat” – regardless of whether they are Sri Lankan! I’ve often struggled to understand the abuse inflicted upon these women (it’s heartbreaking to see cases of FDW suicide come to light on an almost weekly basis in places like Lebanon) and it’s great to see a feminist analysis of the issue. Posted on 02 February 2010 at 8:59 PM twasher said: Thanks for writing this. My mother was an inveterate verbal abuser of maids, and obsessive about controlling them, down to the number of biscuits they eat. She went to the extent of setting “traps” that would reveal if the maid had opened a biscuit tin or honey jar that she shouldn’t be opening. She regularly insulted their religion and, when she suspected one maid was lying, made her kneel down and “swear to Allah” that she was not lying. Needless to say, she was one of those who locked the phones, and whenever the maid received a phone call, would listen in to make sure nothing untoward was being said. She tried to keep track of the frequency and duration with which the maid talked to the maid next door, being paranoid about them engaging in “conspiracies” against their employers. I have often wondered how children who grow up seeing maids treated this way by their parents can have any kind of respect for their parents’ moral authority. I certainly didn’t have any. One worry I have about the postcolonial attitude explanation is that the same kind of maltreatment happens in Malaysia, even though Malaysians have less of a superiority complex with respect to their poorer neighbours. Do they have the same kind of national narrative we do? Or perhaps for Malaysia it might be the case that the households who can afford to hire maids have a narrative of succeeding against the odds through hard work, and this leads to a similar superiority complex vis-a-vis the poor. Posted on 03 February 2010 at 5:03 AM Jolene Tan said: I’m glad you found it interesting. Singapore also has a version of the “srilankiyat” phenomenon, but in the reverse – all Filipinas are assumed to be maids. It caused brief media controversy once in the 90s where on a game show a contestant had to describe the word “maid” o that their partner could guess it, and said simply “Filipino”. When I was on my graduate course, a Filipino classmate also came up to me and said that another Singaporean on the course had called her a maid – presumably in the belief that this was somehow funny. It was mortifying. Posted on February 3, 2010 8:32 AM Jolene Tan said: Thanks for sharing. With a lot of the forms of control and humiliation people engage in, I think it’s clear that what’s going on is more than simple anxiety about the maid’s job getting done. I agree that the Singaporean post-colonial narrative can’t be what generates the abusive behaviour – I would guess that abuse emerges in any situation which combines power imbalance and simple human cussedness – but I believe it is one of the cultural features explaining how abuse is justified between Singaporeans and rendered socially acceptable. Which fortifies the power imbalance. Posted on February 3, 2010 8:40 AM Jolene Tan said: I meant to add, I agree about the role of the notion of the “deserving rich” and the “undeserving poor” within nations too. I think Singapore’s superiority complex in the region is this writ large, and strengthened. Posted on February 3, 2010 8:43 AM Joana Andrade said: I think what you call the post-colonial narrative comes as an excuse and justification for the abusive behaviour, it’s not a cause itself. In Portugal untill the 1970’s/ 80’s it was usual for middle class households to take in youg girls from rural areas as maids, we had similar behaviour (although not as generalized) Posted on 03 February 2010 at 11:50 AM Jha said: Wrt Malaysia, I must say, the answer is, YES, the situation and treatment of maids is similar. My family has given maids more leeway than most families I know of (one of our maids lived with her husband), but we Malaysians are horrendously racist towards Indonesians. We’ve even taken to hiring Indonesians more than Filipinas because the latter “cost more”. Posted on 03 February 2010 at 12:43 PM Anne Onne said: Thank you for this, it’s a good reminder of how othering and exploitation extends across nationalities and ethnicities. Although the same can happen with women from the same country, it seems clear that being an immigrant (and often relatively isolated in a land that doesn’t value you as highly as those ‘native’ to it) plays into the control, as the employer can always threaten to attempt to have their hired help deported. I don’t have much to add other than to say that, like you stated at the end, the UK is also not free of the problem of foreign workers being exploited for domestic services. I think it’s food for thought that although the ethnicities of the poor (usually) women being exploited vary from country to country, the ways in which this happens shows patterns suggesting that this is a global problem as much as a local one. It says something about all of our societies, and what it says isn’t very flattering. Posted on 03 February 2010 at 6:07 PM Joana Andrade said: just out of curiosity; Is the abuse mainly woman on woman? are the abusers working outside their homes normally? Are they financially independent? As you pointed, there seems to be a sexual undertone permeating all this. In the portuguese experience, one of the prevalent fears was the maid engaging in a sexual relationship or having a child with her master or the so called “sons of the house”, shifting the power relations within the household. Women perceived this behaviour as threatening and reacted by being abusive while men weren’t. I’m not familiar with the singaporean or the malaysian cultures to know if the same applies. Posted on 03 February 2010 at 6:59 PM Brad F. said: When I read the news piece about the maid being beaten for eating biscuits, I was disturbed but not really surprised. I’m from the US, where having a maid is something extremely rare and mostly unheard of unless you’re filthy rich. In my mind, the ability to have a maid is something that should be cherished, and you should be thankful and grateful to a person that wants to do that job for you. So, when I see things in the news here about mistreatment, or hear or see online Singaporeans talking down to their maids, as if they’re misbehaving pets or malfunctioning tools, it seriously disgusts me. How do people get to this point? Where they feel justified in treating a human being like an object? These workers aren’t slaves and they shouldn’t be treated as such. Posted on 03 February 2010 at 7:30 PM Lee Chee Wai said: To me, the most basic problem is the failure to treat people as individual human beings. Imho, in Singapore, this failure is extensive and inflicts every level of society. Employees in a company are inanimate digits of productivity. Women are reduced to the number of months they are “not productive” if they got pregnant instead of what should be the celebration of new life. Singaporeans are reduced to a population growth statistic that calls for foreign labor. Statistics and numbers are important. However it just as important if not more to remember that these are fellow human beings we are dealing with. Whether local or foreign, whatever their rank in the social hierarchy. Until we learn to fix this, such social injustices will continue to be dominant. I am lucky to be treated as an individual here in the US, at least at the local level. It does not matter that I am a foreigner. If I call the police, I am a resident in need of aid. If I need help from the University, they will go out of their way to find flexible solutions, even if they are not officially covered by the rules. Potential employers are interested in what I do outside of work and they are interested in what my idea of my own career is. I hate to say this, but I feel more like a complete human being here than when I was in Singapore, even though I’ve had it easy back home. Posted on 03 February 2010 at 7:39 PM Jolene Tan said: I’m not 100% sure about the demographics and I’m not aware of information being collected systematically on this, but I’m not an expert. Certainly anecdotally, and in the view of at least one activist I’ve spoken to who works with FDWs, it is mainly woman on woman, probably because local women are seen as responsible for managing the household work even if they aren’t the ones doing it. The view that FDWs are sexual temptresses out to ensnare men in the families they work for is definitely part of the picture – in fact, FDW visas/regulations specifically forbid marriage between FDWs and Singaporeans or permanent residents. I tend to hear more chatter about the fear that FDWs will bring construction workers back to the home for sexual activity, but this is just an impression. Posted on February 3, 2010 10:15 PM Have your say In order to keep this blog as a feminist and friendly space, comments will be subject to some rules. We do not seek to censor debate: the beauty of the internet is that anyone can set up their own blog or website to express their views. This blog is a safe and friendly space for feminists and feminist allies. Debate and critique are welcome where it is constructive and deepens analysis or understanding. Anti-feminist comments will not be approved. We get to decide what’s anti-feminist. All comments must be approved by one of the bloggers. For this reason, there may be a delay before your comment appears. No sexist, racist, homophobic, transphobic, classist, ablist comments, comments which make personal attacks on any blogger or commenter, or comments that are otherwise deemed offensive by us will be posted. Trolls will be banned from commenting. We get to decide who is a troll. No anonymous comments – please feel free to use your real name or make one up, though. Be nice.”
Hey team,
Here is what I am wanting to do…I run a camera lens review site with articles and guides and whatnot. I have a main Reviews page that I am wanting to auto-populate with a list of every page that I have “reviews” as a category. I am looking for a photo, the title of the article, and he first 20-30 words of the article.
Is this something that wordpress can do natively? Or a plugin?
A HUGE thanks in advance!
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Noch besser hält das Ganze, wenn man Got2B Schmusekatze ins feuchte Haar knetet
this is so my dad, hes threatin my boyfriend so many times before, he once pulled out a knife because my bf was holding my hand. he even threatined my best friends boyfriend, its so funny! i love my dad
A wide angle lens replaces (temporarily) your standard lens, while a wide angle lens converter screws onto the front of your existing lens (it requires that you get the right one based on the filter thread at the front of your lens).
If it were that simple we'd all be using wide angle converters and there would be no market for wide angle lenses, however there is, so why? Well, the reason is very simple, every wide angle converter I've seen causes horrendous chromatic aberration. That's to say that the colours of light are not focused properly and so especially at the extremes of the image and at edges within the photo you can see the colours separating. You can use this to artistic effect, but with little control, it's more often just plain annoying and makes your photos valueless!
Even the best wide angle lens is going to display some chromatic aberration, but far far far less than a wide angle converter will.
Internet connections are crawling in Iran and text message traffic has been disrupted ahead of planned anti-government protests in that country this week. The timing is raising eyebrows. Connections have been poor since last week, writes the AFP, with Communications Minister Reza Taghipour blaming damage to undersea optical fibre under the Gulf. “The cause of the reduced Internet speed in recent days is that part of the fibre-optic network is damaged…The breakage will be repaired by next week and the Internet speed will be back to normal”, the Minister is quoted as saying. But the problems aren’t limited to the Internet: text messages have suffered disruption too, a situation Iran blames on “changing software”. The timing is highly suspicious: February 11 marks the anniversary of the Iranian revolution, and opponents of President Ahmadinejad plan to hold protests against alleged election fraud. The protesters have gathered worldwide support spreading their messages on Twitter and…
they are the model of frugality if i’ve ever seen it. kudos to them, for real.
Check with your local community development office. They may know, or have the papers you need to fill out to make your self legal. They may also have info on grant money for your business.
The cooperative extension may also have some information for you that may be use-full for starting your own business. In fact that office has much info about soil. What type is needed to grow this that and what ever. They also have the info on what grows best in your area etc…
You could always go to your local attorney generals office with questions you may have to keep your self safe in the legal department.
Google has recently been making a lot of waves with regard to Internet speed. Last June, the company posted a blog post detailing its need for speed. And yesterday it announced plans to build a fiber-optic 1Gb/sec network to a limited number of customers to explore what kind of services could be built using that kind of bandwidth (most US ISPs only provide a tiny fraction of that). Today, that obsession with speed is hitting another of the site’s properties: YouTube. YouTube is launching a new Video Speed Dashboard that allows users to see how their download speed stacks up against other users on their ISP, local users using other ISPs, and the state, national, and global averages. All of the data is measuring according to how quickly YouTube video streams to your browser, averaged over 30 days.
From chile
You are below the level of an Amoeba, flowerbower. Or whoever you are. Probably a vagrant.Since you won’t confirm your identity,, we can only assume the worst.
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As I said in my first comment “Energy scarcity is only true with (the) current means we use today” That’s what Peter was referring to. That’s also clearly stated in Addendum which was the topic during the Alex Jones show. If AJ wasn’t so busy acting like a child perhaps Peter could have made that point clear. I clarified Peter’s position and told you where you can hear it for yourself. You can no longer claim you don’t know. I encourage you to learn more for yourself. Visit the sites.
Try playing music it always help me get finished and it make me wnt to keep on going.
RT Kids on school break? Audubon Center/Lefferts Historic House are open all week w free actitivities.
i use meguiar's classic, but you can use any of the washes, eagle one spray on wax, armor all every 1k miles, glass cleaner for the exterior windows, dealership bought window cleaner for the inside of the windows
simple green works great, it is great for engine degreasing and cleaning up oil spills when change oil or transmission or coolant. just remember to cover the distributor, air intake (if you have) and any visible plugs (wire connections) with a plastic bag + rubberband. when you rinse off the simple green its important not to blast the water but rather "shower" it off
TIP: when waxing with microfiber, use the towels used for wax only for wax, drying for drying, and wiping for wiping. it also helps to use window towels for windows only
Gonna eat some soup:) Just got done cleaning house is soooo clean.
Sounds like a pretty wild spring break
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There are several issues to be taken into account when using older lenses on a new digital SLR. First is that you will lose the autofocus and/or auto aperture features of your camera, also you will have to take into account the size difference between the CMOS sensor in your camera and a 35 mm frame. The sensor being smaller will mean that you will have to make some calculations as to what the actual zoom on a given lens will be. For example if you have a 55mm lens for a 35mm camera, it will actually function as a ~ 82.5mm lens (you would use the actual mm rating and multiply it by 1.5).
Evidently to get into the palace your camera lens can't be longer than your arm.. Just made it!
maybe try getting in contact with your local Realtor. even if they can't hire you they should give you some good advice or point you in the correct direction! hope you find the job you want. Good Luck
stuff is blowing up throughout this entire video its hillarious!!!
RISCA Weblog>> REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS: UGH LEADERSHIP!
NATIONAL AUDUBON SOCIETY IS PLEASED TO INVITE APPLICATIO… http://bit.ly/9XXmQy
I am typing as fast as I can as I fully understand this is the most urgent life – death matter before the entire civilized world.
If Virgin Media is your only fiber optic provider and they are unable to deliver it to your location, then their system is not designed to deliver it to you. Perhaps your neighbor is the last on on the delivery circuit at this time and just because it is delivered to him it does not mean it is deliverable to you. Perhaps Virgin Media will extend their circuit shortly and then you will be able to get it. Meanwhile, unless there is another carrier to provide this, you are out of luck.
Your 18-55mm lens is a zoom lens, all it means is that the lens has a variable focal length between X and Y.
A telephoto lens is one that is greater focal length than the "normal" lens for a particular type of camera. On a 35mm, that is anything more than 50mm. On a 645 or 6X6, that is anything greater than an 80mm.
On your Digital Rebel with the 1.6x crop factor, it is anything greater than about 35mm. Your 18-55 is actually a short telephoto, with an equivalent field of view of approximately 29-88mm as compared to a 35mm camera.
What you can get to fulfill your need varies mostly with your budget. The Canon 75-300 III is the least expensive method to get a lot more reach, but is also the worst option. Better, yet still fairly low cost, is the Sigma 70-300 APO. Make sure it is the APO version, there are several.
Upping the budget a little, there is the Canon 55-250 IS, supposed to be a pretty good lens.
For another step up in price, there is the Canon 70-300 IS, which is an image stabilized version of the lens, but is a much better lens to begin with. For only a little more, you can get the Canon 70-200 f/4 L, a constant aperture zoom. Anything with an L in the name is a good lens. Even the 28-300 IS, even though it costs $2,300.
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A telephoto lens is is used tor taking pictures of things that are pretty far away from you, sort of like when you're using the zoom feature on your camera.
A macro lens is used for taking close up pictures of small objects such as coins, bugs, jewelry, and other small things. Macro lenses also allow you to capture the details in smaller objects.
Hope this helps. :]
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Poor quality photos – were these taken on a cellphone cam?
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fuck you you motherfucker lets see your fatrass do that
still sucking the cum from jon’s cock? HAHAHAHH OWNED AGAIN DUMB CUNT!
HAHAHHAHA
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it depends on when you go also it depends on how many other field trips will be there as well. the zoo has expanded a lot since ive gone as a kid. I will say 4 hours does seem like a good window of time only thing is you may want to consider rest breaks because it can be really hot and exhausting doing ALL that walking especially for little ones. have fun!
Koures are high-end upscale eyewear, retail price $250 to $400, found at optometrist offices in very wealthy neighborhoods like Newport Beach, CA, upstate New York, and boutiques in Los Angeles. Koure Eyewear, Inc. well known for their innovative designs & high tech artisantry / Combination of best of creative art and technology. This model# 8077 [...]
I use a lens cloth.
Get a pen and paper and write down what you need to do. Then draw a diagram where you want to put everything in your room. Put clothes in one pile everything else in another. Start washing clothes first, then seperate other items WHILE PLAYING YOUR FAVORITE MUSIC, TURN OFF THE TV AND CLOSE THE DOOR!!!!! Then follow your diagram and throw some of that stuff away!!!
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wow nice
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My pleasure!
The value of the book is however much it means to you, but you would not get anything to speak of for it as a collectible volume. The ORIGINAL of that work, yes, but not a reprint from the 1970s.
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Politely tell them where they can put their snow.
Pool Opening Tip #3: Before uncovering the pool, clean the pool deck with a blower, after removing cover, use a hose and brush to clean edge