Search
Recent Site Wide Posts
-
Mushrooms~ *Not that big orange mushroom in MapleStory!* We will be holding a farm tour to Mycofarm, Singapore’s largest commercial mushroom growing facility and the only farm cultivating exotic mushrooms that are grown in temperate countries. The tour consists of viewing air-conditioned growing houses of mushrooms that only grow in cold climate, an interesting cooking demonstration [...] -
What is important for living? Water! Without water, we would not even be alive to enjoy the awesome food out there! As the Food Connoisseur Club, we “Live to eat” and “Eat to live”. We will be holding a tour to the newly upgraded NEWater Visitor Centre to learn more about the production of NEWater. This [...] -
Shawn Tay wrote a new blog post: Apple Magic Mouse Review 1 day, 4 hours ago · View
The revolutionary apple magic mouse, one of the sleekest and nicest mouse out there in the market. I managed to get my hand on one and tested it. I’m using windows though, but i managed to find a fix for it here. However it two of it features such as two finger swipe and touch click [...] -
Shawn Tay wrote a new blog post: Lenovo ThinkPad T410i Review 5 days, 17 hours ago · View
The Lenovo ThinkPad T410i, a low-cost version of the T410 14.1 inch notebook and it’s now available. The T410i design is the same version of the standard 14-inch T-series. In this review we find out how well the T410i stacks up and if you should consider it for your next notebook. Our Lenovo ThinkPad T410i Specifications: Windows 7 [...] -
spvc wrote a new blog post: Canon’s new toy: 120mp CMOS sensors 6 days, 1 hour ago · View
The first time I’m seeing camera resolutions in 3 digits, Canon has created the “World’s Largest” sensor measuring 202mm x 205mm. Able to capture light one-hundredth times lower than low-lighting situations. Good for people with big budgets, and suitable for videographers with cameras bigger than their palm.
To read more, go here –> http://gizmodo.com/5626133/with-expanded-size-comes-greater-light+gathering-capability-in-canons-worlds-largest-cmos-sensor