test

March 20, 2008

snoop.jpg

Viva La Revolution › Thumnails on the fly

March 17, 2008

See how this post - that doesn’t have an image attached  - pulls the default category image in each section of the Tabber. (I have categorized this post as ALL categories!)


 

Thumbnail testola

March 16, 2008

hopper_chop-suey.jpg

This is a test, only a test.

Simple loren ipsum post

March 15, 2008

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Quisque fringilla, purus sagittis tempor mollis, risus lectus adipiscing mi, eget pellentesque neque purus ut purus. Morbi diam turpis, sodales in, dapibus nec, scelerisque ut, nunc. Vestibulum mattis congue lectus. Phasellus ac metus eleifend turpis auctor aliquam. Phasellus rutrum. Nulla ornare porttitor massa. Nunc mattis orci a enim. Aliquam adipiscing, tortor sit amet feugiat dignissim, velit augue rutrum lorem, eget tincidunt augue mauris pulvinar mauris. Donec laoreet suscipit nibh. Quisque sodales, erat at interdum consequat, tortor arcu pellentesque tellus, nec bibendum quam lorem nec augue. Integer et neque in felis convallis pharetra.

Vivamus non leo feugiat mauris posuere condimentum. Nulla iaculis scelerisque magna. Cras dolor neque, commodo vitae, vestibulum vitae, tempus a, nunc. Suspendisse tristique pharetra dui. Vivamus consequat sem a lectus. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos hymenaeos. Praesent ut mauris. Morbi quis nibh. Mauris lectus nunc, varius vel, dignissim non, placerat vitae, ante. Curabitur tortor nibh, dignissim eget, facilisis fringilla, porttitor nec, quam. Fusce ornare convallis tellus. Donec dignissim mollis magna. Vivamus erat elit, nonummy et, semper sed, cursus non, sapien. Nullam consectetuer auctor odio. Pellentesque eu lectus.

Don’t add a Custom Field and still get a thumbnail

March 15, 2008

Don’t want to see ugly missing image placeholders when you quickly post an article without adding images. Then use the Viva La Revolution fix and you’ll get an automatic thumbnail - cut to size - based on the post’s category.

It’s this easy. Just write the post and hit PUBLISH!

Thumbnail On The Fly 4 Revolution Theme Homepages

March 15, 2008

It’s official  - Viva La Revolution is flying off the shelf as the perfect fix for the thumbnail problems in Revolution themes. Take the pain out of tagging and uploading multiple thumbnaisl with each post. Generate your thumbs on the fly from a single image and a single custom field.

It just works  - the proof is that every user who is logged in to this demo site and tried it has signed up - 100%.

Try it today, and see how easy it is to manage your homepage and sidebar thumbnails in Revolution Themes with Viva La Revolution. You’ll love it!

Thumbnail Test

March 14, 2008

MaxsellRealEstate.jpgLet’s see if this works.

Automate Your Revolution Thumbnails

March 14, 2008

4.jpgWith Viva La Revolution you can add just one image tag to your post - upload an image of any size and let your server do the work. No resizing your thumbnails to fit. It’s all automatic. This post took less than 1 minute - including image upload! And it looks great on my homepage wherever it appears!

Artistic Nudes

March 14, 2008

ARIANA__nude5_copy.jpgOur last Artistic Nude Photo-shoot was great. We had a gorgeous model ARIANA. Very Professional. Thanks to everybody that helped.

Photographer : Bela Fodrovics

Test Mountain Thumbnail

March 13, 2008

mountain1280x1024.jpg(From Wikipedia) A mountain is a landform that extends above the surrounding terrain in a limited area. A mountain is generally steeper than a hill, but there is no universally accepted standard definition for the height of a mountain or a hill although a mountain usually has an identifiable summit. Mountains cover 54% of Asia, 36% of North America, 25% of Europe, 22% of South America, 17% of Australia, and 3% of Africa. As a whole, 24% of the Earth’s land mass is mountainous. 10% of people live in mountainous regions. Most of the world’s rivers are fed from mountain sources, and more than half of humanity depends on mountains for water.[1][2]

The adjective montane is used to describe mountainous areas and things associated with them.

Some authorities define a mountain as a peak with a topographic prominence over a defined value: for example, according to the Britannica Student Encyclopedia, the term “generally refers to rises over 2,000 feet (610 m)”.[3] The Encyclopædia Britannica, on the other hand, does not prescribe any height, merely stating that “the term has no standardized geological meaning”.[4]

[edit] In the United Kingdom

In England and Wales the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs has defined “mountain” (as a mass noun) as all land over 600 metres, for the purposes of right to roam legislation. This is a close metric equivalent of 2,000 feet (610 m).[5] The Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003 does not appear to draw this distinction, and in Scotland the term “mountain” is more subjective, often being used for hills exceeding 3,000 feet (914.4 m) listed as Munros. In the United Kingdom the term “hill” is commonly used for all hills and mountains, regardless of height.

Fowler Mountain of Connecticut, only 750 feet (229 m), is considered a mountain locally.

Fowler Mountain of Connecticut, only 750 feet (229 m), is considered a mountain locally.

[edit] In the United States

In the United States, the U.S. Board on Geographic Names lists hundreds of landscape features under 1,000 feet (305 m) (some as low as 100 feet) named as “mountains.” This is true for all parts of the United States, including the west coast where such lofty ranges as the Cascade Mountains dominate. And yet the Board does not attempt to distinguish between such features as mountains, hills, or other prominences, and simply categorizes all of them as summit, regardless of what they are called or how high they are. However, the Board does list and categorize such low mountain ranges as the Mount Tom Range (with a high point of 1,200 feet; 366 m) as range.[1]

[edit] Height

K2, 8,611 metres (28,250 ft),Karakoram Range,Pakistan.

K2, 8,611 metres (28,250 ft),Karakoram Range,Pakistan.

The height of a mountain is measured as the elevation of its summit above mean sea level. The Himalayas average 5 km above sea level, while the Andes average 4 km. The highest mountain on land is Everest, 8,848 metres (29,030 ft) in the Himalayas.

Other definitions of height are possible. The peak that is farthest from the center of the Earth is Chimborazo in Ecuador. At 6,267 metres (20,560 ft) above sea level it is not even the tallest peak in the Andes, but because Chimborazo is very close to the equator and the Earth bulges at the equator, it is 2,150 metres (7,100 ft) further away from the Earth’s center than Everest.[6] The peak that rises farthest from its base is Mauna Kea on Hawaii, whose peak is 10,200 metres (33,500 ft) above its base on the floor of the Pacific Ocean.[7]

Even though Everest is the highest mountain on Earth today, there have been much taller mountains in the past. During the Precambrian era, the Canadian Shield once had mountains 12,000 metres (40,000 ft)[citation needed] in height that are now eroded down into rolling hills. These formed by the collision of tectonic plates much like the Himalaya and the Rocky Mountains.

At 26 kilometres (85,000 ft) (Fraknoi et al., 2004), the tallest known mountain in the solar system is Olympus Mons, located on Mars and is an ancient volcano. Volcanoes have been known to erupt on other planets and moons in our solar system in our life-times (volcanoes on Venus for example, constantly erupt) and some of them erupt ice instead of lava. Several years ago, the Hale telescope recorded the first known live images of a volcano erupting on a moon in our solar system.

[edit] Characteristics

High mountains, and mountains located closer to the Earth’s poles, have elevations that exist in colder layers of the atmosphere. They are consequently often subject to glaciation and erosion through frost action. Such processes produce the popularly recognizable mountain peak shape. Some of these mountains have glacial lakes, created by melting glaciers; for example, there are an estimated 3,000 glacial lakes in Bhutan.

Mount Olympus in Greece.

Mount Olympus in Greece.

Sufficiently tall mountains have very different climatic conditions at the top than at the base, and will thus have different life zones at different altitudes. The flora and fauna found in these zones tend to become isolated since the conditions above and below a particular zone will be inhospitable to those organisms. These isolated ecological systems are known as sky islands and/or microclimates. Tree forests are forests on mountain sides which attract moisture from the trees, creating a unique ecosystem. Very tall mountains may be covered in ice or snow.

Mountains are colder than lower ground, because the Sun heats Earth from the ground up. The Sun’s radiation travels though the atmosphere to the ground, where Earth absorbs the heat. Air closest to the Earth’s surface is, in general, warmest (see lapse rate for details). Air as high as a mountain is poorly warmed and, therefore, cold.[8] Air temperature normally drops 1 to 2 degrees Celsius (1.8 to 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) for each 300 meters (1000 feet) of altitude.

Mountains are generally less preferable for human habitation than lowlands; the weather is often harsher, and there is little level ground suitable for agriculture. At very high altitudes, there is less oxygen in the air and less protection against solar radiation (UV). Acute mountain sickness (caused by hypoxia - a lack of oxygen in the blood) affects over half of lowlanders who spend more than a few hours above 3,500 meters (11,483 feet).

A number of mountains and mountain ranges of the world have been left in their natural state, and are today primarily used for recreation, while others are used for logging, mining, grazing, or see little use of any sort at all. Some mountains offer spectacular views from their summits, while others are densely wooded. Summit accessibility ranges from mountain to mountain; height, steepness, latitude, terrain, weather, and the presence or lack thereof of roads, lifts, or tramways are all factors that affect accessibility. Hiking, backpacking, mountaineering, rock climbing, ice climbing, downhill skiing, and snowboarding are recreational activities typically enjoyed on mountains. Mountains that support heavy recreational use (especially downhill skiing) are often the locations of mountain resorts.

[edit] Types of mountains

Mountains of Mar in Curitiba, Brazil.

Mountains of Mar in Curitiba, Brazil.

Mountains can be characterized in several ways. Some mountains are volcanoes and can be characterized by the type of lava and eruptive history. Other mountains are shaped by glacial processes and can be characterized by their glaciated features. Still others are typified by the faulting and folding of the Earth’s crust, or by the collision of continental plates via plate tectonics (the Himalayas, for instance). Shape and placement within the overall landscape also define mountains and mountainous structures (such as butte and monadnock). Finally, many mountains can be characterized by the type of rock that make up their composition. More information on mountain types can be found in List of mountain types.

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