Showing 1-6 of 6 results
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Please, touch the art
Life, Kanin Srimaneekulroj, Published on 09/08/2017
» It's not easy learning art when you can't see. For many blind or visually-impaired students in a regular school curriculum, art class can become a tedious and limited affair. While they may be able to memorise names and dates for a quiz, blind students can struggle to keep up with their visually normal peers in more practical tasks or assignments, creating a gap between the capabilities of visually-impaired and regular students.
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Beast of a political drama
Life, Kanin Srimaneekulroj, Published on 09/09/2016
» Ignore the giant, alien-looking kaiju on the film's posters; Shin Gojira (known in English as Godzilla Resurgence), a remake of the iconic 1954 film, is very much a relatively grounded political drama, trading in the spectacular giant-monster battles we've grown to expect of modern kaiju films for a more deliberate exploration of real-world politics, where indecision, unilateral national agendas and complicated bureaucratic protocols kill more innocent civilians than the titular kaiju ever could on its own.
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Prioritising human rights
Life, Kanin Srimaneekulroj, Published on 27/11/2017
» What exactly is a human right? The most obvious way to answer that question may be to point toward the 30 Articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). Signed in 1948 and ratified by 48 out of 58 member countries of the UN at the time, the declaration affirms several rights an individual must be afforded as a human being, such as the right to life, opinions and expression, or the right to not be subjected to arbitrary imprisonment or torture.
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Original intent drives Jabra's new fitness earbud
Life, Kanin Srimaneekulroj, Published on 12/04/2017
» Entirely sweat and waterproof, the Elite Sport is, as its name suggests, a great choice of headphones for working out. Providing decent sound quality with a snug, customisable rubber frame that commendably keeps the earphones where they should be, while keeping ambient noises out, the device is also greatly versatile, able to act as a decent hands-free headset for calls as well as a fitness tracker with HRM (heart rate monitor) capabilities. What the device can't do, however, is act as an on-the-go headphone for your daily needs, with a measly three-hours of battery life per charge. The provided charging case that comes with the headphones does provide a further two charges to your use -- for another six hours of use -- though it probably won't be practical.
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Lose yourself to a world of virtual reality
Life, Kanin Srimaneekulroj, Published on 26/10/2016
» As clichéd a sentiment as it is at this point, it really is difficult to explain how incredible it is to experience virtual reality until you've tried it yourself. While I never doubted that the PlayStation VR -- Sony's recently released virtual reality headset, meant to be used with their PlayStation 4 console -- was going to be a game-changing (pardon the pun) piece of technology, I was resigned to the fact that, like all first-iterations of new hardware, the PlayStation VR would most likely be a cool experience that will be marred by troubles with reliability and convenience. And while I wasn't entirely proven wrong by the week I spent with a review unit (courtesy of Sony Thailand), I had a great time with the device nonetheless, so much so, actually, that it has become an instant recommendation in my book.
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Wearing your fitness gains
Life, Kanin Srimaneekulroj, Published on 19/08/2015
» Fitness trackers are the new smartphones these days, with various tech companies seemingly scrambling over each other to release the dominant fitness wearable. The UP3, called the "most advanced way to track your fitness, sleep and heart health" by creator Jawbone, certainly has all the specs you'd expect from a fitness wearable, though whether that supports Jawbone's lofty claims for its flagship device is doubtful at best.
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