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Arquivo diário: maio 16, 2017
Northrop Grumman announces electronic systems support facility for Western Sydney
Northrop Grumman has announced it is investing $50 million in the development of an electronic systems maintenance and sustainment centre in Western Sydney.
The Electronics Sustainment Centre of Excellence initially will begin operations at RAAF Base Richmond before ultimately being located at the forthcoming Western Sydney Airport at Badgerys Creek, where Northrop Grumman will be the anchor tenant for an aerospace and defence industry precinct there.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, Defence Minister Senator Marise Payne, Defence Industry Minister Christopher Pyne and NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian announced the new facility at Richmond on Monday morning .
The new centre will support advanced electronics such as communications systems, electronic warfare equipment and targeting pods. It could include capabilities to support the maintenance, repair and upgrade of electronic systems fitted to a range of RAAF aircraft such as the C-130J Hercules, EA-18G Growler, F-35A Lightning II, MQ-4C Triton and P-8A Poseidon.
Northrop Grumman will also establish partnerships with Australian universities and training institutions to help train the skilled workforce needed for the centre.
It is yet to be announced when the new centre is due to begin operations.
Source : Australian Aviation
Can you name that plane? Qantas asks public to name its 787s
Qantas has called on the general public to suggest names for its forthcoming fleet of eight Boeing 787-9 aircraft, which it says it wants to name after “Australian icons”.
The airline has published a page on its website where anyone can provide eight name suggestions for the 787s, the first of which is due for delivery in October this year.
“We want their names to reflect the true Spirit of Australia, so your suggestions should be around people, places or things that reflect the depth and breadth of this place we all call home. It could be a notable person, a ground-breaking invention, a piece of our culture, a saying, a man-made or natural landmark, anything that sums up what Australia means to you,” the name-the-plane webpage reads.
But aspiring plane namers will need to be quick, as entries will close on Friday May 26. From then a shortlist of 24 names will be released with the public asked to vote for their favourites before the final eight are announced.
It is also worth noting too that the successful entrants will hand over all rights to the use of the names.
“Entry details remain the property of Qantas and will not be returned to the entrant,” the fine print on the Qantas website reads. “The winners agree to grant Qantas a perpetual and non-exclusive licence to use their entries in all media worldwide and the winners will not be entitled to any fee for such use.”
Qantas has eight 787-9 Dreamliners on order, with options for a further 35. The airline has a long-standing tradition of naming its aircraft, mostly after Australian cities, towns and places. Exceptions in the current fleet include the Airbus A380s, which are named after prominent Australian aviation pioneers, the original Retro Roo 737-800 which is named after former airline CEO James Strong, and the New Zealand-based, Jetconnect-operated 737-800 subfleet, which is named after New Zealand pioneers.
Further information on Qantas’s aircraft naming conventions can be found here.
Source : Australian Aviation
Diogo Mainardi coloca Reinaldo Azevedo no ridículo
Traditional Croatian Tattoos
By Iva Ralica
A tattoo as a tradition probably wouldn´t be a first thing to cross one´s mind when thinking about Croatia. Still, it is. Traditional symbols are connected to Christianity and the custom itself is even older and can be traced centuries back in history around these areas.
A thousand years long tradition of tattooing their hands, to Croat women in Bosnia and Herzegovina still brings back memories. They had been tattooed as little girls, some obliged to and some expressing their wish.
This tradition originates from the places once occupied by the Turks in the time of the Ottoman Empire. Its purpose was to prevent the kidnapping of young (Christian) women and their conversion to Islam. Still, the idea of writings and symbols on the body originates from an older period.
According to the writings of an archeologist and a custodian of the National Museum in Sarajevo, Ćiro Truhelka, who was researching the pre-Ottoman Bosnia and Herzegovina in the 19th century, the origins of this custom could be in the Illyrian and Celtic tribes and their rituals around these areas. Even the simple tattooing needles were found in tombs of those days.
The custom probably survived the coming centuries but was mostly revived during the reign and fear of the Ottoman Empire, when Christian symbols were used for protection against foreign forces.
Traditional symbols are crosses, sometimes tattooed around the women´s wrists so that they looked like bracelets. The cross also has its variations with a sort of small pine trees. It also has non-Christian motives, but everyday motives like the circles, originating from the sort of a circular dance in the villages meaning a union and collectiveness.
The lines around the circles could be associated with mills as an inherent part of the life. The lines also represented small branches and together with a circle form a special design called “Jelica” ( girls name and also a small pine tree). This means that two sorts of symbols were mixed, one originating from nature and family in Illyrian times, and the other, with Christian motives, was added later and was given a new meaning.
The most resembling symbols can also be found on the old tombstones around the villages in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Still, in those hard times of the Ottoman invasions, between the 15th and the 19th century, the attention wasn’t merely to ornament the body, but to protect women from being kidnapped or in that case to help them remember their real Christian faith if forced to convert.
Kids, and usually girls, were being tattooed between the age of 12 and 16 as a sort of the initiation, according to historians of these areas. Still, some were tattooed even younger, at the age of 6. Timing is also connected to the 19th of March, a holiday of St. Joseph who is the official protector of Croats since the 17th century.
This day also indicates the beginning of spring time and change of the season. Still, this doesn’t exclude the other dates which were usually around the Christian or mainly Catholic holidays such as Good Friday.
The ceremony of tattooing was also called „sicanje“ or „bocanje“. It was usually done by older women applying a needle and a mixture of charcoal or gunpowder and honey or milk, usually after the symbol had been written on the body. The ink covered mainly hands or surrounding the wrist, as well as fingers, forearm and sometimes upper arm and chest. Interestingly, a very common place was also on the forehead. It was a painful procedure according to the older women today, but they say mostly it was worth the pain. The next day or in a week the place of the tattoo would heel, was washed and the ink stayed in (on) the skin.
The custom was practiced in central and southern Bosnia, around the town of Jajce, as well as Rama, Uskoplje, Kupres and Kraljeva Sutjeska, and in some places in the inside of the southern Dalmacija, between Sinj and Šibenik and in Dubrovnik-Neretva County. It was mainly brought by deserters who fled during the war from Bosnia and Herzegovina while it was under Turkish occupations.
This was still very much alive in the central Bosnia until the late 50-ies. After the Second World War, it was forbidden because of the Yugoslav relation towards the religion, but it didn’t mean it was forever gone.
Today it stays only in fragments and passes on the younger generations in its new form. New geometrical design mixed with traditional symbols of a Christian cross as well as its true value assures that the custom is passed on.
Whether for purely aesthetical, religious or ideological reasons, it still means this tradition is kept here and even all over the world.
Through a Facebook page named Traditional Croatian Tattoo and thanks to its founders who started exploring this custom, new forms of the symbols can be seen almost every day. People all over the world show their designs based on this old and unique tradition.
Source : Croatia Week
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