Monday, February 4, 2013

CNNGo.com

CNNGo.com


Gallery: 'Expert napkin folder' exhibits in England

Posted: 04 Feb 2013 06:02 AM PST

Leave Catalan artist Joan Sallas alone in a dining hall with a tablecloth and some napkins for a few hours, and you might return to find a garden of paper lilies or a zoo of posturing beasts. 

But the world's leading (if not only) expert on napkin folding is not some space-filler on a Martha Stewart show. 

Sallas, 48, has built a career as a master craftsman and artist and also as a writer, researcher and lecturer of the lost art of linen folding.

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AirAsia X launches child-free seating

Posted: 03 Feb 2013 10:47 PM PST

Kids are now banned from a designated "Quiet Zone" in the front of selected flights
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Beginning this week, under-12s are banned from the first seven rows of economy class on AirAsia X flights to China, Taiwan, Japan, Korea, Australia and Nepal. 

In an official press release, AirAsia X's CEO Azran Osman-Rani described the new rollout as a "heavenly package for those who want peace of mind." 

Not to mention peace of ear.

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How to travel to North Korea

Posted: 03 Feb 2013 10:07 PM PST

You would think with tension so high, the isolated state would be off-limits to tourists. But it's not. Here's how to get in and the best times to go
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Despite tense relations between the United States and North Korea, and increased rheotric from Pyongyang, the isolated state remains open to U.S. citizens, among other travelers.

More on CNN: Rescind North Korea's license to provoke

But how do you actually travel to North Korea? 

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Walking vs. cycling: Which is better for travel?

Posted: 03 Feb 2013 06:02 PM PST

A 3,500-mile walk versus a 35,000-mile cycle -- one adventurer who's done both considers the blisters, pulled muscles and exhaustion of each
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It's winter in the Gobi desert.

The sun has set and an icy wind has picked up as I try to pitch my tent.

My feet throb from 12 hours of walking, blisters upon blisters weeping into my socks.

My hands tremble, from exhaustion, as well as cold, as I try to light the cooker for a cup of tea. My cameraman, Leon McCarron looks over to me and asks: "What the hell are we doing?"

It might sound like one of the world's worst boot camps, but this was my own voluntary trip to walk 3,500 miles through Mongolia and China for National Geographic Adventure Channel.

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Churaumi Aquarium: Okinawa's riveting sea show

Posted: 03 Feb 2013 02:00 PM PST

The aquarium's massive tank is one of the few places in the world you can see a whale shark without getting into the water
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Scores of silhouettes stand in the blue glow of the Kuroshio Sea Tank, only 60 centimeters of acrylic separating them from a mini-ocean filled with creatures great and small.

Smartphones gleam like beacons in the dark, cavernous room, on standby to capture photos once the show starts.

A woman appears on a screen that hangs next to the tank.

"Mina-san, hi, hi," she says in Japanese, welcoming everyone. She's behind the scenes, perched above the water and gearing up for feeding time.

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