Binuatan Creations, Palawan

It’s a fact: I am always fascinated with locally made handicrafts. And I cant help but buy a few items when I found one.

And just recently i found myself scouring for the finest table runners and placemats at Binuatan Crafts in Puerto Princesa Palawan.

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Binuatan has been weaving mats and make them into bags and other stuff for the last thirteen years. They pride themselves in creating masterpieces using locally available tikog and amumuting grass. These grasses are harvested in nearby communities dried and dyed depending on the color preference.

Once done, weaved mats are then made into other pasalubong items like table runner, placemats, handbags, cellphone and tablet sleeve, window blinds keychains and a whole lot more.

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Their finished products are also on display at the showroom jusg beside the weaving center. The showroom opened in 2005 has been one of the top pasalubong shops when in Palawan.

Binuatan Crafts also accepts credit and debit card payments just in case you forgot to bring enough cash.

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YugaTech Presents: Conquering the Dunes with the Nissan NP300 Navara

Nissan Philippines Incorporated recently flew us all the way to Ilocos Norte to try out the capabilities of their recently-launched NP300 Navara. This off-road vehicle promises the comforts of a car with the ruggedness of a pick-up truck. Did it prove true to its claims? Join us in this special feature and find out!

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The 4×4 Nissan NP300 Navara ready to take on the sand dunes of Paoay in Ilocos Norte.

Watch the video above to see this pick-up truck climb hills and lunge on slopes during our trip to the north!

Exterior

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The NP300 Navara stands tough and is very masculine up front. Although definitely wider, it still features the company’s signature V-motion grille that adds more toughness to its front fascia and is also partnered by boomerang-shaped head lamps seen on other models like the testosterone-driven X-Trail.

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Dimensions-wise, the top-tier Navara is now longer, wider, and taller than its previous generation. Its wheelbase, however, has been slightly reduced but ground clearance was taken a notch higher. The rear is also a looker with a tail spoiler that exudes a more agile presence, while tail lamps are bulky that adds to the overall beefy look of the truck.

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Its tires are geared with 18-inch rims and make the all-new Navara stand its ground with authority.

Interior

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The seats are given the same Zero-gravity treatment just like the recent models from the company, while helping you find your destination is a Garmin sat-nav system displayed on a 5-inch screen with Kenwood sound system on-board. Altogether, it was a pretty enjoyable ride and we didn’t experience any fatigue from sitting on its seats for a couple of hours.

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Reminiscent of the Nissan Altima that we previously reviewed, the steering wheel has controls for audio as well as buttons to activate and navigate its cruise control.

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One notable touch of a luxury vibe is the A/C vent and cup holders for the rear passengers. It can be done without, but the company was thoughtful enough to add this touch for the back passengers’ comfort.

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Located at the lower central panel next to the Hill Descent Control button, Nissan opted to go for a knob switch to control the gearing of the truck. Another convenient feature is the presence of more than one USB port which is only commonly seen on SUVs or higher-end sedans.

Fuel efficiency

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We did a mini eco-run challenge to get a feel of how the NP300 Navara is efficient in fuel consumption. The winning team was driving the 4×4 7-speed AT variant and they were able to squeeze out 18.30 kilometers to the liter after traveling more or less 140km on the way to the sand dunes in Paoay, passing Bangui and its famous windmills.

Performance on Sand Dunes

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The top of the line Navara carries a 2.5-liter turbo diesel engine that coughs up 190 horses at 3,600rpm and 450 Newton meters of torque at 2,000 rpm. They let us leave the 6-speed MTs behind and use the 7-speed automatic transmission instead so we could concentrate more on the trail and the pick-up’s performance.

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It’s important to understand that some areas in the dunes have really loose sand and can easily trap a vehicle when shortage of power comes into play. With that said we’re happy to report that its engine is no stranger to heavy duty performance and took on the course like a 4×4 would, with the addition of extra comfort thanks to its suspension system.

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This unique 5-link rear suspension accompanied by coil springs not only promises a comfier ride, but it should also result to better handling. True enough being on it during the bumpiest parts of the trail (see video) really shows how going off-road on this kind of setup is different from having commonly-used leaf-type suspensions.

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In order to not lose power over technical areas, we had to keep flooring the gas pedal. This resulted to us being tossed around while on uneven surfaces but the safety belts conveniently strapped us to our seats.

Also, considering that we were using stock tires that were meant for road, the Navara was able to conquer all the uphill and still maintained aggressive traction against sand. Of course, it’s not all the vehicle that’s doing the work — the driver still plays a big part on how he/she handles and uses the truck to triumph over the obstacles.

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Lastly, its Hill Descent Control (HDC) proved useful on steep slopes. We didn’t have to step on the brakes since the truck itself made sure that we traverse down the slope smoothly and all we had to do was hold on to the steering wheel.

Nissan’s NP300 Navara indeed is like having the best of both worlds — it can provide the comfort offered by sedans on the road, but is always ready to swerve onto the dirt lane anytime you wish it to. Plus, it also has a handful of comfort features that you wouldn’t usually find in this segment like Cruise Control and Zero-gravity seats.

Priced competitively at Php898K for the base model, it’s something that should definitely be on your list if you’re on the prowl for something rugged yet smart. Good job, Nissan Philippines!

Nissan NP300 Navara VL specs:
2.5-liter DOHC 4-cylinder engine
4WD
190PS of power
450Nm of torque
7-speed AT
Diesel
5-link coil suspension with stabilizer bars
Push-button ignition
Nissan V-motion grille
Boomerang-shaped head lamps
Kenwood audio system
Garmin GPS system
Rear A/C vents
Zero-G seats

The 2015 Navara is available in 7 different variants with the following price tags:

  • 2.5L 4×4 VL 7AT – Php1,490,000
  • 2.5L 4×4 VL 6MT – Php1,421,000
  • 2.5L 4×4 EL 6MT – Php1,256,000
  • 2.5L 4×2 EL 7AT – Php1,108,000
  • 2.5L 4×2 EL 6MT Calibre – Php 1,038,000
  • 2.5L 4×2 6MT Calibre – Php 938,000
  • 2.5L 4×2 6MT – 898,000

The post YugaTech Presents: Conquering the Dunes with the Nissan NP300 Navara appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Backstory: Top cops gone awry

By Rowena F. Caronan

FINGERS ARE crossed that whoever becomes the next Director General of the Philippine National Police (PNP) would not also become a magnet of controversies like many of his predecessors.

In fact, of the four PNP heads who have served under President Benigno S. Aquino III, only one – Nicanor A. Bartolome – managed to bow out of service scandal-free. The rest somehow became entangled in controversies that rocked their leadership of an institution tasked to enforce the law and maintain peace and order.

PNP’s most recent chief, Alan L.M. Purisima, resigned last February 6 amid the investigation on the Mamasapano incident.

Purisima had the longest tenure as PNP director general post under Aquino, a distinction that is likely to remain until Aquino’s own term as President ends. Purisima’s more than two years as PNP chief, however, has been marred with numerous controversies – starting with his appointment on December 18, 2012.

His immediate predecessor, Bartolome, had been asked to relinquish his post three months ahead of his mandatory retirement on March 16, 2013. The reason for Bartolome’s early retirement, Malacañang said, was to have a smooth transition of the tasks of the PNP head to whoever was appointed and for preparations for the May 2013 elections to proceed without hitches. After all, the election ban on appointments would begin March 29, 2013 – too close to Bartolome’s mandatory retirement date.

Bartolome had initially planned to go on “non-duty” status before end-2012 while holding on to his four-star rank until March to obtain full retirement benefits. The four-star rank, however, is the highest title in PNP and held by only one police official. This meant that until Bartolome retired, his replacement, Purisima, would remain a three-star official and on the same rank as some of his subordinates.

Both Bartolome and Purisima are known long-time shooting buddies of President Aquino. During the term of the President’s mother, Cory Aquino, Bartolome and Purisima had been members of the Presidential Security Group assigned to protect the Aquino family.

Bartolome eventually agreed to early retirement, enabling Purisima to obtain the highest rank in the PNP upon his installation into office. Following his appointment, Purisima promised to walk the path of Aquino’s “Daang Matuwid,” saying his administration would not tolerate erring and corrupt police officers.

He spelled out his plans for the PNP through a program called “CODE-P: 2013,” which stood for competence, organizational development, discipline, excellence and professionalism. He continued the Individual Performance Scorecard (IP Scorecard), which served as performance monitoring and evaluation mechanism that became the basis for sanctioning or rewarding a police officer. In October 2013, Purisima relieved police officers in Western Visayas and Central Luzon for alleged inaccurate reporting of crime statistics in their jurisdiction. He also relieved the police officers involved in the rubout in Antimonan, Quezon in December of the same year.

Since March 2014, however, it has been downhill for Purisima. The first blows were graft and plunder complaints about a multi-million-peso contract that the PNP signed with the Werfast Documentation Agency Inc. to deliver gun permits. Werfast was allegedly charging overpriced and substandard service. According to the complainant, Werfast was not in the Department of Transportation and Communication’s (DOTC’s) list of authorized courier service; moreover, the company allegedly secured its certificate of incorporation only three months after the deal had been made in May 2011.

News reports later quoted Purisima as admitting that the contract did not undergo a public bidding since the PNP would not pay for the courier fees. By December 2014, his involvement in the anomalous contract would become the basis for the Ombudsman to order a six-month preventive suspension on him and other police officers.

In June 2014, Purisima was also questioned for spending P25 million for the renovation of his official residence or the “White House” at Camp Crame. Indirect bribery charges were filed against him in September for supposedly accepting gifts from his Mason brothers, who donated funds that were used for the renovation. In addition, he was slapped with graft and plunder charges for his alleged untruthful declaration of the value of a multi-million-peso property in Nueva Ecija, as well as the absence in his Statement of Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth of a 10-hectare piece of land in Talisay, Batangas that he is said to own. Purisima has denied owning the Batangas property.

More recently, Purisima found himself at the center of the Senate investigation on the Mamasapano tragedy. He was lambasted for allegedly meddling in the operations of the PNP Special Action Force (SAF) team on January 25, 2015 in the remote Maguindanao town even while on a preventive suspension. On that day, SAF troopers had an unexpected clash or “misencounter” with members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) during a mission to capture terrorist Zulkifli bin Hir (also known as Marwan) and bomb-maker Abdul Basit Usman. The Mamasapano clash claimed the lives of 44 SAF officers, 18 MILF members, and five civilians.

In previous occasions, President Aquino, upon being questioned by the media, had repeatedly defended Purisima. But on February 6, Aquino announced on live television that he had accepted Purisima’s resignation. Purisima’s mandatory retirement, however, is on November 21, 2015 yet.

The Mamasapano tragedy is one of the two largest botched operations of the PNP under Aquino’s term. The first took place on Aug. 23, 2010, during which the apparent mishandling of police operations led to the death of eight Hong Kong nationals being held hostage by a dismissed police officer. The hostage-taker was also killed in the incident.

The hostage crisis, which earned the country international shame and infamy, involved then outgoing PNP director general Jesus A. Verzosa.

Versoza had already resigned by the time the report of the Incident Investigation and Review Committee on the hostage crisis came out in September 2010. Even while Versoza was identified as one of the culpable parties, no legal action was taken against him and other high-ranking officials, including then Interior and Local Government Undersecretary Rico E. Puno. Puno was known to be the President’s close ally.

Verzosa was named PNP chief in September 2008 by then President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. He remained in his post until September 2010 or about three months after Aquino took office. Yet even after his retirement, Verzosa still made headlines, along with his successor, Raul M. Bacalzo, as one of the alleged recipients of multi-million-peso monthly jueteng payola. Both denied the allegations.

Bacalzo re-implemented a one-strike policy on jueteng and illegal gambling activities immediately after his appointment in September 2010. Under the policy, PNP commanders would face relief if illegal activities remained active in their jurisdiction. Bacalzo also banned police officials from playing golf during office hours to improve the PNP’s image.

By the time his term ended in September 2011, Bacalzo had ordered the removal of the PNP logistics director and other officials as chairman and members of the Bids and Awards Committee that was involved in the anomalous procurement of choppers in 2009. His office also conducted a probe on the irregular repairs of light armored vehicles in 2007.

Bacalzo’s tenure as PNP chief, however, was marked by a rash of car thefts, bus bombings, and alleged ambushes of the National People’s Army (NPA). Yet, in a statement posted on the PNP website, the country’s crime rate supposedly decreased under Bacalzo’s leadership.

Bacalzo was Aquino’s first appointee in the PNP. Although he led the institution briefly, he is the only one so far who served until his mandatory retirement, which was on September 9, 2011.

Succeeding Bacalzo was Bartolome, who hails from the President’s ancestral hometown, Tarlac. Before his selection as PNP chief, Bartolome was popularly known as the face and mouthpiece of the organization, serving as such under several PNP director generals.

Bartolome headed the PNP for 15 months, from September 2011 to December 2012. He is remembered for securing funding for the construction of various PNP hospitals, including those built in Camp Martin Delgado in Iloilo City and Camp Rafael C. Rodriguez in Butuan City. His success in securing projects from the Department of Health, however, is credited largely to his having a wife – Dr. Noemi Bartolome – working there. – PCIJ, March 2015

Samsung Galaxy S6 Active full specs leak ahead of launch

If you would like to purchase the new Samsung Galaxy S6 but you’re still thinking twice due to the loss of the water resistance feature compared to its predecessors, you might want to wait for its upcoming Active version which will reportedly be on sale following the original flagship device.

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According to insider reports from SamMobile, the new Samsung Galaxy S6 Active (which bears the model number SM-G890x, with x being the final letter dependent on region/country/network) will feature pretty much everything the current flagship has — the 5.1-inch QHD Super AMOLED display, Samsung’s own Exynos 7420 SoC, 3GB of RAM, 32GB of storage, and the same rear and front cameras. What is said to set apart the S6 Active from the regular S6 will be its battery capacity, which is touted to be bigger than that of the Note 4, and the smartphone’s dimensions.

Samsung Galaxy S6 Active leaked specs:
5.1-inch 2560 x 1440 Super AMOLED display, 577 ppi
Gorilla Glass 4
64-bit octa-core Exynos 7420 CPU
3GB RAM
32GB internal memory (other storage variants still not confirmed)
16 megapixel rear camera
5 megapixel front-facing camera
WiFi
Bluetooth
NFC
4G, Single LTE Cat 6
Single SIM
Qi Wireless Charging
Dust and Water Resistance (Rating not available)
3,500 mAh non-removable battery
Android 5.0.2 Lollipop with TouchWiz
70.5 x 143.4 x 6.8mm

The Samsung Galaxy S6 Active is set to be unveiled first through US mobile carrier AT&T, which handset bears the model number SM-G890A.

{SamMobile}

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TPB booth wins Best Booth at Travel Tour Expo 2015

The Tourism Promotions Board (TPB) won the Overall Best Booth Award in the Domestic Pavilion at the recent Travel Tour Expo 2015.

Based on the brand campaign “It’s More Fun in the Philippines”, the booth design highlights “Visit the Philippines Year 2015,” the year-long invitation of TPB for everyone to discover and experience the country’s must-see destinations and happenings. It also features images of the country’s colorful festivals and must-see events including tasty regional treats.

Several exhibitors also signed up to support the campaign through the Visit the Philippines Year 2015 microsite: www.visitph2015.com.