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Friday, December 12, 2008

Wikipedia - Wikimedia Foundation


 Currently managed by the Wikimedia Foundation,Wikipedia has come a long way since its formal launch on January 15, 2001. The bid concept behind it was to make the sum of all human knowledge accessible to all. Today, the multilingual encyclopaedia is available in 250 languages worldwide, including Malayalam. Articles available on it - written collaboratively - number roughly ten million. There are 40 languages in which 10,000-plus articles are available. The largest open source encyclopaedia is also the fourth biggest site on the internet with 280 million unique visitors every month.

``A lot of people think that ten million people each add a sentence, and an article is created. It’s much more traditional than that,’’ said Wales, who serves on the board of trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation, holding the ‘community founder’ seat. The non-profit Wikimedia Foundation, with a salaried staff of 22 (everyone else, including Wales and the few thousands who take care of editing, is a volunteer), is depending on its `low budget, high efficiency’ mantra to tide over the global economic meltdown, Wales said. Donors today tend to look benevolently at efficient projects, and Wikipedia fits the bill.

 The Foundation, which is currently involved in a fund-raiser for next year, targets $ 6 million, a small budget for the fourth biggest site. ``We depend on donations from the general public, mostly from the US and Europe, a significant amount from Japan, some from philanthropic foundations. But grassroot support is the core,’’ Wales said.  more

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Mumbai Terrorists used advanced technology

Mumbai Terrorist Tech Surprises Indian Authorities

This week, as spectators around the world either watched TV news, tracked Twitter feeds, read blogs and sites in horror as the Mumbai terrorist attacks unfolded, the terrorists themselves were tech'ed up in order to track the police response themselves.

While police and the military were impressed by the arsenal carried by the terrorists, they were also impressed by the technology they carried as well. According to reports from multiple sites, backpacks carried the Mumbai terrorists showed multiple BlackBerry handsets. Read more about Mumbai events.

A typical move in such a standoff is to cut the TV feeds to buildings, shutting down any information feed the attackers may have to track government response. But in Mumbai the terrorists used their BlackBerrys to surf the web and keep track of police movements and global reaction to the attacks, according to analysis of the recovered devices.  more

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Internet - a reliable resource

Internet reach was a reliable resource during Mumbai terror drama

Sat, Nov 29 05:55 PM

Washington/Mumbai, Nov.29 (ANI): The Internet proved to be a reliable resource during the terror mayhem in Mumbai.

New media allowed the world to look in on a city in crisis and receive real-time information from citizen journalists' as events unfolded, reports CBS.

Before the sights and sounds of the attacks in Mumbai could be televised, cell phones and the Internet were abuzz, both in blogs and with images as the horror unfolded.

"What's important is to get a quick sense of what's happening. One of the first real photographs of the scene was posted by somebody on Flickr," said social networking expert Gaurav Mishra. more

Sunday, October 26, 2008

The 1,000mph jet car: Bloodhound SSC, a 42ft-long vehicle

From 
October 26, 2008

The 1,000mph jet car

A British team aims to smash the land-speed record with weird science

The Bloodhound land speed car
IMAGE :1 of 2
Did your car feel a little underpowered this morning? What you need perhaps is a Eurofighter Typhoon jet engine under the bonnet. Plus, for good measure, a Falcon solid-fuel rocket engine, and for an extra kick, a V12 racing engine. That would give you a top speed of, let’s see, roughly 1,050mph, and allow you to travel 10 miles – a typical journey to the newsagent’s and back – in 34 seconds.
Say hello to the Bloodhound SSC, a 42ft-long vehicle (you can hardly call it a car) in which Wing Commander Andy Green, a former RAF pilot, will attempt to break his own land-speed record. It is 11 years since Green became the first driver to travel faster than the speed of sound, hitting 763mph in the Thrust SSC (supersonic car). The Bloodhound is set to beat that by more than 200mph, reaching 1.4 times the speed of sound. Blink and you’ll miss it. Really. In the sixth of a second it takes you to blink, it will travel nearly the length of a football pitch. This monstrous contraption is blessed with the power of 1,200 family cars. The fuel pump alone has 800 horsepower.  more 

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Nicole Kuepper invents a New Solar Cell - Easy As Pizza To Make

ECHNOLOGY

NPR
Weekend Edition Saturday, October 4, 2008 ·

The iJET is a new type of solar cell that's cheap and easy to make, requiring not much more than a pizza oven, some nail polish remover, and a common inkjet printer. Australian scientist Nicole Kuepper describes her invention. read

Robot suit for rent in Japan

The hybrid assistive limb at a demo.
TSUKUBA: A robotic suit that reads brain signals and helps people with mobility problems, an invention that may have far-reaching benefits for the disabled and elderly, will be available to rent in Japan for $2,200 (about Rs. 1 lakh) a month starting Friday .

HAL, short for “hybrid assistive limb,” is a computerised suit with sensors that read brain signals directing limb movement through the skin.

The s10-kg battery-operated computer system is belted to the waist. It captures the brain signals and relays them to mechanical leg braces strapped to the thighs and knees, which then provide robotic assistance to people as they walk.

Cyberdyne, a company in Tsukuba outside Tokyo, will mass-produce HAL. Two people demonstrated the suits at the company’s headquarters on Tuesday. more

Police dog donates blood, saves colleague

Patna, Oct 7: Three-year-old Bishan donated blood to save Jyoti, who was suffering from high fever and acute anaemia. Both are members of Bihar's police dog squad.

"It is true ... Bishan donated blood to save Jyoti's life. If blood was not given to her on time, she would have died," Om Prakash, a trainer of police dogs, told IANS here Tuesday.

Both are labradors. Bishan is trained to catch criminals; Jyoti is an expert in locating explosives.

The two have become close friends now, said Om Prakash.

"This was not the case before Bishan donated blood," he said. The trainer added that they would study the change in the behaviour of the animals.

Last week, Jyoti's condition deteriorated after she stopped eating. She was taken to the state veterinary hospital where doctors said only a blood transfusion would save her life, officials in the Bihar police dog squad said.

The labrador's haemoglobin level had dropped to 2.5 gm, as compared to the normal levels of 14-15 gm.

"Bishan was tested fit for donating blood by veterinarians and one unit of blood was procured to save Joyti," an official said.

Bishan has now become the hero of the nearly one dozen-strong Bihar dog squad. "We will take special care of Bishan. He deserves the attention," Om Prakash said. read

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Gmail - Fwd: Fwd: Swami Vivekananda's StunninG WordS...!!!!! - jacobthanni@gmail.com

Gmail - Fwd: Fwd: Swami Vivekananda's StunninG WordS...!!!!! - jacobthanni@gmail.com: "www.FunAndFunOnly.net





When I Asked God for Strength


He Gave Me Difficult Situations to Face



When I Asked God for Brain & Brown


He Gave Me Puzzles in life to Solve



When I Asked God for Happiness


He Showed Me Some Unhappy People



When I Asked God for Wealth


He Showed Me How to Work Hard



When I Asked God for Favors


He Showed Me opportunities to Work Hard



When I Asked God for Peace


He Showed Me How to Help Others



God Gave Me Nothing I Wanted


He Gave Me Everything I Needed


- Swami Vivekananda"

Friday, July 25, 2008

New Bible Translation

New Bible Translation
http://www.lolcatbible.com/index.php?title=Exodus_20

ABC News: Wikipedia Competitor Opens to Public

ABC News: Wikipedia Competitor Opens to Public


Google Knol Opens to Public
Wikipedia Competitor Includes Identified Authors, Rankings, Ads
By ASHLEY PHILLIPS
July 24, 2008



In a move widely seen as the Silicon Valley behemoth's answer to Wikipedia, this week Google opened Knol, its own user-generated encyclopedia, to the public.
knol wikipedia
Ad-supported Google Knol identifies authors and allows them to make money from ads that appear on the page.


Unlike Wikipedia, people who write entries on Google's encyclopedia are identified and could even earn a profit from their articles with ads. The more times the article is viewed, the more an author can get paid. Google, of course, gets a cut of the profits.

"The key principle behind Knol is authorship. Every knol will have an author (or group of authors) who put their name behind their content," the company wrote on its blog Wednesday. "It's their knol, their voice, their opinion. We expect that there will be multiple knols on the same subject, and we think that is good."

Knol has been operating on a trial basis with a company-selected, invite-only group of authors since December 2007.

"Our goal is to encourage people who know a particular subject to write an authoritative article about it," the company wrote on its blog in December. "We believe that knowing who wrote what will significantly help users make better use of Web content."


Google Knol readers rank the usefulness of entries, adding comments and asking questions. Google will not edit the pieces.

But can Knol unseat current online leader Wikipedia?

Wikipedia was founded in January 2001. It has more than 8.2 million articles in more than 200 languages, including more than 2 million in English.

Unlike Google Knol, Wikipedia is not ad-supported, but instead supported by the nonprofit Wikimedia Foundation. With a stated mission of supporting the free dissemination of information, the foundation is funded mostly by private donations and some grants.

Even without added competition from Knol and similar sites like Squidoo, Wikipedia has faced credibility challenges that can be primarily attributed to the collaborative nature of its entries. In the Wikipedia model, users write articles and other users can edit the entries by adding or deleting information.

In theory, the entries get more thorough and accurate as they live on the site. The reality, however, is not so simple.

In August 2007, a British graduate student developed WikiScanner, a program that identified the authors behind Wikipedia edits. The program revealed that people at the IP addresses of several major companies made changes to their own or competitors' entries.

"That's been a fairly serious problem with Wikipedia," said Rob Enderle, a Silicon Valley technology analyst. "Way too many personal attacks."

Enderle says that identifying the author gives Knol an extra layer of credibility.

Google's main challenge in competing with Wikipedia will be people's current Web habits, Enderle said.

"People are creatures of habit," he said. "If Wikipedia can deal with a trust problem, they can stand up against this."

However Wikipedia fares, there is room for more than one user-generated encyclopedia, said Silicon Valley technology forecaster Paul Saffo.

"On my desk next to my computer I have a reference shelf -- dictionaries, thesauruses," Saffo said. "This same thing will be true on the Web. There's plenty of space. I think the two will reinforce each other."

Knol's respect for authorship will be a huge boon for Google to differentiate it from competitors such as Wikipedia and Squidoo, Saffo said.

"How many people are going to labor hours and hours for Wikipedia [when it's anonymous]? In this case you're the author and it's your reputation," Saffo said. "I can see this being used for graduate students out of school trying to build a reputation, professors thinking about getting tenure. It's a star-making machine for the right kind of intellectuals."

Knol will even work for people who aren't experts, Saffo said.

"Reputation is a really powerful incentive for people to contribute," he said. "This plays perfectly to the whole notion to the rise of amateurs."

In addition to its "star-making" potential, Knol has an added incentive -- it allows its authors to make money from their writing, Saffo said.

"At the discretion of the author, a knol may include ads," Google posted on its blog. "If an author chooses to include ads, Google will provide the author with substantial revenue share from the proceeds of those ads."

It's way too soon to tell what effect Knol will have on Wikipedia and other sites like it, but when the world's largest search engine and its scoring ability gets behind something, people take notice.

"Wikipedia allows group contribution, but it doesn't allow ranking. ... Google is applying ranking to that. Which method is a better way to show reliability?" Saffo said. "[They're] two very different approaches and each has its advantage."

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Abraham Lincoln’s Top 10 Fundamentals for Creating a Great Life

Personal Development with The Positivity Blog" - 1 new article

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Abraham Lincoln’s Top 10 Fundamentals for Creating a Great Life

1“Die when I may, I want it said by those who knew me best that I always plucked a thistle and planted a flower where I thought a flower would grow.”

“I am not bound to win, but I am bound to be true. I am not bound to succeed, but I am bound to live by the light that I have. I must stand with anybody that stands right, and stand with him while he is right, and part with him when he goes wrong.”

“With the fearful strain that is on me night and day, if I did not laugh I should die.”

Even if you are not an American – as I - you’ve probably still heard of Abraham Lincoln. He was the president who introduced and worked on measures to free the slaves and led the country through the Civil War. A war that had just ended when Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth in Ford’s Theatre.

But what can Abraham Lincoln help us with today? Well, here are 10 powerful and timeless fundamentals. I hope you’ll find something helpful.

1. See the positive in people.

“If you look for the bad in people expecting to find it, you surely will.”

“The way for a young man to rise is to improve himself in every way he can, never suspecting that anybody wishes to hinder him.”

What you focus on you will find. In a situation, in a person. There is always plenty of good things and plenty of bad things to discover.

So you need to keep your focus steadily on what you want to find. Don’t let it waver just because you are in a “negative” situation or someone just said/did something “negative”. If your focus gets scattered, try to get it back into a more useful place as quickly as you can.

You can develop whatever view of the world and people that you like. You can go looking for the negative in people and feel a short burst of good emotions as find something negative about a person and feel like you are “right”.

Or you can develop a habit of looking for the positive. A habit where you can expect people to treat you in a positive way.

Because we do to a large extent teach people how we want to be treated. If we expect other people to help us and treat us well then they are more likely to do so than if we are negative and expect to be treated poorly.

This may sound a bit weird, but how we expect to be treated can have a big effect on how the world sees us.

2. Be honest.

“No man has a good enough memory to be a successful liar.”

This is a pretty practical thing. Being honest will for several reasons work better in the long run. Of course, you don’t have to go out of your way to be honest and hurt people though. You can just as well choose to be silent if you like. Here are just a few practical reasons to minimize or just stop lying altogether.

* Your words aren’t everything. Words are only 7 percent of communication. The rest are body language and your voice tonality. And it’s through those channels that the real you will shine through. People will in some way sense that something is wrong, that you aren’t being honest and authentic if those 93 percent of how you communicate aren’t in alignment with your words. So lying is just a short term solution. Sooner or later people will pick up on it.
* Poor self-image and stress. Cultivating a self-image as someone who lies will make you feel worse about yourself. You’ll feel like a fake and your self-esteem plummets. And if you on the other hand are honest you don’t have to feel like someone that is trapped or on the high-wire all the time.
* People really appreciate authentic communication. What separates people is to a large extent the walls that they build up between themselves. When you put aside personas and lies you can build real connections between you and other people. If you remove these walls of insulation then the people or you are interacting with are likely to reciprocate. And so your relationships can improve and are less likely to be damaged by miscommunication.

3. Unite.

“A house divided against itself cannot stand.”

Ego excludes and divides. The ego loves to make someone “the other” to strengthen its own power. It want’s to feel “more” than someone else. More clever. Prettier. Cooler. Wiser. Or more like a victim.

And by making the other even more wrong in your mind the ego grows stronger. However, the ego boosts of good feelings are just temporary. You have to reinforce them continually, just like a caffeine habit.

Consciousness and intelligence includes and accepts. You don’t have to be seduced by your ego’s wish to make people other than you. You can look at the positive in them and at the things you agree about. And be accepting.

Remember, when your thoughts are buzzing around in your head and telling you to exclude or divide in some way then you are listening to your ego. It may tell you that paragraphs just above this one are cheesy and stupid. You may not want to take such thoughts too seriously. You don’t have to.

The most useful advice I’ve found so far to get a handle on the need to divide is to not identify so much with my thoughts or feelings. That doesn’t mean that I stop thinking or feeling. It just means that I realize – and remember in my everyday life – that the thoughts and emotions are just things flowing through me. And that I am the consciousness observing them.

When you realize and remember this it enables you to control the thoughts and feelings instead of the other way around. It enables you to not take your thoughts too seriously and actually laugh at them or ignore them when you feel that your ego is acting out.

When you are not being so identified these things you become more inclined to include things, thoughts and people instead of excluding them. This creates a lot of inner and outer freedom and stillness. Instead of fear, a need to divide your world and a search for conflicts.

4. Create a friend where there is none.

“The best way to destroy an enemy is to make him a friend.”

“I don’t like that man. I must get to know him better.”

This is similar to tip #1 and # 3. But slightly different, seen from a slightly different perspective. It is a helpful and a bit unusual way of looking at people who you might perceive as different or other than yourself.

Turning an enemy or someone we don’t like into a friend is difficult because first impressions can be powerful. Our concept of a person can remain intact if we don’t push further and question and explore it. But if you get to know someone better you can often find out quite a few positive and interesting things about them. People are often more intriguing than your first impression of them.

Of course, since the ego needs to tell you that you are right and someone else is wrong then it can be hard to change your opinion of someone. That opinion of him/her is tied up in your ego and fuels your sense of being “right”. Again, the key and the way out here is to not take your thoughts or emotions too seriously. To stay on top of them instead of letting them overwhelm and control you.

This can allow you to open your mind to a change in the relationship.

Now, how can you make him/her your friend? One suggestion would be to follow tip # 1 and start looking for the positive in the person. Then to take the first step and give some kind of value – like help for instance – to that person. And then to take more steps if s/he is not convinced that you want to change the relationship.

5. Believe in and go after your own success.

“Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any one thing.”

“Things may come to those who wait, but only the things left by those who hustle.”

If you think you can succeed then you can. Your belief in your own ability to succeed is essential and does not only motivate you to keep going.

It will also tune your reticular activation system – a system within your mind that focuses on things in your surroundings based on what you are thinking – into finding opportunities and solutions in all the those things that are in the background of your world right now. It can become a little bit freaky as things that have been there for a long time start to “pop up” as you change what you are focusing on.

You may have heard that you just have to believe that you can achieve something to do it and that the how you will do it will then present itself along the way. Well, this is how that works. Whatever you focus on persistently you will find in your world. So be careful what you focus on. Remind yourself to keep your focus on what you want. Not the opposite, as is often popular but ineffective.

And don’t wait for too long. Procrastination may just leave you with the crumbs or sometimes nothing really. Taking action is awesome. But taking action with little delay will increase the probability of you actually getting what you want before the window of opportunity closes.

So develop a Just do it! habit. Learn to do some planning but then to take action quickly despite what excuses or other negative things your thoughts and emotions may put up in your way. Know that they may just want to protect you from uncertainty and risks. But also know that you are in charge of them and not the other way around.

6. Persist.

“Hold on with a bulldog grip, and chew and choke as much as possible.”

Persistence might not exactly be the sexiest sounding quality. It might not sell a lot of products to people looking for the magic pill. But it is an immensely helpful quality to cultivate and put to use.

If you fail, what do you do? You dust yourself off and try again. If the success you are looking for won’t come that quickly – a pretty likely scenario – then you have to persist. Persistence may be one of the most useful qualities one can have. Not only because you will still be out there in a less competitive playing field as lot other people have given up and gone home. But also because developing patience and being persistent will enable you to get what you want. It may just take a little longer than had hoped for.

7. Sharpen your ax.

“If I had eight hours to chop down a tree, I’d spend six hours sharpening my ax.”

Instead of just starting to chop with a blunt blade for hours on end it’s a whole lot smarter to first sharpen the blade and then take on the physically harder task of bringing the tree down. This goes for everything.

If you are prepared then it will often be a whole lot easier to get something done. Sometimes it can be the thing that separates people that either keeps chopping until they can’t take it anymore and give up and the people who could get the job done.

So success is not just about doing hard work. It’s also about sharpening your ax at regular intervals and learning new and better ways to take down the trees in your life. And it’s about remembering what trees you want to take down rather than just any tree. However, you don’t want to get stuck in this stage and never take action. As with all things, you have to find a balance by experimenting.

Four suggestions for sharpening your ax are:

* Educate yourself. Do some research into the whatever you want to achieve. Look for the most common mistakes people make. Read books and online. Talk to people who have already been where you want to go.
* Do. Fail. Learn. Do. Knowledge from external sources is great. But the best way to really understand is by doing things. And by learning from your own failures. And then doing again with your new understanding in your mind.
* Manage your energy levels. You don’t just have increase your knowledge and understanding of things. You also have to have the physical energy to get things done when you find your opportunity. Otherwise you may just fall into a procrastinating pattern or back down. So workout. Eat enough. Sleep enough. Basic stuff of course. But if you do it consistently then you’ll increase you chances of succeeding when it’s time to start chopping down your trees. With a high energy level it will be easier to persist until you are done.
* Remind yourself where you are going. A lot of not so important busy work can dull your ax. You need to regularly review your plans and remind yourself of your goals and what you really want. If you don’t keep your eyes on where you want to go you might wind up somewhere completely different.

8. Take a responsibility for your own life.

“You have to do your own growing no matter how tall your grandfather was.”

“You cannot help men permanently by doing for them what they could and should do for themselves.”

When we are kids people take care of us. They take responsibility. But to become an adult – and not just a kid in a grown up’s body – one has to take responsibility for oneself. There is no other way. Sure, letting someone else take the responsibility may be easier on you.

But without taking responsibility for yourself how can you be free?
How can you really live up you own potential and dreams?

It can be hard to break out of the comfort zone of having other people taking responsibility for us. But if you don’t then you will be trapped by other people’s standards, expectations and limitations. You have to set your own rules for your life. And not fall back into old patterns. A bit scary. But also liberating.

9. Happiness is optional.

“Most folks are about as happy as they make their minds up to be.

One big upside of taking responsibility for yourself is that it lets you decide where the standards and limits are set. When you take responsibility for what you do you will also feel an entitlement to do what you feel is right for you, in your life.

And as you delve into the field of personal development you may start to realize that your control and responsibility not only goes for what you do out in the world. But also for your thoughts and emotions. You are to a large extent in charge here too.

When you realise this then you realise that you don’t have to play along with your old patterns of thinking and feeling anymore. You don’t have to play along with is “normal” or common thinking. You don’t have to take your thoughts so seriously. You can choose to not feel insulted when someone says something. You can choose to not to be angry whilst stuck in traffic. You can choose to see the positive in people. And you can choose how happy you will be.

Pain is inevitable in life. But how you choose to process or think about things – and if you let them get stuck in your mind or not – is up to you. Suffering is therefore to a large extent optional. And so is happiness.

10. Live your life fully.

“In the end, it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years.”

This one is just beautiful. And I don’t really have much to add. But it might be useful to remind yourself of this saying regularly. Maybe when you feel like you are veering off track. Or when heading into things like small-mindedness, laziness or complacency. Perhaps you want to write it down and put it in a highly visible place so you don’t forget about it.

If you like this article, please give it a thumb up in Stumbleupon. Thanks a lot! =)

Further reading:

- How to Improve Your Social Skills
- Stephen King’s Top 7 Tips for Becoming a Better Writer
- 16 Practical Tips for Solving Your Problems More Easily

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Memory tips:little things first

When people get overwhelmed with tasks, a common problem is that the mind gets paralyzed because it can't decide what to do first. Often, the mind jumps from task to task to task without making much progress with anything. This can lead to a cycle of ever increasing stress about the growing list of things to do.

A simple strategy is to do all the little things first. Find all the tasks that can be completed in only a few minutes and do them in sequence without letting your attention get diverted. Once you have weeded out all the easy stuff your mind will feel less cluttered and it will be easier to concentrate on the bigger tasks

This strategy is even more useful when you apply it to your daily life because it can prevent you from getting into a cluttered mindset in the first place. As a benefit, you will also have fewer problems with forgetting to do something because you do it right away. Anytime you have a short task presented to you, instead of putting it off, just do it and get it over with. One example of how to do this is with email. Whenever you get an email that you need to reply to, just reply to it right then and there. Leaving it in your inbox for later just leads to an overwhelmingly full inbox.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Grandfather Builds Web Browser for Autistic Boy

Grandfather Builds Web Browser for Autistic Boy
Grandfather's Web browser for autistic boy illuminates the challenges, benefits PCs can bring
By BRIAN BERGSTEIN AP Technology Writer
June 3, 2008 (AP)
The Associated Press



Six year old Zackary Villeneuve, who is autistic, uses the 'Zac browser' at his home in Saint Remi, Quebec, Sunday, June 1, 2008. The Web browser was developed by his grandfather John LeSieur for use by autsitic children.

John LeSieur is in the software business, so he took particular interest when computers seemed mostly useless to his 6-year-old grandson, Zackary. The boy has autism, and the whirlwind of options presented by PCs so confounded him that he threw the mouse in frustration.

LeSieur tried to find online tools that could guide autistic children around the Web, but he couldn't find anything satisfactory. So he had one built, named it the Zac Browser For Autistic Children in honor of his grandson, and is making it available to anyone for free.

LeSieur's quest is a reminder that while the Web has created important communication and educational opportunities for some people with cognitive impairments, computers can also introduce new headaches for families trying to navigate the contours of disability.

The Zac Browser greatly simplifies the experience of using a computer. It seals off most Web sites from view, to block violent, sexual or otherwise adult-themed material. Instead it presents a hand-picked slate of choices from free, public Web sites, with an emphasis on educational games, music, videos and visually entertaining images, like a virtual aquarium.

Other programs for children already offer that "walled garden" approach to the Web. But LeSieur's browser aims to go further: It essentially takes over the computer and reduces the controls available for children like Zackary, who finds too many choices overwhelming.

For example, the Zac Browser disables extraneous keyboard buttons like "Print Screen" and turns off the right button on the mouse. That eliminates commands most children don't need anyway, and it reduces the chance an autistic child will lose confidence after making a counterproductive click.

Children using the Zac Browser select activities by clicking on bigger-than-normal icons, like a soccer ball for games and a stack of books for "stories." The Zac Browser also configures the view so no advertisements or other flashing distractions appear.

Saturday, May 31, 2008

Creativity --Opposite Point of View

Creativity :: Opposite Point of View II
People tend to classify a situation quickly, which causes us to think and respond to it in predictable ways. A creative thinker will think about situations from different angles.
Try this exercise to think of these situations from the opposite point of view.

1. You just found a $10 bill on the ground. List five reasons why this is unfortunate.
2. You just had a fight with your best friend. List five positive things about this.
3. Your sink is full of dirty dishes. List five reasons why this is good.
4. Your significant other surprises you with a romantic dinner. List five reasons why this is bad.

courtesy-Mentalrobics

Friday, May 30, 2008

Virtual Reality Latest Tool for Doctors

Virtual Reality Latest Tool for Doctors
Strap on the Virtual Reality Goggles and Fear Not, Doctors Assure
By MIKE LEE
LONDON, May 30, 2008



Do you want to be a success at work? Do you want to have better personal relationships? Do you want to worry less? Do you want to have a nicer day? Do you want to be a better lover?


If yes, perhaps you should make room beside your personal growth guides for a virtual reality self-improvement psycho-treatment Kit. It doesn't exist yet, but it may soon become as common as all those how-to books from authors who claim to know the secrets of success.

Daniel Freeman, a Wellcome Fellow at Kings College London, told ABC News that virtual reality therapy can help all of us: "I think it's definitely in the future as the costs come down and the environments are developed. It has a great potential for helping us to improve our social interactions and conqueror our fears in the workplace, home or wherever."

Freeman is one of the scientists who is testing virtual reality technology for treating various kinds of mental and emotional disorders, from post-traumatic stress disorder in U.S. military personnel returning to a fear of flying.

A reminder: you may have already experienced virtual reality technology in an amusement arcade. You put on a helmet or large goggles wired to a computer. You see only what the computer feeds into the screen in your head gear. As you move your head and walk, the computer image simulates your movements and you sense, with sights and sounds, that you are actually in a different world.

Scientists are taking that idea and making it therapeutic.

The basic technique is to allow subjects to experience the things that trigger their fear but in the safe environment of virtual reality.

For instance, a veteran from Iraq who suffers from PTSD might fear a crowd of strangers. But by repeating that virtual experience over and over without injury or traumatic experience, the subject gradually comes to accept that his or her fear is either unproved or unfounded, and is thus better able to cope in the real world.

Ultraportable VIA Nano Processor Announced

VIA Nano Processor Announced, Prepare Ultraportable for Ludicrous Speed
By Danny Dumas May 28, 2008 | AMCategories: Chips, First Looks, Innovations

Isaiahnanotop_2 Last January we saw tech conglomerate VIA announce its line of Isaiah processors. These clever chips were designed to revolutionize mobile computing through a mix of lightning fast computing speeds and low power consumption.

Today it has announced a new processor family and dubbed it Nano. Guess what kind of computers the processors are designed for? The very first 64-bit superscalars and speculative out-of-order processors ever made by the Bejing Taipei based company should provide owners of ultraportables some insane boosts in performance and function.

Now you're probably wondering why you should care.

Imagine now if you would, an utraportable computer like say, the Asus Eee PC. Small computer, great cost, performs reasonably well ... for something of that size. Now imagine the same computer with VIA's Nano processor. Now the computer is running Photoshop without a hiccup. Now the computer is playing Blu-ray movies without a snag. Now the computer is running Crysis at a frame rate that's actually playable.

The new Nano processors will run up to four times faster yet consume the same amount of power as the Isaiah chipsets VIA currently offers. The Lab can't wait to get ahold of a super small lappy running one of these processors inside. Imagine, fragging fools in Crysis on a new OLPC. Ah, the dreams of geeks.

The Seven Deadly Copy Editing Sins

Posted, Jan. 2, 1996





The Seven Deadly Copy Editing Sins


By Anne Glover
Assistant Managing Editor/Copy Desk, St. Petersburg Times

All copy editors strive to be perfect. Right? Well, everyone's human. To be the perfect copy editor, take note of the following "deadly sins" as enumerated by veteran copy editor, desk supervisor and newsroom manager Anne Glover. Avoid them and you'll be a shining star on the desk.

1. Arrogance.
This could also be described as selfishness: Your layout, your efforts to be clever in your headline at the expense of clarity, the choices you make about using space in your section say to the reader, "I don't care about you. This was more convenient for me to do."

I see many variations on this: grouped cutlines that make it unclear which photos they accompany, type that the reader can't read, photos played too small, a story that's hard to follow because of the layout, art heads that don't say anything.

2. Assumptions.
You assume that the reporter did the math, or that the photographer got the name wrong, not the reporter. Or you assume that the reporter meant something that he or she did not. Or you assumed that someone else would take care of the weekend planning because you were about to go on vacation. Or you assumed that you could use a certain typographic style on your front because that's what you saw the 1A designer do.

3. Sloppiness.
There are so many ways this manifests itself, but here are a few: widows left scattered throughout the page; no page number in a tease; a jumpline that refers readers to the wrong page; a cutline that says someone is in the photo when they clearly are not; a cutline name that is different from the name in the story; a bad break in a headline that makes it difficult to understand.

4. Indifference.
You treat a great story as if it is just another daily feature by giving it a small headline or playing it in a 15-pica wide hole down the side of the page. Or you play a piece of great art in a mediocre way because you can't see its need to run large or with a great crop.

Its cousin is sameness: Every page is predictable, from the headlines to the size of the art to the basic layout of the page. Give your readers something to take away with that day's page: an interesting headline, a tease, a great crop on a photo, a helpful info box.

5. Ignorance.
You run a photo of the wrong congressman from your district because you haven't been paying attention. Or you decide that World War II ended on June 6 because you didn't bother reading the package we had on 1A about VE Day. Or you thought you would be clever by using another language in a headline, but you used the wrong tense in the verb. Or you thought a television show was coming on that night when it had changed nights a month ago.

Readers always know these things, and you damage the newspaper's credibility when you show that you don't.

6. Laziness.
You didn't bother to check to see if we had file art to go with a profile because it wasn't your job and someone should have put it on the budget. Or you didn't bother teasing something because you couldn't find out what page it was on. Or you didn't finish up that advance page because your shift was up and you thought someone else could finish it for you the next day. Or you didn't bother looking up something in the stylebook because you're pretty sure it was right. Or you didn't want to check out the background of a story in the electronic library because you thought the copy chief would catch it.

7. Inflexibility.
You can't possibly change that front page because it's late in the night and just how important could a downed helicopter in the bay be? Or, you have that page all done, why are they asking for another information graphic on it now? Or you resent having to work a later shift when someone is out. Or you don't feel comfortable working in Sports.

This information originated as a handout for a Poynter Institute seminar for journalism educators in June, 1995. It may be used with attribution of the author and the Poynter Institute.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

How to Budget Your Time

on How to Budget Your Time

By David B. Bohl | May 28, 2008 |


What do Jim Donald, Susan Lyne, and Bill Gates have in common? Each of these busy, highly successful professionals has tackled the problem of too much to do in too little time, and come out on top. Let’s take a look at how these high profile managers budget their time.

Prioritize.
Jim Donald, CEO and president of Starbucks, considers himself to be fanatical about communicating. He receives over 200 e-mails per day, responding at least briefly to 75% of them. His secret is to start the day early (6 AM) because it’s the perfect time to reach out to people. In the quiet of the morning, he leaves voicemails for his managers, writes personal thank you cards and signs birthday cards. Clearly, he places a high priority on building and maintaining relationships, and he aligns his day accordingly.

Macro-manage.

Susan Lyne, president and CEO of Martha Stewart Living, doesn’t get caught up in the little stuff. She manages at the macro level, trusting her staff to do the job right. Lyne says that the best way to grow a company is to hire fantastic people. She only hires people that she feels have the potential to do her job! Macro-management allows Lyne to focus on what’s most important, while freeing her staff to do their best work.

Digitally empower.
Bill Gates, chairman and chief software engineer of Microsoft, uses digital tools to organize his day. Really, would you expect anything less? Three synchronized screens form his computer’s desktop because, he says, “once you have that large display area, you’ll never go back, because it has a direct impact on productivity.”

Email is Gate’s medium of choice. A select group of people have direct access to him via email, with the remainder filtered through his assistant. Not a fan of to-do lists, he relies on e-mail, desktop folders and an online calendar to stay organized. He saves time looking for documents by making full use of desktop search instead of using his computer’s hierarchy of files and folders.

Capture Ideas.

One common thread with each of these people is that they make sure to capture ideas as they occur. One uses a hardback black binder, keeping it with him at all times. Another uses a simple notebook. Mr. Gates, as you’d expect, uses a Tablet PC. Regardless of the format used to record information, they all refer back to their notes at the end of the day, making sure good ideas are acted upon, and making sure nothing slips through the cracks.

There you have it, four simple ideas that work for highly successful managers. Make room for your highest priority first. Free up your time while empowering your team through macro-management. Learn how to use your existing digital tools more effectively to manage your time and documents. And make sure to capture ideas as they occur, returning to your notes by day’s or week’s end for actionable items. Apply these ideas at work and home, and feel your productivity and effectiveness soar.

Source: Fortune Magazine [http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2006/10/16/8390317/index.htm?postversion=20061013

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Radio Glitch Delays Activities for Mars Lander

Radio Glitch Delays Activities for Mars Lander
NASA officials say radio glitch on orbiter over Mars delays moving Phoenix lander
By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN Associated Press Writer
TUCSON, Ariz. May 27, 2008 (AP)
The Associated Press


NASA couldn't send commands to the Phoenix Mars lander for most of Tuesday because of a radio glitch, delaying a second day of activities, officials said.
Phoenix
This image provided by NASA, JPL-Caltech and the University of Arizona shows a portion of the... Expand
This image provided by NASA, JPL-Caltech and the University of Arizona shows a portion of the Martian landscape seen from the Phoenix Mars Lander after it landed on the planet on Sunday, May 25, 2008. The spacecraft touched down in the northern polar region of the planet after a 422 million-mile flight from Earth. Collapse
(JPL-Caltech, University of Arizona/ NASA/ AP Photo)
More Photos

The minor problem was fixed later in the day and the Mars Reconnaissance orbiter resumed relaying the lander's images of the Martian landscape back to Earth, said NASA officials.

Phoenix, the latest spacecraft on Mars, communicates with scientists through two NASA orbiters circling the planet.

The Reconnaissance orbiter earlier had turned its radio off, possibly because of a cosmic ray, said Fuk Li, manager of the Mars exploration program for NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

Li said the orbiter was programmed to respond as it did.

"All this is a one-day hiccup in being able to move the arm around, so it's no big deal," said Ed Sedivy, Phoenix program manager at Lockheed Martin Space Systems Co.


Even with the glitch fixed, SPL spokeswoman Veronica McGregor said the second orbiter, the Mars Odyssey, would be used Wednesday to send commands to Phoenix during its morning orbital pass. It will tell the lander to begin unstowing its robotic arm.

Since landing on Mars on Sunday, Phoenix has delighted scientists with the first-ever peek of the planet's northern arctic region. The terrain where Phoenix settled is relatively flat with polygon-shaped patterns in the ground likely caused by the expansion and contraction of underground ice.

Peter Smith of the University of Arizona, the mission's principal researcher, and his colleague Alfred McEwen, who operates the camera aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, said photos taken since the landing show that Phoenix is at the edge of a trough that will make an ideal place for digging.

Smith said plans had called for maneuvers Tuesday to unhook the lander's 8-foot robotic arm from a protective sleeve that held it in place. That movement will be delayed by a day because of the radio outage.

The arm is at the heart of the lander's scientific functions during its three-month experiment.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008


Friday, May 16, 2008

125 Exchange





Saturday, May 10, 2008

Guide to HTML website creation

The Bare Bones Guide to HTML

A very useful site for web designing

WHAT'S HERE
Bare Bones Guide to HTML
The award-winning resource.

Other resources
Information for Web developers by subject.

HTML/WWW FAQ
Answers to common questions about Web design.

Werblog
Kevin's Weblog.

The -k- Page
My personal home page.

bone_spacer.gif

Looking for a good
Web design book? Try:

HTML 4 Visual Quickstart Guide by Elizabeth Castro

Creative Web Design by Lynda and William Weinman

HTML Goodies by Joe Burns

Create your First Web Page in a Weekend by Steven Callihan

Other book suggestions...

bone_spacer.gif
Additional resources to enhance your site:

Optiview
Optimize your graphics. Enter your URL for a free evaluation:

Commission Junction-- Put affiliate program links on your site!

Ultimate Bulletin Board-- Put interactive discussion boards on your site.

I get messages every day from people asking for help in creating Web sites.

This page provides links to some of the excellent resources available on the Web. It's not intended to be a comprehensive list; if that's what you're looking for, try one of the general reference sites listed below. Instead, this page lists some of the best resources for the major areas of Web page design.

If you can't find an answer here, take a look at my HTML FAQ, which has answers to some of the most common questions I get asked about Web page design.

General Reference | HTML | Colors | Style | CGI | Forms | Counters
Guestbooks | Frames | Java
Graphics | GIF Animation | Sound | Javascript | Publicizing



General Reference
These sites have large, organized collections of links to information about every aspect of Web page design.

Andrew King's Webreference. A very attractive, well-organized site, with loads of links and substantial amounts of original content.

Web Developers Virtual Library. Thousands of links to resources on Web page design.

HTML Writers' Guild. An excellent annotated list of resources.

World Wide Web section of Yahoo. Lots and lots of links, but not much filtering or organization.





HTML Guides
These documents describe the HTML markup language, which is used to create Web pages.

World Wide Web Consortium. The official specifications.

The Bare Bones Guide to HTML. My own entry into the field. A comprehensive yet concise "cheat sheet" of HTML tags, including Netscape extensions, in common usage.

HTML Documentation by Ian Graham. An excellent, detailed (but long) tutorial.

Introduction to HTML by Eric Meyer.

Beginner's Guide to HTML. A tutorial from NCSA, the folks who created the Mosaic browser.



Setting Background and Text Colors
Colors in HTML must be entered in the form of hex triplets. Several pages provide tools to help generate the color codes; choose the one that you find most useful.

Background FAQ by Mark Koenen. A great resource with lots of information about the color tags and links to various tools.

RGB Triplet Chart. This page has a large graphical chart with about 250 colors and their hex triplet equivalents.

Colour Selector. Allows you to select colors for background, text, and links from scrolling lists. Shows you how your choices look on screen and provides the HTML code you need to generate those colors.

Color Codes Chart List. A huge chart listing hundreds of colors in RGB, hex, and named form.





Style Guides
Style and design are often overlooked in creating Web pages, but the way you present information has a tremendous impact on the way people respond to your pages.

My (brief) thoughts on what makes a good home page.

Jorn's thoughts on HTML style.

Yale C/AIM style guide. The dean of Web style guides.

World Wide Wide Consortium style guide.

W3C HTML validator. Lets you check your HTML code to make sure it complies with the official specifications. It is generally a good idea to validate all of your pages before putting them online.





CGI Scripting -- General
Common Gateway Interface (CGI) scripts can be used to perform many powerful functions, including adding forms, guestbooks, and access counters to your pages, as described below. Your ability to use CGI scripts will usually depend on whether your service provider offers access to the cgi-bin directory of the server.

The CGI Resource Index. An organized collection of thousands of CGI scripts and resources.

NCSA's overview of CGI.

Matt's Script Archive.

CGI Resources.

Fill-Out Forms
The sites below offer information on how to write scripts and HTML code to process fill-out forms in your Web pages. This sometimes requires that you put CGI scripts on your server, so you need to check with your service provider to find out whether they support forms.

Instantaneous Introduction to CGI and Forms. Detailed information on how forms work and how to implement them.





Access Counters
Access counters let you see how many people have accessed your page. They are ususally implemented either by using CGI scripts or by scanning the systemwide access log files that your server generates automatically.

Webcounter. Another "third party" counter service that doesn't require a script on your server.

Pagecount. Yet another "third party" counter.

Several of the sites listed in the CGI section of this page include counter scripts.



Guestbooks
Guestbooks let people who view your pages "sign in" and leave messages for you and others to peruse. You can create a guestbook manually, as I have, by using a form to gather information and adding the responses to your guestbook page by hand. If you are able to put CGI scripts on your server, you can create a guestbook that updates automatically.

The World Famous Guestbook.

Guestbooks.net.

Several of the sites listed in the CGI section of this page include guestbook scripts.



Frames
Netscape 2.0 supports a new feature called "Frames" that lets you split up the window into independent scrollable panes, each of which can display a different Web page or image.

The Netscape Frames tutorial by Charlton Rose.





Java
Java is a programming language that allows you to embed small "applets" in your Web pages.

Gamelan. Probably the premier Java site on the Web. Lots of free applets to try out.





Graphics Collections
These pages contain libraries of public domain graphics and other tools that you can use to spruce up the look of your pages.

Clipart.com. A huge collection of links to free clip art on the Web.

Barry's Clip Art Server. Another large collection.

Rocket Shop. High-quality 3D clip art.

GIF Wizard. Automatically optimizes your GIF files to reduce file size.

Pixelsite. An amazing interactive graphics renderer and some great freeware clipart.





GIF Animation
One of the most popular ways of creating animated graphics on Web pages is through the use of animated GIFs.

GIF animation tutorial.

Rose's animated GIF library.

GIFWorld.





Embedding Sound Files
There are several methods to embed sound files into their pages so that the sound plays automatically when the page is launched.

Embedding sound in Web pages. A tutorial on the WebReference site.

Crescendo help page. Crescendo makes a Netscape plugin to play midi files. This page described how to put these sound files on your pages.



JavaScript
JavaScript is a scripting language created by Netscape to create special effects in Web pages. Despite the name, it is not related to Java.

Doc JavaScript. A set of detailed articles on JavaScript.

JavaScript Developer Central. Part of Netscape's DevEdge Online.



Advertising Your Pages
Everyone wants people to know about their pages. These sites allow you to register your page with various announcement and "what's new" services on the Web.

Submit It!. Lets you use one form to submit your page to about a dozen different places.

LinkExchange. Advertise for free on other sites in exchange for banners on your pages.

Webcom instructions on how to publicize your site.



In general, the best way to figure out how to do things with the Web is to experiment, and to look at what other people have done and how they have done it. Use the "View Source" command in your browser to see how other people have constructed their HTML. Good luck!

Copyright © 1995-2003 by Kevin Werbach. Last updated March 10, 2003.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Helpful Hints

This blog will you give you a collection of articles that will help you to improve yourself.

From The Positivity Blog
How to Improve Your Social Skills
Published September 10th, 2007 in Personal Development and People Skills.

Over the last 11 months I have written a whole bunch of articles on how to improve one of the most valuable skill sets; your social skills.

Some of you that have read this blog from the beginning might have already read these articles.

But since a lot of new readers have joined throughout this year I thought I´d collect and bring up the articles again in case you´ve missed some of them. I hope that they will provide you with at least a few useful tips.

And that you will give yourself a break.

Take it easy. Don´t beat yourself up if you at first fail when trying to improve a skill. And don´t try to improve everything at once. Focus on one or a few things for a month and try to work on them in your day to day life. If you fail, that’s ok and normal. Just brush yourself off and try again.

Want better results? Take more action.

The most important part of improving your social skills is just to take more chances, show up at more social functions and to interact more with people. So a good place to start might be with these three articles:

* 7 Ways to Break Out of Your Comfort Zone and Live a More Exciting Life
”If you want to improve your life you’ll sooner or later need to step out of that zone. Because it’s there you’ll find all those new and exciting experiences. Where you’ll find freedom from boredom.”
* Top 24 Tips for Making Your Self-Confidence Soar
”Although we may not want to admit it publicly I think a lot of us feel like we could use an improvement in self confidence. Fortunately there are better advice out there than the often exclaimed “Just be more confident, man!” or “Have another beer!”.”
* 5 Life-Changing Keys to Overcoming Your Fear
”What is stopping you from getting what you want in life? Your friends? Your family? A sense that failure – or success – might change your life and that feeling uncomfortable? A sense that the people around you might disapprove of you aiming for what you want, of you succeeding or failing.”

Body language is a BIG part.

I think it’s pretty important to note early on that what you say is only 7 percent of communication. Body language is 55 percent and voice tonality 38 percent.

So if you are not getting the results you’d like, if something in general feels off about your people skills then it might have little to do with what words you are using. So, say that you’d like to improve your body language since it´s such a huge part of communication. Where do you go?

* 6 Reasons to Improve Your Body Language
”When we’re in school or at work, we’re taught to improve our words. We learn to improve our language and words to impress. We learn to construct clever chains of words to gain an upper hand and to communicate more clearly. But when we grow up we learn very little beyond improving our words.”
* 18 Ways to Improve Your Body Language
”Here is just a few of many pointers on how to improve your body language. Improving your body language can make a big difference in your people skills, attractiveness and general mood.”

Talk, talk, talk.

Now, on to conversations. Here are six articles with both broad pointers and smaller, specific tips:

* How to Make a Great Impression
”First impressions can be quite important. Everyone stereotypes everyone on first impression, even if we are reluctant to do it. We all get a first impression of a new person that creates a mental image of his or her personality in our minds. That image of you often lasts and can affect the relationship that follows.”
* Five Awesome and Five Awful Conversation Topics
”“So, what should I talk about?” When it comes to conversations I think this is one question we have asked both others and ourselves many, many times. Often in our heads, when already in a conversation, with an awkward silence looming and while trying to scramble for something to say.”
* Do You Make These 10 Mistakes in a Conversation?
”Can you improve your conversation skills? Certainly. It might take a while to change the conversation habits that’s been ingrained throughout your life, but it is very possible. To not make this article longer than necessary let’s just skip right to some common mistakes many of us have made in conversations. And a couple of solutions.”
* 5 Conversational Mistakes that Can Make You Look Dumb
“The real art of conversation is not only to say the right thing at the right place but to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the tempting moment.
- Dorothy Nevill”
* One Easy Way to Remember Someone’s Name
”I have a pretty good memory for faces. I can remember them for years after just meeting them once or twice. Names are a whole different thing though. I just can’t remember them. When I hear them they just seem flow into one ear and flap away to freedom from the other one.”
* Focus Outward to Win Friends and Improve your People Skills
”One common mistake in conversations of any kind is to turn your focus the wrong way. You (and I) may often focus too much on ourselves while at a party, at work, at school, online or in just about any setting instead of shifting your focus outward, toward the person we are talking with. Why do we do that?”

On Criticism.

Criticism is often a sore spot in communication that creates a lot of misunderstandings and can become hurtful (even if it was not intended to be). I’ve written two articles on this topic. One about giving criticism and one about receiving it.

* One Easy Way to Give More Effective Criticism
”It was back at the university that I first came across this technique for improving the way you criticise. Whenever we had done an exercise in writing, editing or something like that we used this method.”
* How to Handle Criticism and get Something Good Out of It
”Receiving criticism isn’t always fun. However there are ways to handle it in a less hurtful way and – sometimes - get something good out of it. Here are a few pointers I have found useful when dealing with criticism.”

What all those other people said about communication and relationships.

Finally, there are quite a few small collections with quotes from various wise and clever people in the archives of this blog. At least six of these collections are relevant - in some way or another - when you want to improve your social skills and relationships.

* 22 Inspirational Quotes on Fear
”When a resolute young fellow steps up to the great bully, the world, and takes him boldly by the beard, he is often surprised to find it comes off in his hand, and that it was only tied on to scare away the timid adventurers.
- Ralph Waldo Emerson”
* 10 Inspirational Quotes on Forgiveness
”When you hold resentment toward another, you are bound to that person or condition by an emotional link that is stronger than steel. Forgiveness is the only way to dissolve that link and get free.
- Catherine Ponder”
* 17 Inspirational Quotes on People Skills
”You can make more friends in two months by becoming really interested in other people than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you. Which is just another way of saying that the way to make a friend is to be one.
- Dale Carnegie”
* 10 Inspirational Quotes on Relationships
”Some of the biggest challenges in relationships come from the fact that most people enter a relationship in order to get something: they’re trying to find someone who’s going to make them feel good. In reality, the only way a relationship will last is if you see your relationship as a place that you go to give, and not a place that you go to take.
- Anthony Robbins”
* 25 Great Quotes on Leadership
”To lead people, walk beside them … As for the best leaders, the people do not notice their existence. The next best, the people honor and praise. The next, the people fear; and the next, the people hate … When the best leader’s work is done the people say, ‘We did it ourselves!
- Lao-Tsu”
* 9 Great Quotes on Criticism
”Criticism is an indirect form of self-boasting.
- Emmet Fox”

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