Friday, May 28, 2010

Who Were the Wealthiest U.S. Presidents?

 Who Were the Wealthiest U.S. Presidents?
 
George Washington was not only America's first president, but possibly its richest, too.
A calculation of the net worth of each U.S. president in 2010 dollars shows Washington would have had a personal net worth today of more than $500 million.
 
To determine the presidents' net worth, the website 24/7 Wall St. factored in hard assets like property, plus "estimated lifetime savings based on work history, inheritance, homes, and money paid for services," among other things. Some presidents inherited wealth, while others became rich after they left the presidency.
 
Other presidents who were worth more than $100 million (adjusted for inflation) are Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Andrew Jackson, Theodore Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy.
 
While Washington would have been a multi-millionaire today, some presidents had limited financial resources. Those who served in the second half of the 19th century, such as James Buchanan, Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson, Ulysses S. Grant, James Garfield and Chester Arthur, were found to have "almost no net worth at all," writes 24/7 Wall St.
 
As for the current occupier of the White House, President Barack Obama is estimated to have a net worth of $5 million, making him the least prosperous president since Harry Truman.
 
-Noel Brinkerhoff
 
 
 
 (by Michael B. Sauter, Ashley C. Allen, and Douglas A. McIntyre, 24/7 Wall St)

 

 

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Colored Bacon


http://bacontoday.com/colored-bacon/
 
 
a friend of mine saw this site and said,
 
"I don't know which is more exciting; that there's colored bacon,
or that there's a website dedicated to daily updates on the world of sweet, sweet bacon."




 




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The Internet Thinks Greta Van Susteren Is Dumb

from Today's Papers/slate.com

 
Greta Van Susteren, a staple on Fox News, received an e-mail from Brian, an otherwise anonymous viewer from Tehlequah, Oklahoma, who wrote in to tell her how dumb she was. "You have a mind like a seive [sic]. Your brain is empty," Brian wrote. "Matter of fact, it is so empty, if you put a pea in your skull it would rattle around like a BB in a boxcar."
 
Van Susteren, without hesitation, turned to her blog on Fox, the Greta Wire, where she posted a poll that asked readers to vote. "Who is dumber?" the poll asked. The options: "Greta?" or "Brian for spending his time watching someone he thinks is dumb."
 
By the time Gawker got around to writing about the poll, Greta, with more than 5,500 votes, had been voted dumber than Brian by her own readers.
 
"What Greta seems to have forgotten is that while the Internet is a great place to air grievances, it is not a great place to find personal validation," Gawker wrote. "In fact, it is the actual worst  place to find personal validation. Especially in poll form."
 
 

Read original story in Gawker | Friday, May 28, 2010

 

 



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Thursday, May 27, 2010

Quotes to Consider on Memorial Day

 
[ A friend of mine in our Rev War re-enactment unit sent these to me.  I replied that I especially liked the quotes from Churchill and Orwell. He said that they were HIS favorites, too. ]

 

Military Quotes

Listed in no particular order


The battle, sir, is not to the strong alone; it is to the vigilant, the active, the brave...
--Patrick Henry--

Victory belongs to the most persevering.
--Napoleon Bonaparte--

From time to time, the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots.
--Thomas Jefferson--

We have met the enemy and they are ours!
--Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry, 1813--

Veni, Vedi, Vici (I came, I saw, I conquered)
--Julius Caesar--

War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.
--John Stewart Mill--

War is cruelty. There's no use trying to reform it, the crueler it is the sooner it will be over.
--William Tecumseh Sherman--

Freedom isn't free.
--Anonymous--

Never give in--never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small, large or petty, never give in except to convictions of honour and good sense. Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy.
--Winston Churchill--

If it moves, salute it; if it doesn't move, pick it up; and if you can't pick it up, paint it.
--Anonymous (1940's saying)--

The 'eathen in 'is blindness must end where 'e began. But the backbone of the Army is the non-commissioned man!
--Rudyard Kipling--

Soldiers are men...most apt for all manner of services and best able to support and endure the infinite toils and continual hazards of war.
--Henry Knyvett--

A soldier is he whose blood makes the glory of the general.
--Adapted from Henry G. Bohn--

Army: A body of men assembled to rectify the mistakes of the diplomats.
--Josephus Daniels--

Two armies are two bodies which meet and try to frighten each other.
--Napoleon I--

Some people live an entire lifetime and wonder if they have ever made a difference in the world, but the Marines don't have that problem.
--Ronald Reagan--

A young man who does not have what it takes to perform military service is not likely to have what it takes to make a living.
--John F. Kennedy--

A ship without Marines is like a garment without buttons.
--Admiral David D. Porter, USN--

The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
--George Patton--

Diplomats are just as essential in starting a war as soldiers are in finishing it.
--Will Rogers--

Be convinced that to be happy means to be free and that to be free means to be brave. Therefore do not take lightly the perils of war.
--Thucydides--

Soldiers usually win the battles and generals get the credit for them.
--Napoleon Bonaparte--

We make war that we may live in peace.
--Aristotle--

In war there is no substitute for victory.
--General Douglas MacArthur--

Once we have a war there is only one thing to do. It must be won. For defeat brings worse things than any that can ever happen in war.
--Ernest Miller Hemmingway--

The number of medals on an officer's breast varies in inverse proportion to the square of the distance of his duties from the front line.
--Charles Edward Montague--

Always forgive your enemies--nothing annoys them so much.
--Oscar Wilde--

Being in the army is like being in the Boy Scouts, except that the Boy Scouts have adult supervision.
--Blake Clark--

Discipline is simply the art of making the soldiers fear their officers more than the enemy.
--Helvetius--

Every man thinks meanly of himself for not having been a soldier.
--Samuel Johnson--

People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
--George Orwell--

Now I recall the Recon Marines ragged, filthy cammie shirted young men in green paint who move silent like the fog with deadly purpose in their eyes. Swift, Silent, Deadly. I smile. -
--GYSGT Correll, USMC, Retired-- Recon Marine

Hard pressed on my right. My center is yielding. Impossible to maneuver. Situation excellent. I am attacking.
--Ferdinand Foch-- at the Battle of the Marne

 

Huzzah!

 

 

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RE: Snopes.com sets the record straight

sorry, last sentence was cut short:
 
 
On Memorial Day 2010, President Obama is scheduled to honor America's fallen heroes with a speech at Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery in Chicago, while Vice-President Joe Biden takes his place at Arlington.

  


From: bob_bendesky@hotmail.com
Subject: Snopes.com sets the record straight
Date: Thu, 27 May 2010 15:02:48 -0400

  News that President Obama would be spending the 2010 Memorial Day weekend in Chicago rather than attending services in Arlington were attended by claims that he would thus become the first U.S. president to skip the Arlington wreath-laying ceremony since the inception of Memorial Day.
 
This claim is inaccurate: On several occasions in just the last thirty years, U.S. presidents have been elsewhere on Memorial Day (either vacationing or attending to other presidential duties), while other administration officials represented them at the wreath-laying ceremony:
 
  • In 2002, President George W. Bush was in France on Memorial Day and participated in ceremonies at Normandy (site of the D-Day landings) honoring the U.S. soldiers who fought and died in World War II. In his place, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns.
 
  • President George H.W. Bush (himself a World War II veteran) attended no ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery during his four years in office. In 1989 he was in Rome on Memorial Day (where he led observances at an American military cemetery south of that city), and from 1990 through 1992 he spent the Memorial Day weekend vacationing in Kennebunkport, Maine, while Vice-President Dan Quayle laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns.
 
  • President Ronald Reagan was away from Arlington on Memorial Day on four occasions during his eight years in office: In 1981, he (who had been seriously wounded in an assassination attempt six weeks earlier) spent the Memorial Day weekend at his ranch in Santa Barbara, California, while Vice-President George H.W. Bush laid the wreath at Arlington. In 1983, he attended a summit meeting in Williamsburg, Virginia, while Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Thayer represented the administration at the wreath-laying ceremony. In 1987, he spent Memorial Day at the Camp David presidential retreat while Navy Secretary James Webb participated in the wreath-laying ceremony. And on Memorial Day 1988, he was out of the U.S., attending a summit meeting in Moscow.
 
  • (NOTE: President Bill Clinton has no entry in this list because he attended Memorial Day ceremonies at Arlington each year throughout his eight years in office.)
 
On Memorial Day 2010, President Obama is scheduled to honor America's fallen heroes with a speech at Abraham Lincoln





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Snopes.com sets the record straight

  News that President Obama would be spending the 2010 Memorial Day weekend in Chicago rather than attending services in Arlington were attended by claims that he would thus become the first U.S. president to skip the Arlington wreath-laying ceremony since the inception of Memorial Day.
 
This claim is inaccurate: On several occasions in just the last thirty years, U.S. presidents have been elsewhere on Memorial Day (either vacationing or attending to other presidential duties), while other administration officials represented them at the wreath-laying ceremony:
 
  • In 2002, President George W. Bush was in France on Memorial Day and participated in ceremonies at Normandy (site of the D-Day landings) honoring the U.S. soldiers who fought and died in World War II. In his place, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns.
 
  • President George H.W. Bush (himself a World War II veteran) attended no ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery during his four years in office. In 1989 he was in Rome on Memorial Day (where he led observances at an American military cemetery south of that city), and from 1990 through 1992 he spent the Memorial Day weekend vacationing in Kennebunkport, Maine, while Vice-President Dan Quayle laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns.
 
  • President Ronald Reagan was away from Arlington on Memorial Day on four occasions during his eight years in office: In 1981, he (who had been seriously wounded in an assassination attempt six weeks earlier) spent the Memorial Day weekend at his ranch in Santa Barbara, California, while Vice-President George H.W. Bush laid the wreath at Arlington. In 1983, he attended a summit meeting in Williamsburg, Virginia, while Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Thayer represented the administration at the wreath-laying ceremony. In 1987, he spent Memorial Day at the Camp David presidential retreat while Navy Secretary James Webb participated in the wreath-laying ceremony. And on Memorial Day 1988, he was out of the U.S., attending a summit meeting in Moscow.
 
  • (NOTE: President Bill Clinton has no entry in this list because he attended Memorial Day ceremonies at Arlington each year throughout his eight years in office.)
 
On Memorial Day 2010, President Obama is scheduled to honor America's fallen heroes with a speech at Abraham Lincoln

 
The URL for this page is http://www.snopes.com/politics/obama/memorialday.asp
 
 




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Oil Spill in the Gulf - Live Cam

 
  BP Oil Spill Live Video Feed
 
Watch a live video feed of the BP Oil Spill from the ocean floor, 5000 feet below the surface.
 
 
 
====

 "It's like, 'how much more black could this be?' and the answer is 'None. None more black.'"
       - Nigel Tufnel, 'This is Spinal Tap'

 
 



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Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Death and Taxes 2011; Federal Government Budget Poster

.
A 24x36" poster showing exactly where your tax money goes.
The size of the circle is proportional to its funding.
 
http://www.deathandtaxesposter.com/
 
On the website, you can use the plus/minus symbols at top left to zoom in on any section for a closer examination.
 
=====
 
what others have said:
 
"If you want a daily reminder of where all the tax money that doesn't go into your paycheck actually goes, then put this stunning new poster up on your wall. You may be relieved just to see what a magnificent display the people at WallStats.com can make materialize out of those dollars that seem to disappear so abstractly from your paycheck."  

OpenCongress.org

 
 

"Your "Federal Government Budget Poster" is perhaps the single best display I have seen of where and how our tax dollars are spent. A wonderful graphic that makes it easy to see the relative budgeted dollars for each agency, bureau and organizational unit in the government. Terrific job of sorting out a complicated subject."

Ron Cote, 
Vice President, SiloSmashers



"I have your chart hanging in my office - I work for the Dept. of Defense, and I enjoy reminding my fellow civil servants of the trust and confidence placed in us by the taxpayer, as evidenced by the sheer magnitude of dollars they send us. For me, it's a helpful reminder of how lucky I am to work here and that I'd better accomplish something meaningful with these resources." 
Kevin Marlowe,
Director, Strategic Plans and Policy USJFCOM Joint Systems Integration Command

 

 

 
 

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Bacon in the News

NY Times:
 
 
Don't Bring Home the Bacon

New research shows red meat is not the health culprit we once thought it was. But the findings are also bad news for bacon.

=====

If you don't have time to read the article, this xkcd graph sums it up nicely.

 



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It seems that Philly sports fans have a bad reputation

 
 
  



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Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Gentle Reminder


 I just got back from a nine day vacation on a cruise ship.
 
 It's easy to lose track of time on a cruise, so on the floor of the elevators there's a removable portion of the carpet. They change it every night.
 
It has the day of the week on it. 

"Oh, it's Wednesday !  I completely forgot what day it is."

I want to go on a cruise where that changeable carpet section tells you the month of the year.
"Hey, it's November. I forgot what month we were in."

  


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bacon flavored envelopes

 Yes, you read that correctly.

 

 

"Technology has given us a lot lately. The car. TV. X-rays. The refrigerator. The Internet. Heck, we even cured polio. But what have our envelopes tasted like for the last 4,000 years? Armpit, that's what."

 

"So, after thousands of years and kajillions of horrible tasting envelopes licked, we're happy to report that J&D's Bacon-Flavored Mmmvelopes™ are here to save the day. No longer will envelopes taste like the underside of your car. You can enjoy the taste of delicious bacon instead. "

 


http://www.jdfoods.net/products/mmmvelopes.php

 

 


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Monday, May 24, 2010

Remembering Martin Gardner

.
Martin Gardner, who died on Saturday in Norman, Oklahoma, may be best-known today as an author of mathematical puzzles. Yet his most important contribution to scientific literacy is an entirely and wonderfully different book, Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science.
 
As its title implies, Fads and Fallacies challenges crackpots and frauds. I picked it up in my teens, when I was fascinated by rogues, eccentrics and scoundrels of all sorts, from Gilded Age financiers to flying saucer fans. Gardner wrote it in the 1950s, it made fascinating reading when I found it in the 1960s, and it remains full of important lessons for today.
 
One crucial lesson is to be entertaining. It's terribly easy to write worthy books full of righteous indignation, scolding fools for their foolishness and trying to lead them to scientific truth. That's the stuff of cold showers and gruel: "good for you" by someone else's definition, but not terribly appetizing.
 
Fads and Fallacies is fun. Gardner had wit and wasn't afraid to use it.

 
full at
http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/culturelab/2010/05/martin-gardner-exposing-fads-and-fallacies.php?DCMP=OTC-rss&nsref=online-news
 
 




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'Wee Willie' Webber dies, a beloved radio, TV star

By JOHN F. MORRISON
Philadelphia Daily News

 

BILL WEBBER often said that he didn't look forward to retirement. He said that he wanted to continue working until they put him in the ground - "and maybe longer."

 

William W. Webber, known as "Wee Willie Webber" to countless TV and radio fans in Philadelphia for more than half a century, longtime officer of the Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia and a man who never turned down a request to do a fundraiser, telethon or other charitable benefit, died yesterday. He was 80 and lived in Center City.

 

He had gone into Presbyterian Medical Center for heart surgery but died before it could be performed.

 

Webber wore many hats in the local broadcasting scene, from hosting children's shows, to playing what he called "middle-of-the-road" music as a disc jockey to interviewing celebrities as a talk-show host.

 

He was still working until a short time before his hospitalization. One of his stints was with disc jockey Jerry Blavat on WVLT in Vineland, N.J., as well as spinning platters on Philadelphia's WHAT.

 

He was a really good guy who just enjoyed doing the work he did," Blavat said. "He never wanted to be more than Wee Willie. He was 6-foot-5 and I'm 5-foot-6, so when I stood next to him, I told him he really was Wee Willie.

 

"The persona he created was his own personality. If you sat with him at a restaurant, people knew who he was when they heard his voice. He was friendly with everybody. He loved the fact that people recognized him.

 

"He was a true professional. Whatever he was asked to do, he was right on the mark, ready to do it. He loved personal appearances, meeting his fans."

 

His fans spanned generations. Gerry Wilkinson, president of the Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia, remembered watching Bill's children's show, "Breakfast Time," in 1957 at the age of 8.

 

"Kids watched him on TV and their parents heard him on radio," said Willie's son, William W. Webber Jr. "His fans covered a whole range of ages.

 

"He was really a great guy. He was my best friend as well as my dad. I lost my dad and my best friend. The whole family is very proud of the career he had in Philadelphia."

 

Bill Jr., who runs Selector, a music-software company used by over 7,000 radio stations around the world, said that his father "loved what he was doing, loved people and loved Philadelphia."

 

Kal Rudman, publisher and philanthropist, can attest to Wee Willie's generosity. Rudman was a school teacher who yearned to be on the air.

 

Bill Webber was at WPEN at the time and Rudman recalls rapping on the window of the studio to catch his attention. Bill invited him in and later uttered to supervisors what Rudman called "those immortal words, 'Why don't you give the kid a break?' "

 

Rudman went on the air at a station in Camden a short time later, starting a long career as a DJ and announcer before he began publishing music magazines and handing out money to worthy causes.

When the Broadcast Pioneers holds its annual dinner and produces a program, Rudman always runs the same ad: "Thank you, Bill Webber, for opening doors for me."

 

When his son, Mitchell, was born in the old Doctor's Hospital, Rudman stopped off at the WPEN studios, at 17th and Delancey streets, and asked Webber to make the announcement of the birth on the air.

"When I got to the hospital, doctors and nurses were standing around," Rudman said. "One said, 'You have a famous baby. We just heard his name on the Bill Webber Show.'"

 

Bill Webber was born in Havana, Cuba, where his father was an executive with a company that was paving Havana's streets. His father, Reginald Webber, was a British subject, and his mother, Madeline, was from Brooklyn.

 

As a child, Bill was taken to Brooklyn where he graduated from Bushwick High School. He later took courses at New York University and the University of Pennsylvania.

 

Having been born in Cuba to a Brit, it wasn't until after his Army service during the Korean War that Webber became a U.S. citizen.

 

He was a mapmaker in the Army before becoming a disc jockey on Armed Forces Radio in Japan, playing country/Western music. He was called the "Honshu Cowboy."

 

Returning to civilian life, he hosted a children's cartoon show, "Breakfast Time," on Channel 6, starting in 1956, then an after-school cartoon show, "Wee Willie Webber's Colorful Cartoon Club," on Channel 17 from 1965 to 1976. The show then moved to Channel 48 and was called "Kid's Block."

 

All the while, he was a disc jockey and talk-show host on local radio. He also did commercials and hosted a pre-game show for the Phillies.

 

He served as president of the Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia for two two-year terms starting in 2002, and later became chairman of the board.

 

He met his wife, Constance Russell, while he was doing "Breakfast Time." She was taking a tour of the station and he met her in the hall. They were married in 1958.

 

In 1965, he played the last song on KYW before it became an all-news station. It was Doris Day singing, "Que Sera, Sera."

 

"Bill always reminded us of what radio should be," said South Philly rocker Charlie Gracie Jr. "Anyone who listened in knew Bill loved what he did by his exuberance and enthusiasm. He could make the dullest commercial sound like a trip round the world, the deal of a lifetime, one that you should never pass up.

 

"Bill knew he was blessed to work in an industry he loved for so many years, and he made us, his listeners, feel so good as we basked in that radiance."

 

Besides his wife and son, he is survived by a daughter, Wendy Scheid, and four grandchildren.

 

Services were being arranged.

 
http://www.philly.com/philly/obituaries/20100524__Wee_Willie__Webber_dies__a_beloved_radio__TV_star.html





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Sunday, May 23, 2010

Struwwelpeter (1844) by Heinrich Hoffmann

.
Scariest.
Children's book.
Ever.


http://www.fln.vcu.edu/struwwel/peter_dual.html
 
 





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Thursday, May 13, 2010

Fake Science. Because facts are boring.

.
http://fakescience.tumblr.com/
 





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Another “Dark Ages” opportunity:

.
.
.


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Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Fact of the Day


# 3550 - Fact - According to Scientific American magazine: if you live in the northern hemisphere, odds are that every time you fill your lungs with air, at least one molecule of that air once passed thru Socrates' lungs.
===== 
 

Then I suppose that when I take a drink, I ingest a molecule of water that was passed through Socrates'... umm, never mind.
 

... Ack !

 

 


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Tuesday, May 11, 2010

You must play: Cheese or Font ?

.
You will curse me if you go to this site and start playing, because you'll while away hours. But think of the knowledge you'll acquire.


http://cheeseorfont.com


and, of course, there's an app for that:
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/cheese-or-font/id333254647?mt=8
 
 
 


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NY Times: In Mobile Age, Sound Quality Steps Back

excerpts:
 
 The last decade has brought an explosion in dazzling technological advances — including enhancements in surround sound, high definition television and 3-D — that have transformed the fan's experience. There are improvements in the quality of media everywhere — except in music.
 
In many ways, the quality of what people hear — how well the playback reflects the original sound— has taken a step back. To many expert ears, compressed music files produce a crackly, tinnier and thinner sound than music on CDs and certainly on vinyl. And to compete with other songs, tracks are engineered to be much louder as well.
 
In one way, the music business has been the victim of its own technological success: the ease of loading songs onto a computer or an iPod has meant that a generation of fans has happily traded fidelity for portability and convenience. This is the obstacle the industry faces in any effort to create higher-quality — and more expensive — ways of listening.
. . .
 
The change in sound quality is as much cultural as technological. For decades, starting around the 1950s, high-end stereos were a status symbol. A high-quality system was something to show off, much like a new flat-screen TV today.
 
But Michael Fremer, a professed audiophile who runs musicangle.com, which reviews albums, said that today, "a stereo has become an object of scorn."
 
The marketplace reflects that change. From 2000 to 2009, Americans reduced their overall spending on home stereo components by more than a third, to roughly $960 million, according to the Consumer Electronics Association, a trade group. Spending on portable digital devices during that same period increased more than fiftyfold, to $5.4 billion.
 
"People used to sit and listen to music," Mr. Fremer said, but the increased portability has altered the way people experience recorded music. "It was an activity. It is no longer consumed as an event that you pay attention to."
 
Instead, music is often carried from place to place, played in the background while the consumer does something else — exercising, commuting or cooking dinner.
 
 
 
full @ http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/10/business/media/10audio.html




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Good and Evil Deeds Stimulate Surprising 'Superpowers'

 

The mere act of kindness, or one of evil, can boost willpower and physical strength, a new study suggests.

 

The results, based on three experiments, show that those who performed good deeds, or envisioned themselves acting charitably, were able to hold a weight or squeeze a hand grip significantly longer than those who didn't perform or think about such deeds.

 

But evil acts appeared to confer similar and perhaps even greater superpowers.

 

"When you think of superheroes or super villains, [you think of people] that can possess huge amounts of willpower and are relatively unfazed by pain," said study researcher Kurt Gray, a doctoral student in psychology at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. "And because of your stereotype of heroes and villains, you kind of embody that, or transform yourself into your perception of hero and villain," when you perform good or evil acts, he said.
 
 
full @ http://www.livescience.com/culture/good-deeds-willpower-100504.html

 





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Monday, May 10, 2010

Pat Metheny's Orchestrion

Youth Radio's Charlie Foster says, "I saw an amazing concert Saturday night in Berkeley, where Pat Metheny jammed out with an orchestra of robots – playing pianos, vibraphones, a bass, a weird bouncing guitar machine and every kind of percussion instrument – all controlled by his guitar through solenoid triggers. It was insane steampunk and beautiful jazz."

The Wonderful World of Trivia

from my friend Michael: 
 
 
TRUE FACT
In the Southern Hemisphere, strippers rotate around the pole in the opposite direction.

 

 
 


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Sunday, May 09, 2010

Star Wars™ voices now available for TomTom devices


 http://starwars.tomtom.com/voices/index-starwars.php?Lid=1

Be sure to check out the voice samples of The Dark Lord's Driving Instructions on the right side of the webpage.





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Friday, May 07, 2010

Max Palevsky dies at 85; computer magnate and philanthropist


A founder of Intel, the billionaire donated lavishly to political causes and the arts.

 

A baron of the early computer industry, he helped found the world's largest chipmaker, Intel. He came up with the cash to save a fledgling magazine called Rolling Stone and bankrolled movies. And he used his immense wealth to build notable art collections that turned the Los Angeles County Museum of Art into a destination for lovers of the Arts and Crafts movement.

 

 

 
 


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Laptop Steering Wheel Desk

from my friend Brian
 

http://www.amazon.com/Mobile-Office-WM-01-Laptop-Steering/dp/B000IZGIA8

Be sure to read the customer reviews
 

 




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It's the first Friday in May, which means it's...

 

http://www.nopantsday.com

 

 



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Thursday, May 06, 2010

A Sampling of Chinglish - Slide Show - NYTimes.com

 
For the last two years, the Shanghai Commission for the Management of Language Use has been trying to clean up English-language signs and menus to rid them of their malapropisms, like these examples.

http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2010/05/03/world/asia/20100503_CHINGLISH.html
 
 
 


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RE: Nazitübbies ???


My friend Brian has thoughtfully provided a link to the first episode:
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=poM5e3fXW4g
 
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazit%C3%BCbbies

 
 
 


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Nazitübbies ???

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.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazit%C3%BCbbies

 
 
 


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Wednesday, May 05, 2010

Quote of the Day

From my friend John 

 

 

"It's cool that they made an album in support of Abbie Hoffman etc, but I've been listening to "Chicago VII" and I simply don't hear it."

 
   - John Wesley Harding (songwriter)


 
 

 
 
 


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Happy Cinco de Mayo

 


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Oh God No. A Dating Site For Apple Fans

.
So that Technology of the Apple, by the Apple, for the Apple, shall not perish from the Earth.

http://techcrunch.com/2010/05/04/oh-god-no-a-dating-site-for-apple-fans/

 
 


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Tuesday, May 04, 2010

Warning. Terrible pun ahead.

May the 4th be with you.
 



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But wait, there's more !!!

 from my friend Brian
 

 http://j-walk.com/other/wifispray/
 
[ be sure to click the "order online" button ]
 
 
 


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Meowmania

 

 http://meowmania.jqln.org/

 
 


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Monday, May 03, 2010

"I guess being on 2nd St in SS uniforms on a Friday night is a way to incite a semi-riot"

Tue, Apr. 27, 2010

Concertgoers show the Reich stuff, are beaten by crowd


http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/20100427_Concertgoers_show_the_Reich_stuff__are_beaten_by_crowd.html

 
=====
 
the first line of the article is:
 
"How did they Nazi this coming?"




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Sunday, May 02, 2010

Neuroscience and "Yaka-Wow!"



 from World Wide Words:

 
> WORLD WIDE WORDS ISSUE 688 Saturday 1 May 2010


> -------------------------------------------------------------------
> YAKA-WOW! In what seems to have been a mixture of rueful admission
> of error and pleasure in accidental accomplishment, the Times noted
> on 23 April that a transcription error in an interview on 15 April
> with the neuroscientist Baroness Greenfield has gone viral. She was
> concerned that excessive playing of computer games or using social
> networks such as Twitter would stop the malleable brains of young
> people developing as they should: "It's not going to destroy the
> planet but is it going to be a planet worth living in if you have a
> load of breezy people who go around saying yaka-wow. Is that the
> society we want?" Within 24 hours, it is said, Google had 75,000
> results for "yaka-wow". It has inspired a Twitter stream, a page on
> Facebook, mugs and T-shirts; it has become a personal philosophy:
> "I think, therefore I yaka-wow"; and it has led to the creation of
> the virtual First Church of the Yaka-Wow. What Baroness Greenfield
> really said was "yuck and wow", a derogatory comment about the
> limited emotional range and vocabulary of Twitter users. Considered
> linguistically and culturally, it's a fascinating example of the
> way electronic communications can today create and transmit a new
> word.
 

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