Author: Serkadis

  • Diamond1(CDMA) WMPoweruser ROM Available

    image The Diamond world has been asking, and so far we have the CDMA world happy. Today we are happy to release the WMPoweruser Series ROM for Diamond 1 CDMA devices. The ROM was cooked by one of our newest cooks OMJ. He has put some time into the ROM, and the end result can only be judged by you, the user.

    The ROM has the same features all of our ROM have. We are working on something new for the next ROM release in 3-4 weeks, so look out for that.

    Well its time to get to the ROM:

    *CE OS 5.2.25006
    *Sense 2.5 build 2012
    *SASHIMI Compliant
    *.NETCF3.5
    *Office Mobile 2010
    *Internet Explorer 6
    *Opera 9.7
    *SQLCEMobile 3.0
    *HTC Calculator
    *Bluetooth
    *Chess
    *Hearts
    *Teeter
    *Freecell
    *Solitare
    *File Explorer EXT
    *Google Maps 4.0
    *Quick GPS 2.0
    *Inbox Menu Extension
    *SensorSDK v4
    *AdobePDF
    *Microphone AGC
    *YouTube 2.6
    *HTC Album 3.2
    *Streaming Media
    *PIM Backup 2.8
    *Spb ScreenShot
    *RSSHub 2.1.1.1107
    *Microsoft Voice Command
    *Windows Live
    *MS Marketplace
    *Social Networks Engine
    *FaceBook Engine
    *Arcsoft MMS 5.2.2.37
    *CleanRam
    *MyPhone 1.05
    *SetVolume
    *FM Radio
    *MP3 Trimmer
    *Audio Booster 2.5
    *In Call Recorder
    *EZ Input 2.1
    *Finger Keyboard
    *Total Commander 2.52b2
    *Xtask 2.15 (6.5.3 only)
    *WiFi Router
    *BackgroundforAll mod

    ALL THANKS GOES TO OUR CDMA DIAMOND COOK: OMJ for his hard work

    If that all sounds  good try the ROM:

    Download 6.5

    Download 6.5.3

    HardSPL Guide

    The file is in 7z, so I recommend you unzip it with winzip.

    Remember, when flashing a ROM you most be careful and make sure you have the right SPL to do the job. Flash at your own risk. We cannot be held liable for bricked devices.

  • School zone speeders beware

    EVANSTON (WBBM)  — Today starts the warnings, and a week later will start $550 tickets for anyone caught going over 20 miles per hour in school zones when children are present between 7am and 4 pm.

    Evanston Police Commander Tom Guenther stresses this is not a revenue raising device but an effort to protect the children of the lake shore community just north of Chicago.

    Commander Guenther says motorists are responsible for obeying the law and so will be fined, even if they say they didn’t see any children in the area.

    The fine for violation of the state school zone ordinance had been $150 plus $50 to the Evanston school district. Now that the city ordinance is in place, the fine is $500 and $50 to the school district with the fine handled in an Evanston administrative court instead of a state linked traffic court.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Information and advice – Rushcliffe Community and Voluntary Service, Nottingham

    Nottingham-visit-4

    Information and advice was the theme when Care Services Minister Phil Hope visited  Rushcliffe Community and Voluntary Service in Nottingham.

    The Minister spoke with local councilors and council workers, and saw presentations on the four schemes the service is running. The schemes provide information and advice to different sections of the community, helping people to access care and support services that fit their needs and aspirations. The overall aim is to promote the health, safety and independence of older people in their own homes.

    Mr Hope said: “Rushcliffe Community and Voluntary Service shows helping people stay active and independent is key to a people-centred care system.”

    First Contact

    First Contact is a signposting scheme aimed at helping people aged over 60 to access services.

    The system relies on the first person who comes into contact with an older person. Typically a frontline member of staff or volunteer, they use a quick and simple checklist to create a profile of an older person’s circumstances and needs. They will then signpost to the appropriate services to meet those needs.

    Alternatively, a self-assessment form is filled out and sent off to a central point of contact
    where referrals are automatically generated to relevant agencies. The agency then makes contact with the older person within 28 days and offers services.

    The areas it covers include accommodation, housing maintenance and repairs, injury prevention, affordable warmth, home security, welfare benefits, transport, and voluntary and community groups.

    The scheme is delivered as a partnership between a wide variety of local bodies including the police, housing, voluntary and fire services. Piloted in 2005, it has since been rolled out county-wide. In most cases it is delivered through the voluntary sector.

    Community Outreach advisers

    The Community Outreach programme, like First Contact, is a county-wide project delivered through voluntary sector organisations. It is also designed to help people to stay safe and independent at home by helping them access services.

    Open to anyone over 50, the council-funded scheme puts more of an emphasis on hard to reach groups such as black and minority ethnic (BME) communities, people living with mental health problems, people in rural isolation or traveller communities – and identifying and reporting gaps in local services

    “They are also looking to reach carers from BME communities, particuallrly south asian people who are tending to miss out and we are looking into why that is,” says David Pearson, Corporate Director Adult Social Care and Health Notts County Council

    Again like First Contact, the system works from self-referrals, or referrals taken from a range of other workers such as Community Matrons, hospital discharge schemes and tenancy support workers.

    Once a referral has been made, an outreach adviser will make a home visit to identify needs, share information and to make further referrals to other agencies where appropriate. There is then a follow-up contact to identify further needs, and to ensure other agencies have been in touch. The scheme works more closely with people with complex needs. 

    “It’s much more of a personalised service,” said Jessica Molineaux, Community Outreach Advisor for the service. “I really get to grips with the issues that a person has. I spend more time with them, so they’ll start to trust me and have more confidence that they can tell me about things that perhaps they weren’t ready to tell somebody else.

    “On my second or third visit they might tell me something they didn’t tell me at first. We are really trying to reach those people that don’t ordinarily access services. Who are isolated.”

    The Community Outreach programme covers a broad spectrum of services, from frozen meal delivery services, to local support groups and hobby groups, and is delivered through organisations with a detailed knowledge of local services, activities and support.

    Nottingham-visit-12

    Notts 50+

    The Notts 50+ scheme also  offers information, advice and support for people over 50.
    The scheme uses, among other things, various publications and newsletters and the Notts 50+ website.

    The web portal provides information on services, activities and organisations for people who are aged over 50 and living in Nottinghamshire, including sports clubs, support groups, food shopping and financial advice.

    By gathering this information in one place, the scheme helps people to find out what is available and take part in their local community, keep in contact with other people and stay independent.

    Computer access to those without their own PC is available in a number of outlets including libraries and older people’s resource centres. Free computer support and training is available. The scheme has a number of IT champions to help facilitate this.

    “Having a computer is essential,” says Diane Smeeton, who recently become computer literate with help from the support services.

    “We were provided with two computers at our community centre. In the 15 months that we have had them, 60 people have learned how to use them. They are so thrilled that they are not marginalised, and they are able to get this kind of information, and of course to keep in contact with their friends. It is exciting when people realise that yes – they’re old, but they can still learn how to use a computer.”

    Nottsinfoscript

    Nottsinfoscript is Nottinghamshire’s information prescription service for everybody with long term health and care and support needs. An information prescription is anything that gives patients and carers information they need. 

    The scheme was set up after pilots and consultation with patients and interested parties. The categories it covers are: diagnosis, emotional wellbeing, home and local services, voluntary, support and community groups, leisure, sport and work, benefits, legal and financial advice, general health and wellbeing.

    Like the other schemes, Nottsinfoscript relies upon the front line worker who first meets a  patient or carer. They will identify their information need, explain information prescriptions and offer information. They will then explain follow-up procedures and dispensing methods before completing an online form.

    “We’re looking at a cultural change in the way in which we in our communities view our responsibilities and the way in which organisations work within communities,” said
    Ian Bradford, Chief executive of Rushcliffe Community Voluntary Service.

    “All of that needs resources and encouragement and support. These schemes are about making sure that people have access to services. What we’ve got to make sure of is that the services are there for them to access.”

    “Overall we reckon we’re reaching about 10-15% of the older population,” said John Hannam, Adult Social Care and Health at Nottinghamshire County Council. “Overall we do find a growing use of the websites and we feel while older people in general are not particularly enthusiastic about computers, a growing number of people are.

    “We are constantly reviewing these things. We’re looking at efficiency, we’re looking at effectiveness we’re looking at the possibility of extending it to younger vulnerable adults.

    “We do realise there is a bit of a gap there in terms of services to carers, so again we are piloting the service for carers aswell. We’re expecting a very rapid role out to the whole of the county.”

  • isoHunt Tries To Setup A Site That Doesn’t Induce

    One result of the Supreme Court’s ruling in the Grokster case, five years ago, was formalization of the concept of “inducement” of copyright infringement as being against the law itself — despite the lack of any such concept in the statute, and a failure (despite repeated attempts) by Congress to put an inducement standard directly into the law (suggesting, pretty clearly, that Congress did not intend for there to be an inducement standard in copyright law). Now, the entertainment industry has stretched the Grokster ruling for years, pretending that the Supreme Court actually said simply that any file sharing program/site was violating copyright law. But that’s not true at all. What’s unclear, however, is what constitutes inducement and what doesn’t. Given various court rulings on the subject, it seems like you could set up a perfectly legal file trading system/search engine that doesn’t run afoul of the law by making sure that it wasn’t designed to induce infringement at all.

    Unfortunately, pretty much every file sharing system/search engine that’s gone to court in the US has failed that test miserably by regularly pitching its product for the purpose of infringing on copyright law. In a recent ruling, concerning the torrent search engine IsoHunt, we noted that the judge found inducement in a variety of places in how the site was operated and (more importantly) in comments made by the site’s owner, Gary Fung.

    Now, in response, Fung appears to be interested in trying to see if he can thread that needle and setup a site that still has the search engine, but avoids any of the things that were flagged for inducing infringement. The key one is the question of whether or not the company/site/owner promotes the infringing nature of its site — which is one par of the three-pronged test for inducement. Fung has proposed to the court that if he sets up such a site, which he calls isoHunt Lite, there shouldn’t be an injunction shutting down the site.

    It’s an interesting legal question, but somehow I doubt the judge is likely to agree.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Study: Traffic congestion goes back up as economy recovers

    Filed under:

    There’s really no good news about a recession, but if you really hate your commute (and you’re not one of the millions of Americans out of work) at least traffic congestion subsides a bit. We don’t know about you, but we’d rather see a strong economy even if it means a bit more cars on the road, and a new study by traffic and navigation services INRIX shows that may be what’s happening.

    The INRIX study shows modest improvements in traffic congestion as the country pulls out of its economic downturn. In 2008, traffic dropped off quite a bit from the all-time highs of 2007 due mostly to the recession coupled with $4 per gallon gasoline. The latest data for 2009 shows that four of the 10 most congested cites in the U.S. showed increased traffic in 2009, as drivers in New York, Los Angeles, Washington D.C. and Philadelphia all felt a bit more pain. Houston traffic actually decreased in 2009, as the Texas city dropped from fourth to sixth on the list of most congested cities. The areas with an at least a 10 percent increase in traffic congestion are Las Vegas, Baltimore and D.C. So in other words, gambling and lobbying likely increased in 2009.

    The federal government’s stimulus projects are also affecting traffic congestion. The INRIX study shows that construction projects have led to 25 percent higher traffic congestion during off-peak hours, and the majority of projects are courtesy of stimulus funds.

    Hit the jump to read over the INRIX press release, which includes the top 10 most congested cities and the 10 biggest highway bottlenecks in the country. If you live in New York, you probably already know that five of the top 10 bottlenecks are in your neck of the woods, and if you typically travel on the Cross Bronx Expressway/I-95 Southbound at the Bronx River Parkway you don’t even want to look.

    [Source: INRIX | Image: Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images]

    Continue reading Study: Traffic congestion goes back up as economy recovers

    Study: Traffic congestion goes back up as economy recovers originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 26 Feb 2010 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • The Garrett, Watts Report (February 25, 2010)

     

    garrettwatts

    To Our Clients, Colleagues and Friends,  

    • Corky and I were Compass Analytics users for years back when it was called Tuttle & Co., and as great a hedging advisor as it was then, it may even be better today.  One of the many things they track for clients is the spread between best efforts and mandatory pricing, and we recently looked at their numbers for all of 2009.  The spread was as follows:

    2009

    High – Low

    Average Differential

    1st quarter

    160 – 62

    117

    2nd quarter

    72 – 60

    65

    3rd quarter

    55-  45

    50

    4th quarter

    43 – 41

    42

    The first quarter for 2009 was crazy insane, and many of our clients made as much money selling on a mandatory basis in the first quarter as they did the rest of the year.

    • If you were a Compass user back in the early 90’s, you probably remember Art Yend, Ray Knapp, Lenny Auerbach, Rob Chrisman, and, of course, Paul Tuttle.  Last week we stated that one way to measure a company’s greatness is to see how many industry leaders came from its ranks.  By this measure, Tuttle/Compass was an amazing success, with the hedging and secondary world being populated with tons of ex-Tuttle employees.
    • We remember one Safety & Soundness Exam years ago where the Examiner-in-Charge was going through our hedging techniques.  We were a Compass user, and their reports were detailed, comprehensive and easy to follow.  We spent an hour with the EIC going over how we hedged,  and after listening patiently, she started flipping through her notes and asked, “Um, yeah, like back at the beginning you used the term ‘being short” and then you said something about “being long.” I’m not familiar with those terms, so like, can you can explain them to me.”  Uh oh.
    • Do you ever write to politicians? If you do, don’t use e-mail.  Ask their staff members and they’ll tell you that almost no e-mail is actually read.  If you want your letter read by a decision-maker, do it on hard copy and send it by mail.
    • The San Francisco Bay Bridge was damaged in the 1989 earthquake, and they’re still rebuilding it 21 long years later.  We were throwing out some old papers and came across an article with the headline “Red Tapes Holds up New Span of Bay Bridge.” Doesn’t that strike you as funny, as if it’s being held together by some sort of red-colored tape? If you care about good syntax, you can drive yourself batty with all the poor writing out there.
    • Remember last week our writing about Bank of Commerce that got a CAMEL 1 but with a 2 rating for management? Here’s an e-mail from their CEO Pete Davis:  “Hey, that was us!! Actually the regulators wanted to give the bank a CAMEL 2.  This was after years as a 3 and even a 4 — so they thought they were doing us a favor.  When they finished going over the report with us, they asked if we had any questions and I said “What’s the appeal process?”  They were shocked as was Gary (the CFO). They said they’d get back to us, and when they did, the bank had an overall CAMEL #1, but management a #2. When  Gary asked about this they said it was because Management was not receptive to regulatory counsel. The Bank sold for 5 times book less then a year later, so fighting this was moot. Besides we had gotten the Camel #1.”  Is this a great story, or what?
    • We just read that the University of Oregon women’s basketball team is being coached by Paul Westhead, and we wish we knew earlier so we could watch them.  He’s coached men’s college teams as well as winning championship in the NBA, and his up-tempo, run-and-gun teams are always great fun to watch.  His philosophy is simple: (1) Forget about defense. If you take more shots than the other team, you’ll win, and (2) if you’re in better condition than the other team, you can run them till their exhausted.  When he coached men’s basketball at Loyola Marymount in Los Angeles , his 1989-90 team went 27-3 and averaged 122 points per game!  They scored over 140 points in eight games, beating Michigan 149-115, Saint Mary’s 150-119, and the University of San Francisco 157-115.   He had a rule that the offense only had seven seconds to get the ball up court and get a shot off. Here he is in his Oregon t-shirt.
      j2
    • There’s a company that helps lenders fight investor re-purchase demands. It’s Resolution Portfolio Management & Oversight in Boca Raton , Florida (866-661-4776). We don’t know anything about them, so if anyone out there has used them, please let us know what you think.
    • We found this funny, the part about gay termite control experts: “We need knowledgeable, professional gay or gay-friendly real estate agents, brokers, mortgage lenders, home appraisers, insurance agents, home inspectors, pest and termite control experts, professional painters……and so much more, who would look forward to serving our gay community.” http:///www.gayrealestatedirectory.com  Gay termite control experts just strikes us as funny.
    • We’re endlessly fascinated by the role the bank Directors should play, and our latest thoughts are how Director education can be such a tricky area.   There are some areas that are so complex that there’s no way a Director can be expected to learn them. Think about all  the financial engineering of the past few years, the derivatives, the derivates of derivatives, the swaps, the options, the swaps on options (they’re actually called swaptions) , the CDO’s and the CMO’s and on and on.  If you have the President of a manufacturing company on your Board, or perhaps the head of a community based non-profit, can they really be expected to ever understand this?  Of course not.  Some of these instruments may be inappropriate for your bank, but some serve a legitimate purpose, so how can your Directors know which is which? The answer is multi-sided, but this is an example of things that Board members simply aren’t going to ever really understand, no mater how good your Director Education might be.
      So what should they be doing?  We think they should look at the overall risk in the bank, and one such example is one of the basics of risk, this being leverage.  Our recollection is that when Lehman fell, they had leveraged their capital 32-to-1, while most other Wall Street firms were leveraged around 15-to-1.  Were Lehman’s Directors aware of this? Above all else, they should have been aware. This could be a perfect example of a broad policy where the Board sets the maximum leverage ratio and where this might take care of their not understanding many of the truly complex details of the banks operations.  They may not understand Inverse Floating Collateralized Mortgage Obligations, but they can certainly under the maximum leverage that management is allowed. The key is to find the limited number of metrics that (a) are critical to directing the bank and (b) that can be understood easily by your Board members.
    • Banks and thrifts reported an aggregate profit of $914 million in the fourth quarter of 2009, a teeny, tiny amount but a huge improvement from the $37.8 billion loss the industry suffered in the fourth quarter of 2008.
    • More than half of all institutions (50.3%) reported year-over-year improvements in their quarterly net income. Almost one-third of all institutions (32.7%) reported net losses for the quarter, down from 34.6% a year earlier.  All this data is from the FDIC Quarterly Banking profile, a copy of which is attached.
    • The FDIC’s liquid resources (cash and marketable securities) increased to $66 billion at year-end, up from $23 billion at the end of September. That might not be enough if some really big banks fail, but it should be enough if most bank failures continue to be the smaller institutors.
    • With Opening Day not too far away, we get to delight our clients who are baseball fans and bore the rest of you, so here’s a good one.  Q: What pitcher holds the record for striking out ten consecutive batters?  A: It was Tom Seaver who struck out 19 Padres in a 1970 game, ten of them in a row. Can you imagine how exciting that must have been if you were in the crowd?
    • This week’s cartoon is dedicated to all those who bought their homes near the top and who think it might still fetch an okay price.

    · Movie critic Pauline Kael once wrote of Cary Grant:   “We smile when we see him. We laugh before he does anything. It makes us happy just to look at him.”  We were watching the Dave Chapelle show the other night, and we thought you could say the exact same thing about him.  He may have the most engaging smile of anyone on this planet, and his humor is original and brilliant.  This photo doesn’t do him justice, but when he walks on stage, don’t you feel like you and he could be great pals?
    j1

    • When people talk about the Third World , we know this means developing nations or emerging markets, (they used to be called under-developed nations but that was considered insulting). Anyway, the poor countries were the Third World, the West (The U.S., England etc.) was the First World and the Commies were considered the Second World . Foreign policy expert Leslie Gelb has come up with a new hierarchy he calls the Pyramid of Power with the U.S. alone on the top.  The second tier contains Eight Principals: China , Japan , India Russia, the U.K. France, Germany and “just barely” Brazil . Below them are the Oil and Gas Pumpers. In the fourth tier are Regional Players like Mexico , South Africa , and South Korea . Next are the Harmless Responsibles (i.e. Switzerland , Singapore , and Norway ) and finally, in the 6th tier are the Bottom Dwellers, like Zimbabwe , Sudan and the like. A good way for ordering the world.
    • For those of you haven’t gotten around to calculating your break-even, wasn’t January a sort of a proxy of a breakeven analysis? With volumes down 30-50%, many clients came face-to-face with what their earnings looked like when volume drops dramatically.  It was a real wake up call for a lot of people we know.
    • Bernie Madoff’s daughter-in-law, Stephanie Madoff, has petitioned the court to change her last name to Morgan.  She explained to the judge how difficult it was having the name Madoff.  No kidding!
                                                           *    *

    Not much traveling the next week for us, so we’ll see you soon.  We like staying in touch this way.

    Garrett, Watts & Co.

    “Helping lenders increase revenues, control costs, and better manage risk.

  • BMW ActiveHybrid 5

    BMW ha confirmado que veremos a su nuevo híbrido en el inminente Salón de Ginebra. No es otro que el BMW ActiveHybrid 5.  En el diseño exterior destaca por el color azul de la carrocería y por sus nuevas llantas y parrilla.

    BMW ActiveHybrid 5

    Cabe destacar que este modelo sigue siendo por el momento un concept pero próximamente se desarrollará una versión comercial. En cuanto a la motorización, hace uso de un motor de seis cilindros en línea unidos a otro motor eléctrico.

    Dispone del sistema de parada y arranque Start-Stop. Su maletero tiene una capacidad total de 520 litros aunque podremos aumentarla si reclinamos los respaldos de los asientos traseros.

    Related posts:

    1. Mitsubishi PX-MiEV Concept en el Salón de Tokio
    2. Hyundai desarrolla un deportivo eléctrico para 2012
    3. El nuevo Nissan GT-R será un híbrido
  • Fairness Doctrine* in Baby Steps…

    If the Obama administration can’t yet legally pluck Glenn, Rush and Sean from the airwaves…they can at least attempt to use them to push their own talking points.

    You’re gonna love this: An offshoot of the DNC, ‘Organizing for America,’ has set up a website coaching libs on how to call Conservative talk shows and what to say to various hosts.

    The first time I went on I was told to call Roger Hedgecock’s show, given some tips like this:
    “Some hosts may challenge your views. Stay calm and firm. Sharing a personal story about how health reform affects you and your family is a great way to show the importance and urgency of health reform.”
    And then a list of discussion topics.

    There’s a CAN’T GET THROUGH? GIVE ME ANOTHER SHOW button.

    Next I got Fred Thompson (and numbers are provided with each new selection). Next was ‘Focus on the Family,’ then Neal Boortz, Sean, Hugh Hewitt… (I could do this all day…)

    You are then instructed to submit your report like a good little drone bee.

    As unseemly as I find staged support and/or indignation…I have to once again comment on the fact that the LEFT utilized NEW MEDIA much better than the RIGHT and I’m a bit disgusted about that.

    (*Fairness Doctrine)

  • IPS TerraViva Beijing +15

    beijing15-lg-web-a-menorFifteen years after the Beijing World Conference on Women, IPS remains committed to in-depth reporting on progress achieved and challenges facing women and girls.

    IPS has a long-standing editorial commitment to mainstreaming gender, which it has realised through training, editorial guidelines and targeted projects.

    On the occasion of the 54th session of the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) in New York (1 – 12 March), an international team of journalists will provide special coverage from New York through the IPS TerraViva Beijing+15 website.

    The IPS TerraViva Beijing +15 includes analyses of the latest developments from our team in New York, as well as gender stories from the global IPS Gender Wire.

    Two printed editions of IPS TerraViva will be published and distributed in New York during the CSW (1 March and 8 March). These published editions will be available for download at the IPS TerraViva Beijing +15 webpage.

    The TerraViva Beijing +15 is part of the IPS programme “Communicating for Change: Getting Voice, Visibility andImpact for Gender Equality“. The IPS cast of stories includes independent coverage financed through the Dutch Government’s MDG3 Fund: Investing in Equality, and through the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM).

  • God = Happiness?


    So many studies correlate a religious belief with various positive out comes. Happier, stronger sense of right and wrong, less depression, positive outlook, etc. And adding to the growing consensus, a new one was just released:

    “…University of Toronto psychologists reported last year that “believing in God can help block anxiety and minimize stress,” their research showcasing “distinct brain differences” between believers and nonbelievers.

    A new study released Wednesday by Rush University Medical Center in Chicago took the idea a step further.

    In patients diagnosed with clinical depression, “belief in a concerned God can improve response to medical treatment,” said the new research, which has been published in the Journal of Clinical Psychology.

    The operative term here is “caring,” the researchers said. “The study found that those with strong beliefs in a personal and concerned God were more likely to experience an improvement.” (source)

    And you know the evidence must be irrefutable if the scientific community is willing to give a Supreme Being credit for anything…

    I have deprived my children of this. Now I have guilt.

    My bad experiences and adolescent OD of church (12 years of Christian school, church, youth group, pioneer girls, christian camp, etc) soured me to the hypocrisy man brings to the mix and I removed myself so I wouldn’t resent God for man’s many shortcomings… But now when someone makes a very basic Biblical reference and my kids are clueless it bothers me more than I ever thought it would. I think they’ve been to church twice. Once for a Christening and once for a funeral. The Man was raised atheist and he has no empathy or compassion and a very different moral compass than I do –I don’t know if this is a direct result of him being a total heathen, but I don’t want my boys to grow up that way. He doesn’t either.

    Starting this Sunday I’m guessing they will really hate me. Starting this Sunday they will start going to church. Staring this Sunday they will be introduced to what is now known as Evangelical Christianity. I even have a Jesus fish tambourine 😉

  • Balloon Blamed For Second Outage In Two Days

    ELGIN (STMW)  — A mylar balloon that struck a power outage was blamed for the second power outage in as many days in northwest suburban Elgin.

    Commonwealth Edison representatives said a mylar balloon hit power lines near National Street and Wellington Avenue on Thursday, causing a second power outage in as many days on the city’s east side.

    Power went out at 12:13 p.m. Thursday to 684 customers in an area bordered by Bode Road, Route 20, Willard Avenue and Grove Avenue.

    About the same time Wednesday, an outage affected the same number of residences in the same area.

    Power was restored to all affected customers by 1:47 p.m. Thursday, according to ComEd spokeswoman Alicia Zatkowski.

    The cause of Wednesday’s outage was an equipment failure and was unrelated to Thursday’s incident, Zatkowski said.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Oak Lawn quest for quiet rolls forward

    The quest to establish railroad quiet zones in Oak Lawn has inched one step closer to reality this week, with the federal government outlawing train horn blasts at two village railroad crossings.

    The Federal Railroad Administration has approved “quiet zones” at railroad crossings for the tracks that carry Metra’s Southwest Service Line at 95th Street and Cicero Avenue.

    The official designation is supposed to come within three weeks, but federal officials indicated the trains are allowed to stay silent before the formal establishment of the quiet zones, which prohibits train conductors from blasting their horns in designated residential areas.

    Engineers always have the authority to blow the horns if they feel there’s a safety hazard.

    Other local rail crossings, including those at 52nd, Cook, Central and Kilbourn avenues in Oak Lawn, as well as Duffy Avenue in Hometown, are slated to get the quiet zone designation, but local officials say paperwork delays stalled the process.

    Still, officials said the latest news marks a step in the right direction.

    “I don’t believe that living or working near a busy rail line should mean having to put up with train horns at all hours,” U.S. Rep. Dan Lipinski (D-3rd), of Western Springs, said in a statement. “I’m going to continue working with Oak Lawn and the FRA to bring peace and quiet to everyone who resides along the Southwest Service tracks.”

    Read the original article from SouthTown Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Homewood seeks community development director

    Homewood’s public works director John Schaefer will have some busy days ahead. In addition to his duties with public works, he temporarily will be filling the role of community development director until the village finds a permanent replacement for the position.

    Bill Ernat resigned as Homewood’s community development director last week.

    Village manager Mark Franz declined to comment Thursday on why Ernat resigned, saying it was a confidential personnel matter.

    Ernat served as community development director for 14 years. His department also handled building, planning and zoning, economic development and property maintenance.

    A search for a replacement is under way, and Franz said he hopes the position will be filled in the next three or four months.

    “We will begin as soon as possible, and it will be a national search,” he said.

    Franz said no decision has been made yet on whether the village will form a committee to look over final candidates and make a recommendation.

    Schaefer was chosen as interim community development director because the building department was under the domain of public works until eight years ago, Franz said.

    “It seemed like a good fit,” he said. “I’m expecting a seamless transition.”

    Franz said while Schaefer works both positions, assistant public works director Joe Jakubowski will take on a larger role at public works.

    “I expect (Schaefer) will delegate some of his responsibilities to Joe,” Franz said.

    Ernat could not be reached for comment.

    Read the original article from SouthTown Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Quilt helps youths cope with loss of loved ones

    Dezi DePyper will be remembering her late friend Felix on Saturday.

    So will other youths when a quilt dedicated to the memories of their deceased friends and family members is unveiled.

    DePyper, 17, of Oak Forest, is among the 23 youths who attend weekly meetings of the BraveHeart Youth & Family Loss Group.

    At 11 a.m. Saturday, a quilt dedicated to their deceased loved ones will be unveiled at the BraveHeart headquarters, the offices of Horizon Hospice & Palliative Care, 3420 Vollmer Road, Olympia Fields.

    Twenty-one of the youths have decorated squares that will be incorporated in the 5-by-5-foot quilt.

    To remember her late friend, Felix Jimenez, DePyper drew a heart with angel wings and a halo.

    “I like BraveHeart a lot because this helps me cope with losing my best friend,” DePyper said of Jimenez, who died last year.

    “I find that the group is very helpful for me. We talk about our losses, we share stories and discuss our feelings,” DePyper said.

    BraveHeart, which has youth members ranging in age from 5 to 19, is split into four age-appropriate groups.

    Kate Maver, who this week was finishing the quilt, is impressed by the variety of the squares.

    “Some (squares) have little hearts on them. One has a picture of a steak because the person (who died) loved to eat steak. We have one that’s a picture of a family,” said Maver, Horizon’s development & communications director.

    The quilt, she said, is “a way for children to express and memorialize their love for their loved ones who have died.”

    “They can put down something that’s permanent, that will always remind them of those people,” Maver said.

    The quilt will be on permanent display at the Horizon office, bereavement coordinator Theresa Parrish said.

    “A lot of times, kids don’t even get to tell their story. We don’t ask the kids what happened. We probably are too wrapped up in our own grief,” Parrish said.

    During the BraveHeart sessions, one group for kids meets while another for caregivers and parents meets, Parrish said.

    Adults, she said, may cope with grief easier than children, who often face a lifetime of confronting their loss.

    “It does take longer for a child. Think of the 5-year-old girl who lost her father. She graduates from high school, gets married, has children.

    “Every time something comes up, she remembers her father. As she grows up she will re-grieve that loss,” Parrish said.

    The BraveHeart groups meet Thursdays from 6 to 7:45 p.m. A light meal is served and there is no fee, but donations are accepted.

    For more information about the meetings or the Saturday quilt event, call Parrish at (708) 441-8278.

    MEMORY QUILT

    What: Unveiling of a memory quilt designed by youths in the BraveHeart Youth & Family Loss Group.

    When: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday.

    Where: Horizon Hospice & Palliative Care, 3420 Vollmer Road, Olympia Fields.

    Information: Visit www.horizonhospice.org or call (708) 441-8278 or (708) 283-8150.

    Read the original article from SouthTown Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Naughty Disney Princesses

    3CE5BF61-CFEB-4047-B443-D755F5710CCD.jpg

    The folks over at The Chive have come up with yet another entertaining round-up of photos. This one isIf Disney Princesses were real…and naughty.

    Here are a few of our faves:

    68F2FA07-CCE5-4920-AD28-65C6CB8F68FA.jpg

    D8393A12-7C7A-4BEB-A1B3-AC2A33011572.jpg

    309E9DF2-F003-457E-9E0C-11A28342CC35.jpg

    Check out all 10 naughty princesses at The Chive.

    Related posts:

    1. Disney Not Happy About ‘Ho White and the Seven Dwarfs’
    2. Who Knew Mail Order Brides Were So Hot?
    3. Run for Your Life! It’s the Dreaded Back Boob!

  • 70000 SERIE – CERTIFICATION STANDARD NSF 51 & NSF 61

    Many people use water devices, coffee machines and bottled drinks, but how do you know which are right for you? Are you sure how these drinks are prepared or dispensed to you?

    Finally Aignep has developed a unique line of metal push-in fittings for food and drinking equipments: 70000 serie! The line has been recently awarded with the NSF certificates for standard 51 & 61.
    This mark is your assurance that the products have been tested by one of the most respected and independent certification companies in existance today. NSF also confirms the safe use of our fittings in all the equipments (water dispenser, coffee machine, water purification, pneumatic systems etc) in direct contact with all food/beverage fluids.

    The 70000 serie is made of unleaded brass with a special non-toxic coating treatment. All the seals are FKM food grade and the gripper is in stainless steel AISI 304. Pressure range for this line is –0,99 bar (-0,099 Mpa) to a maximum of 15 bar (1,5 Mpa). Big advantage is the temperature range which depending on application it can go up to very high temperature +200° C (+392 F).

    70000 serie offers a range of the most popular figure and size used in this specific sector.

    For more information consult NSF web-site www.nsf.org looking for Aignep under the list of certified companies or ask for our catalogue at [email protected] .

    70000 serie our commitment to protect our customer health!

  • Lloyd´s register certification for SITEMA-Locking Unit

    SITEMA now offers a special Lloyd’s certified SITEMA-Locking type KFHL which has been developed to satisfy the particular requirements for clamping units in maritime applications .

    Design measures have been adopted to ensure equipment is able to function safely, even under the difficult conditions experienced, for example, on the open sea.
    For example, the complete clamping system has been thoroughly adapted, both in terms of the materials used and the special housing designed to provide protection against any hazards associated with incoming sea water. Other measures include the use of special materials for the housing and seals, as well as the use of special coatings.

    SITEMA has placed particular emphasis on ensuring an adequate safety margin in terms of achievable clamping forces.
    As such, the SITEMA – Locking Unit KFHL makes a clear distinction between „admissible load“ and „holding force“. The admissible load in kN denotes the actual maximum load that can be applied to a SITEMA – Locking Unit KFHL. The actual holding force is twice as high and equates to the margin required by Lloyd’s Register EMEA for the purposes of personal safety.

  • The Perfect Load Cell Package

    FUTEK is proud to introduce the newly designed Panel Mount Load Cell, LPM200. This particular Load Cell is a robust sensor package in a minature size.

    The Panel Mount Load Cell (LPM200) offers distinct advantage in its miniature size, a robust flexure and low capacity of 10 gram to 5 lbs. A common challenge for low capacity sensors is the damage the sensor can incur during installation. With the LPM200’s design, this challenge has been greatly minimized. Furthermore, the product features an overload protection of 1000% (note that this percentage is not a typo and we do mean 1000%) of Rated Output for all the capacities (10 grams to 5 lbs). The installation of the product also became a critical design focus for FUTEK Engineers. By threading the flexure, the LPM200 can easily be installed for usage. The LPM200 uses a tough #28 AWG 4 Conductor Braided Shielded Clear PVC cable but as an extra feature, this model may also be offered with a USB output option.

    the LPM can easily be threaded onto a platform during installation. The product was built for a diverse range of applications such as fiber tensile force measurement or automated feedback control systems. The LPM200 is a model from FUTEK’s miniature Sensors line with a diameter of 0.75 inch and height of 2.09 inch. The load cell has a high accuracy with an operating temperature of -67° F to 221° F.

  • Butt fusion machine for pipes and joints in HDPE, PP, PB, PVDF: BASIC 355

    RITMO S.P.A. presents “BASIC 355”, the new butt welding machine for pipes and joints in HDPE, PP, PB, PVDF.

    The “BASIC 355” is distinguished by the excellent quality – price ratio, while maintaining reliability, precision and ease of use, along with RITMO’s standards. With the “BASIC 355”, RITMO makes its machines and work philosophy available to everyone!

    BASIC 355 is able to weld fittings such as elbows, tees, Y-branches and flange necks without any additional equipment by simply fixing the clamps’ drag bar.

    BASIC 355 includes:

    • Machine Body with 4 clamps and 2 hydraulic cylinders with
    fast non-drip couplings;
    • Extractable Heating plate with DIGITAL DRAGON, high –
    precision electronic thermo-regulator;
    • Extractable milling cutter, with safety micro-switch;
    • Electro-hydraulic gearcase, with a clamp opening and
    closing lever;
    • Hydraulic hoses with non – drip quick couplings.

    Standard set includes inserts from Ø 125 to 315 mm with 250 mm Master adapters.
    Available on request: tool for flange necks.

    Working range – 125 ÷ 355 mm
    Power supply – 230 VAC 50/60 Hz
    Total absorbed power – 5800 W
    Working temperature – 180 ÷ 280°C
    Weight only body machines – 150 Kg

    Ritmo S.p.A.
    Via A. Volta, 7 35037 Bresseo di Teolo (PD) ITALY
    Ph. + 39 049 9901888 Fax: +39 049 9901993 www.ritmo.it – [email protected]

  • BEVELLING MACHINE TYPE PROTEM US620-HSB

    PIPE RANGE 30” TO 38”

    • The hydraulic PROTEM US620-HSB machine can be used either on site or in a workshop.
    • The machine is transportable, easy to install and will be clamped into the inside diameter of the pipe.
    • The US620-HSB is used for bevelling, facing and counter boring (short) works. These works can be processed individually or simultaneously.
    • It will perform repeatable high quality bevel with a V, J, X shape or compounded bevels per-fectly suitable for the orbital or manual welding process.
    • It can be operated for the main pipe materials such as stainless steel, carbon steel, and all exotic alloys such INCOLOY, HASTELLOY, INCOLOY DUPLEX etc..

    For diameters >38″ : please consult us

    For contact and information :

    PROTEM SAS
    ZI LES BOSSES
    F-26800 ETOILE SUR RHONE
    FRANCE
    Tel +33 4 75 57 41 41
    email : [email protected]

    PROTEM IS LOOKING FOR DISTRIBUTORS WORLDWIDE