Author: Guest Blogger

  • Pobs: One of the top 20 puzzle games of ADC2

    Pobs is a strategy game, like Checkers or Reversi. The goal of the game is to have more “pobs” than the other players at the end of the game. The game has many modes including Quick game, Classic, Time attack, Score limit, Random, and Two players.

    The “Quick Game” mode selects a random level of the classic mode. The classic mode features 20 different levels to solve. As soon as you complete the classic mode, the random mode is unlocked. The random mode generates a random level for you.

    In the “Time attack” challenge you only have to a limited amount of time to make your turn, so you need to concentrate on the game and think over your strategies even while your enemy is making his turn. In the “Score limit” mode you have to reach a specific amount of pobs of your color on the playing field. When you reach that amount the game ends. In the multiplayer mode you can play against a friend. You can choose a playing field from one of the levels of the classic mode.

    The game itself is easy to understand.

    You have the red pobs and your enemies have the blue and the green pob. To win you have to have the highest amount of pobs at the end of the game. If you tap on one of your pobs you have two options: You can either duplicate it to a free space right aside that pob or let the pob jump to a free space 2 spaces away from that pob.

    When one of your pobs touches one or multiple pobs of one of your enemies, those pobs will become yours. When you somehow got into the situation that your enemy/enemies can’t make a turn anymore, the game will automatically duplicate all of your pobs so the game finishes quickly.

    Pros:

    • Game performance -> The game has been kept simple, but the graphics aren’t bad either
    • Simpleness, especially the options: There is only an option for the difficulty and an option for the sound volume
    • Innovative game

    Cons:

    • Well.. nothing here

    Final verdict: Pobs is a really nice game to waste time! It’s fun to solve the levels and you really have to think about your turns!



    Note: This review was submitted by Christian Brüggemann as part of our app review contest.

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  • World War: A nuclear war breaks out on Android

    World War was originally developed for the iPhone, but recently came to Android. The company who makes it, Storm8, brags that they are, “the creator of the #1 Role Playing Games on the iPhone and iPod Touch.”

    The game itself is a role playing game which means you do missions and battles to gain experience which will cause you to grow levels. At higher levels you can purchase better buildings and units to make you stronger in battle. Buildings boost defense, restore energy (which is used to complete missions), and increase cash flow. Units are used to win battles and complete missions.

    The Android version of World War is identical to the iPhone version except for several aspects. The first difference is the navigation – instead of having permanently docked navigation buttons at the bottom, the controls can be accessed by pressing the menu button from any screen. Second, Storm8 does not offer honor points like they promote on Apple’s App Store. Honor points can be cashed in for money, allies, loot, and other rewards. If you run out of honor points you can also buy some from their website.

    The missions (player versus computer) and battles (player versus other players) have no fancy graphics. Just simply click attack and are told the outcome. The battle system of the game happens continuously between all players of the game (even when you aren’t playing you can be attacked). You can also form alliances with other players in order to make you more powerful when fighting.

    There is also currently no way to transfer an account from an iPhone or iPod Touch to the Android version. There are already many people asking for this on their forums, so hopefully it will come soon.

    The goods:

    • Grow levels to unlock new buildings and combat units
    • Form an alliance with other players around the world
    • Five different countries offer unique bonuses to the players who fight for them

    Needs improvement:

    • Currently there is no way to transfer and account from the iPhone or iPod Touch
    • Promotions giving free honor points are not yet offered on the Android Market
    • The back button doesn’t bring you to previous screens, but rather exits the game from any screen.

    Final Verdict:

    If you like modern combat role playing games this will be fun for you. Those who prefer more general RPGs should check out the other games Storm8 makes. Be warned; you may get addicted.





    Note: This review was submitted by Kevin Jones as part of our app review contest.

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  • HootSuite: A unique Twitter app tailor made for businesses

    HootSuite is a premium Twitter client that features many unique features. It supports multiple accounts and allows the user to choose which custom streams to display (home feeds, @replies, and direct messages). This is a major benefit because you can toggle notifications for each stream.

    This is especially nice on older Android phones because the more notifications you have active, the harder the app is on battery life. Most (if not all) competing clients I’ve tested with multiple-account support force the same notification settings across all accounts.

    One of the most powerful options is keyword notification. Users can create a keyword search that is treated as its own stream with an option for notifications when new tweets match the query. Other clients have keyword search built in, but do not offer tracking and notifications. Businesses that use Twitter rely heavily on keyword tracking, and frankly I’m surprised keyword notification isn’t offered in more clients.

    HootSuite also integrates click-through statistics for all shortened URLs using Ow.ly. This information is available for all links you shorten using their service (even from the desktop). However, the Android client does come up short here by only showing per-link statistics and nothing for all links combined.

    Another unique feature on Android is the ability to schedule delayed tweets. This helps prevent users from flooding followers’ timelines and expand their account’s visibility over the day.

    HootSuite is available in the Android Market for $2.99 and a lite version is offered for free.

    The goods:

    • Free version includes multi-account support
    • High level of customization
    • Keyword tracking and notifications
    • Integrated stats with graphs
    • Threaded @replies

    Needs improvement:

    • Does not support native RT
    • Needs more link stats

    Final verdict:

    HootSuite is well known for its flexible and robust web interface, and their Android app lives up to that reputation. If you’re looking for a business-oriented Twitter client, HootSuite should be first on your list to try.




    Note: This review was submitted by Lane Montgomery as part of our app review contest.

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  • MapDroyd: True offline maps for your Android

    MapDroyd is a vector based map system for Android. It uses the GPS chip in your phone and its own map format to present you with a quick and easy map system. It is powered by OpenStreetView so it’s free.

    The great thing about its vector based maps is storage size. A map for a single state only takes less than 75 MB on your SD card. Vector based maps also allow for very detailed zooming.

    The last thing that makes this map app even better is that all maps are downloaded while you have a data connection (we suggest WiFi) and work when you are not connected or wish to save data roaming charges. So all you need to do is download a map for your state and go.

    The Good:
    • It’s free
    • OpenStreetMap is maintained by the mapping community so changes to maps can happen quickly
    • No data or roaming required
    • Major restaurants and gas stations are included in the map
    Needs improvement:
    • No Search (Shows where you are but won’t help you find if you don’t know where it is)
    • No routing or directions
    • No ability to move to a location by lattitude/longitude
    • No ability to save waypoints/place markers
    • Have to download a 2nd app ContentDroyd in order to download maps
    Final Verdict:

    This is app is perfect for someone who is traveling or doesn’t have access to a data plan because the maps are all right there. But if you have the data to burn, Google Maps is still the best map/navigation app there is.

    App Splash Screen.
    1st Map download screen that allows you to find maps for your continent.
    United States, select your state(s) to download maps.
    Download progress screen.
    Example of a high-level map.

    Note: This review was submitted by Aaron Bessey as part of our app review contest.

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  • Women’s Day march in San Antonio says ‘Ya Basta’ to abusive treatment of workers

    san_antonio_womens_rally.jpg

    By Chris Kutalik, Labor Notes

    Much like its storied sibling, International Labor Day (May 1), International Women’s Day often gets short shrift in the United States, its place of birth.

    But for 20 straight years women’s groups and allies in San Antonio,
    Texas have been raising the profile of Women’s Day — and a little
    hell — by taking to the streets. The march has grown steadily over the
    years, and close to 2,000 marched this Saturday, making it the largest
    and arguably the rowdiest such event in the country.

    The varied messages of the annual event reflect the broad coalition
    of groups that come together to plan it over several months of weekly women-only meetings. Women from the worker-run seamstress collective Fuerza Unida rub shoulders with younger Chicana feminists from the Esperanza Peace and Justice Center
    and women from a local university’s social work association and the
    Martinez Street Women’s Center. Banners bearing the Virgin of
    Guadalupe mix with signs showing old-time Latina labor leader Emma Tenayuca
    and those bearing slogans like “End NAFTA: Stop the Femicide in Juarez”
    (a reference to the many violent deaths stemming from the drug trade in
    that border city).

    Starting this year in front of downtown San Antonio’s massive
    1,000-room Grand Hyatt, this wide-ranging group placed the fight for
    women in the workplace center stage. For over a year now, a tight
    rank-and-file UNITE HERE-affiliated organizing committee has been
    plugging away at rallies, worker-community delegations, creative street
    actions, neighborhood outreach, and member-to-member organizing in an
    effort to get the hotel to back down from its aggressively anti-union
    campaign locally — and provide a neutral process for the workers to
    choose a union.

    Many of the committee’s stalwarts are women workers in the hotel’s
    housekeeping and laundry departments. And many of them are just plain
    tired and angry about their grinding workload.

    Iola Scott, a Grand Hyatt laundry worker and Katrina survivor,
    addressed the cheering crowd in front of the hotel: “Sometimes I work
    the [laundry] chute, pulling many pounds of filthy, contaminated
    linens, moving them and sorting them. The work is hard and heavy. I
    have pain when I’m working and I have pain when I’m home…and I have
    the medicine cabinet to prove it.

    “I’m proud of myself and my co-workers, because we are not just
    victims,” said Scott, referring to the committee’s linking its local
    fight to national efforts around hotel job injuries and lifting standards in the industry. “We are not afraid to fight back,” she said. “We are leaders in a
    campaign across the country to force companies like Hyatt to stop
    abusing and hurting women. And we invite all women to join in this
    struggle, because our fight is a fight for all women.”

    Chants of “Hyatt, Hyatt, What do you say? Stop abusing your workers
    today” echoed back from the towering hotel as the three-block-long
    march swung out into the wide street in front of it. Hotel workers
    waved from upstairs windows and cars and buses honked their horns in
    support as the march moved through downtown to Plaza del Zacate, a
    historic meeting spot in Milam Park for the city’s various protest
    movements.

    Chris Kutalik is a Labor Notes Policy Committee member who is
    helping organize UNITE HERE’s community unionism project in San
    Antonio. He can be reached at [email protected].

    (Photo by Chris Kutalik)

  • Bus drivers hold daylong strike at University of Alabama

    AlabamaBusStrike.jpg

    By Jake DaSilva, Labor Notes

    Bus drivers at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa struck Monday
    after nine months of bargaining left their employer — a contractor — still
    demanding at-will employment and frozen wages.

    On Monday morning about 60 drivers, members of Amalgamated Transit
    Union Local 1208, authorized a strike and took to the picket line to
    achieve a first contract.

    Student activists distributed flyers encouraging people not to ride
    buses driven by scabs. Just more than half the drivers honored the
    strike.

    Tia Brown, a steward, said drivers make only $9.50 per hour. “That
    is not a fair wage for people who have a commercial driver’s license,”
    she said.

    The university brought in scabs and had them drive university vans
    around the bus routes, but students had longer waiting times because so
    few buses made it out.

    By mid-afternoon a negotiator for the contracted bus operator, First
    Transit, called ATU International Vice President Kenneth Kirk and asked
    to hold negotiations immediately.

    The strike forced the company to come back to the table and drivers
    voted to come back to work. While they don’t have a clear victory yet,
    the drivers feel the company’s movement is a good sign. They also said
    that they would be willing to go right back out on strike if the
    contract offer does not improve.

    Small victories, big plans

    Strikers reported small successes, including convincing one scab to
    drive off after a confrontation. Two other workers who were going to
    cross the line took off their company jackets and joined the pickets. “Nothing’s ever going to change if you go in there and work for $9.50!”
    strikers yelled.

    The union’s members, officers, and staff are predominantly Black and
    their fight has given labor struggle a visibility not normally accorded
    to unions and workers in the Deep South.

    The drivers at the University of Alabama formed their union last
    summer, fed up with low wages, a lack of benefits, and inadequate time
    off. Their vote was unanimous.

    Since that time First Transit, a UK-based multinational, has been
    stalling in negotiations. The drivers have met with negotiators several
    times but the offers have been abysmal.

    First Transit offered the drivers either less than they are getting
    currently or about the same in wages and benefits. The company says its
    contract with the university mandates at-will employment. The union has
    filed several unfair labor practice charges over the company’s firing
    workers for union activity. ATU represents 12,000 workers nationwide at
    First Transit.

    “This campaign is about fair play for all,” said Kenneth Crout, a driver and member.

    The union used a Freedom of Information Act request to reveal that
    the university pays $55 an hour per driver to First Transit, helping
    its parent company score a $200 million profit through the first half
    of last year.

    Drivers at the University of Texas, also under contract with First Transit, make $11.75 an hour starting pay and top out at $17.

    The disparity came to light on Alabama’s campus as the two schools
    prepared to face off at the Rose Bowl, college football’s championship
    game.

    “It upset a whole lot of people to find out how badly the drivers
    were being treated,” said Clayton Sinyai, ATU’s director of strategic
    campaigns.

    Students leapt on the opportunity to support the drivers. Students
    for a Democratic Society is phone-banking, collecting petitions,
    talking to riders on the buses, and writing letters to the student
    newspaper. Together with documentary filmmaker Ginger Jolly and members
    of the Student Labor Action Movement, they’re making a YouTube
    documentary about the bus drivers’ fight for a living wage.

    West Alabama’s union community has pulled together to support the
    drivers, too. The powerful Steelworkers Local 351L has given ATU space
    at their hall for its base of operations.

    Student activists and the union have targeted Robert Witt, the University of Alabama’s president. Like countless administrators only too eager to outsource responsibility
    for the wages and working conditions of people working on their
    campuses, he has refused to acknowledge the hundreds and hundreds of
    expressions of support for the drivers.

    Recently union members and officials held a meeting with student
    activists to discuss ways to increase the pressure on First Transit,
    including by holding peaceful protests on campus.

    “We’ve seen increasing numbers of private contractors coming in to
    provide service, and this one has come in with the most hostile
    attitude,” Sinyai said. “They used a lot of orthodox union-busting at
    first, and they are still the most difficult to work with on wages and
    working conditions.”

    Jake Da Silva is a graduate student in Library and Information Studies at the University of Alabama and works with the Student Labor Action Movement.

  • Saving the Gadget? The Dilemma of an Android Fanatic.

    The following is an opinion piece from one of our readers, Lars Aronsson.

    That things progress very quickly in the world of mobile technology is no secret: there’s always something bigger, better, faster and more powerful around the corner. In the last 15 years, cell-phones have gone from being a rather exclusive gadget, to a necessity of modern living that you wouldn’t leave home without. Since smartphones can do so much, and they keep getting a wider range of uses, it’s sometimes easy to get gadget envy and crave that last superphone that just came out.

    As you all may know, the grass is often greener on the other side, and I for one can get so intrigued by a new handset that I just got to have it – even though the one that’s in my pocket right now is more than adequate and only a couple of months old. How fast things move forward on the smartphone scene perhaps became more apparent than ever with the recent launch of the Android device HTC Desire at MWC in Barcelona. HTC’s latest Android beast is basically another version of the Nexus One, with a few improvements.

    I bought the HTC Hero unlocked in late September last year when it was fairly new, for the equivalent of $625. In a couple of weeks, the HTC Desire will start selling in Europe.  I can soon get a phone with a more state of the art version of my favorite mobile OS, a 16% larger screen with 2.5 times higher resolution, an improved and more advanced display technology, an almost twice as fast processor and the double amount of RAM. On top of that, for good measures, I’d get a stereo FM radio with RDS as well, only six months after buying the HTC Hero. And I would get all this for the same amount as the Hero back in September. That’s quick progress.  If Apple only had been able to match this impressive rate of development, I just might have had an interest for the technologically inferior iPhone.

    I would lie if I didn’t say I desired the Desire, and I did consider buying it for a while. Even though I have more important things to spend my money on, like food and shelter (it all depends on how you prioritize, of course – true phone fanatics may beg to differ). But then I thought; do I actually need a new device? What’s wrong with the Hero? Sure, it would be really nice to browse the web and watch pictures and movies on that huge and vivid AMOLED display. I could play games with great hardware accelerated 3-D graphics; the entire system would be a lot faster with that Snapdragon CPU and multi-tasking would be smoother thanks to the massive amount of RAM. I could enjoy all this longer without recharging as well, since both the processor and the display have power saving features. But do I really need all this? No. The Hero can do most of what the Desire can (especially when the Éclair update arrives), albeit on a smaller scale.

    It’s a bit nuts, but I have bought three new devices in less than a year – two of them in the high-end. For each new handset, I’ve thought: this is the last phone I’m going to need for a very long time. But then something new and exciting pops-up that totally geeks me out. However, I think I finally have moved beyond yearning for the greener Google on the other side of the digital river. I’d say it’s time to, in the spirit of John Lennon, start living in the moment and enjoy what I have here today, instead of always wanting something more (at least when it comes to gadgets, one step at a time).

    Voices have been raised against Google and affiliates for pushing out new and better products too frequently: the Motorola Droid was released in early November 2009, soon thereafter the Nexus One arrived and now the HTC Desire is the current Android pièce de résistance. I fail to see why this is a bad thing. When you buy a new gadget, no matter when, it’s bound to soon be upstaged by a more advanced one, anyway. It’s always been like that.

    I do understand why some people can get a bit stressed about the frequent upgrades, though. It’s hard enough just to keep up with all the new releases, let alone actually having the latest and greatest device out there. Doing so will probably just give you an ulcer and a hole in your wallet.

    Instead, I think one ought to applaud the ingenuity that keep pushing technology forward, enjoy the device you have, and rest assured that when you eventually feel it’s time to upgrade – total awesomeness will be there waiting for you. I think yearly or even biyearly upgrades generally are sensible choices – and the longer you wait, the more you’ll get.

    Do you recognize yourself in my battle against spending way too much money on gadgets? Does it all depend on how big a phone nerd you are? How often do you upgrade to a new device? My biggest challenge will probably be to resist the rumored Enterprise version of the Nexus One (if it ever comes out), sporting a hardware QWERTY keyboard. I quiver already…

    I am determined to not buy a new device for all 2010, and if I’m truly good at my new philosophical, Zen-like approach to technological advances, I will not even want to buy one either. Will I succeed? Only time will tell.

    Lars Aronsson

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  • Keep Valentine’s Day Romance Throughout the Year

    By Guest Blogger Dawn Meisch

    While the traditional gifts of Valentine’s Day of flowers and candy are wonderful, this year surprise your special someone with a gift that will last throughout the year. It’s important to show our loved ones we care the entire year, not just one one day. Thoughtful ideas to create more romance throughout the year will be more appreciated than a one-time gift of a candy heart and a bouquet of roses.

    There are many gift options that keep the fire going all year long.

    Image: istockphoto

    Image: istockphoto

    A “Love Note” Mailbox – Buy a small mailbox with a usable flag, and use it to leave love notes to your certain someone. Leave a message that says “I Love You” the day before an important meeting or to leave clues for a scavenger hunt with a gift at the end. Be sure to let your Valentine know that the flag in the up position means that they’ve got mail.

    Monthly Tea or Coffee Blend – Sign your loved one up for a Coffee or Tea of the Month Club. Tuck a gift message into a special mug in a holiday color like Sengware’s Pimento letting him or her know what to expect in the coming months. Whether your special someone prefers coffee or tea, they will appreciate the thoughtful gift each month when their selection arrives.

    Magazine Subscription – Almost every hobby has a magazine dedicated to it. Buy one issue and let your recipient know that it will be coming for the next year. Each time they get one in the mail, they will be happy as they remember you wanted to give them something important to them.

    Learn Something Together – Sign you and your Valentine up for a class for a unique way to spend time together and learn something in the process. Many community colleges offer continuing education classes on subjects such as Wine Tasting, Cooking, or Foreign Languages. City or county recreational departments also have offerings in various subjects of interest. After the class is finished, practicing a new skill is a great way to spend time together.

    Time Saving Dinnerware – If your significant other loves to entertain, you may know that planning a successful party takes time and effort. Save your significant other time with Sengware dinnerware which he or she will love for its ease of use and the ability to can go from the freezer to the oven to the table.

    Living Plants or Herbs – An herb or plant garden can bring enjoyment throughout the year. Give your special person a herb growing kit or a living plant. Choose hardy native plants if it will be transferred outside when spring arrives or select something hardy like bamboo or cactus that requires little work to maintain.

    Use your these ideas and your imagination to select a gift for your loved one this year. It will be sure to be special when your Valentine realizes the thought and care that went into choosing their gift. They will feel appreciated and special when reminded of your love by the gifts that continue to give throughout the year.

    Post from: Blisstree

    Keep Valentine’s Day Romance Throughout the Year

  • VOICES: Haiti, hell and hope

    By Bill Quigley

    Smoke and flames rose from the sidewalk. A
    white man took pictures. Slowing down, my breath left me. The fire was
    a corpse. Leg bones sticking out of the flames.


    Port-au-Prince police headquarters is gone, already bulldozed. A
    nearby college is pancaked. Government buildings are destroyed. Stores
    fallen down. Tens of thousands of buildings destroyed. Hundreds of
    thousands homeless.


    Giant piles of concrete, rebar, metal pipes, plastic pipes, doors and wires.


    Corpses are still inside many of the mountains of rubble. No estimates of how many thousands of people are dead inside.  

     

    Electrical poles bend over streets, held up by braids of thick
    black wires. On some side streets the wires are still down in the
    street.  


    Buildings take unimaginable shapes. Some are half up while
    the other side slopes to the ground. Some like collapsed cakes. Others
    smashed like children’s toys.

     
    Everywhere are sheet shelters. In parks, soccer fields, in the
    parking lot of the TV station, tens of thousands literally in the streets and on sidewalks.

     

    Thousands of people standing in the hot sun waiting their turn. Outside the hospital, clinics, money transfer companies, immigration
    offices, and the very few places offering water or food.


    Troops and heavy machinery are only seen in the center of the city.

     

    After days in Port-au-Prince I have seen only one fight — two teens
    fighting on a streetcorner over a young woman. No riots. No machetes.

     

    Hope is found in the people of Haiti. Despite no
    electricity, little shelter, minimal food and no real goverment or
    order, people are helping one another survive.

     
    Men and boys are scavenging useful items from the mounds of fallen buildings. Women are selling
    mangoes and nuts on the street. Teens are playing with babies.

     

    Beautiful hymns are lifted as choirs calling to God in every sheet
    camp every evening. People pray constantly. The strikingly beautiful
    tap tap cabs trumpet In God We Trust or Merci Jesus on bright colors.

     

    Everyone needs tents and food and medical care and water.
     But when you talk to them, most will lead you to the ailing great
    grandma or the malnourished child.


    What should
    outsiders do?, I asked Lavarice Gaudin. Lavarice, who helps the St.
    Clares community feed thousands each day through their What If
    Foundation, said, “Help the most poor first. Some who labored their
    whole lives to make a one bedroom home will likely never have a home
    again. Haiti needs everything. But we need it with a plan. Pressure the
    Haitian government, pressure USAID to help the poorest.”

    International volunteers who work hand in hand with Haitians are welcomed. Others not so much

    Lavarice saw the Associated Press story that reported only one penny
    of every U.S. aid dollar will go directly in cash to needy Haitians. “I
    can understand that they distrust the government, but why not distribute
    aid through the churches and good community organizations?”

    “We hope this will help us develop strong leadership that listens and responds to the people.”
     
    “No matter what, we will never give up. Haitians are strong, hopeful people. We will rebuild.”

    A frequent contributor to Facing South and other
    online publications, Bill Quigley is a long-time advocate for human rights in Haiti and
    a veteran of the post-Katrina recovery. He sent this dispatch
    from Haiti this morning.

  • Celebrate Unbirthdays with Friends & Family

    By Guest Blogger Dawn Meisch

    If you want to plan a party, but no holidays are on the horizon, throw an “Unbirthday Party”. This celebration is hosted on a regular day when it is not the birthday of any of the guests. The party is an amusing way to get together with friends or family and have plenty of fun.

    Invitations and Expectations
    One way to get everyone in the mood for the party is to send out invitations. Invitations should not only include the date, time and place, but also instructions for what to wear and what to bring. Instruct guests to wear something they’d never wear to their own birthday party or to come wearing a peculiar hat, and they should bring a small gift they would like to receive themselves.

    Image: istockphoto

    Image: istockphoto

    Delightful Decorations
    When decorating for this type of party, anything goes. Be unpredictable with your decor. Hang a Happy Birthday Banner upside down. If you’re feeling extra whimsical, securely hang a candelabra or a vase upside down from your ceiling. Perch craft store birds in strategic places throughout your home with phrases like “Happy UnBirthday” or even “Tweet” coming from their beaks.

    Your table setting is a fantastic and easy place to continue the theme of your party. The dinnerware you serve on should be as fun as your party. Pfaltzgraff has a wide variety of eye-catching patterns that are sure to add to the offbeat atmosphere of your party. Since they are dishwasher safe, they make cleaning up super quick. Place flatware upside down on the table or place them under your Pfaltzgraff dinnerware instead of next to it.

    Magnificent Menu
    Your menu may vary depending on what time of day it is, but be sure that you have appetizers ready for guests who may arrive early. Something easy like hummus with pita chips or bean dip and guacamole with corn chips. Offer guests a glass of wine or pink lemonade for non-drinkers. Easy do-it-yourself meals are perfect for this type of party. Set up a taco bar or a chili bar with all the ingredients necessary, and let guests make their own creations. Include some wacky items like chocolate sprinkles or powdered sugar with the available fixings.

    Fun and Frolic
    Before your guests arrive, place a few single use cameras around the room and encourage guests to pick it up and take pictures at whim. If you’d rather stay all digital, ask guests to bring their digital cameras in your invitation. Set up a “Posing Station” where your friends can pose for their unbirthday photo. Have things like an empty picture frames, a stuffed parrot or an oversized martini glass to use as props. Once dinner is finished, have everyone gather around with their gifts. Have your guests unwrap their own presents. Since it’s not their birthday, they can buy something for themselves. If your guests are the board game type, choose a few games to play. If not, just let guests mingle and have fun.

    Hosting an Unbirthday party can be work, but the laughter of your friends will make it all worthwhile. Let loose and let your inner silliness take over, and you will enjoy yourself even more. The most important thing is to enjoy your party and have fun.

    Post from: Blisstree

    Celebrate Unbirthdays with Friends & Family

  • Make Holidays Meaningful with Family Traditions

    By Guest Blogger Dawn Meisch

    Traditions are significant and an important part of the holidays. They help us connect with our families, create cherished memories, and make the holidays more meaningful. I have special memories of my own family’s holiday traditions from when I was a child. When my husband and I started our own family, we wanted to make new traditions of our own.

    Each Christmas season, we add to the family holiday scrapbook which we have kept since our child was born. We have also bought her an ornament each year for the tree. Last year, we started a new tradition of buying holiday pajamas to wear on Christmas Eve.

    Image: istockphoto

    Image: istockphoto

    Starting your own family tradition is easy and fun. Here are a few ideas to get you started:

    Personal Ornament – Purchase a special ornament for each member of the family symbolizing his or her interests or accomplishments the year before. Many malls have Christmas stores open during the holiday season with a range of ornaments catering to almost any interest.

    Holiday Pajamas – Each year either buy new or wear a favorite pair of special holiday-themed pajamas on the eve of your holiday. Sitting around in cozy Christmas PJs with a warm cider in our hands is one of our favorite things to do after our daughter has gone to bed on Christmas Eve.

    Cookie Swap – Exchanging cookies and other treats is a great way to incorporate the giving spirit of the holiday season. Have your friends come over for a desert swap, bringing their own batches of cookies to share. Set up a special table with a festive tablecloth and some great holiday plates. Noritake has great holiday tableware, like the Aria Christmas and Palace Christmas patterns that will make your cookies look as good as they taste.

    Holiday Volunteering – If you are looking for a way to bring meaning to the holiday season, helping out others is a good way. There are many opportunities to help those in need. Visit an nursing home to sing carols or just talk to the residents there, or bring toys to patients in a children’s hospital, or help serve food in a soup kitchen.

    Holiday Movie or Story Night – Choose a favorite movie, wear your holiday pajamas, and watch it together. Don’t forget to make some hot cocoa and cookies. If movies aren’t your thing, have a family member read his or her favorite holiday story.

    Festive Music – Whatever your holiday celebrations entail, be sure to include some favorites music during your holiday activities. Pandora.com has some holiday stations that play a variety of holiday music, from Christmas pop tunes to classical masterpieces.

    Yearly Scrapbook – There are many ways to preserve memories for upcoming years. Save photos in one particular holiday book, or use a pamphlet stitch to bind holiday cards together into a booklet. Family members could write their favorite moments from the holiday that year or save their favorite recipes. Next year, pull out the scrapbook and reminisce about past holiday moments together.

    Use one of these suggestions or come up with new holiday traditions of your own to celebrate the spirit of the holiday season. Togetherness and spending quality time with loved ones always creates special memories that will be appreciated for years to come.

    Post from: Blisstree

    Make Holidays Meaningful with Family Traditions