Category: News

  • African Vegetable Soup with Coconut( Soup – Vegetable )

    Daily Random Recipe

    INGREDIENTS:

      • 2 T vegetable oil
      • 1 large onion
      • 175 g / 6 oz each turnip, sweet potato and pumpkin, peeled and cubed
      • 1 t marjoram
      • 1 1/2 t each ground ginger and cinnamon
      • Salt and pepper to taste
      • 1 T chopped spring onion
      • 1.2 L / 2 pints vegetable stock
      • 2 T flaked almonds
      • 1 fresh chilli de-seeded and chopped
      • 1 t unrefined sugar
      • 115 g / 4 oz creamed coconut

    METHOD:

    In a large saucepan heat the oil, add the onion and cook it gently for 4-5 minutes. Add the cubed vegetables and toss them over a medium heat for a further 5-6 minutes. Add the marjoram, ginger, cinnamon, salt and pepper and cook together over a low heat for 10 minutes stirring frequently.

    Add the spring onion, stock, flaked almonds, chilli and sugar and simmer gently for 10-15 minutes until the vegetables are just tender. Check the seasoning. Grate the creamed coconut into the soup and stir well. Garnish with chopped coriander or parsley and serve.

  • Apple Pondering Music Streaming?

    CNET is reporting Apple is in an “advanced” stage of talks with music service Lala, according to a pair of sources, one of which asserts that terms have already been agreed upon. If so, such a deal could portend big changes in how the iTunes Store does business.

    Lala launched in 2006 as a CD trading website, followed by more permanent changes to its business model. Lala now sells DRM-free MP3s for as little 89 cents, as well as “web songs” for 10 cents. According to Lala, a “web song is a song that lives on the Internet,” that dime getting you unlimited number of plays from a web browser, which isn’t a micro-subscription at all. Yeah, this sounds exactly like what Apple is interested in.

    Since the inception of the iTunes Store, Apple has been unequivocal in its opinion of music subscriptions—by any name—and often that non-equivocation has come from Steve Jobs. In a 2003 interview with Rolling Stone, the Apple CEO explained the intrinsic problem with “web songs,” that you don’t own your own music. He then added this Jobsian gem.

    I think you could make available the Second Coming in a subscription model and it might not be successful.

    So has Steve Jobs suddenly found his infinite plays of his own Personal Jesus by Depeche Mode for just ten cents? It seems unlikely. More likely, Apple may be interested in Lala because Google is interested. Lala recently partnered with Google for the search giant’s music service, and more recently Google acquired AdMob. Shortly before that acquisition, Apple was supposedly in talks with AdMob. However, while buying AdMob might have kept Google away from the App Store, Apple buying Lala won’t stop Google from seeding the Internet cloud with music.

    There is another possibility, though. Lala also has a Music Mover service that lets users upload their collection and make it available “anywhere on the web.” Like an iPhone. At least, that would be the theory, though the reality of AT&T’s network might be a problem. Another problem to consider, at least for Apple, is what’s the point of buying a 32GB iPhone if 20GB of your music is in the cloud? It’s that latter issue that makes this a curious move for Apple, if a purchase of Lala is indeed Apple’s next move.


  • Deal with garden moles

    The good news is that you don’t always have to deal with garden moles. Many moles are actually useful garden pals. They munch on harmful bugs that will hurt your plants and they even improve soil through aeration. Plus to be honest, I think they’re kind of cute.

    mole

    Some moles are a problem though. Here in the Northwest where I live a common mole is the Townsend’s mole (I believe the largest mole in North America) and this guy does eat quite a lot of garden goods and vegetation along with bugs.

    Other problems moles may cause include eating up your beneficial earthworms, pulling up little seedlings, disfiguring your lawn – although make sure that a mole is your actual problem. Sometimes gophers and /or field mice cause damage and it looks like a mole did it.

    To fix your mole problems:

    First make sure you need to get rid of your mole. If he’s not being a problem – i.e not munching on your plants badly you may want him around. Mole damage is only really noticeable if you have a lawn so having only garden plots and no lawn is one way around this. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife has an excellent piece on Practicing Mole Tolerance that I highly suggest reading.

    If you like your lawn better than the mole though you can try planting hyacinths and castor oil plants which moles don’t like or try a castor oil repellent. Castor oil repellents only have a so-so success level, but it’s a non-toxic way to go so try it first. After that you can try wire mesh or let your dog cruise the garden. If using wire mesh (1/4-inch mesh) bury it about 20 inches deep around the perimeter of your garden plot or lawn. My local Oregon extension notes that people with dogs report fewer mole issues, so maybe dogs scare them off.

    Lethal mole trapping, poisoning and stunning all seem extreme in my opinion plus in some states you need a permit from the Department of Wildlife and Fish to do so. PLUS you could catch an innocent animal or even a family pet. Lethal is lethal to all small animals not just moles so I’d think long and hard before going that route.

    Do you have useful garden moles or pesky ones?

    [image via wiki commons]

    Post from: Blisstree

    Deal with garden moles

  • The Language Of ‘Piracy’ As A Spectacle

    I’ve discussed in the past why I’m not thrilled about the use of the word “piracy,” even as it has become rather standard for describing unauthorized file sharing. It’s inaccurate, and is used by the entertainment industry to paint a picture of pure evil, where a more nuanced and accurate view might help. At the same time, with the rise of “The Pirate Party” in various countries, a group of folks have tried to take the word back — but I still wonder if the name limits the party’s upside, even as it may have enabled some of the initial attention (and vote-getting ability).

    That said, Nancy Baym points us to an interesting analysis of piracy in the context of “language of spectacle”, by Gabriella Coleman, and how that can help drive political messages and involvement:


    But what keeps me interested in the politics of piracy is how it can speak the language of spectacle, which can be a powerful tactic and technique for broadcasting a political message. Here I’m just paraphrasing and cribbing the work of Stephen Duncombe, who has argued, I think quite persuasively, that we cannot rely solely on reasoned debate for building political programs. Duncombe does not argue that we must toss out rationality and truth seeking (these are absolutely necessary) but notes how on their own or if not clothed in some other cloak, they may not be enough to convey and compel, especially in this day of total media saturation. Or to put a but more poetically by him “Reality needs fantasy to render it desirable, just as fantasy needs reality to make it believable.”

    Much (though not all) of contemporary digital piracy follows the logic of spectacle. It builds and conveys a fantastical drama of right and wrong, of new possibilities, of freedom from the noose of the law; it signals and speaks to the thrill and fun in twisting, even breaking, existing structures and constraints; and provides a window into another way of acting/behaving. In many cases what it provides is a commons (and I will be exploring it in depth in my class next semester on the commons) and many folks, I imagine, turn to piracy simply for the free stuff, and a number of them come out of the other side transformed into copy fighters willing to engage in a politics beyond sharing stuff and waving the pirate flag.

    It’s an interesting thought, and it gets me thinking. Folks like Bill Patry make compelling arguments that the use of moral panics and folk devils with words like “piracy” distort the debate in negative ways, but Coleman suggests that by embracing that term, people may be able to build a stronger case on this particular issue. Which seems more compelling? Or is it a combination of both?

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  • Sensationalism can divert empathy toward wrong causes: cancer and malnutrition being the ones that suffer

    But there is a more general impact by information providers in biasing the representation of the world one gets from the delivered information. It is a fact that our brain tends to go for superficial clues when it comes to risk and probability, these clues being largely determined by what emotions they elicit or the ease with which they come to mind.

    In addition to such problems with the perception of risk, it is also a scientific fact, and a shocking one, that both risk detection and risk avoidance are not mediated in the "thinking" part of the brain but largely in the emotional one (the "risk as feelings" theory). The consequences are not trivial: It means that rational thinking has little, very little, to do with risk avoidance.

    Much of what rational thinking seems to do is rationalize one’s actions by fitting some logic to them.
    In that sense the description coming from journalism is certainly not just an unrealistic representation of the world but rather the one that can fool you the most by grabbing your attention via your emotional apparatus-the cheapest to deliver sensation.

    Take the mad cow "threat" for example: Over a decade of hype, it only killed people (in the highest estimates) in the hundreds as compared to car accidents (several hundred thousands1)-except that the journalistic description of the latter would not be commercially fruitful. (Note that the risk of dying from food poisoning or in a car accident on the way to a restaurant is greater than dying from mad cow disease.)

    This sensationalism can divert empathy toward wrong causes: cancer and malnutrition being the ones that suffer the most from the lack of such attention. Malnutrition in Africa and Southeast Asia no longer causes the emotional impact – so it literally dropped out of the picture. In that sense the mental probabilistic map in one’s mind is so geared toward the sensational that one would realize informational gains by dispensing with the news.

    From

    Fooled by Randomness
    Nassim Nicholas Taleb
    Penguin Books/Random House 2007

  • Let Them Sing… About Copyright?

    Shocklee points us to an awesome little app that lets you type in whatever lyrics (or, well, words) you want, hit play, and whatever you type will be sung for you, using clips from various famous songs. It’s a really fun little app (though, I was amused that they have no clip for the word “lyrics” despite the service being all about lyrics) and can get pretty addictive. In fact, if you want to hear this entire post sung outloud via this system, just click here (please note, this will take a really long time to load, but it’s totally worth it). However, like with many other cool music projects, I’m left wondering whether or not some would consider this to be copyright infringement. All of the clips are tiny — one word, or in many cases, less than a full word, but they do seem to come from various popular and well-known songs. It’s not hard to identify some of them. I have no idea if the company behind this service cleared all the licenses (it’s possible), but if that’s the case, you’d have to imagine that this service would get ridiculously expensive very quickly. If a simple lyric of, say, 8 words, involves a dozen clips, with royalties needing to be paid for each, such a service would quickly become impossible. Doesn’t it say something when copyright law would effectively outlaw an awesome and fun app like this one?

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  • Health Canada Recalls Lot of Zaditen Tabs

    PRESS RELEASE – Health Canada

    One Lot of Zaditen Tablets (for Asthma) Recalled Due to Potential Health Risks

    Internet-News_NC

    OTTAWA – Health Canada is advising consumers that Montreal-based Paladin Labs Inc., the manufacturer of the prescription asthma drug Zaditen, is recalling lot #440494, which is packaged as blisters of 14 – 1mg tablets. Lot #440494 has been found to have less of its active pharmaceutical ingredient (ketotifen) than indicated on the label. An active pharmaceutical ingredient is a substance or mixture of substances in a drug that delivers the therapeutic benefit to a patient.

    Use of product from lot #440494 could result in different adverse events due to decreased effectiveness. Individuals currently stabilized on Zaditen may notice a worsening of their asthma symptoms and could also experience side effects related to an unnecessary increase in the dose of their other asthma medications.

    Canadians who are taking Zaditen tablets should check the lot number found on the blister packaging. If the tablets are from lot #440494, consumers are advised not to use them and to consult their pharmacist for replacement Zaditen tablets or their physician if they have new or worsening symptoms. Unused tablets from the affected lots should be returned to the pharmacist.

    Zaditen is indicated as an add-on medication in the chronic treatment of mild atopic asthmatic children and comes in tablet or syrup form. Only tablets from lot # 440494 are affected by this recall.

    To date, no adverse reactions from the use of this product have been reported in Canada.

    Consumers requiring more information about this advisory can contact Health Canada’s public enquiries line at (613) 957-2991, or toll free at 1-866-225-0709.

    ~~~

    Image: Newscom.com

    Post from: Blisstree

    Health Canada Recalls Lot of Zaditen Tabs

  • TV Exec Upset When Daughter Doesn’t Want To Bring TV To College

    Just about a year ago, ABC TV exec Anne Sweeney was telling people at CES that they were in the providing good content business, and she wanted to see it delivered however people wanted to watch it, on whatever device they wanted. But, it’s a little more difficult to apply that message to her own family, apparently. In the opening to an article about the whole “web vs. TV” debate (as if there really is one) in light of the Comcast/NBC deal, the piece opens with a story about Sweeney forcing her daughter to bring a television to college, despite the younger Sweeney’s protests that she had no need for a TV:


    “Mom, you don’t understand. I don’t need it,” her 19-year-old responded, saying she could watch whatever she wanted on her computer, at no charge….

    “You’re going to have a television if I have to nail it to your wall,” she told her daughter, according to comments she made at a Reuters event this week. “You have to have one.”

    Perhaps it’s time to recognize that more and more people don’t need a TV?

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  • PS3 version of Madden NFL 10 patched

    Heads up, Madden fanatics! EA Sports has just released the second patch of Madden NFL 10. The patch is now available on the PlayStation 3 with the Xbox version sceduled to arive late next week. It includes

  • Washington Post Learns The Importance Of Fact Checking… And Reading The Comments

    On November 26th (Thanksgiving), the Washington Post put up an article about the group Public Enemy and its efforts to help the homeless in DC. Nice enough. However, there was one oddity in the article. It claimed that the band’s famous song 911 is a Joke was about the attacks of September 11th. Yes, this is a song that was released in 1990. And if you’ve ever heard it, you know that it’s about the phone number you call for emergencies. I mean the first line of the song is “I dialed 911 a long time ago….”.

    Now, I guess this is a mistake that anyone could make if they were totally unfamiliar with Public Enemy or its music — but you would think that someone writing an article about the band would at least learn a little about the music it released. Furthermore, we’re constantly told about how the mainstream press is important because they have fact checkers. Apparently, they took Thanksgiving off.

    But, a bigger point is brought forth by Mathew Ingram who points out that people in the comments of the article pointed out the mistake really quickly and it took an entire week for the Washington Post to get around to making a correction.

    Now, everyone makes mistakes now and again, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but it does demonstrate a few things. Just claiming you have fact checkers doesn’t make you significantly more accurate at times. Separately, we’ve pointed out in the past how bad newspapers seem to be with actually engaging with commenters on their site, and this highlights why they’re making a big mistake. Yes, it’s work. Yes, sometimes there can be a lot of junk in the comments, but you can also learn a lot — such as when you’ve made a huge mistake.

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  • 2009 LA Auto Show Wrap Up

    Filed under:

    Did you miss our coverage of the 2009 LA Auto Show? Don’t know where to look to find it? No worries. We’ve assembled the best parts for you below, and you can visit our LA Auto Show page to view every last piece of coverage we did.

    THE CARS

    Allard J2X MkII
    Gallery
    | Post
    Audi e-tron
    Gallery
    | Post
    Audi R8 Spyder
    Gallery
    | Post
    2011 Cadillac CTS Coupe
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Chevrolet Cruze
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Chevrolet Volt
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Dodge Viper
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Ford Fiesta
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Ford Mustang V6
    Gallery | Post
    Honda P-NUT Concept
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Hyundai Sonata
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Hyundai Tucson
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Infiniti G
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Infiniti M
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Kia Sorento
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Mazda2
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Porsche Boxster Spyder
    Gallery | Post
    2010 Range Rover Sport Autobiography
    Gallery | Post
    2010 Scion xB Release Series 7.0
    Gallery | Post
    2010 Spyker Aileron C8 Spyder
    Gallery | Post
    2010 Subaru WRX STI Special Edition
    Gallery | Post
    Toyota Prius Plug-In
    Gallery | Post
    2011 Toyota Sienna
    Gallery | Post
    Toyota Billabong Venza
    Gallery | Post
    2011 VW Final Edition New Beetle
    Gallery | Post
    VW Up! Lite Concept
    Gallery | Post

    THE NEWS

    LA 2009: Maximum Bob, Maximum Live Blog
    We’re here in the City of Angels to watch Fritz Henderson deliver GM’s keynote address to all us media types here at LA Auto Show. Only thing is, Fritz resigned yesterday, and for some reason interim CEO Ed Whitacre will not be delivering the keynote. Which can only mean one thing — GM’s Vice Chairman of Marketing and Communications Bob Lutz will be delivering the opening address.
    LA 2009: Ford Taurus and Volvo XC60 named International Car and Truck of the Year
    Hold onto your hats folks, because while magazine award ceremonies appear to be just about finished, the auto show trophies are just starting to be handed out. This time, it’s the International Car of the Year at the LA Auto Show, and we’ve got two winners from within the Ford empire. The Ford …
    LA 2009: Audi A3 TDI named 2010 Green Car of the Year in diesel repeat
    At the LA Auto Show this morning, the Audi A3 TDI was crowned the 2010 Green Car of the Year, wresting the title away from last year’s winner, the Volkswagen Jetta TDI. Even though three hybrids made this year’s list of finalists, the A3’s win marks the second year in a row that a TDI diesel car …
    LA 2009: Lexus LFA wireframe cutaway wows us
    Wow. Lexus brought their new LFA supercar to the LA Auto Show this year. That might not seem particularly wow-worthy, but it definitely becomes more surprising when you hear that they actually brought an LFA and a half. While a white LFA was happily humming along, spinning slowly on a rotating …
    “Viridian Joule” picked as winner of Chevy Volt Paint Color Contest
    The votes have been cast, the tallies tallied and the winner determined: Viridian Joule will be the official name of the silvery-green hue as seen on a slew of Chevrolet Volt marketing material for what seems like the last decade or so. So, um, what does Viridian Joule mean? We’ll let the winner …


    BUT WAIT, THERE’S MORE…

    2009 LA Auto Show Wrap Up originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 19:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Apple Fighting Macpro In Australia, Despite Is Using That Name For 26 Years

    Reader mick alerts us to a legal fight in Australia with Apple working hard to stop computer firm Macpro from being able to keep its name. The company has been in business since 1983, prior to Apple introducing the Macintosh (which happened in early 1984). In other words, Macpro should have priority on the name. When Apple tried to register a trademark on Mac Pro, Macpro opposed it and won, but Apple keeps fighting, and Macrpo’s boss thinks the company is just trying to force them into bankruptcy with legal bills (he’s already spent $200,000). He says he’s offered reasonable settlements to Apple, but gets no response. Again, given Apple’s early trademark fight with the Beatle’s Apple Corp., you might think that it would be sensitive to bullying other companies over trademark issues… but apparently Apple thinks different(ly).

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  • LA 2009: Random beauty in the City of Angels

    Filed under: ,

    Just some of the beauty in LA – Click above for high-res image gallery

    With the state of the economy, it didn’t come as much of a surprise that manufacturer presence was down at the LA Auto Show this year. The carmakers that did show up, however, brought their “A Game” – mostly. As much as that was true for new vehicle introductions, it also applied to the deployment of booth professionals as well.

    Many booths didn’t hire models this year, unfortunately, and companies that have traditionally been reliable sources of model employment weren’t even here in 2009. We’re looking at you, Ferrari, Lamborghini and Maserati. Still, it was nice to see even a few smiling faces while we scoured the darkened halls of the LA Convention Center trying in our obsessive search for postworthy material.

    While we didn’t encounter many spokesmodels, we did find a lot of beauty in the City of Angels. We’ve assembled a small gallery of random shots and artsy-fartsy images to give all of you a taste of this year’s show from LA. Click below to see our small but satisfying high-res gallery.

    Photos copyright (C)2009 Frank Filipponio/Weblogs, Inc.

    LA 2009: Random beauty in the City of Angels originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 19:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 12.4.09

    Cornell’s SAE Baja buggy helps us get even with would-be alma mater

    Ten horsepower may not seem like much, but Cornell’s team of student engineers created a carbon fiber Baja buggy that has to be driven to be believed. And we did just that.

    Spy Shots: Baby Buick sedan caught in Germany

    Buick’s working on a new compact car for 2012, and after yesterday’s impromptu release of a teaser sketch, our spy shooters have caught the Baby Buick testing across the pond.

    Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 12.4.09 originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Nissan updates Qashqai crossover – and no, we’re still not gonna get it

    Filed under: , ,

    2010 Nissan Qashqai – click above for high-res image gallery

    The Nissan Qashqai has a silly name. Though not as silly as the Qashqai+2, the seven-seat version of the British built small CUV. But silly name not withstanding, the slightly smaller than a Nissan Rogue compact crossover has been something of a sales phenom for Nissan, selling more than 500,000 copies around the world since 2007 despite not being offered in the North American market.

    For the 2010 model year, some things are changing, and some aren’t. The biggest and most obvious difference is the front end, which is all-new and quite handsome looking. We especially like the sculpted lower fascia and intake. And while it is slightly smaller than the Rogue we do have in America, the Qashqai (named after a nomadic Iranian tribe) looks tougher. In the rear, the song remains largely the same, though the taillights have been slightly revised. The colors you see here are both new — Magnetic Red and Mineral Gray.

    Inside, functionality is up with a new dash computer, gauges, lighting and “oddments” storage. Refinement is also up, with more baffling in place to reduce NVH, along with a revised windscreen and A-pillars to cut wind noise. The suspension has also been redesigned to improve both ride comfort and handling. All in all, the Qashqai looks to be a pretty tasty package. But you can almost set your watch to the fact that Nissan will not be bringing it to our red, white and blue shores, and while we like the Rogue just fine, we’d just assume that Nissan give us this one instead. What do you think? Check out the ress release after the jump and the high-res gallery below, and then let us know which one you’d prefer to see on sale in America.

    [Source: Nissan]

    Continue reading Nissan updates Qashqai crossover – and no, we’re still not gonna get it

    Nissan updates Qashqai crossover – and no, we’re still not gonna get it originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • The Salt Lake Christmas Tour 2009 is About to Begin!

    It’s that time of year again! We’re now moving into the Salt Lake Plaza Hotel in Salt Lake City for our annual Salt Lake Christmas Tour. Most of the folks fly in on Sunday – and out the following Sunday – spending the entire week researching and attending classes at the Family History Library – or next door at the Plaza Hotel. This year we have 67 attendees, and 10 professional genealogists hired to work with the group – besides myself, Patty, Bill Balter, and Donna Potter Phillips.

    We’ll have the Family Roots Publishing Store set up all week long at the Plaza. The public is welcome to come by and shop. FRPC orders will continue to be taken on the Internet during the week – and shipped with 24 hours, as normal.

  • Home Safety – Protecting Important Documents

    Where is your Social Security card? What about your car title and your child’s birth certificate? The fact that your diploma is awaiting framing in a desk drawer or the only photo of great great grandma that is in existence is sitting in the unscrapped photo box until you figure out what to do with it doesn’t seem to be a problem. And, hopefully, it won’t be a problem. However, if the worst happens and there is a house fire, it will be a problem. A big problem. Protecting important documents is an essential part of home safety.

    keep important documents safe

    Some people scan their important documents into their computers and save a copy in a zip drive or other portable device that they can give to a trusted family member to keep or that they can store in a bank. This is a nice backup for originals, but it isn’t a substitute for protecting the real thing. The DMV and many other places require original documents.

    One of the simplest ways to protect documents from fire is to put them in a fireproof box. The majority of people shove their boxes under the bed, but, in a one story house in a flood zone, you may want to look for a higher location so the box doesn’t float away if a few feet of water rushes through the house.

    Photo: Chris Eyles/SXC

    Post from: Blisstree

    Home Safety – Protecting Important Documents

  • Live By The Patent, Get Sued By The Patent

    Microsoft has been a big believer in patents lately, even though Bill Gates once classically noted that the computer industry would have been at a “standstill” if people had aggressively patented ideas back in the early days of personal computing. Since then, however, Microsoft has massively ramped up its patenting machine. But, of course, if you live by the patent, you should expect to get sued by the patent as well. Brian writes in to let us know that a patent holding firm, with a long history of suing a bunch of big name tech firms is now suing Microsoft as well, claiming that every copy of Vista, Windows 7, and Windows Server 2008 violate its patent 6629163 on “Demultiplexing a First Sequence of Packet Components to Identify Specific Components Wherein Subsequent Components are Processed without Re-Identifying Components.” I have no idea if the patent is valid or not, but I always find it amusing when big patent system supporters find themselves sued for patent infringement as well.

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  • Success & Motivation: What Will You Remember When You are 90 ?

    Unique opportunities. How many of them will you have in your life ? 1 ? None ? 100s ? The thing about life is that its impossible to know. You never know when something you never even considered could happen, will happen.

    As something you has been incredibly blessed, let me just tell you that the things at the top of my list are not numbers or dollars.  They are my family and the things I had fun doing.

    A lot of people think Im crazy, or chasing publicity, or whatever. I don’t care what they think. Before I do any of the many things that I get asked to do, and that I think might be fun, I have one simple question i ask myself.  When I hopefully turn 90 and look back at my life , would I regret having done it, or not having done it ?

    Before I started Motley’s Pub with Evan Williams when we were at Indiana University and I wasnt even old enough to drink, it was the question i asked myself. Before we sold MicroSolutions. Before I spent the money to buy a Lifetime Pass on American Airlines when I was 29 and then retired to travel the word.  Before I bought the Mavs. Before I did The Benefactor on ABC, or Dancing with the Stars, or Survivor and RAW this coming monday nite, or any number of other fun and amazing things I have done. Its the question I asked myself. To me its part of being successful.

    When Im 90, will I smile when i think back, or will I frown and regret not having done it.  IMHO,  Success is about making your life a special version of unique that fits who you are. Not what other people want you to be.

  • Most Common Hormone Imbalance in Cats

    If your kitty is experiencing weight loss even with a big appetite, it’s time to visit the veterinarian. Your cat may have hyperthyroidism, a common hormonal imbalance in older cats.

    Most cats are diagnosed with hyperthyroidism via a blood panel around age 13. Besides weight loss, affected cats may also experience chronic vomiting and diarrhea, plus muscle deterioration.

    Even if cats aren’t exhibiting symptoms, it’s important to treat the condition to prevent heart failure or sudden blindness or death.
    cat-sleeping
    A cat with hyperthyroidism is producing too much T4, and the feline probably has a growth the thyroid gland. These growths are usually benign, but cancer may rarely be present.

    Benign thyroid growths are a form of goiter instead of cancer. Radiotherapy, a way to cure hyperthyroidism, may be used to distinguish between goiters and cancer.

    Treatment Options for Cats with Hyperthyroidism

    To learn more about hyperthyroidism in cats, visit the online Hyperthyroidism Center for Cats at Veterinary Partner.

    (Source: VeterinaryPartner.com; Image via stock.xchng)

    Post from: Blisstree

    Most Common Hormone Imbalance in Cats