There are many situation in which your access to the internet and the services used with it are restricted.
It can be your employer.
It can be your service provider.
It can also be that you live in a country which controls your online activities.
The latter one is mainly valid in the Middle Est, especially in United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
If one of those reasons is your case, how cn you solve your problem if you need to use the blocked services – VoIP (Skype for example) ?
There is one simple solution.
It is called VPN, which stands for Virtual Private Network.
As you won’t be able to install VPN by yourself within your environment due to the restrictions mentioned, you can use an external VPN service.
This will allow you to use all these blocked services and Anonymous Surfing. VPN Service is the answer.
Friday, February 29, 2008
How to bypass Internet Service restrictions
The Simpson
"It's been 18 years and 400 episodes since The Simpsons first appeared on Fox, and although the idea of a film has been mooted since round about season three, it's taken until now to materialise. Yet with the TV show generally agreed to be a teensy bit past its best and a weensy bit surpassed in recent years by Family Guy, Baker wasn't all that far off the mark - this has as much potential to go wrong as a ballsed-up Beatles reunion.
Don't worry, though: unless these were literally the only 10 fun minutes out of 90, The Simpsons Movie seems as brilliant as it should be. Where the sublime South Park movie Bigger, Longer and Uncut depicted a gay affair between Saddam Hussein and Satan, Al Jean claimed last night that the theme of their movie was basically "that a man should listen to his wife".
Yet even 10 minutes were enough to tell that The Simpsons Movie riffs on global society's two biggest moral panics: religion and the environment."
We are used to the other way around.
It usually begins with a successful movie and goes on as a more or less successful TV series.
But then: who watches TV now a days?
Easier to go to the movies, better, easier to download the Movie from a P2P and watching it on your computer screen.
This is definitely the victory of the Internet over TV.
Movie on demand, or whatever you want to call it.
Everything but TV.
One thing more: the Internet and Movies Shouldn’t really be a BAD COPY of TV.
Patrizia The Movie Whisperer
My favourite subject is: Good Food
What is my favourite subject?
It a three words letter: PIE
And I think I love all kinds of PIES.
From fruit to chocolate, from ice cream to cheese and I am open to any kind of suggestions.
I am so fond of them that I even like to COOK them, even if cooking comes in the last places of my habitual duties.
Let's be honest, I am not what you could declare a "born cook", but when it comes to produce what I like to eat I can become great.
Of course with a little help from the Internet and some good websites with good recipes.
Something like: http://www.agapetechnologies.com/, where you really find ALL what you can dream.
You just need to be able to read, to understand and of course to follow instructions and then you can really prepare masterpieces like any great cook.
This is one of the Magic of the Internet, you can easily become what you are not, you can learn, because there are million places where they teach.
So, what about "All Cookie recipes"?
Or "Chocolate history"? In case you fancy to know who had the good idea to invent something so delicious.
I guess that if the Nobel prize was given to people who really did something great to humanity, there would be much more place for the people who invented food like Chocolate or Pizza or Pies...
Well, certainly Agape Technologies understand what I mean...
How to make your network better (for free)
Got a small network, home network, medium-size network -- even an enterprise network -- and want to get the most out of it? Then I've got good news for you: 10 free pieces of software that can make your network easier to use, troubleshoot and maintain. These freebies will help everyone from networking pros to networking newbies and everyone in between.
There's plenty here for you -- great free tools for keeping your network secure; creating a quick, navigable network map; scanning networks and putting together a list of all connected devices; checking to see if your servers are up and running; even designing networks and more.
Note that I'm leaving out extremely popular and well-known free downloads, such as the Ethereal network protocol analyzer or Wireshark and am concentrating instead on lesser-known downloads.
And as a bonus, I'm including a review of an extra, for-pay, try-before-you-buy download that can help your network as well.
Network Magic
If you're looking for a simple, free, all-in-one network management tool for a small peer-to-peer network, this is the one to get. It handles all the basic network chores, including adding new devices to the network, fixing broken network connections, setting up wireless encryption and protection, sharing printers and folders, reporting on the state of the security of each PC, and much more.
Wizards guide you through all these tasks and others. If you've got network experience, the wizards may or may not be useful, but those with moderate or less network experience will certainly find them helpful. But even if you're a network pro, there's a lot in this simple program you'll find worthwhile.
Network Magic's Network Map is superior to Windows Vista's and lists useful information for each device attached to the network.
Click to view larger image.For example, the network map, pictured nearby, displays every device connected to your network, shows whether it's online or offline, and displays details about each, including the computer name, IP address, MAC address, operating system being used, shared folders, and system information such as its processor and RAM. It also lets you change the machine name, and it displays alerts about each device, such as if it isn't protected properly. Overall, it's far superior to Windows Vista's Network Map.
The software's Status Center is also useful. It displays overall information about your network, such as whether there are any problems with overall security or with an individual PC. It also lets you troubleshoot connections, shows whether there are any intruders on the network, and displays information about wireless protection.
Network Magic can create reports about Internet and network use of each PC connected to the network.
Click to view larger image. Parents will appreciate some of Network Magic's features. For example, the software can monitor the use of any individual PC on the network for the Web sites it visits, the times the computer is online and which programs are being used, and then mail a daily report about it to an e-mail address. So it's ideal for parents who want to keep track of their kids' computer use. There's much more as well, including a bandwidth tester to show you your current Internet broadband speed.
Note that there are both paid and free versions of the software. The free version includes most basic features, such as repairing broken connections, issuing security alerts, monitoring network activity and the Network Map. The paid version, which costs from $24 to $40 (depending on how many PCs are on your network), delivers daily reports of Internet activity, supports remote access to your network's files and includes other advanced features.
When you install this program, you may need to tell your firewall to let this application access your network and the Internet.
Full Article
A happy customers is worth 1K words...
For professional use, or just for a personal need you may decide that a label, a real coloured, printed label can add to your products that touch of uniqueness or just order and usability.
But the right one has to answer to special features:
1) Be professionally done
2) be the right size
3) be the right style
4) be the right colour
5) having colours that last
6) In certain cases be water proof
7) be easy to use.
So, where to find the rightLabels?
http://www.frontierlabel.com can offer all what you can dream of asking for your labels.
They are printed using HP indigo press, and AB Graphics converting machinery to laminate, die cut, and slit the stickers and labels onto separate rolls.
They do not have "set up" fees, this thanks to the fact that the graphic image is electrically drawn onto a PIP (photo imaging plate) and the fluid ink is then transferred directly onto the substrate or material eliminating the need for costly printing plates.
This also allows to print variable data stickers or labels.( You can have different labels on the same roll).
And you can be sure that your labels will perfectly match the press proof.
For all this you would think you have to wait ages, believe me, the processing time is just three working days.
Not only, if you are in a real hurry they can process your request in one day...
And last, but not least: thy really care for their customers.
They know that a happy customers is worth 1K words, more than any image...
Is encryption the solution?
Several BitTorrent developers have joined forces to propose a new protocol extension with the ability to bypass the BitTorrent interfering techniques used by Comcast and other ISPs. This new form of encryption will be implemented in BitTorrent clients including uTorrent, so Comcast subscribers are free to share again.
BitTorrent throttling is not a new phenomenon, ISPs have been doing it for years. When the first ISPs started to throttle BitTorrent traffic most BitTorrent clients introduced a countermeasure, namely, protocol header encryption. This was the beginning of an ongoing cat and mouse game between ISPs and BitTorrent client developers, which is about to enter new level.
Unfortunately, protocol header encryption doesn’t help against more aggressive forms of BitTorrent interference, like the Sandvine application used by Comcast. A new extension to the BitTorrent protocol is needed to stay ahead of the ISPs, and that is exactly what is happening right now.
Back in August we were the first to report that Comcast was actively disconnecting BitTorrent seeds. Comcast of course denied our allegations, and ever since there has been a lot of debate about the rights and wrongs of Comcast’s actions. On Wednesday, Comcast explained their BitTorrent interference to the FCC in a 57-page filing. Unfortunately they haven’t stopped lying yet, since they now argue that they only delay BitTorrent traffic, while in fact they disconnect people, making it impossible for them to share files with non-Comcast users.
In short, the Comcast interference works like this: A few seconds after you connect to someone in a BitTorrent swarm, a peer reset message (RST flag) is sent by Comcast and the upload immediately stops. Most vulnerable are users in a relatively small swarm where you only have a couple of peers you can upload the file to.
Dewayne Hendricks
Why a MAC
Looking for a new computer?
Or a second one?
One that allows you to do much more than your actual PC?
If you are fond of working with multimedia material the right machine is a Mas as the Mac offers much more professional software in this field than any other. Windows software can’t even come close to this.
No matter if you want to work with digital music files or video files, you will find everything you can dream of.
And these applications offer you features and functions which can fulfil the highest requirements.
It doesn’t end here.
If you also have to or need to prepare professional documents and printing there is again nothing really better than a Mac.
Which is why most of the graphical and printing companies use Mac’s around the globe.
Well, we all know that a new Mac with all the features we would like doesn't come cheap.
But – does it always have to be a new one?
Why not looking for a used MAC?
This is the way to get a machine with features integrated you normally wouldn’t be able to pay for.
And these computers are on sale not because they didn’t do what they should have done, but the main reason is usually that the actual owner wants a new one with more memory or more features or just wants the very latest model.
Think about this possibility and if you go for it, the right place is http://www.dvwarehouse.com.
The secrets of flying come from Birds, Bats And Insects
Natural flyers like birds, bats and insects outperform man-made aircraft in aerobatics and efficiency. University of Michigan engineers are studying these animals as a step toward designing flapping-wing planes with wingspans smaller than a deck of playing cards.
A Blackbird jet flying nearly 2,000 miles per hour covers 32 body lengths per second. But a common pigeon flying at 50 miles per hour covers 75. The roll rate of the aerobatic A-4 Skyhawk plane is about 720 degrees per second. The roll rate of a barn swallow exceeds 5,000 degrees per second.
Select military aircraft can withstand gravitational forces of 8-10 G. Many birds routinely experience positive G-forces greater than 10 G and up to 14 G.
“Natural flyers obviously have some highly varied mechanical properties that we really have not incorporated in engineering,” said Wei Shyy, chair of the Aerospace Engineering department and an author of the new book “The Aerodynamics of Low Reynolds Number Flyers.”
“They’re not only lighter, but also have much more adaptive structures as well as capabilities of integrating aerodynamics with wing and body shapes, which change all the time,” Shyy said. “Natural flyers have outstanding capabilities to remain airborne through wind gusts, rain, and snow.” Shyy photographs birds to help him understand their aerodynamics.
Full Article
How to have the breast of your dreams
Rachel was the tallest of her family: 5"9.
Somebody like me would think she was the luckiest of girls.
Also because she was quite thin, with a model body.
But, as usual in life, nobody is ever happy about the way she looks...
She felt her small chest was out of proportion and she used to be very unhappy about it.
Till one day she came to know about what they call Boob Job.
It means Breast Enlargement Surgery and it is the most common form of cosmetic surgery with the highest satisfaction rate.
Breast enlargement is a simple and very safe surgical procedure that can help you to regain the confidence you lack in your body as Rachel did.
Very simply an implant is inserted through a small incision made in the natural crease of your breast.
One day later you can leave the Hospital and after one week you'll have your stitches removed.
Simple, isn't it?
We are all born with an evolutionarily ancient mathematical instinct
Our ability to learn sophisticated mathematical procedures resided in an entirely different part of the brain from a rougher quantitative sense. Over the decades, evidence concerning cognitive deficits in brain-damaged patients has accumulated, and researchers have concluded that we have a sense of number that is independent of language, memory, and reasoning in general. Within neuroscience, numerical cognition has emerged as a vibrant field.
We are all born with an evolutionarily ancient mathematical instinct. To become numerate, children must capitalize on this instinct, but they must also unlearn certain tendencies that were helpful to our primate ancestors but that clash with skills needed today. And some societies are evidently better than others at getting kids to do this. In both France and the United States, mathematics education is often felt to be in a state of crisis. The math skills of American children fare poorly in comparison with those of their peers in countries like Singapore, South Korea, and Japan. Fixing this state of affairs means grappling with the question that has taken up much of Dehaene’s career: What is it about the brain that makes numbers sometimes so easy and sometimes so hard?
Full Article
A victory against Alzheimer
With a little help, our brains can be trained to heal themselves. After a traumatic brain injury, some of your brain cells go into reset mode, reverting to a stem cell-like state. Using these "reset cells," a group of German researchers were able to coax the brains of injured mice to regrow neurons to replace damaged tissue (the images above are micrographs of the cells regrowing over time).
Though their methods are far from perfect, this breakthrough could help replace dead or damaged brain cells in people suffering from Alzheimer's as well as any type of injury. It's just a matter of extending the brain's natural self-healing powers.
Full Article
At the light speed: who will stop P2P in a near future?
Alcatel-Lucent researchers in France have successfully transmitted optical data at an absolutely blazing speed of 16.4 Tbps over a distance of over 1,500 miles.
The transmission was done with the goal of achieving a 100 Gbps Ethernet connection, which, as I'm sure you'd agree, is a goal we can all get behind. All sorts of fancy, confusing-sounding technologies were used to get the blazing optical transmission, including "a highly linear, balanced optoelectronic photoreceiver and an ultra-compact, temperature-insensitive coherent mixer." I kept telling them that they just needed a more balanced optoelectronic photoreceiver! I'm glad they finally listened.
We're still pretty far from seeing speeds anywhere near this in consumer connections, as the technology being worked on here will go towards the internet's backbone rather than in a line to your house. But I mean, honestly, at what point is bandwidth so fast that it doesn't matter if it gets any faster? When we're talking about speeds that'll allow you to download a full HD movie in 15 seconds versus 3 seconds, you really start to lose the right to complain about it.
Full Article
It's called "Google hacking"the way to unearth sensitive material mistakenly posted to public Web sites.
Automated 'Google Hacking' Software for Unearthing Data on Other Sites Triggers Security Fears
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- It's called "Google hacking" -- a slick data-mining technique used by the Internet's cops and crooks alike to unearth sensitive material mistakenly posted to public Web sites.
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And it's just gotten easier, thanks to a program that automates what has typically been painstaking manual labor. The program's authors say they hope it will "screw a large Internet search engine and make the Web a safer place."
Google hacking doesn't mean anyone's hacking Google's Web site. Rather, it refers to a sophisticated searching technique used to uncover flaws in the way Web sites handle confidential details, such as public files containing password and credit card numbers and clues about the vulnerability of the site's own servers.
It works by examining the hidden recesses of a Web site, areas that have been indexed by Google but don't pop up in traditional searches. Sometimes Web sites accidentally post revealing information about themselves, either because employees mistakenly put confidential documents online, or the site wasn't properly configured to obscure sensitive areas.
Security experts say Google hacking wouldn't be an issue if Web sites had proper security safeguards in place.
By looking through Google for evidence of specific types of files used by a Web site or telling responses from the Web site's servers, hackers can learn a lot about how the site was built -- and thus how to begin crafting their attacks.
Although Google hacking has been used for several years by good guys and bad guys to monitor security, experts caution that the new program, called Goolag, could tip the balance in favor of criminals.
"It just makes their job that much easier -- in a very short period of time they can do all these searches for sensitive information," said Ryan Barnett, director of application security at Breach Security Inc. and a SANS Institute faculty member.
Google hackers have typically had to enter in detailed Google search strings by hand, using specially crafted queries to unearth links buried deep in the list of a site's contents. Google has been able to clamp down on past attempts to automate the process.
Experts say the new program, on the other hand, appears to work differently, tricking Google into believing a real person is typing the queries -- in other words, someone Google would be unlikely to block.
Google declined to comment on Goolag, released by the hacker group Cult of the Dead Cow.
Full Article
You are just a few clicks away from your full satisfaction
In a world that is getting more and more a place of illegal legality, where very often insult adds to injury, it is difficult to get Accident Compensation also when you are 100% right.
Very often it costs a lot of money and it doesn’t pay off.
So much that for small accidents it is not even worth to claim damages.
What about legal services that DO NOT "SUCK"?
What about a leading law firm that no matter what and how and who will ALWAYS act in your best interest?
What about a dream?
What about having, for once in life, the feeling that justice still works and somebody still cares for you and your rights?
"We act under a No Win No Fee agreement. If unsuccessful it costs you nothing".
Isn't that gold for your ears?
Is that really possible?
It looks like it is, if you see they have already obtained £180 million in compensation for their clients.
Do you want to be their next happy and satisfied customer?
Easy: Register your claim or alternatively call one of their specialist advisors on 0800 294 1700
You are just a few clicks away from your full satisfaction.
How to prevent breast cancer
A drug that could prevent thousands of young women developing breast cancer has been created by scientists.
If given regularly to those with a strong family history of the cancer, researchers say it could effectively "vaccinate" them against a disease they are almost certain to develop.
The drug, which attacks tumours caused by genetic flaws, could spare those who have the rogue genes the trauma of having their breasts removed.
Currently, a high proportion of women told they have inherited the rogue genes choose to have a mastectomy as a preventative measure.
Researchers hope such a "vaccine" will be available within a decade. Flawed BRCA genes, which are passed from mother to daughter, are responsible for around 2,000 of the 44,000 cases of breast cancer each year in the UK.
Full Article
Thursday, February 28, 2008
It pays to give people a chance
Sometimes the chance to get money as credit is linked to a number, a low number means bad credit, a high number means you are very likely to get what you asked for.
But if you have a low score that is usually the moment you need more to get credit.
And of course a low number doesn't mean always you won't be able to pay back your debts.
Luckily there are still companies that can believe in you helping to pay off debts before it causes a bad credit in your name.
Or sometimes is just enough to put all your debts together, fix a new and easier way to pay back and life can smile again to you.
I luckily was never in that situation, because I was brought up in a different way and I was lucky enough to have help when I needed it.
But I still remember when I was a child a family friend (a salesman) talking to my mother and telling her the story of one of his customers.
He was a good man, a good worker, but once in his life he was not able to pay his bills.
And that was a very bad period for him, because his wife gave birth in the same time to a handicapped child.
What would you do, he asked my mother.
One would think that the best solution was to let him go bankruptcy and get all what he could.
He didn't.
He bet on that man.
He let him work out his problems, he gave him credit and he got ALL his money back, with interests too.
He did it because he was a nice and good person, but also because he was a clever business man.
He knew that it pays to give people a chance.
I was very little at that time.
That family's friend died many years ago, but I still remember.
When going backward means going forward
Rev your bike, strum a chord, hit that trail, says Sarah Barrell. There's a whole other country out there.
1 Roswell, New Mexico
Why go? Join the 150,000 Americans who travel across the country each year to Roswell's UFO Festival (1-4 July 2004). This cult community celebration of the supposed crash of a UFO near Roswell in 1947 knocks little green spots off Nevada's area 51. Expect alien costume parades and parties and earnest conferences on alienology. Extend the weekend with a trip to Santa Fe, arts hub and home to an opera festival (July-August).
2 Austin, Texas
Why go? A happening liberal college town with great nightlife and a thriving live music scene, Austin is in most respects as far from cowboy country as LA or New York. A southern refuge for artists, musicians and writers, the capital of Texas won't have tourists doing their frantic rounds but is simply a darn good place to hang out. Austin also hosts the unique South by Southwest Festival, which annually draws the biggest names in "alt-country" (alterative country/blues) and "borders" music - a hip hybrid of US alt-country and contemporary Mexican. This year's festival starts on Wednesday and runs to next Sunday. Little Richard headlines, along with The Thrills, The B-52s, Papa Roach, Athlete, and The Scissors Sisters.
3 The Presidentials, New Hampshire
Why go? Not for the election but the tallest and most impressive mountains in New England. The Presidentials stand at the heart of New Hampshire and represent the best leaf-peeping terrain. The Appalachian trail, through the heart of the range, is beloved of hikers but almost any road in this rugged region offers spectacular views. Mount Washington Auto Road and Kancamagus Highway afford jaw-clanging panoramas.
4 The Southern Rockies
Why go? Beyond the international flash of ski resorts such as Aspen and Vail, there are quiet, quirky little mountain towns. Try Redstone, Colorado, "the Ruby of the Rockies", or, just to the south, Dunton Hotsprings. This is a gold-rush town, renovated by an inspired hotelier into a rustic resort for well-heeled outdoor types. It's located in Telluride, a valley overlooking the Four Corners, where mountains of Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and Utah meet.
5 Charlotte, North Carolina
Why go? A cool small city with southern charm and an artistic flair, non-stop flights from London make Charlotte easily accessible while leaving it its off-the-beaten-track atmosphere. The city is well within striking distance of the "real" Cold Mountain, partial setting of the recent film and great place for panoramic road trips. Follow the twisting Blue Ridge Mountain parkway to spot soaring views of the mountain itself with plenty of short hiking trails, and camp sites and lodges en route for the adventurous.
6 Paradise, Arizona
Why go? A road trip from Tucson to Tombstone on the Old Spanish Trail goes via the Saguaro National Park, a 100,000-acre reserve famous for its iconic wiggly cacti. Follow State Highway 80 for about 75 miles (along the route of the Old Spanish Trail, formerly the main highway across the southern US) and you'll pass some curious roadside attractions before ending up in Tombstone, the site of the OK Coral. Paradise, above Tombstone in the mountains of the Coronado National Forest, is an 1880s silver-mining town. Here you'll be confronted by Cave Creek Canyon's vast red-rock walls, as impressive as those in the parks of Zion or Yosemite, but with fewer tourists.
7 San Diego, California
Why go? If you've done LA, the Californian wineries and San Francisco, the next stop has to be San Diego. The most instantly likeable coastal spot in southern California, San Diego has almost constant sunshine, smog-free beaches, plus galleries and nightlife in its historical Little Italy district. And it's only 20 miles from Tijuana.
8 Memphis, Tennessee
Why go? The Stax Museum of American Soul Music opened last year in the dilapidated southern part of "America's music capital". It is named after the record label that produced so much talent in the 1960s that this part of town became known as Soulsville, USA. The "Stax sound" produced monster hits, including Sam and Dave's "Soul Man" and Otis Redding's "The Dock of the Bay". The museum looks set to revitalise Memphis, which, while known as the "home of the blues", "birthplace of rock'n'roll", and site of Elvis Presley's old home Graceland, may have seen better days.
9 Louisville, Kentucky
Why go? Better known for the Kentucky derby (16 April to 2 May), Louisville has gained more cult attention lately for Lebowskifest (18-20 June 2004), an annual celebration of all things Lebowski. This homage to "The Dude" (the off-beat American par excellence from the 1998 Coen Brothers' film, The Big Lebowski), includes costume contests, screenings, bowling competitions and far too many White Russians.
10 Sturgis, South Dakota
Why go? The Sturgis Motorcycle Rally started 60 years ago as a small road race and now attracts a quarter of a million bikers. Harley-riding chief executives from Milwaukee (where the Harley-Davidson was born) pull up beside teenagers from Iowa on second-hand Hondas for the biggest celebration of the open road in America. The festival (9-15 August, 2004) sends chapters of bikers on competitions and cruises to such hallowed American sights as Mount Rushmore and the spooky Badlands National Park.
Full Article
The deceptive "unfettered" and "fastest" of Comcast
Washington, DC (February 19, 2008)—Gilbert Randolph LLP announced today that it has filed a class action lawsuit against Comcast of the District, LLC in the Superior Court for the District of Columbia on behalf of its client, Dr. Sanford Sidner, and all citizens of the District of Columbia who have subscribed to Comcast's high-speed Internet service during the past three years. The Complaint alleges that Comcast advertises and represents that it provides the "fastest Internet connection" and "unfettered access to all the content, services, and applications that the Internet has to offer."
These representations allegedly are false because Comcast intentionally blocks or otherwise impedes its customers' access to peer-to-peer file-sharing applications.
According to the Complaint, Comcast surreptitiously impersonates the computers of users attempting to share files and sends forged "reset packets" that instruct the transmitting computers to stop sending data. Thus, users of peer-to-peer applications are denied full access to the Internet despite paying for a service that Comcast promises is "unfettered" and the "fastest" available.
"Comcast promises that it does not block access to any online applications, including peer‑to‑peer services, but then it turns around and does exactly that," said Gilbert Randolph's August J. Matteis, Jr., attorney for the plaintiff. "Comcast deliberately hinders customers from getting the full benefits of the service they purchased, and it does so in an underhanded and deceptive manner."
Full Article
Global warming means global cooling
Twelve-month long drop in world temperatures wipes out a century of warming
Over the past year, anecdotal evidence for a cooling planet has exploded. China has its coldest winter in 100 years. Baghdad sees its first snow in all recorded history. North America has the most snowcover in 50 years, with places like Wisconsin the highest since record-keeping began.
Record levels of Antarctic sea ice, record cold in Minnesota, Texas, Florida, Mexico, Australia, Iran, Greece, South Africa, Greenland, Argentina, Chile -- the list goes on and on.
No more than anecdotal evidence, to be sure. But now, that evidence has been supplanted by hard scientific fact. All four major global temperature tracking outlets (Hadley, NASA's GISS, UAH, RSS) have released updated data.
All show that over the past year, global temperatures have dropped precipitously.
Full Article
The World's fastest Indians
"Herbert J 'Burt' Munro, a plucky pensioner who repeatedly broke the world land-speed record in the 60s on his modified Indian Scout motorbike. As played by Anthony Hopkins, he emerges as a likeable eccentric whose refusal to see out his days quietly will strike a chord with geriatrics everywhere."
A movie to see.
Not because of the story, but for the power and life's lessons of the main character Anthony Hopkins ( 'Burt' ).
How to follow and reach your goals with the strenght of your will.
If you are determined enough people cannot do anything else than following you and liking you.
A breath of youth coming from an old aged person.
Nothing more adrenaline creating than that.
It's the revised "American Dream", where a nobody can create his bright future, providing he wants it enough.
Hopkins is, as usual, at his best.
Patrizia in The Movie Whisperer
About health
I am not a superstitious person, but I never walk under stairs, I touch iron (I am Italian, I know somewhere else they touch wood) when a black cat crosses my road and I have a good Health insurance.
Because the best way to be healthy is having a good insurance, and you can be almost 100% sure you won't get ill, and, in the case you do, at least you have the satisfaction to get back the money you spent...
If you happen to live in the UK I suggest you as private health cover BUPA.co.uk.
Because it is "The UK's leading provider of private health care insurance and health care services", because it can be tailored to all your needs, because it gives a good financial protection and you can insure everything, from yourself to your home and family, your trips and even your dog...
And if this is not enough, may be it would make you feeling better to know that part of your money will be spent for a good cause.
"From October to December 2007, 60 BUPA volunteers travelled to northern Thailand to work on a series of projects to improve Sarnelli House orphanage."
See the Movie
Because I said so
At Jane Austen's times a non married woman of three and twenty was a spinster.
Now a days she is a "happy single" where happy can be seen as ironical, because it looks like not so much has changed.
The goal of today's girls is the same: to find a husband.
Not as a feminist, but as a clever woman (as I humbly describe myself) I didn't like it and I hope many won't.
Nevertheless it could anyway make profits.
It could be used as a commercial for those multi usage electronic devices which are mostly real time communication tools: the cell phones.
The whole movie is an eulogy to them, and 90% of the time the people acting spend, is on their portables.
The only thing they should add is some nice and original ringtones, which I found lacking and are a due accessory to them.
The end is too much granted, but most of the people wouldn't like a different way.
And customers are king, since they pay for it.
Nevertheless I made it to the end, and if I did, I guess most would.
Patrizia in The Movie Whisperer
A light on "Western"
Are you a cowboy?
Or a fan of Western?
This post is for you.
I won't suggest how to be one, but how to live with the same "light".
"Lamps and lighting are a deeply integral part of any home design, and double for any Western home decor plan", so why not looking for western lamps?
They would match any style, but would be perfect for a nostalgic, casual, masculine style.
I would see it perfect for a bachelor (better, a single).
They call it "Lone Star Western decor" and it could be a perfect way to create the real atmosphere of the "Marlboro Country".
And may be also surprise and attract a Western nostalgic like you...
Take the lead
Interesting movie.
First: if you think dancing was for sissies, may be you can change your mind.
Second: great men can use anything to teach life. Also dancing lessons. And this proves what I always knew and said: you can be a real "entertainer" and even more, if you know and love what you are supposed to teach.
"Amor che a nullo amato amar perdona" Dante's words, true almost one thousand years ago and true now.
If you really love something you can make others loving it.
Third: this could be the classic example of how commercials will be in the future.
Do you need to promote Ballroom dancing? Don't use a spot, use a movie like this.
There is no commercial product that couldn't be widespread better than entertaining people and suggesting the real value of it.
How many will suddenly realize that there is no better exercise than learning ballroom dancing?
You acquire grace, fitness, you can control and develop your muscles and more than anything: you will enjoy it...
Patrizia in The Movie Whisperer
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Cocaine: some people more vulnerable then others
Brain scans have revealed a possible biological basis for cocaine addiction which may explain why some get hooked, while others can use the drug socially.
The scans show cocaine alters parts of the brain controlling behaviour and appropriate decision-making.
In effect, the drug messes with what is colloquially known as willpower - with some maybe more vulnerable than others.
Trinity College Dublin researchers will present their findings to a Royal Society meeting.
The researchers took brain scans of cocaine users while they performed computer tasks.
They found that cocaine increased activity in areas of the pre-frontal cortex.
The scans also revealed differences in brain structures of cocaine users.
It is unclear whether the differences existed before they started taking cocaine, or were a result of using the drug.
But the findings raise the possibility that differences in brain structure render some people potentially more vulnerable to the effects of the drug.
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Eco Power
Biofuel has been a buzzward in green political circles for a long time, but are biofuels truly a sustainable solution? Many argue that they are not. Land used in the production of biofuels often replaces much-needed farmland or is cut out of important ecosystems around the world. In short: the big picture for biofuels does not look bright given the vast natural resources that are required to produce them in the first place.
Fusion Power is that fabled cheap-and-clean energy source that always seems to be just on the horizon and out of reach. How many times in the past decades have we heard that this sustainable technology is just a few more years away? Sure, it might be true this time, but there’s no way to say. Some argue though that the mood (and venture capital) is shifting, but is it worthwhile putting so many resources toward something that is anything but a sure bet?
Artificial Islands have been a conceptual idea for ecological power generation for over a decade. The basic idea: use wind, wave and solar power in ideal offshore locations to produce onshore power. The latest idea: use thermal variation to generate power. The problem: setting up and maintaining these offshore islands could be cost and energy prohibitive, a common problem with new technologies.
Plug-In Hybrids are one proposed solution to transportation fuel in a world where soybeans, biofuels and other renewable/sustainable energy sources are competing to be the next be the next big thing. Batteries are the big limiting factor here because they have to not only store a great deal of energy but also be able to output energy at variable intensity in order to sustain both normal use and a range of acceleration rates.
Zero-Pollution Cars have been proposed that would keep rather than exhaust carbon which would then be recycled into usable fuel at a conversion facility. The trick, of course, is converting said non-exhaust on-site within the vehicle itself before it is transported back to a central location. Beyond that, the technology for converting the fuel back is feasible but its redistribution would require extensive and energy-consuming networks.
Gravity Powered devices (such as lamps) sound like a great idea, but no energy is free and the scalability of this concept is questionable. The basic idea: a weight is raised then generates power for hours as it works its way down the body of the lamp. A neat idea on a small scale that could save some energy but may not have many applications beyond more localized novelty and concept devices that still take quite a bit of energy to create.
A 15-Year Light Source that requires no recharges sounds great - at first anyway. It seems that this GloPaint innovation will last a long time as promised but leftover materials are of questionable toxicity so there is still waste to be considered - just fifteen years later. This may help replace emergency lighting in the short term but still isn’t a long term solution.
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How deep are their pockets?
Any funds PayPal holds for dispersal are automatically deposited in a corporate bank account, which earns interest, according to Paypal representative Amanda Pires. The money is kept there until it's ready for distribution. PayPal, which processes payments for eBay auctions as well as e-commerce transactions from elsewhere on the Internet, counts interest payments on those funds as one of its revenue streams.
That's a perfectly legal practice, as PayPal is classified as a deposit broker, according to Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) spokesman David Barr.
"Deposit brokers make money being deposit brokers," Barr said. "That's the reason they're in business. As long as fees are disclosed, that's fine from our standpoint."
But the revenue generated from this practice is miniscule given PayPal's total revenue picture, said Thomas Weisel Partners managing director Christa Quarles.
Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) Director of Internet Research Mark Mahaney arrived at similar estimates by examining PayPal's public quotes of average "stored value." Mahaney approximates the interest earned on the float at "single-digit millions per quarter, and at most $10 million a quarter."
"I understand sellers are angry about [the 21-day policy], but the fee changes are really what's going to drive broader revenues at eBay," Quarles said.
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Call and begin dreaming
I have never been to Canada.
But I know many who were there and are quite enthusiastic about it.
How couldn't they be?
Canada offers so much and has so many and different attractions that it would be hard to find somebody who wouldn't like to be there.
It is perfect for "green" lovers.
Snowy mountains, deserts, prairies, rain forests and long white beaches, as well as big towns, cultural attractions, cosmopolitan cities, two languages and two different cultures, all in the second largest country of the world.
And if you want to plan your next holidays and you haven't been there, there is nothing easier, just : dial a flight .
They have very cheap flights to Canada, besides having very good offers for a complete vacation (flights and hotels) at very competitive prices.
Call for special offers on all the best Airlines.
Call and begin dreaming, your next holiday is going to be "very special".
When eyes are connected to something else than brain...
For partnered women, a manly man with no attachments seems sexiest when she is fertile.
Whom do you fancy? When in a relationship, women's preferences change over the course of their menstrual cycle.
Women beware: instinctive preferences might up the odds of getting pregnant when cheating on a partner.
In a study looking at the ever-interesting (and ever-mysterious) question of why women are attracted to certain men, researchers found that sexual interest shifts with a partnered woman’s menstrual cycle. When fertile, women in relationships are most attracted to single men; when infertile their attraction shifts to coupled men.
The reason, the researchers suggest, is that coupled women who are thinking of having an affair (even when asked to think about it by researchers) subconsciously select a man who is more likely to be a willing partner when they are fertile.
Full Article
Why Not?
Every minute a "Baby Boomer" reaches 60.
But they do not feel sixty, at least not as "sixty" as the previous generation felt.
In Jane Austen times a woman of five and thirty was an old woman, at the time of Edith Wharton was a "Lady", today she is a young girl who doesn't want to grow old, who just wants to live as well as possible, as nicely as possible and as beautiful as possible.
And all this because she can, and why not taking advantage out of it?
Why being ugly when you can be beautiful?
Why looking old when you can look young?
"Baby boomers are turning to cosmetic surgery to defy the signs of ageing, it has been reported."
And the reason is in two words: Why Not?
"When your clothes fit and your husband says ''You look hot,'' at 50-years-old, it really makes you feel good,"
I think it is just hypocrisy to deny it, in the name I do not know what.
If you want to improve your culture and you read and study, you are clever.
Why not if you want to improve your physical appearance?
Why should you feel guilty if you want to look smart and beautiful, if you want to look young when you feel young?
If with the aid of Liposuction, you can have again a wonderful waist and bottom, you can wear a nice bikini, you can feel sure of yourself and the way you look?
And believe me, the best investment is in yourself and may be also in the way you look, because, as dreadful as it can look, that is a part of the way the others see you.
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
The Newest UK Big Brother
Motorists will be targeted by a new generation of road cameras which work out how many people are in a car by measuring the amount of bodily fluid it contains.
The latest snooping device on the nation's roads aims to penalise lone drivers who abuse car-sharing lanes, and is part of a Government effort to combat congestion at busy times.
The cameras work by sending an infrared beam through the windscreen of vehicles which detects the unique make-up of blood and water content in human skin.
The system's inventors believe it will catch out motorists who try to fool existing CCTV road cameras by placing mannequins in passenger seats or fixing photographs to windscreens.
It will at first be used to police car-sharing lanes in Leeds, but councils across the country have already expressed an interest in using them.
Full Article
Unprecedentedly free? Or permanently tethered?
From essentially zero, we've passed a watershed of more than 3.3 billion active cellphones on a planet of some 6.6 billion humans in about 26 years.
This is the fastest global diffusion of any technology in human history -- faster even than the polio vaccine.
"We knew this was going to happen a few years ago. And we know how it will end," says Eric Schmidt, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Google. "It will end with 5 billion out of the 6" with cellphones. "A reasonable prediction is 4 billion in the next few years -- the current proposal is 4 billion by 2010. And then the final billion or so within a few years thereafter.
"Eventually there will be more cellphone users than people who read and write. I think if you get that right, then everything else becomes obvious."
"It's the technology most adapted to the essence of the human species -- sociability," says Arthur Molella, director of the Smithsonian's Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation. "It's the ultimate tool to find each other. It's wonderful technology for being human."
Maybe. But do our mobiles now render us unprecedentedly free? Or permanently tethered?
Joel Garreau
What antidepressant drugs do
It is my humble opinion that when you are depressed and begin taking antidepressant drugs you begin with a problem and end up with two.
After a short time effect, you fall in an even deeper depression and have the further problem of addiction to the antidepressant.
There is no drug that can help you unless you can help yourself.
Prozac, the bestselling antidepressant taken by 40 million people worldwide, does not work and nor do similar drugs in the same class, according to a major review released today.
The study examined all available data on the drugs, including results from clinical trials that the manufacturers chose not to publish at the time. The trials compared the effect on patients taking the drugs with those given a placebo or sugar pill.
When all the data was pulled together, it appeared that patients had improved - but those on placebo improved just as much as those on the drugs.
The only exception is in the most severely depressed patients, according to the authors - Prof Irving Kirsch from the department of psychology at Hull University and colleagues in the US and Canada. But that is probably because the placebo stopped working so well, they say, rather than the drugs having worked better.
"Given these results, there seems little reason to prescribe antidepressant medication to any but the most severely depressed patients, unless alternative treatments have failed," says Kirsch. "This study raises serious issues that need to be addressed surrounding drug licensing and how drug trial data is reported."
The paper, published today in the journal PLoS (Public Library of Science) Medicine, is likely to have a significant impact on the prescribing of the drugs. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice) already recommends that counselling should be tried before doctors prescribe antidepressants. Kirsch, who was one of the consultants for the guidelines, says the new analysis "would suggest that the prescription of antidepressant medications might be restricted even more".
The review breaks new ground because Kirsch and his colleagues have obtained for the first time what they believe is a full set of trial data for four antidepressants.
They requested the full data under freedom of information rules from the Food and Drug Administration, which licenses medicines in the US and requires all data when it makes a decision.
The pattern they saw from the trial results of fluoxetine (Prozac), paroxetine (Seroxat), venlafaxine (Effexor) and nefazodone (Serzone) was consistent. "Using complete data sets (including unpublished data) and a substantially larger data set of this type than has been previously reported, we find the overall effect of new-generation antidepressant medication is below recommended criteria for clinical significance," they write.
Two more frequently prescribed antidepressants were omitted from the study because scientists were unable to obtain all the data.
Concerns have been raised in recent years about the side-effects of this class of antidepressant. Evidence that they could prompt some young people to consider suicide led to a warning to doctors not to prescribe them for the under-18s - with the exception of Prozac, which was considered more effective than the rest.
Full Article
Computer desks superstore
It can look useless or futile talking of computer desks, but they can be invaluable help in your daily work.
There is nothing that can drive me crazier than a disordered place where I have to work and have to spend 50% of my time looking for what I need, or having to fight with the printer while using the scanner, or not having enough space for a piece of paper I have to read while working with my computer.
All this sums easily up and easily makes me a nervous worker instead of a happy one...
So little can do so much.
Well, it is true, sometimes life is in the small things and ten centimetres more space can make your day.
It is in this view that a Corner Computer Desk is the favourite of ComputerDesk.com.
With something like this you can maximize your office space efficiently without sacrificing style. ( also the eye wants its part)
It was designed to perfectly follow the lines of a ninety degree angle to provide an optimum working area for those who have limited space howe
