Monday, May 29, 2006

Fairy Tales Can Come True (Just Not Every Day!)

Here's a "photo story" based on the book,
Fairy Tales Can Come True (Just Not Every Day!),
published by Shake It! Books.

Tip #1


Make a list.
When you find yourself feeling critical
of your beloved, sit down and make a list of
"All The Things I Still Love About My Mate."
This will remind you of why you first fell in love.



You'll have a few giggles... and learn a few things as well!



Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Seven Rules of Motivation

Socialize with others of similar interest. Mutual support is motivating. We will develop the attitudes of our five best friends. If they are losers, we will be a loser. If they are winners, we will be a winner. To be a cowboy we must associate with cowboys.

More....

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

GAPINGVOID

HOW TO BE CREATIVE
"If you weren't so stupid I can explain you how stupid you are!!"

1. Ignore everybody.

2. The idea doesn't have to be big. It just has to change the world.

3. Put the hours in.

4. If your biz plan depends on you suddenly being "discovered" by some big shot, your plan will probably fail.

5. You are responsible for your own experience.


Read more intersting things here....

Friday, May 12, 2006

EIGHT WAYS TO SELF ACTUALIZE

"When the four basic needs (Physiological, Safety, Love/Belonging, Esteem) have been satisfied, the growth need or self-actualization need arises: A new discontent and restlessness will develop unless the individual is doing what he individually is fitted for. A musician must make music, an artist must paint, a poet must write--in short, what people can be they must be" Abraham Maslow
  1. Experience things fully, vividly, selflessly. Throw yourself into the experiencing of something: concentrate on it fully, let it totally absorb you.
  2. Life is an ongoing process of choosing between safety (out of fear and need for defense) and risk (for the sake of progress and growth): Make the growth choice a dozen times a day.
  3. Let the self emerge. Try to shut out the external clues as to what you should think, feel, say, and so on, and let your experience enable you to say what you truly feel.
  4. When in doubt, be honest. If you look into yourself and are honest, you will also take responsibility. Taking responsibility is self-actualizing.
  5. Listen to your own tastes. Be prepared to be unpopular.
  6. Use your intelligence, work to do well the things you want to do, no matter how insignificant they seem to be.
  7. Make peak experiencing more likely: get rid of illusions and false notions. Learn what you are good at and what your potentialities are not.
  8. Find out who you are, what you are, what you like and don't like, what is good and what is bad for you, where you are going, what your mission is. Opening yourself up to yourself in this way means identifying defenses--and then finding the courage to give them up.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

India is an innovation titan, leaves China in the dust: WSJ

There is no silver bullet to innovation. The Wall Street Journal observed in a powerful commentary that New Delhi had gone the extra mile to revamp its intellectual property rights. Now the dividends were showing — India was cruising imperiously ahead of China in the innovation race.

“It may appear as if India’s recent economic rise is solely due to its low-cost outsourcing opportunities for foreign businesses. But this is only part of the story,” said the US financial daily on Monday.

“India is rapidly evolving into Asia’s innovation centre, leaving China in the dust. Its secret weapon? Intellectual property-rights protection. In recent years, New Delhi has taken big steps to protect these rights, and the results have been dramatic,” it added.

In an effort to align itself with international treaties such as the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS) of the World Trade Organisation, India revamped its copyright laws in the 1990s. The Indian Copyright Act was overhauled in 1994 to explain the rights of a copyright holder and the penalties for infringement of copyrighted software. The daily hailed the Indian law as one of the “toughest in the world.” “These changes, which significantly ramped up enforcement provisions, will undoubtedly prove the most important for copyright protection on the subcontinent — far ahead of other countries in Asia,” said the daily.

“The Indian courts have risen to the challenge. They have taken a broad approach to applying the new laws — especially to protect intellectual property in emerging fields such as information technology.” Last year, India’s new patent law extended protection to computer software and pharmaceutical products. The changes have acted as a catalyst for foreign and domestic investment. India’s Patent Office also got a pat on the back for getting its act together: “Today, a patent can be granted in less than three years, as opposed to only a few years ago, where it took up to an average of five to seven years.”

“As a result, copyright-based industries such as the Indian IT sector have enjoyed rapid growth,” it said, adding that within the next few years, annual revenues from Indian software exports were tipped to touch $50 billion. It pointed out that Indian business and government labs were both filing for patents at astonishing rates.

“The number of Indian patent applications filed has increased 400% over the past 15 years. Nearly 800 Indian companies submitted international patent applications to the World Intellectual Property Organisation in 2004…more than double the number of Indian patents applied for in 2000,” said the daily. It noted that Indian drug makers who have been producers of generic versions of brand-name drugs have also started “embracing innovation-based business models.”

The Wall Street Journal summed up that New Delhi’s actions are a “stark contrast” to China and Brazil. “When it comes to reigning in the rampant piracy of music, movies and software, these governments are lagging behind India. But to truly reach their potential for creativity and innovation, other emerging economic powers could take a few pointers from New Delhi.”

Asia’s innovation centre

As a result of the Indian Copyright Act which was overhauled in 1994, copyright-based industries such as the Indian IT sector have enjoyed rapid growth.

The annual average rate of growth of Indian software exports from 1994 to 2002 was 48%, marking a drastic surge from the preceding five years, when the average growth was about 35%.

The number of Indian patent applications filed has increased 400% over the past 15 years.

HOW TO TICK PEOPLE OFF

  1. Leave the copy machine set to reduce 200%, extra dark, 17 inch paper, 99 copies.
  2. Specify that your drive-through order is "TO-GO."
  3. If you have a glass eye, tap on it occasionally with your pen while talking to others.
  4. Stomp on little plastic ketchup packets.
  5. Insist on keeping your car windshield wipers running in all weather conditions "to keep them tuned up."
  6. Reply to everything someone says with "that's what you think."
  7. Practice making fax and modem noises.
  8. Highlight irrelevant information in scientific papers and "cc" them to your boss.
  9. Make beeping noises when a large person backs up.
  10. Finish all your sentences with the words "in accordance with prophesy."
More ...here Source

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Electrical / Electronics Conversions, Formulas & References

Capacitance
Capacitance Conversions
Capacitor Dielectrics & Descriptions
Capacitor Dielectric Properties
Capacitor Families, Mil-Spec
Capacitor Values

Transmission Lines 1, 2, 3
Thévénin Equivalent

And many more.....

Interestin Panorama Pics

At panoramas.dk you can see interactive 360 degree panoramas

also called VR Photography by some of the best VR Photographers in the world. They are presented in Fullscreen and you need Quicktime

New panoramas are presented weekly. Scroll down for the last features. The Archive contains more than 160 panoramas from all the world.