Sergio William Cruz

Posts

September 02, 03:09 PM

Image via Wikipedia

Several years ago, I decided to move my entire CD-based music collection to our family computer, making the music more easily accessible. I, then, realized that having the music in the computer was great for synchronizing with mobile devices and maintaining a catalog of the music, but not so great for listening to on the home stereo system. As I looked for a better solution, I found numerous, expensive ways to get the music that was on my computer to play on my stereo via both wired Ethernet and WiFi connections, yet each needed me to control the music via the computer's interface. My goal: I wanted to stream music from my computer and control the music from a remote. And I wanted it to be reasonably priced. I was beginning to think that there was nothing out there in the "affordable" category to fulfill my needs, and then I heard about AirTunes.


AirTunes is a feature built-in to Apple's AirPort Express that allows playing your iTunes music through your stereo or powered speakers. More research yielded that the Airport Express had a 3.5 mm audio minijack for analog or optical digital sound. The setup was simple: use the AirPort Express behind the home stereo -- the AirPort Express would connect  to my home's wireless network and via cable to my home stereo system. The final piece to the puzzle is Apple's Remote application for the iPhone, which would allow me to control the streaming music remotely. Music streaming nirvana! Everything worked as I wanted and the AirPort Express unit was under $100.

Present day: Apple releases the new Apple TV. AirPlay, coming soon to Apple TV, will allow content on an iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch to be streamed to an Apple TV via wireless. This means music and video purchased on a mobile device can be watched on an television via the Apple TV. If AirTunes provided a great solution for streaming music, then AirPlay is an evolution of AirTunes, allowing video streaming as well. I look forward to adding an Apple TV to my television too.

Sergio Cruz |

M: +1.305.403.9858 | scruz@cruzical.com | posts.cruzical.com | sergiowcruz

Related articles by Zemanta
Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


August 30, 09:55 AM

Email Rampage! 8 Tips to Find the Bottom of Your Inbox

August 27, 2010 in email,time management with

This post is not for the faint of heart.

Things are going to get ugly with your inbox.

(Some might even say dangerous!)

And some email is going to get hurt.

Today, we are going to get to the bottom of your email inbox…

Have You Seen the Bottom?

When I tell people that they are going to empty their inbox, often their first response is,

“You can do that? Is that allowed?”

I have discussed the inefficiency of email communication before.  (See here and here.)

However, in today’s world, email is still the major communication for business.  For that reason, you need to stay on top of it and you need to stay current with it.

Not doing so has consequences.  These range from overlooked opportunities to late deliverables to missed communications.

So…are you drowning in your email inbox?  Or do you regularly keep it in check?

How to Get to Empty

Many people’s inboxes resemble the “Big Pile” method.  I have seen some  inboxes that have 3000+ messages in them.

They are big piles.

What would your boss say if he or she walked in to your cubicle and you had 3000 memos piled on your desk?  Probably not a good situation.

In today’s business world, the term “email bankruptcy” seems to come up frequently.  This refers to when a person falls so hopelessly behind in their email that they eventually declare bankruptcy.  They simply nuke their entire email inbox and start over.

I don’t agree with this approach.  First, there was probably something of value in your inbox that you just threw out.  Second, it doesn’t solve the problem and often you will be right back where you started in a short timeframe.

However, I do believe in keeping your inbox near empty.  And I believe in being tough with your email to keep it there.

Email Rampage!

Here’s where it gets a bit gruesome… this is the part when we get mean with our email.  Just in case you need to look away.

Set aside an hour (or two!) to do nothing but attack your email backlog.  Turn off the phone.  Shut the door.  Minimize interruptions.

Ready?  Let’s go…

8 Tips to Get to the Bottom of Your Inbox:

  1. Get Stuff OUT of IN – You will never empty your inbox if you don’t have a place to put your emails.  You must have a “filing” method for getting stuff out of your inbox. Choose the method that works best for you.  But, make that choice, because it needs to be law for your inbox.  I prefer the simplest setup.  Some people create dozens of folders to categorize each and every email.  That is overkill.  With today’s search tools, I can find an email from 4 years ago in seconds.  No separate filing needed.  The only individual folders I set up are for travel and receipts/bills.  I archive all old email into one archive folder.  (BTW, Gmail does a wonderful job of this, in fact, it even has an “archive” button.)
  2. Emails Are Not Todos – The reasons that many people leave emails in their inbox is because they are still “working on them.”  But, emails are not todos.  You need to get the tasks out of your communication stream.  You need to put the todos straight on your todo list.  After you have done this, then yes, file that email. If you need to reference it, you can always come back to your archive.  Most likely, you won’t need to.
  3. Work from Newest to Oldest – Many want to start with the oldest email.  After all, those have been sitting the longest, and they feel more guilt about them.  However with email, often an issue has been updated in a more recent message.  So if you start from the back, you will find yourself responding to items only to read subsequent emails that the issue was already resolved.  How often to you see responses from team-members only to then see a second email, “Oh, I hadn’t read the other message yet.”
  4. Deal With Email in Groups – To take the “Newest to Oldest” method even further, by dealing with email conversations by group or thread.  Let you mail client group the related messages.  Again, starting with the most recent, you can often archive a whole group of messages at once.  This makes batching down you inbox much quicker.  I do this both in Outlook and on my iPhone.
  5. Delete Delete Delete! – Slash slash slash!  Do not be afraid to delete emails. This act bothers some.  What if I need it again?  Again? You haven’t even read it once?  Let it go.  If it is that important… it will come back.  You will get another message.  DELETE!
  6. Set an Auto Archive – This is a powerful technique.  Set up your email client to automatically archive any messages over two weeks old.  This sets up an automatic rolling deadline, where anything you leave for more than two weeks disappears into your archive.  This is good, because it is there if you need it, and you don’t have to worry about your email inbox reaching 3000 again.
  7. Don’t Respond Unless Needed – A mistake that many make when trying to empty their inbox is that they go down the list and try to deal with every email…meaning responding to each.  Don’t fall into this trap.  Not all emails need another email.  Don’t unnecessarily respond.  This leads to email Ping-Pong!  And of course, more email.
  8. Remove Those Last Few Emails – When victory is in sight, most people stop short.  They end up with a handful of “important” emails that they want to keep in their inbox.  Don’t stop there.  Those last few emails are likely tasks that need to go on your todo list, and those emails need to be archived.  (Refer back to #1 and 2.)

There is a Bottom

Despite myths to the contrary, there is a bottom to your inbox.

And you can get your inbox to empty.  Because email is virtual clutter, it is easy to let it pile up.

Get tough with your email.  Go on a rampage to get it under control.

Then be consistent to keep it under control.  Quick attacks from time to time will prevent you from having to work down from hundreds (if not thousands) of emails again.

Do you need to go on an email rampage today?  When was the last time you saw the bottom of your inbox?

Related Posts:

TMN’s 9 Rules for Work Email

7 Ways to Be Ruthless With Your Email

Email Ping-Pong!

Some of the most sage advice on the topic of emptying your inbox. I use two folders to clean out my inbox regularly: Do Now and Waiting on someone to Do.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


August 27, 10:53 AM

I am a sucker for devices that share my name. Here you see the latest eReader and Tablet, respectively, from Velocity Micro. Borders will be selling them packaged with the Borders reader app. The Cruzer name is reminiscent of the Cruzer line of Sandisk USB drives, of which, I have two.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


August 25, 02:09 PM

 

« Previous |

You Shall Not Pass!


Submitted by: Frankie Sez Exlax

Increased fines didn’t help, so the transportation commission hired a mad scientist.

Incorrect source or offensive?

This funny was posted on Wednesday, August 25th, 2010 at 9:31 am

This one would do well here in Miami...

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


August 17, 02:22 PM

Venting Frustration Will Only Make Your Anger Worse

Nobody recommends bottling up your anger, but venting your frustrations may actually be much worse. Quiet reflection may be the best cure for pent up frustration.

Photo by Eat Our Brains

David McRaney, of the excellent You Are Not So Smart blog, explains how catharsis (the act of cleansing or purging) is entirely useless in letting go of your anger.

Releasing sexual tension feels good. Throwing up when you are sick feels good. Finally getting to a restroom feels good. So, it seemed to follow, draining bad blood or driving out demons or siphoning away black bile to bring the body back into balance must be good medicine. Be it an exorcism or a laxative, the idea is the same: get the bad stuff out and you'll return to normal.

It's drug-like, because there are brain chemicals and other behavioral reinforcements at work. If you get accustomed to blowing off steam, you become dependent on it.

Common sense says venting is an important way to ease tension, but common sense is wrong. Venting – catharsis – is pouring fuel into a fire.

While you certainly don't want to neglect your problems, studies found that doing nothing was more effective in helping anger dissipate that venting those frustrations. While it may feel good, venting only keeps the anger present.

McRaney's full post is a long but good read, providing a lot of useful information on why catharsis doesn't help relieve your anger and advice on what to do instead.

Catharsis [You Are Not So Smart]

Send an email to Adam Dachis, the author of this post, at adachis@lifehacker.com.

');

Your version of Internet Explorer is not supported. Please upgrade to the most recent version in order to view comments.

Loading comments ...

In order to view comments on lifehacker.com you need to enable JavaScript.
If you are using Firefox and NoScript addon, please mark lifehacker.com as trusted.

There's a little tidbit that I need to learn...

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


August 04, 12:56 PM

More than three dozen of America's wealthiest individuals and families have joined Bill Gates and Warren Buffett in agreeing to give away at least half their fortunes to charity.

The announcement was made Wednesday by The Giving Pledge, an effort officially launched by Gates and Buffett earlier this year to persuade the richest people in America to commit to giving the majority of their wealth to the philanthropic causes and charitable organizations of their choice, either during their lifetime or after their death.

In addition to Buffett and Gates — America's two wealthiest individuals, with a combined net worth of $90 billion, according to Forbes — 38 other billionaires are taking the give-it-away pledge. They include New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, entertainment executive Barry Diller, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, energy tycoon T. Boone Pickens, media mogul Ted Turner, David Rockefeller, film director George Lucas and investor Ronald Perelman.

"We’ve really just started, but already we’ve had a terrific response,” Buffett, co-founder and chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, said in a statement. “At its core, the Giving Pledge is about asking wealthy families to have important conversations about their wealth and how it will be used.

"We’re delighted that so many people are doing just that – and that so many have decided to not only take this pledge but also to commit to sums far greater than the 50 percent minimum level.”

Bloomberg, who made his fortune from financial news and information services company Blomberg L.P., added: "If you want to do something for your children and show how much you love them, the single best thing — by far — is to support organizations that will create a better world for them and their children. And by giving, we inspire others to give of themselves, whether their money or their time.”

CNN founder Ted Turner said he felt compelled to give back. "I’m particularly thankful for my father’s advice to set goals so high that they can’t possibly be achieved during a lifetime and to give help where help is needed most," he said. "That inspiration keeps me energized and eager to keep working hard every day on giving back and making the world a better place for generations to come.”

Gates, the Microsoft co-founder, and Buffett launched "The Giving Pledge" in June. The effort could funnel a colossal amount of money into nonprofit groups. If the individuals on the Forbes 400 list of richest Americans pledged half their net worth to charity, that would amount to $600 billion, according to Fortune magazine.

  1. Click here for related content
    1. Texas teen raises $1 million for hospital
    2. Paul Allen to leave bulk of wealth to charity
    3. Vote: Would you give your wealth to charity?
    4. Gates, Buffett to megarich: Give it away

The United States has roughly 400 billionaires, about 40 percent of the world's total, according to Forbes. The 40 names that have pledged to date have a combined net worth surpassing $230 billion.

© 2010 msnbc.com Reprints

Wow. It's money that can be used for both good and evil. Here's hoping that only good comes from this pledge.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


July 14, 11:38 PM

I think I'm in love.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


July 14, 10:30 PM
July 09, 01:31 PM

Abortion and the Help We Need

July 6th, 2010 by Len Gutmann

 Print This Article ·ShareThis

There’s a beautiful soul I see at daily Mass. He’s a simple guy. I’ll call him “Bob” to hide his identity — which in his humility he’d probably prefer. He is who he is: the salt of the earth… and a beacon of light to the disabled sister he cares for at home. Somewhere in his late 40s, he’s an usher on the weekends and helps out whenever the parish might need him. He’s slotted on Friday mornings for an hour before the Blessed Sacrament at our parish’s adoration chapel.  That hour of his ends when the eight o’clock Mass begins.

I arrived shortly before Mass, and soon saw him leave the chapel to head to his pew just as the entrance hymn was starting up. The simplicity he shines out makes people smile. And on this particular summer morning, his red and green sweatshirt with “Christ is the reason for the Season” across the front had already made my day. But he looked troubled this particular Friday. I wondered if something was wrong… a cold, perhaps, or maybe allergies. I made a mental note to include him in my Mass intentions.

During Mass he cherishes his role as the one who moves the table out of the way after the offertory gifts are taken up. He does it with a certain reverence, taking his time to smooth the cloth on the table after he sets it ahead of the front pew — perfectly out of the way for the Communion line. This particular morning, he was taking his time with the table and its covering. I could tell he was carrying a heavy load inside.

On the way back from Communion, he usually has a peculiarly serene smile on his face. He finds such happiness receiving back the gifts that are transformed by the priest on God’s table. But this particular morning, his consumption of Jesus didn’t seem to be strong enough medicine for his troubles.

After Mass, he’ll wander over to tell me the headlines about the pro-life news that he’s read on the internet at the library. He wears his soul on his sleeve, usually grinning from ear to ear when he’s heard of positive news in the movement. When it’s bad news that he’s come upon, he frowns and tells it to me in sad, defeated tones.

He never stops telling me how great a job our parish’s small pro-life committee is doing, and apologizes often for his inability to help the cause, except by praying or giving something up — like pop, or his favorite television show. “It’s all right, Bob. God knows you can’t drive,” I tell him — to make him feel better about not being more active. He whispered to me, once, the real reason he can’t help us more: “Whenever I get thinking about abortion too much, it makes me have a bad day.” You see, he can’t bear it when God’s innocent creations are harmed.

On this troubled morning after Mass, he appeared to be holding back tears as he approached me in my pew. “Are you okay, Bob?” I asked as he took a seat in front of me.  Still thinking (or hoping) it was just allergies, I was ready to offer him a ride to the drug store.

“Something came to me before Mass… during my adoration hour,” he told me immediately. “Something about the oil spill that is making Jesus sad.”

I know him well enough by now, and sensed that whatever “came to him” wasn’t anything geo-political or apocalyptic. I wasn’t going to hear anything elaborate and scientific, nor anything fanatical. Just the reason he was upset. With Bob, what you see is what you get. And what you hear is probably what comes to him when he’s connecting with his best friend, Jesus.

He loves animals, and the spill has been bothering him lately. He’s seen the pictures of the pelicans and the dead fish, and he wants the oil to stop leaking into the Gulf more than most people do—especially people like myself who can drive and want it to stop before the cost of gasoline begins to skyrocket.

“Tell me, Bob,” I said.

“The oil leak goes on and on and lots of dolphins are going to die,” he said somewhat prophetically. “It’s all because of an abortion, and Jesus is frustrated because of it.” I thought I heard him correctly. He said “an abortion,” and not because of abortion in general. “I wish I could let the world know. It came to me… in front of Jesus,” he added, just so I wouldn’t think he was crazy about what came to him in prayer.

An abortion?” I said. I was puzzled.

“Uh huh,” he said. “The person who has the smarts to come up with a plan to stop the oil….” Then the reality of what came to him descended on me.

“There should be a smart person in the world who knows how to fix it!” he explained.

“Yes, you’d think someone would have figured it out by now,” I agreed, hoping to steer him away from what I feared Jesus had spoken to his soul.

“There is someone,” he said, “but he’s not down there in the Gulf to help out. He or she has been aborted.”

“Oh, geez, Bob!” I almost gasped.  “Jesus told you that?” A long, quiet pause followed while his statement sent a wave of goosebumps up my arms. I truly did not know what to say. Then it dawned on me… this unsophisticated man could very well be right. With all the minds that never got a chance to go to college because of over 50 million legal pregnancy terminations, it’s quite likely that at least one of the “terminated” would have had a brain with the capacity to provide a solution.  I looked at the tabernacle and wondered why Bob’s best friend would trouble him with such a thought. I tried quickly to come up with something that would console this gentle guy who holds all living creatures so dear in his heart. Then something came to me.

“Bob, I think the Lord just told me something,” I said, breaking our silence. “We can pray.”

“I’m praying all the time,” he said soberly. “I don’t want any more animals to die.”

“Yeah, but we can pray specifically,” I explained. “If a person with the solution was aborted, then that means he is now with our Lord. And if he’s with our Lord, then he’s a saint, just like all the Saints.”

“You mean pray…  like ask for his intercessions?” he said.

“Just like that,” I answered. “He’s not gone completely. He’s somewhere in the world, just with God now. And if he… or she… would have had the solution, then that person still has the solution. We just have to ask God if that person can somehow share it with us here on earth.”

“How can we get the word out for everyone to ask him — or her — to intercede for us?” he asked me.

“I don’t know, buddy,” I said. Then I realized why he was telling me all this. I told him once that a Catholic daily website had published some things I wrote, so he thinks I’m a famous author.

“Maybe I can write something and send it in to that website I told you about, the one ran some of my stuff in the past,” I told him.

“That’s right, I forgot! You’re a famous author. Could you do that, Len?” he begged. He makes me feel so good about a little talent I often forget to share.

“I can try. It’s up to the editors. They decide if something is good enough to put up on their website.”

“I’ll start praying that they take what you write. I don’t have the internet,” he reminded me. “Can you tell me if they do. I’ll buy you coffee after Mass if they do.”

So dear reader, if you’ve followed thus far, could you do me a favor? A possible way to stop the oil leak may have come to a beautiful soul I know. It’s a “fix” which the oil company or the federal government would only laugh at, mainly because — to them — “things” terminated by abortion are not considered persons with brains. But the next time you have a moment in front of the tabernacle, could you ask God: if there is a person –  if there is a “victim-of-abortion saint” in heaven — and that person’s mind was meant to give us a solution, can he or she somehow send us the answer?

A man who cares dearly for his sister and his parish and “his” offertory table; who wears his heart on his sleeve and a Christmas sweatshirt to daily Mass in the summer; who will never be fettered by the chains of fame or fortune; who seems to have a sense about what saddens his friend Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament; and who is troubled when innocent animals die –he asked me to write this for him.

Me? I’m just looking forward to getting a peculiarly serene smile back on a face I see every day. And some pleasant conversation over coffee with a beautiful soul.

Len Gutmann lives in the Detroit area. He is a member of the Knights of Columbus, and is active in his parish's pro-life group. A carpenter and the father of four, he writes with the support of his wife, and at the behest of JPII's call to work for the new evangelization.

tag. * * If you do not want to deal with the intricities of the noscript * section, delete the tag (from ... to ). On * average, the noscript tag is called from less than 1% of internet * users. */-->

7 Comments For This Post

  1. PrairieHawk says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 10:36 am

    This one practically knocked me flat on my back. I’m going to pray to the Blessed Sacrament right now.

  2. peanutbutter says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 12:05 pm

    That oil spill–it looks like all the blood spilled by abortion.

  3. Mary Kochan says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 6:13 pm

    Years ago I saw a cartoon of a child asking God why he had not sent us a cure for AIDS and God replied that He had, twice, but we had aborted it each time. It is simply staggeringto think of the gifts that God has sent us and that we have rejected by abortion. The art, the music, the books, the scientific breakthroughs, the leaders, the teachers, the friends. Just staggering.

  4. donmwesley says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 10:32 pm

    It is amazing the people God puts in front of us. Many of whom can be seen with their true physical splendor. This message reminds us that we must not forget all God’s children, even the ones we have not had the PRIVALEDGE to view all their physical being while here on earth. God has given us the gift to see ALL through him in prayer.

    In Christ name we pray

  5. terrygeorge says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 11:48 pm

    lovely. I hope to see the 2nd part of this article soon, and an end to abortion…
    please help us Lord Jesus

  6. microsoftsam says:
    July 7th, 2010 at 12:02 am

    When I showed a “friend” this article he said, “if people read a science textbook instead of The Bible we would have a cure for AIDS, and a solution to this oil spill.”

    I wish people weren’t so mean sometimes.

  7. sandra124 says:
    July 7th, 2010 at 6:15 am

    Back in the early ’90′s BP was targeted as a corporation which contributed to Planned Parenthood. Many prolifers across the country wrote their headquarters and begged them to stop. I myself wrote, and responded to their reply. Shortly after this campaign BP announced they would no longer support PP. We pro-lifers should definitely be praying for this situation.

1 Trackbacks For This Post

  1. Tweets that mention Abortion and the Help We Need | Catholic Exchange -- Topsy.com says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 9:21 am

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Religion News, James Pereira. James Pereira said: Abortion and the Help We Need: There’s a beautiful soul I see at daily Mass. He’s a simple guy. I’ll call him “Bob… http://bit.ly/d7IJLq [...]

Leave a Reply

Comments May Not Display Immediately

You must be logged in to post a comment.

It's when we over-complicate things that we start to miss the simple answers that are right in front of us. All we need to do is open ourselves to a little divine healing, and we are soon well on our way.

Sergio Cruz | M: +1.305.403.9858 | scruz@cruzical.com | posts.cruzical.com

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


July 08, 03:08 PM

Image via Wikipedia

For U.S. carriers Verizon and Sprint, CDMA technology symbolizes their bread and butter. The rest of the world enjoys a more common GSM technology, which can allow travel around the globe with a single, properly outfitted, mobile phone. When I read about Telecom New Zealand pulling plug on its CDMA network in 2012, I was quite surprised that any carrier using CDMA technology would be doing away with it in such a short time. It is known that Verizon is moving to Long Term Evolution (LTE), the mobile communications standard that is evolved from the existing GSM standard. For Verizon to make the change work, LTE and CDMA will have to peacefully coexist and seamlessly transfer calls until such time as Verizon decides to follow Telecom New Zealand and pull the plug on its CDMA network. That may prove a costly move for Verizon with their large subscriber base, however, that may be a moot point if they are able to have the iPhone on their new LTE network.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


July 08, 12:02 PM

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Maybe I am not as daring as I used to be, but while reading Lifehacker, I came across their post Run Android on Your Windows Mobile Phone. Instantly, I thought, "Wow! There is a way to make those old Windows Mobile phones run the Android mobile operating system. I bet that will make them better!" It was when I read past the headline that I understood just how wrong I was in my thinking.  In days of old (pre-iPhone), I probably would have lined up to run two operating systems on my phone, but today, it got me thinking, "If the phone was under-powered to run Windows Mobile, how much more under-powered will it be running two operating systems! Why would anyone want to do that?"
Choice is a good thing -- having the ability to choose what operating system your phone uses would give consumers more flexibility in choosing phones and carriers. Choice can also be a bad thing -- one phone running two different operating systems means the manufacturer cannot focus on what makes one particular combination great and continue to build on that. Instead, development of the operating systems slow down, market fragmentation occurs within a single manufacturer, and what could have been a stellar product is now ho-hum. Maybe it is cool to have the ability to test another operating system on a current phone, but in my mind, it's just wishing you had something better than what you already have in your hand.

Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


July 07, 11:06 PM

Image by Somewhat Frank via Flickr

Today, I was drawn into reading a TUAW.com post Five apps for the conference-goer, by sheer virtue of the fact that the first graphic on the page was a "Hello, my name is" badge. The badge is bright red, and it grabbed my attention immediately. I am not a frequent conference-goer, but iPhone apps were being discussed and as an iPhone aficionado, I thought it worth my while to look at what apps were being discussed. Of the five apps, only two were familiar to me: one because I already have the app and the other because I remembered possibly once having created an account on a web site with a similar name.
Bump was the first app that I recognized; Bump is installed on my iPhone, and I have two or three profiles for sending my information to new contacts using Bump. The other app gave me a sense of distant familiarity, like I once used it or knew about it. Indeed, Contxts was a service that I had once signed up for and my account was still active (or inactive) on their system. I logged in to my account on the Contxts web site and navigated around the site, updating my information and realizing what the service could do: send an SMS message with my contact information to anyone requesting it. So, how did the iPhone app fit in and what about the brightly colored "Hello" badge? 
The Contxts iPhone app displays the "Hello" badge when the Contxts app is open and you turn your iPhone into a landscape position. What makes this simple, is your Contxts contact information and the Contxts SMS number are also on the "Hello" badge. Anyone reading your badge can instantly receive your contact information by sending a text to the number shown on the badge. What makes this app ingenious is that the recipient does not need to have an iPhone -- any SMS-capable device will do. Contxts will send the information you want: your name, title, company, telephone number, e-mail, etc. and though currently still in beta, you can also optionally attach a VCard with your contact information to the SMS. A pro Contxt account ($4.99/month) will allow you to have multiple contact profiles to send for different occasions. The iPhone app is more than just a brightly colored badge -- it lets you control what information to send to requesters too.
A blog post that piqued my curiosity with a bright color wound up giving me a really useful tool to add to my iPhone arsenal. Interestingly, it was a tool that I had left by the wayside because it was missing a key component, an app. Now, you can find out more about me -- just look for my bright red "Hello, my name is Sergio" badge.

 

Sergio Cruz |

M: +1.305.403.9858 | scruz@cruzical.com | www.cruzical.com | sergiowcruz
Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


June 21, 09:16 PM

Downloading iOS4 for my iPhone 3G... Hope it goes well.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


May 19, 02:28 PM

Image via CrunchBase

"It occurred to me that Apple ought to consider building in a digital TV tuner into the iMac and add software similar to Eye TV 3.0 as a replacement for the Apple TV."


In reading the above quote from TUAW writer Steven Sande, I wondered what's holding Apple back from doing just this. If you think about it, Apple would most likely incur the wrath of: 1) cable operators, as cable customers would not need DVRs; 2) cable networks, as their content could be viewed on numerous devices without incurring additional cost or paying cable networks any additional fees; and 3) other manufacturers of DVRs and TV place/time-shifting equipment, whose devices would seem obsolete when compared to an Apple device.

I have been using a Windows Vista Media Center PC to do this for several years now. I was able to eliminate my TiVo DVR (and it's monthly bill) in doing so, and I gained a larger space to store recorded television shows in my computer than my TiVo ever had. With the addition of a Media Center Extender to this setup, I can watch shows recorded on my computer on my bedroom television set. Why, you ask, has Microsoft not had any problems with the above parties, when Windows computers known as Media Centers have been doing this for years? Because it takes a geek to set it up and learn how to use it, and you need additional parts unless you want a computer next to your television set. You can be that any Apple designed device (i.e. similar to the Apple TV device) would be: a) easy to connect; b) easy to use; and c) designed for the common masses and not only geeks.

I'm with Steven. Apple, fix the Apple TV and make it record TV shows like a DVR. And while you're at it, piss everyone off about how easy it is to watch TV on your computer.
Related articles by Zemanta
Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


February 10, 12:56 PM

Statues.pdf Download this file

I have to make a trip here someday to see this beautiful place in person. Thanks, Eric, from sending it my way.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


February 05, 08:04 AM

I am always being asked for extra "copies" of licensed software like Word, PowerPoint, Photoshop, etc. It's illegal to give this software to you! What I do, is recommend a free, open source alternative to the software I am being asked for and many times, the alternative software fills the niche (more often than not, people are looking for a word processing program, not specifically Word). Check out this CNET video showing off 7 great free apps.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


January 30, 06:12 PM

What a day Wednesday, January 27, turned out to be! All the conjectured swirling around the Internet was finally laid to rest with the unveiling of the Apple iPad. While the iPad name is certainly in line with iPhone and iPod, there may have been a better choice in name out there — although iSlate was definitely not it. Now, that the iPad has been revealed to the world, the pundits are screaming praises and crying foul. Truthfully, I was a little disappointed with what Apple released, but I know in a generation or two the iPad will evolve into a wonderful device.

Why was I disappointed? I was thinking with the webcams in many laptops, netbooks and even desktop PCs that often  go unused, a device like the iPad would be perfect for having video chats. In hind sight, perhaps holding a device with a camera while you are conversing is not such a good idea. Apple probably had great reasons for leaving the camera out; time will tell if they decide to include a webcam in future generations of the iPad. I had also hoped that the device would be closer to a laptop than the iPhone, but Apple was once again far brighter than I am on the subject. With 75,000,000 iPhone and iPod Touches shipped worldwide, that is 75,000,000 users that can already use an iPad — brilliant!

Among the pundits, are those who find the iPad a very nice device, and still others who can only complain about the device. I would like to focus on a few of the criticisms I have frequently read that make no sense to me. Ultimately, the iPad will not be for everyone — some will want to use it and others will want more from the device . I think that the two camps can peacefully coexist, but the proselytization of one camp over the other is not necessary. It’s not a holy war; it’s consumption versus production.

One of the frequent complaints I read is that the iPad does not support Adobe’s Flash software. For years, I have found Adobe Flash a hindrance to surfing the web. I have my choice of browsers, which for the most part can view all web sites equally — that’s why we have standards — but to view certain web sites, I have to use a Flash plug-in. Flash makes for another avenue of attack when viewing web pages. Granted, there are many avenues of attack without Flash, but why add another?

HTML5 is the next generation of web standards that will make things like Adobe’s Flash plug-in obsolete. Today, there are numerous browsers that can already view certain aspects of HTML5 and make web sites much more interactive without the need for plug-ins. I have begun using the new mobile Google Voice web site, which is built on HTML5 programming, on my iPhone and can tell you that it can do some amazing things. Using simple coding without the need for additional plug-ins, performance is increased, surface area of attack is maintained at a basic level, and web standards are maintained. After all, we are going to use an iPad to “hold the Internet in your hands as you surf it” (per Scott Forstall, Apple’s Senior Vice President of iPhone Software).

To me, that’s the biggest benefit of the iPad — holding it in my hands. I like to read in bed. Unfortunately for me, I like to read Internet news in bed, thereby necessitating some form of computer to surf the Internet to read news. I have been using tablet PCs for many years to accomplish this, and while functional, using a 4 pound laptop to read in bed is not very comfortable. Along came netbooks, which promised to give me a similar experience to a laptop, but in a lighter and less expensive package. Yet, you can’t fold most netbooks in a slate fashion, like I can with tablet PCs, and their weight, while about half most tablet PCs still left something to be desired.

The argument for netbooks against an iPad is that you can use the netbook to produce content, whereas, an iPad is for consuming content. So now, it’s more important to be a producer of content rather than a consumer of content? That’s the “geek” argument? There will always be more consumers than producers — that’s how a market system works. Apple was looking for a way to get into the hands of the masses, hence the iPad, a device for consuming media, and the low starting price, under $500. Steve Jobs took a jab at netbooks in his keynote address, and maybe he overtly targeted them for a reason, but the reality is, netbooks and the iPad are not similar devices.

Image via CrunchBase

As regular notebook computers continue to decline in price, the netbook market will continue to be squeezed into an ever smaller niche, whereas the iPad has created a new niche for itself with lots of room to grow. The iPad is an innovative device that may turn the computing industry on its ear, given time. For now, the iPad is a new gadget that will surely invite many computer aficionados, amateurs, novices and experts alike, to join the Apple world and surf the web from the other side.

Check out my take on the new iPad at http://computersight.com/computers/my-take-on-the-apple-ipad/.

>

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


January 20, 09:23 PM

In the supercar league such as Ferrari and Lamborghini, there’s another name to be added – Honda. Don’t be surprised, Honda has already cheered its accomplishment as supercar manufacturer way back in 2005 with the Honda NSX-R GT. Of course, its been ages since then, but with the HSV-010 GT, Honda plans afresh. The HSV-010 GT has been developed as a racecar to compete in the GT500 class of the 2010 Super GT Series, and as it was with the NSX, again five examples of the car will take to the track for the race series. Powered by a naturally aspirated 3.4 litre V8 which produces 496 horsepower and 392 Nm (289 lb-ft) of torque, HSV (Honda Sports Velocity) will initially be developed as a pure racing machine but hopefully it will see the roads outside the racetrack.

Via: Diseno-Art509306

It would sure be nice to see this on the street as a replacement to my S2000...

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


January 18, 03:05 PM

What happens when an adult and a four year old have a barrier in their communication while they are playing with LEGO bricks? Read more over at http://socyberty.com/languages/perseverance/.

>

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


January 16, 09:55 PM

In the small business space, I frequently see businesses purchasing computers at a retail store and then wanting to add them to the domain network in their office. The rub is that most computers purchased in retail stores run a home version of Windows, which cannot be added to a domain network. In the past, this was a costly mistake as a professional Windows upgrade needed to be installed to the computer, which usually meant purchasing a new Windows license (an upgrade version) and performing a fresh install of Windows. With Windows 7 Anytime Upgrade process, the costly mistake is not so costly.

Image via CrunchBase

I recently was helping a client with a new computer, and the computer that had been purchased was running Windows 7 Home Premium. I did a little research before arriving at the client’s site and found that it was a very easy upgrade process from Windows 7 Home Premium to Windows 7 Professional edition. Not having experienced this before, I was a little skeptical about the ease of this process. In the past, Microsoft was not known for the ease of upgrading the operating system.

Microsoft has included an icon to begin what is known as the Windows Anytime Upgrade. You click on the icon and are prompted to either purchase a license for the version of Windows 7 that you wish, or enter the product key for the version of Windows 7 that you have in your possession. “How could it be that easy?” I found myself asking. We proceeded through the Anytime Upgrade process and Windows 7 began to go step through the upgrade. The screens are very similar to the patching screens that Microsoft has been employing for Vista and Windows 7. After a few “Please Wait” screens and a restart, the computer was upgraded from Windows 7 Home Premium to Windows 7 Professional.

After the upgrade, we added the computer to the domain. This was almost two weeks ago, and I have only heard great things from this client about Windows 7. What possessed Microsoft to resolve all the painful upgrades that we previously had to endure? I can only imagine that years of criticism finally made a dent in the Microsoft armor, and the solution that they unveiled with Windows 7 is certainly slick. I am glad to see that Microsoft is finally making their varied products more accessible to consumers.

A great upgrade experience from Microsoft? Who knew? Read more at computersight.com.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »


Posts

September 02, 03:17 PM

Image via Wikipedia
Several years ago, I decided to move my entire CD-based music collection to our family computer, making the music more easily accessible. I, then, realized that having the music in the computer was great for synchronizing with mobile devices and maintaining a catalog of the music, but not so great for listening to on the home stereo system. As I looked for a better solution, I found numerous, expensive ways to get the music that was on my computer to play on my stereo via both wired Ethernet and WiFi connections, yet each needed me to control the music via the computer's interface. My goal: I wanted to stream music from my computer and control the music from a remote. And I wanted it to be reasonably priced. I was beginning to think that there was nothing out there in the "affordable" category to fulfill my needs, and then I heard about AirTunes.


AirTunes is a feature built-in to Apple's AirPort Express that allows playing your iTunes music through your stereo or powered speakers. More research yielded that the Airport Express had a 3.5 mm audio minijack for analog or optical digital sound. The setup was simple: use the AirPort Express behind the home stereo -- the AirPort Express would connect  to my home's wireless network and via cable to my home stereo system. The final piece to the puzzle is Apple's Remote application for the iPhone, which would allow me to control the streaming music remotely. Music streaming nirvana! Everything worked as I wanted and the AirPort Express unit was under $100.
Present day: Apple releases the new Apple TV. AirPlay, coming soon to Apple TV, will allow content on an iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch to be streamed to an Apple TV via wireless. This means music and video purchased on a mobile device can be watched on an television via the Apple TV. If AirTunes provided a great solution for streaming music, then AirPlay is an evolution of AirTunes, allowing video streaming as well. I look forward to adding an Apple TV to my television too.

Related articles by Zemanta
Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.
August 30, 12:55 PM

Feast, famine, or function.

Caloric intake is really important when you are going to do any activity that is exerting. On Saturday mornings, I usually wake up early to accomplish at least one item from my home to do list. In an effort to get as much as I can accomplished, I frequently forget, or purposefully ignore, having breakfast. Whether I am mowing the lawn, working as a carpenter or moving furniture, I am not working as efficiently as I could.
Without the benefit of breakfast, I am working hard with only the previous day's caloric intake as a power source, some of which I was burning off while sleeping! After the first few truly exerting moments, I am more tired than I would have been had I begun the day with breakfast. The more exerting work, the larger breakfast I should have. Heavy lifting requires many more calories than just pushing a lawn mower.
While calories are important for energy, they can also help you control your weight. If you are taking in more calories than you can burn off in a regular day, then you will begin to gain weight. Your metabolism is what controls your burning of calories. Making sure that your body is burning an appropriate number of calories will help you maintain and lose undesired weight. I have used the Lose It! iPhone app very successfully to monitor my caloric intake and usage and lose weight.
Lose It! helps you watch your caloric intake and use and daily weight, and based on age, current weight and how much weight you would like to lose per week, will give you a plan to achieve your goals. In a period of about 6 months, I lost about 20 pounds and managed to keep the weight off by maintaining the level of caloric intake suggested by Lose It!.
Energy is necessary to work. Not having enough energy will leave you feeling drained; having too much energy will make you gain weight. Being healthy is a delicate balance.
August 30, 09:56 AM

Email Rampage! 8 Tips to Find the Bottom of Your Inbox

August 27, 2010 in email,time management with

This post is not for the faint of heart.

Things are going to get ugly with your inbox.

(Some might even say dangerous!)

And some email is going to get hurt.

Today, we are going to get to the bottom of your email inbox…

Have You Seen the Bottom?

When I tell people that they are going to empty their inbox, often their first response is,

“You can do that? Is that allowed?”

I have discussed the inefficiency of email communication before.  (See here and here.)

However, in today’s world, email is still the major communication for business.  For that reason, you need to stay on top of it and you need to stay current with it.

Not doing so has consequences.  These range from overlooked opportunities to late deliverables to missed communications.

So…are you drowning in your email inbox?  Or do you regularly keep it in check?

How to Get to Empty

Many people’s inboxes resemble the “Big Pile” method.  I have seen some  inboxes that have 3000+ messages in them.

They are big piles.

What would your boss say if he or she walked in to your cubicle and you had 3000 memos piled on your desk?  Probably not a good situation.

In today’s business world, the term “email bankruptcy” seems to come up frequently.  This refers to when a person falls so hopelessly behind in their email that they eventually declare bankruptcy.  They simply nuke their entire email inbox and start over.

I don’t agree with this approach.  First, there was probably something of value in your inbox that you just threw out.  Second, it doesn’t solve the problem and often you will be right back where you started in a short timeframe.

However, I do believe in keeping your inbox near empty.  And I believe in being tough with your email to keep it there.

Email Rampage!

Here’s where it gets a bit gruesome… this is the part when we get mean with our email.  Just in case you need to look away.

Set aside an hour (or two!) to do nothing but attack your email backlog.  Turn off the phone.  Shut the door.  Minimize interruptions.

Ready?  Let’s go…

8 Tips to Get to the Bottom of Your Inbox:

  1. Get Stuff OUT of IN – You will never empty your inbox if you don’t have a place to put your emails.  You must have a “filing” method for getting stuff out of your inbox. Choose the method that works best for you.  But, make that choice, because it needs to be law for your inbox.  I prefer the simplest setup.  Some people create dozens of folders to categorize each and every email.  That is overkill.  With today’s search tools, I can find an email from 4 years ago in seconds.  No separate filing needed.  The only individual folders I set up are for travel and receipts/bills.  I archive all old email into one archive folder.  (BTW, Gmail does a wonderful job of this, in fact, it even has an “archive” button.)
  2. Emails Are Not Todos – The reasons that many people leave emails in their inbox is because they are still “working on them.”  But, emails are not todos.  You need to get the tasks out of your communication stream.  You need to put the todos straight on your todo list.  After you have done this, then yes, file that email. If you need to reference it, you can always come back to your archive.  Most likely, you won’t need to.
  3. Work from Newest to Oldest – Many want to start with the oldest email.  After all, those have been sitting the longest, and they feel more guilt about them.  However with email, often an issue has been updated in a more recent message.  So if you start from the back, you will find yourself responding to items only to read subsequent emails that the issue was already resolved.  How often to you see responses from team-members only to then see a second email, “Oh, I hadn’t read the other message yet.”
  4. Deal With Email in Groups – To take the “Newest to Oldest” method even further, by dealing with email conversations by group or thread.  Let you mail client group the related messages.  Again, starting with the most recent, you can often archive a whole group of messages at once.  This makes batching down you inbox much quicker.  I do this both in Outlook and on my iPhone.
  5. Delete Delete Delete! – Slash slash slash!  Do not be afraid to delete emails. This act bothers some.  What if I need it again?  Again? You haven’t even read it once?  Let it go.  If it is that important… it will come back.  You will get another message.  DELETE!
  6. Set an Auto Archive – This is a powerful technique.  Set up your email client to automatically archive any messages over two weeks old.  This sets up an automatic rolling deadline, where anything you leave for more than two weeks disappears into your archive.  This is good, because it is there if you need it, and you don’t have to worry about your email inbox reaching 3000 again.
  7. Don’t Respond Unless Needed – A mistake that many make when trying to empty their inbox is that they go down the list and try to deal with every email…meaning responding to each.  Don’t fall into this trap.  Not all emails need another email.  Don’t unnecessarily respond.  This leads to email Ping-Pong!  And of course, more email.
  8. Remove Those Last Few Emails – When victory is in sight, most people stop short.  They end up with a handful of “important” emails that they want to keep in their inbox.  Don’t stop there.  Those last few emails are likely tasks that need to go on your todo list, and those emails need to be archived.  (Refer back to #1 and 2.)

There is a Bottom

Despite myths to the contrary, there is a bottom to your inbox.

And you can get your inbox to empty.  Because email is virtual clutter, it is easy to let it pile up.

Get tough with your email.  Go on a rampage to get it under control.

Then be consistent to keep it under control.  Quick attacks from time to time will prevent you from having to work down from hundreds (if not thousands) of emails again.

Do you need to go on an email rampage today?  When was the last time you saw the bottom of your inbox?

Related Posts:

TMN’s 9 Rules for Work Email

7 Ways to Be Ruthless With Your Email

Email Ping-Pong!

Some of the most sage advice on the topic of emptying your inbox. I use two folders to clean out my inbox regularly: Do Now and Waiting on someone to Do.

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

August 27, 11:05 AM

I am a sucker for devices that share my name. Here you see the latest eReader and Tablet, respectively, from Velocity Micro. Borders will be selling them packaged with the Borders reader app. The Cruzer name is reminiscent of the Cruzer line of Sandisk USB drives, of which, I have two.

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

August 25, 08:28 PM
Image via CrunchBaseIt is with great anticipation that I am starting to write this post. Just a few moments ago, I was reading about the new Clicker iPhone app at Lifehacker.com. I watch only a handful of television shows, most of which have recent episodes available on the web for free and/or pay. Clicker makes it easy to find these shows, watch these shows and share what I am watching, from a simple interface on my iPhone. Watch the video below promoting the new Clicker iPhone app while I download the new app on my iPhone.
With the ostentatious tagline of "The Internet Television Guide," Clicker certainly has to fill some pretty large shoes. I visited the web site before downloading the app to see what kind of shows are available. Covert Affairs... check; White Collar... check; House... check; all the shows I watch on television... check! Many of the shows even had a few of the most recent episodes available for free. Now, let's see what the iPhone app has to offer.
The iPhone app greets you with the option of signing in or creating an account. I went ahead and created an account to see what the app had to offer. The interface had a Search and Playlist feature similar to the web site. Already, I find the app easy to use, but will I be able to watch shows on the iPhone? As I searched and found the same shows I found via the web site, I discovered that none of the shows were able to be watched on the iPhone. Was this by design? Probably.
All the iPhone content for the television shows I watch is Paid. Why? In my mind, two reasons: 1) Apple sells the shows via iTunes and 2) the free episodes on the web usually require Flash for viewing. What a disappointment, but par for the course in the world of paid television. Don't misunderstand me -- the Clicker app can be used to watch many Internet-based shows and videos. Also, if you are interested in socially interacting with others about the television shows you watch -- it looks to be the Foursquare of videos -- Clicker should fulfill your every need. But, if you're like me and you're looking for a way to watch network television for free on your iPhone, there is still something left to be desired.
  
Clicker for iPhone: Available Now from Clicker on Vimeo.
August 25, 02:09 PM

 

« Previous |

You Shall Not Pass!


Submitted by: Frankie Sez Exlax

Increased fines didn’t help, so the transportation commission hired a mad scientist.

Incorrect source or offensive?

This funny was posted on Wednesday, August 25th, 2010 at 9:31 am

This one would do well here in Miami...

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

August 17, 02:22 PM

Venting Frustration Will Only Make Your Anger Worse

Nobody recommends bottling up your anger, but venting your frustrations may actually be much worse. Quiet reflection may be the best cure for pent up frustration.

Photo by Eat Our Brains

David McRaney, of the excellent You Are Not So Smart blog, explains how catharsis (the act of cleansing or purging) is entirely useless in letting go of your anger.

Releasing sexual tension feels good. Throwing up when you are sick feels good. Finally getting to a restroom feels good. So, it seemed to follow, draining bad blood or driving out demons or siphoning away black bile to bring the body back into balance must be good medicine. Be it an exorcism or a laxative, the idea is the same: get the bad stuff out and you'll return to normal.

It's drug-like, because there are brain chemicals and other behavioral reinforcements at work. If you get accustomed to blowing off steam, you become dependent on it.

Common sense says venting is an important way to ease tension, but common sense is wrong. Venting – catharsis – is pouring fuel into a fire.

While you certainly don't want to neglect your problems, studies found that doing nothing was more effective in helping anger dissipate that venting those frustrations. While it may feel good, venting only keeps the anger present.

McRaney's full post is a long but good read, providing a lot of useful information on why catharsis doesn't help relieve your anger and advice on what to do instead.

Catharsis [You Are Not So Smart]

Send an email to Adam Dachis, the author of this post, at adachis@lifehacker.com.

');

Your version of Internet Explorer is not supported. Please upgrade to the most recent version in order to view comments.

Loading comments ...

In order to view comments on lifehacker.com you need to enable JavaScript.
If you are using Firefox and NoScript addon, please mark lifehacker.com as trusted.

There's a little tidbit that I need to learn...

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

August 04, 12:56 PM

More than three dozen of America's wealthiest individuals and families have joined Bill Gates and Warren Buffett in agreeing to give away at least half their fortunes to charity.

The announcement was made Wednesday by The Giving Pledge, an effort officially launched by Gates and Buffett earlier this year to persuade the richest people in America to commit to giving the majority of their wealth to the philanthropic causes and charitable organizations of their choice, either during their lifetime or after their death.

In addition to Buffett and Gates — America's two wealthiest individuals, with a combined net worth of $90 billion, according to Forbes — 38 other billionaires are taking the give-it-away pledge. They include New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, entertainment executive Barry Diller, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, energy tycoon T. Boone Pickens, media mogul Ted Turner, David Rockefeller, film director George Lucas and investor Ronald Perelman.

"We’ve really just started, but already we’ve had a terrific response,” Buffett, co-founder and chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, said in a statement. “At its core, the Giving Pledge is about asking wealthy families to have important conversations about their wealth and how it will be used.

"We’re delighted that so many people are doing just that – and that so many have decided to not only take this pledge but also to commit to sums far greater than the 50 percent minimum level.”

Bloomberg, who made his fortune from financial news and information services company Blomberg L.P., added: "If you want to do something for your children and show how much you love them, the single best thing — by far — is to support organizations that will create a better world for them and their children. And by giving, we inspire others to give of themselves, whether their money or their time.”

CNN founder Ted Turner said he felt compelled to give back. "I’m particularly thankful for my father’s advice to set goals so high that they can’t possibly be achieved during a lifetime and to give help where help is needed most," he said. "That inspiration keeps me energized and eager to keep working hard every day on giving back and making the world a better place for generations to come.”

Gates, the Microsoft co-founder, and Buffett launched "The Giving Pledge" in June. The effort could funnel a colossal amount of money into nonprofit groups. If the individuals on the Forbes 400 list of richest Americans pledged half their net worth to charity, that would amount to $600 billion, according to Fortune magazine.

  1. Click here for related content
    1. Texas teen raises $1 million for hospital
    2. Paul Allen to leave bulk of wealth to charity
    3. Vote: Would you give your wealth to charity?
    4. Gates, Buffett to megarich: Give it away

The United States has roughly 400 billionaires, about 40 percent of the world's total, according to Forbes. The 40 names that have pledged to date have a combined net worth surpassing $230 billion.

© 2010 msnbc.com Reprints

Wow. It's money that can be used for both good and evil. Here's hoping that only good comes from this pledge.

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

July 14, 11:40 PM

I think I'm in love.

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

July 14, 10:32 PM

The courtyard at the Setai

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

July 09, 01:31 PM

Abortion and the Help We Need

July 6th, 2010 by Len Gutmann

 Print This Article ·ShareThis

There’s a beautiful soul I see at daily Mass. He’s a simple guy. I’ll call him “Bob” to hide his identity — which in his humility he’d probably prefer. He is who he is: the salt of the earth… and a beacon of light to the disabled sister he cares for at home. Somewhere in his late 40s, he’s an usher on the weekends and helps out whenever the parish might need him. He’s slotted on Friday mornings for an hour before the Blessed Sacrament at our parish’s adoration chapel.  That hour of his ends when the eight o’clock Mass begins.

I arrived shortly before Mass, and soon saw him leave the chapel to head to his pew just as the entrance hymn was starting up. The simplicity he shines out makes people smile. And on this particular summer morning, his red and green sweatshirt with “Christ is the reason for the Season” across the front had already made my day. But he looked troubled this particular Friday. I wondered if something was wrong… a cold, perhaps, or maybe allergies. I made a mental note to include him in my Mass intentions.

During Mass he cherishes his role as the one who moves the table out of the way after the offertory gifts are taken up. He does it with a certain reverence, taking his time to smooth the cloth on the table after he sets it ahead of the front pew — perfectly out of the way for the Communion line. This particular morning, he was taking his time with the table and its covering. I could tell he was carrying a heavy load inside.

On the way back from Communion, he usually has a peculiarly serene smile on his face. He finds such happiness receiving back the gifts that are transformed by the priest on God’s table. But this particular morning, his consumption of Jesus didn’t seem to be strong enough medicine for his troubles.

After Mass, he’ll wander over to tell me the headlines about the pro-life news that he’s read on the internet at the library. He wears his soul on his sleeve, usually grinning from ear to ear when he’s heard of positive news in the movement. When it’s bad news that he’s come upon, he frowns and tells it to me in sad, defeated tones.

He never stops telling me how great a job our parish’s small pro-life committee is doing, and apologizes often for his inability to help the cause, except by praying or giving something up — like pop, or his favorite television show. “It’s all right, Bob. God knows you can’t drive,” I tell him — to make him feel better about not being more active. He whispered to me, once, the real reason he can’t help us more: “Whenever I get thinking about abortion too much, it makes me have a bad day.” You see, he can’t bear it when God’s innocent creations are harmed.

On this troubled morning after Mass, he appeared to be holding back tears as he approached me in my pew. “Are you okay, Bob?” I asked as he took a seat in front of me.  Still thinking (or hoping) it was just allergies, I was ready to offer him a ride to the drug store.

“Something came to me before Mass… during my adoration hour,” he told me immediately. “Something about the oil spill that is making Jesus sad.”

I know him well enough by now, and sensed that whatever “came to him” wasn’t anything geo-political or apocalyptic. I wasn’t going to hear anything elaborate and scientific, nor anything fanatical. Just the reason he was upset. With Bob, what you see is what you get. And what you hear is probably what comes to him when he’s connecting with his best friend, Jesus.

He loves animals, and the spill has been bothering him lately. He’s seen the pictures of the pelicans and the dead fish, and he wants the oil to stop leaking into the Gulf more than most people do—especially people like myself who can drive and want it to stop before the cost of gasoline begins to skyrocket.

“Tell me, Bob,” I said.

“The oil leak goes on and on and lots of dolphins are going to die,” he said somewhat prophetically. “It’s all because of an abortion, and Jesus is frustrated because of it.” I thought I heard him correctly. He said “an abortion,” and not because of abortion in general. “I wish I could let the world know. It came to me… in front of Jesus,” he added, just so I wouldn’t think he was crazy about what came to him in prayer.

An abortion?” I said. I was puzzled.

“Uh huh,” he said. “The person who has the smarts to come up with a plan to stop the oil….” Then the reality of what came to him descended on me.

“There should be a smart person in the world who knows how to fix it!” he explained.

“Yes, you’d think someone would have figured it out by now,” I agreed, hoping to steer him away from what I feared Jesus had spoken to his soul.

“There is someone,” he said, “but he’s not down there in the Gulf to help out. He or she has been aborted.”

“Oh, geez, Bob!” I almost gasped.  “Jesus told you that?” A long, quiet pause followed while his statement sent a wave of goosebumps up my arms. I truly did not know what to say. Then it dawned on me… this unsophisticated man could very well be right. With all the minds that never got a chance to go to college because of over 50 million legal pregnancy terminations, it’s quite likely that at least one of the “terminated” would have had a brain with the capacity to provide a solution.  I looked at the tabernacle and wondered why Bob’s best friend would trouble him with such a thought. I tried quickly to come up with something that would console this gentle guy who holds all living creatures so dear in his heart. Then something came to me.

“Bob, I think the Lord just told me something,” I said, breaking our silence. “We can pray.”

“I’m praying all the time,” he said soberly. “I don’t want any more animals to die.”

“Yeah, but we can pray specifically,” I explained. “If a person with the solution was aborted, then that means he is now with our Lord. And if he’s with our Lord, then he’s a saint, just like all the Saints.”

“You mean pray…  like ask for his intercessions?” he said.

“Just like that,” I answered. “He’s not gone completely. He’s somewhere in the world, just with God now. And if he… or she… would have had the solution, then that person still has the solution. We just have to ask God if that person can somehow share it with us here on earth.”

“How can we get the word out for everyone to ask him — or her — to intercede for us?” he asked me.

“I don’t know, buddy,” I said. Then I realized why he was telling me all this. I told him once that a Catholic daily website had published some things I wrote, so he thinks I’m a famous author.

“Maybe I can write something and send it in to that website I told you about, the one ran some of my stuff in the past,” I told him.

“That’s right, I forgot! You’re a famous author. Could you do that, Len?” he begged. He makes me feel so good about a little talent I often forget to share.

“I can try. It’s up to the editors. They decide if something is good enough to put up on their website.”

“I’ll start praying that they take what you write. I don’t have the internet,” he reminded me. “Can you tell me if they do. I’ll buy you coffee after Mass if they do.”

So dear reader, if you’ve followed thus far, could you do me a favor? A possible way to stop the oil leak may have come to a beautiful soul I know. It’s a “fix” which the oil company or the federal government would only laugh at, mainly because — to them — “things” terminated by abortion are not considered persons with brains. But the next time you have a moment in front of the tabernacle, could you ask God: if there is a person –  if there is a “victim-of-abortion saint” in heaven — and that person’s mind was meant to give us a solution, can he or she somehow send us the answer?

A man who cares dearly for his sister and his parish and “his” offertory table; who wears his heart on his sleeve and a Christmas sweatshirt to daily Mass in the summer; who will never be fettered by the chains of fame or fortune; who seems to have a sense about what saddens his friend Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament; and who is troubled when innocent animals die –he asked me to write this for him.

Me? I’m just looking forward to getting a peculiarly serene smile back on a face I see every day. And some pleasant conversation over coffee with a beautiful soul.

Len Gutmann lives in the Detroit area. He is a member of the Knights of Columbus, and is active in his parish's pro-life group. A carpenter and the father of four, he writes with the support of his wife, and at the behest of JPII's call to work for the new evangelization.

tag. * * If you do not want to deal with the intricities of the noscript * section, delete the tag (from ... to ). On * average, the noscript tag is called from less than 1% of internet * users. */-->

7 Comments For This Post

  1. PrairieHawk says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 10:36 am

    This one practically knocked me flat on my back. I’m going to pray to the Blessed Sacrament right now.

  2. peanutbutter says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 12:05 pm

    That oil spill–it looks like all the blood spilled by abortion.

  3. Mary Kochan says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 6:13 pm

    Years ago I saw a cartoon of a child asking God why he had not sent us a cure for AIDS and God replied that He had, twice, but we had aborted it each time. It is simply staggeringto think of the gifts that God has sent us and that we have rejected by abortion. The art, the music, the books, the scientific breakthroughs, the leaders, the teachers, the friends. Just staggering.

  4. donmwesley says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 10:32 pm

    It is amazing the people God puts in front of us. Many of whom can be seen with their true physical splendor. This message reminds us that we must not forget all God’s children, even the ones we have not had the PRIVALEDGE to view all their physical being while here on earth. God has given us the gift to see ALL through him in prayer.

    In Christ name we pray

  5. terrygeorge says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 11:48 pm

    lovely. I hope to see the 2nd part of this article soon, and an end to abortion…
    please help us Lord Jesus

  6. microsoftsam says:
    July 7th, 2010 at 12:02 am

    When I showed a “friend” this article he said, “if people read a science textbook instead of The Bible we would have a cure for AIDS, and a solution to this oil spill.”

    I wish people weren’t so mean sometimes.

  7. sandra124 says:
    July 7th, 2010 at 6:15 am

    Back in the early ’90′s BP was targeted as a corporation which contributed to Planned Parenthood. Many prolifers across the country wrote their headquarters and begged them to stop. I myself wrote, and responded to their reply. Shortly after this campaign BP announced they would no longer support PP. We pro-lifers should definitely be praying for this situation.

1 Trackbacks For This Post

  1. Tweets that mention Abortion and the Help We Need | Catholic Exchange -- Topsy.com says:
    July 6th, 2010 at 9:21 am

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Religion News, James Pereira. James Pereira said: Abortion and the Help We Need: There’s a beautiful soul I see at daily Mass. He’s a simple guy. I’ll call him “Bob… http://bit.ly/d7IJLq [...]

Leave a Reply

Comments May Not Display Immediately

You must be logged in to post a comment.

It's when we over-complicate things that we start to miss the simple answers that are right in front of us. All we need to do is open ourselves to a little divine healing, and we are soon well on our way.

Sergio Cruz | M: +1.305.403.9858 | scruz@cruzical.com | posts.cruzical.com

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

July 08, 03:08 PM

Image via Wikipedia

For U.S. carriers Verizon and Sprint, CDMA technology symbolizes their bread and butter. The rest of the world enjoys a more common GSM technology, which can allow travel around the globe with a single, properly outfitted, mobile phone. When I read about Telecom New Zealand pulling plug on its CDMA network in 2012, I was quite surprised that any carrier using CDMA technology would be doing away with it in such a short time. It is known that Verizon is moving to Long Term Evolution (LTE), the mobile communications standard that is evolved from the existing GSM standard. For Verizon to make the change work, LTE and CDMA will have to peacefully coexist and seamlessly transfer calls until such time as Verizon decides to follow Telecom New Zealand and pull the plug on its CDMA network. That may prove a costly move for Verizon with their large subscriber base, however, that may be a moot point if they are able to have the iPhone on their new LTE network.

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

July 08, 12:02 PM

Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Maybe I am not as daring as I used to be, but while reading Lifehacker, I came across their post Run Android on Your Windows Mobile Phone. Instantly, I thought, "Wow! There is a way to make those old Windows Mobile phones run the Android mobile operating system. I bet that will make them better!" It was when I read past the headline that I understood just how wrong I was in my thinking.  In days of old (pre-iPhone), I probably would have lined up to run two operating systems on my phone, but today, it got me thinking, "If the phone was under-powered to run Windows Mobile, how much more under-powered will it be running two operating systems! Why would anyone want to do that?"
Choice is a good thing -- having the ability to choose what operating system your phone uses would give consumers more flexibility in choosing phones and carriers. Choice can also be a bad thing -- one phone running two different operating systems means the manufacturer cannot focus on what makes one particular combination great and continue to build on that. Instead, development of the operating systems slow down, market fragmentation occurs within a single manufacturer, and what could have been a stellar product is now ho-hum. Maybe it is cool to have the ability to test another operating system on a current phone, but in my mind, it's just wishing you had something better than what you already have in your hand.

Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

July 07, 11:06 PM

Image by Somewhat Frank via Flickr

Today, I was drawn into reading a TUAW.com post Five apps for the conference-goer, by sheer virtue of the fact that the first graphic on the page was a "Hello, my name is" badge. The badge is bright red, and it grabbed my attention immediately. I am not a frequent conference-goer, but iPhone apps were being discussed and as an iPhone aficionado, I thought it worth my while to look at what apps were being discussed. Of the five apps, only two were familiar to me: one because I already have the app and the other because I remembered possibly once having created an account on a web site with a similar name.
Bump was the first app that I recognized; Bump is installed on my iPhone, and I have two or three profiles for sending my information to new contacts using Bump. The other app gave me a sense of distant familiarity, like I once used it or knew about it. Indeed, Contxts was a service that I had once signed up for and my account was still active (or inactive) on their system. I logged in to my account on the Contxts web site and navigated around the site, updating my information and realizing what the service could do: send an SMS message with my contact information to anyone requesting it. So, how did the iPhone app fit in and what about the brightly colored "Hello" badge? 
The Contxts iPhone app displays the "Hello" badge when the Contxts app is open and you turn your iPhone into a landscape position. What makes this simple, is your Contxts contact information and the Contxts SMS number are also on the "Hello" badge. Anyone reading your badge can instantly receive your contact information by sending a text to the number shown on the badge. What makes this app ingenious is that the recipient does not need to have an iPhone -- any SMS-capable device will do. Contxts will send the information you want: your name, title, company, telephone number, e-mail, etc. and though currently still in beta, you can also optionally attach a VCard with your contact information to the SMS. A pro Contxt account ($4.99/month) will allow you to have multiple contact profiles to send for different occasions. The iPhone app is more than just a brightly colored badge -- it lets you control what information to send to requesters too.
A blog post that piqued my curiosity with a bright color wound up giving me a really useful tool to add to my iPhone arsenal. Interestingly, it was a tool that I had left by the wayside because it was missing a key component, an app. Now, you can find out more about me -- just look for my bright red "Hello, my name is Sergio" badge.

 

Sergio Cruz |

M: +1.305.403.9858 | scruz@cruzical.com | www.cruzical.com | sergiowcruz
Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

June 21, 09:17 PM
Downloading iOS4 for my iPhone 3G... Hope it goes well.

Posted via web from A few loose scruz

May 19, 02:28 PM

Image via CrunchBase

"It occurred to me that Apple ought to consider building in a digital TV tuner into the iMac and add software similar to Eye TV 3.0 as a replacement for the Apple TV."


In reading the above quote from TUAW writer Steven Sande, I wondered what's holding Apple back from doing just this. If you think about it, Apple would most likely incur the wrath of: 1) cable operators, as cable customers would not need DVRs; 2) cable networks, as their content could be viewed on numerous devices without incurring additional cost or paying cable networks any additional fees; and 3) other manufacturers of DVRs and TV place/time-shifting equipment, whose devices would seem obsolete when compared to an Apple device.

I have been using a Windows Vista Media Center PC to do this for several years now. I was able to eliminate my TiVo DVR (and it's monthly bill) in doing so, and I gained a larger space to store recorded television shows in my computer than my TiVo ever had. With the addition of a Media Center Extender to this setup, I can watch shows recorded on my computer on my bedroom television set. Why, you ask, has Microsoft not had any problems with the above parties, when Windows computers known as Media Centers have been doing this for years? Because it takes a geek to set it up and learn how to use it, and you need additional parts unless you want a computer next to your television set. You can be that any Apple designed device (i.e. similar to the Apple TV device) would be: a) easy to connect; b) easy to use; and c) designed for the common masses and not only geeks.

I'm with Steven. Apple, fix the Apple TV and make it record TV shows like a DVR. And while you're at it, piss everyone off about how easy it is to watch TV on your computer.
Related articles by Zemanta
Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

February 10, 12:56 PM
Download now or preview on posterous
Statues.pdf (1251 KB)

I have to make a trip here someday to see this beautiful place in person. Thanks, Eric, from sending it my way.

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

February 05, 08:04 AM

I am always being asked for extra "copies" of licensed software like Word, PowerPoint, Photoshop, etc. It's illegal to give this software to you! What I do, is recommend a free, open source alternative to the software I am being asked for and many times, the alternative software fills the niche (more often than not, people are looking for a word processing program, not specifically Word). Check out this CNET video showing off 7 great free apps.

Posted via web from A few loose scruz

January 30, 06:13 PM

What a day Wednesday, January 27, turned out to be! All the conjectured swirling around the Internet was finally laid to rest with the unveiling of the Apple iPad. While the iPad name is certainly in line with iPhone and iPod, there may have been a better choice in name out there — although iSlate was definitely not it. Now, that the iPad has been revealed to the world, the pundits are screaming praises and crying foul. Truthfully, I was a little disappointed with what Apple released, but I know in a generation or two the iPad will evolve into a wonderful device.

Why was I disappointed? I was thinking with the webcams in many laptops, netbooks and even desktop PCs that often  go unused, a device like the iPad would be perfect for having video chats. In hind sight, perhaps holding a device with a camera while you are conversing is not such a good idea. Apple probably had great reasons for leaving the camera out; time will tell if they decide to include a webcam in future generations of the iPad. I had also hoped that the device would be closer to a laptop than the iPhone, but Apple was once again far brighter than I am on the subject. With 75,000,000 iPhone and iPod Touches shipped worldwide, that is 75,000,000 users that can already use an iPad — brilliant!

Among the pundits, are those who find the iPad a very nice device, and still others who can only complain about the device. I would like to focus on a few of the criticisms I have frequently read that make no sense to me. Ultimately, the iPad will not be for everyone — some will want to use it and others will want more from the device . I think that the two camps can peacefully coexist, but the proselytization of one camp over the other is not necessary. It’s not a holy war; it’s consumption versus production.

One of the frequent complaints I read is that the iPad does not support Adobe’s Flash software. For years, I have found Adobe Flash a hindrance to surfing the web. I have my choice of browsers, which for the most part can view all web sites equally — that’s why we have standards — but to view certain web sites, I have to use a Flash plug-in. Flash makes for another avenue of attack when viewing web pages. Granted, there are many avenues of attack without Flash, but why add another?

HTML5 is the next generation of web standards that will make things like Adobe’s Flash plug-in obsolete. Today, there are numerous browsers that can already view certain aspects of HTML5 and make web sites much more interactive without the need for plug-ins. I have begun using the new mobile Google Voice web site, which is built on HTML5 programming, on my iPhone and can tell you that it can do some amazing things. Using simple coding without the need for additional plug-ins, performance is increased, surface area of attack is maintained at a basic level, and web standards are maintained. After all, we are going to use an iPad to “hold the Internet in your hands as you surf it” (per Scott Forstall, Apple’s Senior Vice President of iPhone Software).

To me, that’s the biggest benefit of the iPad — holding it in my hands. I like to read in bed. Unfortunately for me, I like to read Internet news in bed, thereby necessitating some form of computer to surf the Internet to read news. I have been using tablet PCs for many years to accomplish this, and while functional, using a 4 pound laptop to read in bed is not very comfortable. Along came netbooks, which promised to give me a similar experience to a laptop, but in a lighter and less expensive package. Yet, you can’t fold most netbooks in a slate fashion, like I can with tablet PCs, and their weight, while about half most tablet PCs still left something to be desired.

The argument for netbooks against an iPad is that you can use the netbook to produce content, whereas, an iPad is for consuming content. So now, it’s more important to be a producer of content rather than a consumer of content? That’s the “geek” argument? There will always be more consumers than producers — that’s how a market system works. Apple was looking for a way to get into the hands of the masses, hence the iPad, a device for consuming media, and the low starting price, under $500. Steve Jobs took a jab at netbooks in his keynote address, and maybe he overtly targeted them for a reason, but the reality is, netbooks and the iPad are not similar devices.

Image via CrunchBase

As regular notebook computers continue to decline in price, the netbook market will continue to be squeezed into an ever smaller niche, whereas the iPad has created a new niche for itself with lots of room to grow. The iPad is an innovative device that may turn the computing industry on its ear, given time. For now, the iPad is a new gadget that will surely invite many computer aficionados, amateurs, novices and experts alike, to join the Apple world and surf the web from the other side.

Check out my take on the new iPad at http://computersight.com/computers/my-take-on-the-apple-ipad/.

>

Posted via web from A few loose scruz

January 20, 09:23 PM

In the supercar league such as Ferrari and Lamborghini, there’s another name to be added – Honda. Don’t be surprised, Honda has already cheered its accomplishment as supercar manufacturer way back in 2005 with the Honda NSX-R GT. Of course, its been ages since then, but with the HSV-010 GT, Honda plans afresh. The HSV-010 GT has been developed as a racecar to compete in the GT500 class of the 2010 Super GT Series, and as it was with the NSX, again five examples of the car will take to the track for the race series. Powered by a naturally aspirated 3.4 litre V8 which produces 496 horsepower and 392 Nm (289 lb-ft) of torque, HSV (Honda Sports Velocity) will initially be developed as a pure racing machine but hopefully it will see the roads outside the racetrack.

Via: Diseno-Art509306

It would sure be nice to see this on the street as a replacement to my S2000...

Posted via web from A few loose scruz

January 18, 03:06 PM

What happens when an adult and a four year old have a barrier in their communication while they are playing with LEGO bricks? Read more over at http://socyberty.com/languages/perseverance/.

>

Posted via web from A few loose scruz

January 16, 09:55 PM

In the small business space, I frequently see businesses purchasing computers at a retail store and then wanting to add them to the domain network in their office. The rub is that most computers purchased in retail stores run a home version of Windows, which cannot be added to a domain network. In the past, this was a costly mistake as a professional Windows upgrade needed to be installed to the computer, which usually meant purchasing a new Windows license (an upgrade version) and performing a fresh install of Windows. With Windows 7 Anytime Upgrade process, the costly mistake is not so costly.

Image via CrunchBase

I recently was helping a client with a new computer, and the computer that had been purchased was running Windows 7 Home Premium. I did a little research before arriving at the client’s site and found that it was a very easy upgrade process from Windows 7 Home Premium to Windows 7 Professional edition. Not having experienced this before, I was a little skeptical about the ease of this process. In the past, Microsoft was not known for the ease of upgrading the operating system.

Microsoft has included an icon to begin what is known as the Windows Anytime Upgrade. You click on the icon and are prompted to either purchase a license for the version of Windows 7 that you wish, or enter the product key for the version of Windows 7 that you have in your possession. “How could it be that easy?” I found myself asking. We proceeded through the Anytime Upgrade process and Windows 7 began to go step through the upgrade. The screens are very similar to the patching screens that Microsoft has been employing for Vista and Windows 7. After a few “Please Wait” screens and a restart, the computer was upgraded from Windows 7 Home Premium to Windows 7 Professional.

After the upgrade, we added the computer to the domain. This was almost two weeks ago, and I have only heard great things from this client about Windows 7. What possessed Microsoft to resolve all the painful upgrades that we previously had to endure? I can only imagine that years of criticism finally made a dent in the Microsoft armor, and the solution that they unveiled with Windows 7 is certainly slick. I am glad to see that Microsoft is finally making their varied products more accessible to consumers.

A great upgrade experience from Microsoft? Who knew? Read more at computersight.com.

Posted via web from A few loose scruz

January 16, 03:38 PM
What a great way to entertain kids and keep them busy!

Posted via email from A few loose scruz

January 15, 08:11 AM

What a simple charger... I'm a little surprised that Apple didn't design their charger like this.Then again, Apple's charger gives you the flexibility of charging via USB or electrical outlet. Definitely putting this on my wish list.

Posted via web from A few loose scruz

January 13, 07:54 AM

Chromium OS, the open source build of Google's upcoming web-focused netbook system, was made into a thumb-drive-friendly build early on by a helpful hacker named Hexxeh. His latest build, ChromiumOS Zero, adds Chrome extension support, speed boosts, and other goodies.

Here's the official list of updates at Hexxeh's blog, with notable improvements in the delay suffered by Broadcom-based Wi-Fi and the Chromium browser at the heart of the OS. The build still fits on a 1 GB USB drive, surprisingly, can be updated in-system from this release forward, and is offered as a BitTorrent download from Hexxeh's site.

Wanna give ChromiumOS Zero a go on your own laptop from the safety of a USB stick? Check out Gina's human's guide to running Google Chrome OS, which details running a Hexxeh-based build from a thumb drive.

ChromiumOS Zero is a free download, and boots (usually) on non-Mac systems.


Send an email to Kevin Purdy, the author of this post, at xriva@yvsrunpxre.pbz

moc.rekcahefil@nivek.

I am definitely going to give this new OS a try. Someday, I envision a computer will have no internal hard drive storage and only boot if you have a USB stick with an operating system inserted into it.

Posted via web from A few loose scruz

Posts

El Pichy Films Presenta “Matrix a lo cubano” movie http://ping.fm/hKoZY

funny banned beer commercial http://ping.fm/eOmLD

Reminder that December is the last month to order the Windows Essential Business Server Migration Kit http://ping.fm/pSlJy

Scuba Course from Grove Scuba for only $40! http://ping.fm/P9VPl

iPhone Users Reporting Problems With Microsoft Exchange 2003 After Upgrading To iOS 4.2.1 http://ping.fm/7uGCD

T.J. Maxx Offering 16 GB Wi-Fi iPads for $399? http://ping.fm/0TyNE

Virgin Mobile USA Partners with WalMart to Deliver Affordable Pre-Paid Mobile Broadband Plan http://ping.fm/iyi9y

A blast from the past that’s got me So Excited ♫ http://blip.fm/~yjg7w

Where is the Tenderness? ♫ http://blip.fm/~yjg4m

listening to “Maroon 5 - Misery” ♫ http://blip.fm/~yjfjt

listening to “Snow Patrol - Chasing Cars” ♫ http://blip.fm/~yhvyu

listening to “Crystal Castles - Not In Love (Feat. Robert Smith)” ♫ http://blip.fm/~yhvxt

Get the blood pumping. ♫ http://blip.fm/~yhvv6

Anybody can use foul language, but Cee-Lo really makes it sound classy… LMFAO :D ♫ http://blip.fm/~yhvu9

Shatner Sings F*CK YOU! (Uncensored) http://ping.fm/vsEue

listening to “sugar ray fly” ♫ http://blip.fm/~x24ta

We All Have Shortcomings http://ping.fm/uk0El

Our family go the new FPL Smart Meter this morning. http://ping.fm/PATBJ Here’s hoping that we save some energy and money.

Audio

  • I saw Violent Femmes open their us tour in Gainesville, Florida (Go Gators!) back in 1995(?). G. Love and Special Sauce opened up for them. I knew the Femmes from their Add It Up days and they put on a great show. G. Love, I wasn’t too impressed with, but he went on to do a Coke Zero commercial that was OK. joelaz: Violent Femmes - Crazy It’s cover day Friday. This week, the Violent Femmes cover Gnarles Barkely’s Crazy. Odd combination, but it works. Photo from Violent and Crazy on MySpace
    1540 plays

Posts

June 19, 01:02 PM

Silence
Love
Silence
Violence
Silence
Loneliness
Silence

Written 1990-91


May 20, 12:18 AM

Despair overwhelms me
My heart is shriveling
The hole in my center grows larger
I embody despair
I am careening toward emptiness and loneliness with no way to stop

I am me
I only see me
Me is all I want and feel
What more is there than me?

You are on the other side
You are far away – an ocean separates us
What do you matter?
You are not me, yet we are the same

Two me’s can never equal an us
Two me’s are just two me’s
There is no form of joining me
Me is destined to be alone, empty

Where am I without you?
Am I even me?


January 02, 08:02 AM

I sleep and sleep and sleep
Yet I wake with no energy.
I lie about and rest
Only to find myself exhausted;
When I am on vacation,
I find no pleasure in having nothing to do.

Work is my elixir
Breathing hard, my reason to be.
Expending my energy only gives me more.
How can I ever go green?


December 31, 09:10 AM

Are we not doomed to have history repeat itself?

Once we make that one mistake, it will keep coming back
Repeating itself over and over until in the end
We realize our life was just one big cycle of mistakes.

Circles have no beginning and no end.

The future holds a vision of hope for us
Until we fall in the relentless groove of repetitiveness
Where no matter how we try to escape it
Only a scratch will make the needle jump
And scratching certain itches ruins our effort.

Can’t we learn to love ourselves?

Our mistakes are ultimately driven by our lack of love
Not for others, but for ourselves.
We have to start spreading that love within
Before we can spread it to the world.

Love one another. As I have loved you, so you also should love one another. John 13:34-35


August 23, 11:49 AM

Doom
Devastation
I’m crying in the pool

Fear
Loathing
I’m crying in the pool

What am I doing?
I’m crying in the pool
Where am I going?
I’m crying in the pool
Why am I crying?
I’m crying in the pool
I’ve lost all reason
I’m crying in the pool

This is what I’m thinking as…
I’m crying in the pool

No more swimming
I’m crying in the pool


August 20, 02:47 PM

There she sat
politely conversing
she looked this way
She turned her head
Never to return

Tuesday Turns Her Head –> Published in The Daily Figure by Kyle T. Webster


August 06, 01:47 PM

spoony: foolishly or sentimentally in love.

Can’t ask for more than that.


September 09, 01:57 PM

I find myself growing tired
I find myself angry all the time
I find myself increasingly frustrated


I find myself doing things to hurt you
I find myself bitter
I find myself not caring –
or caring too much
I find myself reacting to my surroundings

Where am I in all of this?


September 23, 04:49 PM

Finding a smile in a crowded room

I noticed you

You tossed your hair over your shoulder, carefree

Your beautiful eyes glowed while you spoke

Your bright red lips glistened as if wet

I wanted you

Finding a smile in a crowded room

I noticed you again

Your face seemed sad

Your eyes were filled with fire

Your dark lips quivered with every breath

I wanted you more

Finding a smile in an empty room

I came home to you

Your smile was warm

Your eyes lit up the room

Your beautiful lips kissed me

We are one


September 19, 10:50 AM

The thumb comes rushing down and flat I fall

What have I done?

You exist to please me.

Crushing me makes you happy?

I keep you alive if it pleases me.

Only now do I understand

Puppets and playthings

A game that ends in death

All for the pleasure of our Grand Director.


abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz