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September 26, 2005

Official Google Blog

If you want to know what happens in Google's world. You can visit their blog site at http://googleblog.blogspot.com/Google Blog

About Google
Google is a public and profitable company focused on search services. Named for the mathematical term "googol", Google operates web sites at many international domains, with the most trafficked being www.google.com. Google is widely recognized as the "World's Best Search Engine" and is fast, accurate and easy to use. The company also serves corporate clients, including advertisers, content publishers and site managers with cost-effective advertising and a wide range of revenue generating search services. Google's breakthrough technology and continued innovation serve the company's mission of "organizing the world's information and making it universally accessible and useful."

September 25, 2005

Lisa Ono New Albums: Romance Latino 1, 2 and 3

These 3 albums are the latest from Lisa Ono, a japanese bossa nova singer who grows up in Brazil. Since debuting in 1989 with Catopili, Lisa Ono has steadily won over fans all over the world with her winsome smile, silky voice and staggering guitar work.
She is currently enjoying unprecedented and unparalleled success. Her style and voice rival that of Brazilian divas such as Gal Costa and Joyce while her delivery and tone are exquisite. Her mastery of the natural, unforced Bossa Nova sound has also received the stamp of approval from Bossa Nova pioneer Antonio Carlos Jobim, with whom she has collaborated. Her material is extraordinary, made more so by the lilting and unmistakable voice.

Lisa Ono, the most sophisticated Japanese interpreter of contemporary Bossa Nova, will hold her first concert in Singapore on November 6, 2005.

The Lisa Ono “Romance Latino” Tour 2005 promises to be an exciting night of tender romance and simmering passion. She will deliver a sultry repertoire of songs cued from her latest Bossa Nova music expedition: the three “Romance Latino” albums.

Game that we play: Tokyo Bus Guide 2

Taking control of one of two real-world city busses used in Tokyo, you get to experience all facets of driving a bus. Press buttons at the right time to make announcements, open and close the doors, switch your blinkers on and off, check your rear-view mirrors, and above all else, protect the rules of the road by not going too fast, not running red lights, and especially not hitting people or other objects.

Two modes of play are available: Isho Mode and Driver Mode. In Driver Mode, you play as a bus driver and work your way through eighteen courses. Break driving rules, and you lose points; lose enough points and the game ends. This time around, passengers will let you know how you're doing by sending you mail following their ride. Isho mode has one player driving while the other player takes on a passenger support role, helping passengers push the button indicating they'd like to get off the bus.

September 24, 2005

Turning the Pages™

Want to leaf through the original great books in human history? Visit Turning the Pages™ at British Library at http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/ttp/ttpbooks.html.Turning the Pages

You will need Macromedia Shockwave player to accompany you with the journeys.

September 21, 2005

Still - Hillsong (Album: Hope)

Singing TogetherStill

Hide me now under Your wings
Cover me within Your mighty hand.

(Chorus)
When the oceans rise and thunders roar,
I will soar with You above the storm.
Father, You are King over the flood.
I will be still and know You are God.

Find rest my soul in Christ alone.
Know His power in quietness and trust.

Click here to listen.

September 19, 2005

Lord's Prayer ~ How to Pray?

How to Pray"One day Jesus was praying in a certain place. When he finished, one of his disciples said to Him, 'Lord, teach us to pray, just as John taught his disciples.'

He said to them, (Ecumenical English Version)
'When you pray, say: Father, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come. Give us each day our daily bread. Forgive us our sins, for we also forgive everyone who sins against us. And lead us not into temptation"
Matthew (6:9-13)


(Traditional English Version)
Our Father who art in Heaven,
hallowed be Thy Name.
Thy Kingdom come, Thy Will be done,
on Earth, as it is in Heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread,
and forgive us our trespasses,
as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil.
[For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory,
for ever and ever.
Amen.]

Nintendo's New 'Magic Wand' Controller

Brand New Revolution ControllerNintendo breaks with more than 20 years of video game history by abandoning the traditional controller held with two hands and introducing an all-new freehand-style unit held with one hand.

The intuitive, pioneering interface allows players to run, jump, spin, slide, shoot, steer, accelerate, bank, dive, kick, throw and score in a way never experienced in the history of gaming.

“The feeling is so natural and real, as soon as players use the controller, their minds will spin with the possibilities of how this will change gaming as we know it today,” explains Satoru Iwata, Nintendo president. “This is an extremely exciting innovation – one that will thrill current players and entice new ones.”

When picked up and pointed at the screen, the controller gives a lightning-quick element of interaction, sensing motion, depth, positioning and targeting dictated by movement of the controller itself.

The controller also allows for a variety of expansions, including a “nunchuk” style analog unit offering the enhanced game-play control hard-core gamers demand.

The response from all major publishers worldwide has been extremely positive. Beyond its other innovations, the new controller gives third parties flexibility, allowing them the option to use as many or as few of the controller features as they desire. In addition, incorporated technology will easily allow games from the NES, SNES, N64 and Nintendo GameCube generations to be controlled in familiar fashion.

September 18, 2005

Precious Moment: Chapel

Touching the lives of those who enter its doors with a sense of peace, hope and promise has been the mission of the Precious Moments Chapel since it opened in 1989. The Chapel is the crowning work of Precious Moments artist and creator Samuel J. Butcher.

Sam Butcher used his Precious Moments art to bring well known and loved stories from the Bible to life in dozens of murals. From the story of creation to the promise of the resurrection, the Chapel tour guide takes guests through the many stories of God’s love for us.

The mural “Hallelujah Square” celebrates the lives of real children whose lives ended too soon, but whose stories continue to bring a message of love, hope and peace. The Precious Moments Chapel is open year around with the exception of Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day.

Click Here to walkthrough to the Chapel

September 10, 2005

Water~Lily

Water Lily

Jim Thompson's House #2

having lunch at Jim Thompson's House

September 08, 2005

iPod Nano

Only .27 inches thin and 1.5 ounces, iPod nano packs a lot into its diminutive design. Up to 14 hours of battery life(1). 2GB or 4GB of storage.(2) A bright color display. The Apple Click Wheel. A Dock connector that fits an entire ecosystem of iPod accessories. With so many features like these, iPod nano can change the way you listen to music — and more. Click on this link to see more details about it.2 Colors

September 05, 2005

The 80-20 Rule of Job Satisfaction

Every job has its flaws, Michael Gartner, the veteran editor and Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial writer, once observed during a reporting and writing seminar here at Poynter. But as long as 80 percent of a job's duties are acceptable, he said he could tolerate the 20 percent that wasn't.

Gartner's formula is a variation of an 80-20 rule first proposed in 1906 by an Italian economist named Vilfredo Pareto who created "a mathematical formula to describe the unequal distribution of wealth in his country, observing that 20 percent of the people owned 80 percent of the wealth."

Pareto's Principle has since been applied in many other fields. In sales, it assumes that "20 percent of the customers generate 80 percent of the sales, or that 80 percent of merchandise comes from 20 percent of the vendors." In productivity circles, 20 percent of the effort produces 80 percent of the work. In warehouses, 20 percent of the stock takes up 80 percent of the space.

But while business types generally use Pareto's century-old idea to remember to pay more attention to the "vital few" rather than the "trivial many," Gartner reversed the principle to make an important point about any job: there's always going to be something you don't like about it. The question is what's the percentage of bad vs. good, boring vs. interesting.

The lesson Michael Gartner taught that day was to ask yourself what's the ratio that makes a job situation acceptable (or not) for you. Budgets weren't his favorite thing, but that kind of disagreeable task was far outweighed by the newsroom work he loved. For him, it was 80-20.

Gartner's 80-20 rule always comes to mind when someone gripes to me about their job. The pain of seeing your story mangled by the desk, the hassle of putting up with prima donna reporters who can't spell their way out of a paper bag. Interminable meetings. Insufferable colleagues. You name it.

Next time you find yourself grousing, break down the things about your job that you love and hate. What's your ratio? More important, once you know your tipping point, what do you do about it?

Pareto Principle - The 80-20 Rule

The 80/20 Rule in Your Job Search


By Kevin Donlin

What if I told you that 80% of what you're doing every day in your job search is a total waste of time? Well, it's true, according to the Pareto Principle.

Let me explain ...

Vilfredo Pareto (1848-1923) was an Italian economist who found that 20% of the Italian people owned 80% of that country's wealth. But what's fascinating about his discovery, also called the 82/20 Rule, is that its implications go far beyond economics.

Examples: 20% of your carpeting gets 80% of the foot traffic ... 20% of any sales force produces 80% of sales ... 20% of your customers cause 80% of your problems, etc.

In other words, a small number of causes produce a large percentage of effects, in a ratio of about 20:80.

What does this mean for your job search?

About 20% of what you do accounts for 80% of your results. Conversely, 80% of what you're doing to find a new job is producing only 20% of your results -- it's largely a waste of time.

So, to get hired faster, you must focus like a laser on the 20% of your actions that produce 80% of your employment leads. It's that simple.

Here are three ways to do just that ...

1) It's the Network, Stupid

According to all the research I've done, the clients and seminar attendees I've spoken to over the years, and my own experience, up to 80% of job leads come from networking.

Yet, where do most job seekers spend 80% of their time? Chasing after job postings online or in the help wanted ads. This is a mild form of mass insanity.

Bottom line: if you're not spending up to 80% of your time expanding your network, talking daily to friends, colleagues, family and new contacts about the job you seek and the value you can deliver ... you're screwing up.

Turn it around. Change your priorities. Make time to network every day -- starting today.

2) Begin Your Resume with Bold Strokes

Recognize that the opening lines of your resume must grab readers by the lapels and force them to keep going. Typically, that has to happen within the first 15-30 seconds. Otherwise, you'll lose out to more compelling candidates. Every time.

So, in the top 20% of page one, clearly tell employers what you can do for them and why you're the one to do it. Back your claims with specific facts and figures that are easy for busy readers to grasp -- no puffy language or empty assertions, please.

When you do this, and fire off your big guns early, you'll be 80% of the way toward getting employers to read your entire resume ... and call you for an interview.

3) Make the Best First Impression at Every Interview

Where do 80% of your results in the job interview come from? You guessed it -- the impression you make in first 1-2 minutes -- the opening 20%.

Here's good news: the first 20% of every interview is largely under your control. You decide what clothes to wear, how to groom yourself, when to leave so that you arrive on time, how to smile and shake hands, what opening words to say, questions to ask, etc.

So prepare thoroughly and treat the opening 20% of your job interview like the golden opportunity it truly is.

OK. You understand the Pareto Principle and its effect on your job hunt. Now, here's your homework assignment. Sit down and add up how you've spent your time over the past 5-10 days. What 20% of your activities have produced 80% of your employment leads? Do more of them. What 80% of your efforts have been unproductive? Stop doing them, or delegate them.

-- Kevin Donlin is the author of "The Last Guide to Cover Letter & Resume Writing You'll Ever Need," a do-it-yourself manual that will help you find a job in 30 days ... or your money back. For more information, please visit http://www.CollegeRecruiter.com/1dayresumes.php

September 04, 2005

Jim Thompson's House

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