Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2014-03-07 Thread Pundit Sir
Google Chromebook:

Google's laptops -- made by Samsung and Acer -- are now the two top
sellers on Amazon.com, and six out of the top 14 are Google Chromebooks.
Talk to many schools and you'll see them either throwing out Microsoft and
Apple products already, or plotting to replace them with Chromebooks in the
next year or two.

'Why Google's Chromebook Is Better than Windows, Mac and Android'
http://www.thestreet.com/googles-chromebook/http://www.thestreet.com/story/12480667/1/why-googles-chromebook-is-better-than-windows-mac-and-android.html?puc=yahoocm_ven=YAHOO


On Sat, Feb 8, 2014 at 9:19 AM, Pundit Sir pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

 The Glyph headset is weird-looking and expensive, but amazingly
 immersive. ...

 'The Future of Personal Entertainment'
 MIT Technology Review:

 http://www.technologyreview.com/news/523966/the-future-of-personal-entertainment-in-your-face/


 On Sat, Feb 8, 2014 at 8:34 AM, Pundit Sir pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

 The End of the Swipe-and-Sign Credit Card

 It's a payment ritual as familiar as handing over a $20 bill, and it's
 soon to go extinct: prepare to say farewell to the swipe-and-sign of a
 credit card transaction. Beginning later next year, you will stop signing
 those credit card receipts. Instead, you will insert your card into a slot
 and enter a PIN number, just like people do in much of the rest of the
 world.

 http://blogs.wsj.com/corporate-intelligence/http://blogs.wsj.com/corporate-intelligence/2014/02/06/october-2015-the-end-of-the-swipe-and-sign-credit-card/


 On Fri, Jan 31, 2014 at 10:52 AM, Bhairitu noozg...@sbcglobal.netwrote:



 Plus maybe you'll be able to use it as a radiation detector:

 http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2014/01/17/263369742/weekly-innovation-a-radiation-detector-in-your-smartphone

 Probably a mistake as the article says CCDs detect radiation but today's
 devices use CMOS chips for the camera.  But at least you can keep up on
 Fukushima's encroachment on your environment.  Happy gamma rays!


 On 01/31/2014 07:19 AM, Richard Williams wrote:


  Meet the $38 tablet: Hands-on with DataWind's UbiSlate 7Ci

  
 http://shopping.yahoo.com/datawind-ubislatehttp://shopping.yahoo.com/blogs/digital-crave/meet-38-tablet-hands-datawind-ubislate-7ci-185612468.html


 On Sat, Jan 18, 2014 at 7:48 AM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

  What  People Want

  YES! I don't want a curved phone. I want one that won't break when
 dropped, is waterproof, and that I can see in the sun. And with all-day
 battery life...

  https://twitter.com/GPollowitz/statuses/423787604559945728

  [image: Inline image 2]


 On Fri, Jan 17, 2014 at 7:09 AM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.com
  wrote:

  Twitter at 3:00 AM

  The activity column shows you what everyone you follow on Twitter
 is doing. It will tell you if someone just favorited a tweet or followed
 someone new in a constantly moving stream. But if you follow a lot of 
 heavy
 Twitter users, the feed will often move fast...

  'There Are Things You Do On Twitter That Should Only Be Done At 3'
 AM'
 http://www.newstimes.com/technology/business/insider/


 On Thu, Jan 16, 2014 at 4:04 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  The anti-NSA smartphone?

  [image: Inline image 1]

  Blackphone at Popular Mechanics

  Of course, perfect encryption (which many argue isn't even
 possible) is a two-way street. Whether calling, emailing, or texting, the
 level of security is dependent on what tech or services are being used on
 the other end of the line.

  Blackphone, the Security-First Smartphone:
 http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/tech-news/silent-circle-announces-security-first-smartphone-16384335?click=pm_latest


 On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  Galaxy Nexus 16GB (Unlocked)

  Lack of an SD card slot and only 16GB of internal memory. This is
 the only thing that bothers me. However USB OTG solves part of this 
 problem
 (with a special cable, you can plug in an external mass storage device 
 --
 this does not currently work without rooting, but official support will 
 be
 included in a future firmware update as confirmed by Google). - Amazon
 review:

  
 http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/product-reviews/B005ZEF01A/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?showViewpoints=1


 On Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  Example of abandoned technology:

  [image: Inline image 1]


  On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is
 new?

 Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the
 enrollment systems right at a major community college.

 When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper
 and pen and long 

Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2014-02-08 Thread Pundit Sir
The End of the Swipe-and-Sign Credit Card

It's a payment ritual as familiar as handing over a $20 bill, and it's
soon to go extinct: prepare to say farewell to the swipe-and-sign of a
credit card transaction. Beginning later next year, you will stop signing
those credit card receipts. Instead, you will insert your card into a slot
and enter a PIN number, just like people do in much of the rest of the
world.

http://blogs.wsj.com/corporate-intelligence/http://blogs.wsj.com/corporate-intelligence/2014/02/06/october-2015-the-end-of-the-swipe-and-sign-credit-card/


On Fri, Jan 31, 2014 at 10:52 AM, Bhairitu noozg...@sbcglobal.net wrote:



 Plus maybe you'll be able to use it as a radiation detector:

 http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2014/01/17/263369742/weekly-innovation-a-radiation-detector-in-your-smartphone

 Probably a mistake as the article says CCDs detect radiation but today's
 devices use CMOS chips for the camera.  But at least you can keep up on
 Fukushima's encroachment on your environment.  Happy gamma rays!


 On 01/31/2014 07:19 AM, Richard Williams wrote:


  Meet the $38 tablet: Hands-on with DataWind's UbiSlate 7Ci

  
 http://shopping.yahoo.com/datawind-ubislatehttp://shopping.yahoo.com/blogs/digital-crave/meet-38-tablet-hands-datawind-ubislate-7ci-185612468.html


 On Sat, Jan 18, 2014 at 7:48 AM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

  What  People Want

  YES! I don't want a curved phone. I want one that won't break when
 dropped, is waterproof, and that I can see in the sun. And with all-day
 battery life...

  https://twitter.com/GPollowitz/statuses/423787604559945728

  [image: Inline image 2]


 On Fri, Jan 17, 2014 at 7:09 AM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

  Twitter at 3:00 AM

  The activity column shows you what everyone you follow on Twitter is
 doing. It will tell you if someone just favorited a tweet or followed
 someone new in a constantly moving stream. But if you follow a lot of heavy
 Twitter users, the feed will often move fast...

  'There Are Things You Do On Twitter That Should Only Be Done At 3' AM'
 http://www.newstimes.com/technology/business/insider/


 On Thu, Jan 16, 2014 at 4:04 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

  The anti-NSA smartphone?

  [image: Inline image 1]

  Blackphone at Popular Mechanics

  Of course, perfect encryption (which many argue isn't even possible)
 is a two-way street. Whether calling, emailing, or texting, the level of
 security is dependent on what tech or services are being used on the other
 end of the line.

  Blackphone, the Security-First Smartphone:
 http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/tech-news/silent-circle-announces-security-first-smartphone-16384335?click=pm_latest


 On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.com
  wrote:

  Galaxy Nexus 16GB (Unlocked)

  Lack of an SD card slot and only 16GB of internal memory. This is
 the only thing that bothers me. However USB OTG solves part of this 
 problem
 (with a special cable, you can plug in an external mass storage device --
 this does not currently work without rooting, but official support will be
 included in a future firmware update as confirmed by Google). - Amazon
 review:

  
 http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/product-reviews/B005ZEF01A/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?showViewpoints=1


 On Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  Example of abandoned technology:

  [image: Inline image 1]


  On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is
 new?

 Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the
 enrollment systems right at a major community college.

 When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper and
 pen and long lines standing out in the sun. Teachers would be sitting at
 long tables enrolling students one by one - it took all day just to 
 enroll
 in a few courses.

 Enrollment was hell back then!

 Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on DOS. Instructors would
 walk all the way across campus just to look at it, not use it, just 
 look at
 it. The college IT director couldn't understand what we were going to do
 with all that hard drive space!

 Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main campus and another 5,000
 spread out over twenty computer labs on five campuses.

 And, enrollment is still hell!

 The school has at least three Oracle databases for student
 enrollment, one for credit card payments, personal data like adds and
 drops, grades, and the online library database, and then the course
 database. Not to mention the 3,000 online courses using the Blackboard
 database! Who do they think is going to run all this technology with me
 gone? Go figure.

 Somebody 

Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2014-02-08 Thread Pundit Sir
The Glyph headset is weird-looking and expensive, but amazingly immersive.
...

'The Future of Personal Entertainment'
MIT Technology Review:
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/523966/the-future-of-personal-entertainment-in-your-face/


On Sat, Feb 8, 2014 at 8:34 AM, Pundit Sir pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

 The End of the Swipe-and-Sign Credit Card

 It's a payment ritual as familiar as handing over a $20 bill, and it's
 soon to go extinct: prepare to say farewell to the swipe-and-sign of a
 credit card transaction. Beginning later next year, you will stop signing
 those credit card receipts. Instead, you will insert your card into a slot
 and enter a PIN number, just like people do in much of the rest of the
 world.

 http://blogs.wsj.com/corporate-intelligence/http://blogs.wsj.com/corporate-intelligence/2014/02/06/october-2015-the-end-of-the-swipe-and-sign-credit-card/


 On Fri, Jan 31, 2014 at 10:52 AM, Bhairitu noozg...@sbcglobal.net wrote:



 Plus maybe you'll be able to use it as a radiation detector:

 http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2014/01/17/263369742/weekly-innovation-a-radiation-detector-in-your-smartphone

 Probably a mistake as the article says CCDs detect radiation but today's
 devices use CMOS chips for the camera.  But at least you can keep up on
 Fukushima's encroachment on your environment.  Happy gamma rays!


 On 01/31/2014 07:19 AM, Richard Williams wrote:


  Meet the $38 tablet: Hands-on with DataWind's UbiSlate 7Ci

  
 http://shopping.yahoo.com/datawind-ubislatehttp://shopping.yahoo.com/blogs/digital-crave/meet-38-tablet-hands-datawind-ubislate-7ci-185612468.html


 On Sat, Jan 18, 2014 at 7:48 AM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

  What  People Want

  YES! I don't want a curved phone. I want one that won't break when
 dropped, is waterproof, and that I can see in the sun. And with all-day
 battery life...

  https://twitter.com/GPollowitz/statuses/423787604559945728

  [image: Inline image 2]


 On Fri, Jan 17, 2014 at 7:09 AM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

  Twitter at 3:00 AM

  The activity column shows you what everyone you follow on Twitter is
 doing. It will tell you if someone just favorited a tweet or followed
 someone new in a constantly moving stream. But if you follow a lot of heavy
 Twitter users, the feed will often move fast...

  'There Are Things You Do On Twitter That Should Only Be Done At 3' AM'
 http://www.newstimes.com/technology/business/insider/


 On Thu, Jan 16, 2014 at 4:04 PM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.com
  wrote:

  The anti-NSA smartphone?

  [image: Inline image 1]

  Blackphone at Popular Mechanics

  Of course, perfect encryption (which many argue isn't even
 possible) is a two-way street. Whether calling, emailing, or texting, the
 level of security is dependent on what tech or services are being used on
 the other end of the line.

  Blackphone, the Security-First Smartphone:
 http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/tech-news/silent-circle-announces-security-first-smartphone-16384335?click=pm_latest


 On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  Galaxy Nexus 16GB (Unlocked)

  Lack of an SD card slot and only 16GB of internal memory. This is
 the only thing that bothers me. However USB OTG solves part of this 
 problem
 (with a special cable, you can plug in an external mass storage device --
 this does not currently work without rooting, but official support will 
 be
 included in a future firmware update as confirmed by Google). - Amazon
 review:

  
 http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/product-reviews/B005ZEF01A/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?showViewpoints=1


 On Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  Example of abandoned technology:

  [image: Inline image 1]


  On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is
 new?

 Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the
 enrollment systems right at a major community college.

 When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper
 and pen and long lines standing out in the sun. Teachers would be 
 sitting
 at long tables enrolling students one by one - it took all day just to
 enroll in a few courses.

 Enrollment was hell back then!

 Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on DOS. Instructors
 would walk all the way across campus just to look at it, not use it, 
 just
 look at it. The college IT director couldn't understand what we were 
 going
 to do with all that hard drive space!

 Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main campus and another
 5,000 spread out over twenty computer labs on five campuses.

 And, enrollment is still hell!

 The school has at least three Oracle databases for 

[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2014-01-31 Thread Richard Williams
Meet the $38 tablet: Hands-on with DataWind's UbiSlate 7Ci

http://shopping.yahoo.com/datawind-ubislatehttp://shopping.yahoo.com/blogs/digital-crave/meet-38-tablet-hands-datawind-ubislate-7ci-185612468.html


On Sat, Jan 18, 2014 at 7:48 AM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 What  People Want

 YES! I don't want a curved phone. I want one that won't break when
 dropped, is waterproof, and that I can see in the sun. And with all-day
 battery life...

 https://twitter.com/GPollowitz/statuses/423787604559945728

 [image: Inline image 2]


 On Fri, Jan 17, 2014 at 7:09 AM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 Twitter at 3:00 AM

 The activity column shows you what everyone you follow on Twitter is
 doing. It will tell you if someone just favorited a tweet or followed
 someone new in a constantly moving stream. But if you follow a lot of heavy
 Twitter users, the feed will often move fast...

 'There Are Things You Do On Twitter That Should Only Be Done At 3' AM'
 http://www.newstimes.com/technology/business/insider/


 On Thu, Jan 16, 2014 at 4:04 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 The anti-NSA smartphone?

 [image: Inline image 1]

 Blackphone at Popular Mechanics

 Of course, perfect encryption (which many argue isn't even possible) is
 a two-way street. Whether calling, emailing, or texting, the level of
 security is dependent on what tech or services are being used on the other
 end of the line.

 Blackphone, the Security-First Smartphone:
 http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/tech-news/silent-circle-announces-security-first-smartphone-16384335?click=pm_latest


 On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 Galaxy Nexus 16GB (Unlocked)

 Lack of an SD card slot and only 16GB of internal memory. This is the
 only thing that bothers me. However USB OTG solves part of this problem
 (with a special cable, you can plug in an external mass storage device --
 this does not currently work without rooting, but official support will be
 included in a future firmware update as confirmed by Google). - Amazon
 review:

 http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/product-reviews/B005ZEF01A/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?showViewpoints=1


 On Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

 Example of abandoned technology:

 [image: Inline image 1]


 On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is new?

 Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the
 enrollment systems right at a major community college.

 When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper and
 pen and long lines standing out in the sun. Teachers would be sitting at
 long tables enrolling students one by one - it took all day just to 
 enroll
 in a few courses.

 Enrollment was hell back then!

 Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on DOS. Instructors would
 walk all the way across campus just to look at it, not use it, just look 
 at
 it. The college IT director couldn't understand what we were going to do
 with all that hard drive space!

 Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main campus and another 5,000
 spread out over twenty computer labs on five campuses.

 And, enrollment is still hell!

 The school has at least three Oracle databases for student
 enrollment, one for credit card payments, personal data like adds and
 drops, grades, and the online library database, and then the course
 database. Not to mention the 3,000 online courses using the Blackboard
 database! Who do they think is going to run all this technology with me
 gone? Go figure.

 Somebody should write ONE simple program called 'schools'. Go figure.

 'Some say health-care site's problems highlight flawed federal IT
 policies'
 Technology:
 http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/some-say-health-care-sites-problems-highlight-flawed-federal-it-policies/2013/10/09/d558da42-30fe-11e3-8627-c5d7de0a046b_story.html









Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2014-01-31 Thread Bhairitu

Plus maybe you'll be able to use it as a radiation detector:
http://www.npr.org/blogs/alltechconsidered/2014/01/17/263369742/weekly-innovation-a-radiation-detector-in-your-smartphone

Probably a mistake as the article says CCDs detect radiation but today's 
devices use CMOS chips for the camera.  But at least you can keep up on 
Fukushima's encroachment on your environment. Happy gamma rays!


On 01/31/2014 07:19 AM, Richard Williams wrote:

Meet the $38 tablet: Hands-on with DataWind's UbiSlate 7Ci

http://shopping.yahoo.com/datawind-ubislate 
http://shopping.yahoo.com/blogs/digital-crave/meet-38-tablet-hands-datawind-ubislate-7ci-185612468.html



On Sat, Jan 18, 2014 at 7:48 AM, Richard Williams 
pundits...@gmail.com mailto:pundits...@gmail.com wrote:


What  People Want

YES! I don't want a curved phone. I want one that won't break
when dropped, is waterproof, and that I can see in the sun. And
with all-day battery life...

https://twitter.com/GPollowitz/statuses/423787604559945728

Inline image 2


On Fri, Jan 17, 2014 at 7:09 AM, Richard Williams
pundits...@gmail.com mailto:pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

Twitter at 3:00 AM

The activity column shows you what everyone you follow on
Twitter is doing. It will tell you if someone just favorited a
tweet or followed someone new in a constantly moving stream.
But if you follow a lot of heavy Twitter users, the feed will
often move fast...

'There Are Things You Do On Twitter That Should Only Be Done
At 3' AM'
http://www.newstimes.com/technology/business/insider/


On Thu, Jan 16, 2014 at 4:04 PM, Richard Williams
pundits...@gmail.com mailto:pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

The anti-NSA smartphone?

Inline image 1

Blackphone at Popular Mechanics

Of course, perfect encryption (which many argue isn't
even possible) is a two-way street. Whether calling,
emailing, or texting, the level of security is dependent
on what tech or services are being used on the other end
of the line.

Blackphone, the Security-First Smartphone:
http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/

http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/tech-news/silent-circle-announces-security-first-smartphone-16384335?click=pm_latest


On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Richard Williams
pundits...@gmail.com mailto:pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

Galaxy Nexus 16GB (Unlocked)

Lack of an SD card slot and only 16GB of internal
memory. This is the only thing that bothers me.
However USB OTG solves part of this problem (with a
special cable, you can plug in an external mass
storage device -- this does not currently work without
rooting, but official support will be included in a
future firmware update as confirmed by Google). -
Amazon review:

http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/

http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/product-reviews/B005ZEF01A/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?showViewpoints=1


On Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Richard Williams
pundits...@gmail.com mailto:pundits...@gmail.com
wrote:

Example of abandoned technology:

Inline image 1


On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J.
Williams pundits...@gmail.com
mailto:pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too
well - what else is new?

Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years
I tried to get the enrollment systems right at
a major community college.

When I first got there, they were enrolling
students using paper and pen and long lines
standing out in the sun. Teachers would be
sitting at long tables enrolling students one
by one - it took all day just to enroll in a
few courses.

Enrollment was hell back then!

Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on
DOS. Instructors would walk all the way across
campus just to look at it, not use it, just
look at it. The college IT director couldn't
understand what we were going to do with all
that hard drive space!

Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main
campus 

[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2014-01-18 Thread Richard Williams
What  People Want

YES! “I don’t want a curved phone. I want one that won’t break when
dropped, is waterproof, and that I can see in the sun.” And with all-day
battery life...

https://twitter.com/GPollowitz/statuses/423787604559945728

[image: Inline image 2]


On Fri, Jan 17, 2014 at 7:09 AM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 Twitter at 3:00 AM

 The activity column shows you what everyone you follow on Twitter is
 doing. It will tell you if someone just favorited a tweet or followed
 someone new in a constantly moving stream. But if you follow a lot of heavy
 Twitter users, the feed will often move fast...

 'There Are Things You Do On Twitter That Should Only Be Done At 3' AM'
 http://www.newstimes.com/technology/business/insider/


 On Thu, Jan 16, 2014 at 4:04 PM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 The anti-NSA smartphone?

 [image: Inline image 1]

 Blackphone at Popular Mechanics

 Of course, perfect encryption (which many argue isn't even possible) is
 a two-way street. Whether calling, emailing, or texting, the level of
 security is dependent on what tech or services are being used on the other
 end of the line.

 Blackphone, the Security-First Smartphone:
 http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/tech-news/silent-circle-announces-security-first-smartphone-16384335?click=pm_latest


 On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 Galaxy Nexus 16GB (Unlocked)

 Lack of an SD card slot and only 16GB of internal memory. This is the
 only thing that bothers me. However USB OTG solves part of this problem
 (with a special cable, you can plug in an external mass storage device --
 this does not currently work without rooting, but official support will be
 included in a future firmware update as confirmed by Google). - Amazon
 review:

 http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/product-reviews/B005ZEF01A/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?showViewpoints=1


 On Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.com
  wrote:

 Example of abandoned technology:

 [image: Inline image 1]


 On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is new?

 Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the
 enrollment systems right at a major community college.

 When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper and
 pen and long lines standing out in the sun. Teachers would be sitting at
 long tables enrolling students one by one - it took all day just to enroll
 in a few courses.

 Enrollment was hell back then!

 Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on DOS. Instructors would
 walk all the way across campus just to look at it, not use it, just look 
 at
 it. The college IT director couldn't understand what we were going to do
 with all that hard drive space!

 Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main campus and another 5,000
 spread out over twenty computer labs on five campuses.

 And, enrollment is still hell!

 The school has at least three Oracle databases for student enrollment,
 one for credit card payments, personal data like adds and drops, grades,
 and the online library database, and then the course database. Not to
 mention the 3,000 online courses using the Blackboard database! Who do 
 they
 think is going to run all this technology with me gone? Go figure.

 Somebody should write ONE simple program called 'schools'. Go figure.

 'Some say health-care site’s problems highlight flawed federal IT
 policies'
 Technology:
 http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/some-say-health-care-sites-problems-highlight-flawed-federal-it-policies/2013/10/09/d558da42-30fe-11e3-8627-c5d7de0a046b_story.html








[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2014-01-17 Thread Richard Williams
Twitter at 3:00 AM

The activity column shows you what everyone you follow on Twitter is
doing. It will tell you if someone just favorited a tweet or followed
someone new in a constantly moving stream. But if you follow a lot of heavy
Twitter users, the feed will often move fast...

'There Are Things You Do On Twitter That Should Only Be Done At 3' AM'
http://www.newstimes.com/technology/business/insider/AMhttp://www.newstimes.com/technology/businessinsider/article/There-Are-Things-You-Do-On-Twitter-That-Should-5143067.php


On Thu, Jan 16, 2014 at 4:04 PM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 The anti-NSA smartphone?

 [image: Inline image 1]

 Blackphone at Popular Mechanics

 Of course, perfect encryption (which many argue isn't even possible) is a
 two-way street. Whether calling, emailing, or texting, the level of
 security is dependent on what tech or services are being used on the other
 end of the line.

 Blackphone, the Security-First Smartphone:
 http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/tech-news/silent-circle-announces-security-first-smartphone-16384335?click=pm_latest


 On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 Galaxy Nexus 16GB (Unlocked)

 Lack of an SD card slot and only 16GB of internal memory. This is the
 only thing that bothers me. However USB OTG solves part of this problem
 (with a special cable, you can plug in an external mass storage device --
 this does not currently work without rooting, but official support will be
 included in a future firmware update as confirmed by Google). - Amazon
 review:

 http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/product-reviews/B005ZEF01A/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?showViewpoints=1


 On Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 Example of abandoned technology:

 [image: Inline image 1]


 On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is new?

 Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the
 enrollment systems right at a major community college.

 When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper and
 pen and long lines standing out in the sun. Teachers would be sitting at
 long tables enrolling students one by one - it took all day just to enroll
 in a few courses.

 Enrollment was hell back then!

 Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on DOS. Instructors would
 walk all the way across campus just to look at it, not use it, just look at
 it. The college IT director couldn't understand what we were going to do
 with all that hard drive space!

 Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main campus and another 5,000
 spread out over twenty computer labs on five campuses.

 And, enrollment is still hell!

 The school has at least three Oracle databases for student enrollment,
 one for credit card payments, personal data like adds and drops, grades,
 and the online library database, and then the course database. Not to
 mention the 3,000 online courses using the Blackboard database! Who do they
 think is going to run all this technology with me gone? Go figure.

 Somebody should write ONE simple program called 'schools'. Go figure.

 'Some say health-care site’s problems highlight flawed federal IT
 policies'
 Technology:
 http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/some-say-health-care-sites-problems-highlight-flawed-federal-it-policies/2013/10/09/d558da42-30fe-11e3-8627-c5d7de0a046b_story.html







[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2014-01-16 Thread Richard Williams
The anti-NSA smartphone?

[image: Inline image 1]

Blackphone at Popular Mechanics

Of course, perfect encryption (which many argue isn't even possible) is a
two-way street. Whether calling, emailing, or texting, the level of
security is dependent on what tech or services are being used on the other
end of the line.

Blackphone, the Security-First Smartphone:
http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/tech-news/silent-circle-announces-security-first-smartphone-16384335?click=pm_latest


On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 6:57 PM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 Galaxy Nexus 16GB (Unlocked)

 Lack of an SD card slot and only 16GB of internal memory. This is the
 only thing that bothers me. However USB OTG solves part of this problem
 (with a special cable, you can plug in an external mass storage device --
 this does not currently work without rooting, but official support will be
 included in a future firmware update as confirmed by Google). - Amazon
 review:

 http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/product-reviews/B005ZEF01A/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?showViewpoints=1


 On Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Richard Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 Example of abandoned technology:

 [image: Inline image 1]


 On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams 
 pundits...@gmail.com wrote:

  So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is new?

 Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the
 enrollment systems right at a major community college.

 When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper and pen
 and long lines standing out in the sun. Teachers would be sitting at long
 tables enrolling students one by one - it took all day just to enroll in a
 few courses.

 Enrollment was hell back then!

 Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on DOS. Instructors would
 walk all the way across campus just to look at it, not use it, just look at
 it. The college IT director couldn't understand what we were going to do
 with all that hard drive space!

 Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main campus and another 5,000
 spread out over twenty computer labs on five campuses.

 And, enrollment is still hell!

 The school has at least three Oracle databases for student enrollment,
 one for credit card payments, personal data like adds and drops, grades,
 and the online library database, and then the course database. Not to
 mention the 3,000 online courses using the Blackboard database! Who do they
 think is going to run all this technology with me gone? Go figure.

 Somebody should write ONE simple program called 'schools'. Go figure.

 'Some say health-care site’s problems highlight flawed federal IT
 policies'
 Technology:
 http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/some-say-health-care-sites-problems-highlight-flawed-federal-it-policies/2013/10/09/d558da42-30fe-11e3-8627-c5d7de0a046b_story.html






[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2013-11-19 Thread Richard Williams
Galaxy Nexus 16GB (Unlocked)

Lack of an SD card slot and only 16GB of internal memory. This is the only
thing that bothers me. However USB OTG solves part of this problem (with a
special cable, you can plug in an external mass storage device -- this does
not currently work without rooting, but official support will be included
in a future firmware update as confirmed by Google). - Amazon review:

http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-I9250-Galaxy-Nexus-Unlocked/product-reviews/B005ZEF01A/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?showViewpoints=1


On Sun, Oct 13, 2013 at 12:07 PM, Richard Williams pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

 Example of abandoned technology:

 [image: Inline image 1]


 On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams pundits...@gmail.com
  wrote:

  So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is new?

 Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the
 enrollment systems right at a major community college.

 When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper and pen
 and long lines standing out in the sun. Teachers would be sitting at long
 tables enrolling students one by one - it took all day just to enroll in a
 few courses.

 Enrollment was hell back then!

 Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on DOS. Instructors would walk
 all the way across campus just to look at it, not use it, just look at it.
 The college IT director couldn't understand what we were going to do with
 all that hard drive space!

 Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main campus and another 5,000
 spread out over twenty computer labs on five campuses.

 And, enrollment is still hell!

 The school has at least three Oracle databases for student enrollment,
 one for credit card payments, personal data like adds and drops, grades,
 and the online library database, and then the course database. Not to
 mention the 3,000 online courses using the Blackboard database! Who do they
 think is going to run all this technology with me gone? Go figure.

 Somebody should write ONE simple program called 'schools'. Go figure.

 'Some say health-care site’s problems highlight flawed federal IT
 policies'
 Technology:
 http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/some-say-health-care-sites-problems-highlight-flawed-federal-it-policies/2013/10/09/d558da42-30fe-11e3-8627-c5d7de0a046b_story.html





[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2013-10-13 Thread Richard J. Williams

A Computer Infection That Can Never Be Cured?

According to what I've read, it would be very difficult, if not 
impossible, to detect a chip built your computer hardware in your 
computer. Have you identified and tested all those resistor, diodes, and 
capacitors? You see that long line running across your motherboard? 
That's the system bus - to take your data to the other end of the mother 
board - it could be the same bus that takes all your data to a backdoor 
stealth chip and then on to the NSA database.


A presentation at recent Black Hat security conference in San Francisco 
demonstrated a way to install a backdoor on a new PC so that even 
switching the hard drive won't close the backdoor! Go figure.


The possibility that computer hardware in use around the world might be 
littered with NSA back doors raises the prospect that other nations' 
agencies are doing the same thing, or that groups other than the NSA 
might find and exploit the NSA's back doors.


MIT Technology Review:
http://www.technologyreview.com/a-problem-from-hell/ 
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/519661/nsas-own-hardware-backdoors-may-still-be-a-problem-from-hell/


On 10/11/2013 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams wrote:

So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is new?

Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the 
enrollment systems right at a major community college.


When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper and 
pen and long lines standing out in the sun. Teachers would be sitting 
at long tables enrolling students one by one - it took all day just to 
enroll in a few courses.


Enrollment was hell back then!

Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on DOS. Instructors would 
walk all the way across campus just to look at it, not use it, just 
look at it. The college IT director couldn't understand what we were 
going to do with all that hard drive space!


Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main campus and another 5,000 
spread out over twenty computer labs on five campuses.


And, enrollment is still hell!

The school has at least three Oracle databases for student enrollment, 
one for credit card payments, personal data like adds and drops, 
grades, and the online library database, and then the course database. 
Not to mention the 3,000 online courses using the Blackboard database! 
Who do they think is going to run all this technology with me gone? Go 
figure.


Somebody should write ONE simple program called 'schools'. Go figure.

'Some say health-care site's problems highlight flawed federal IT 
policies'

Technology:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/ 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/some-say-health-care-sites-problems-highlight-flawed-federal-it-policies/2013/10/09/d558da42-30fe-11e3-8627-c5d7de0a046b_story.html 





[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology

2013-10-13 Thread Richard Williams
Example of abandoned technology:

[image: Inline image 1]


On Fri, Oct 11, 2013 at 4:25 PM, Richard J. Williams
pundits...@gmail.comwrote:

  So, the Obamacare web site isn't working too well - what else is new?

 Sometimes it's hell working in IT - for years I tried to get the
 enrollment systems right at a major community college.

 When I first got there, they were enrolling students using paper and pen
 and long lines standing out in the sun. Teachers would be sitting at long
 tables enrolling students one by one - it took all day just to enroll in a
 few courses.

 Enrollment was hell back then!

 Then, we got our first PC - an IBM running on DOS. Instructors would walk
 all the way across campus just to look at it, not use it, just look at it.
 The college IT director couldn't understand what we were going to do with
 all that hard drive space!

 Today, there are over 5,000 PCs on the main campus and another 5,000
 spread out over twenty computer labs on five campuses.

 And, enrollment is still hell!

 The school has at least three Oracle databases for student enrollment, one
 for credit card payments, personal data like adds and drops, grades, and
 the online library database, and then the course database. Not to mention
 the 3,000 online courses using the Blackboard database! Who do they think
 is going to run all this technology with me gone? Go figure.

 Somebody should write ONE simple program called 'schools'. Go figure.

 'Some say health-care site’s problems highlight flawed federal IT policies'
 Technology:
 http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/some-say-health-care-sites-problems-highlight-flawed-federal-it-policies/2013/10/09/d558da42-30fe-11e3-8627-c5d7de0a046b_story.html



[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology for Manifesting Intentions - meeting is changed!

2008-09-19 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Susan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi everyone, 
 The first meeting of the Technology for Manifesting Intentions 
 group that was scheduled for Sept 19 at 7:30 at Revelations in 
 Fairfield is being postponed due to a very exciting new 
 development. 
  
 Tommorrow night, Sept 19 at 8pm at Dalby Hall in the Argiro 
 Student Center (MUM campus) there is a free showing of the 
 movie THE SECRET and then John Hagelin and Michael Beckwith, 
 both of whom are featured speakers in the movie, will be there 
 live for a discussion afterwards.
  
 So I am postponing our first meeting one week so that everyone can 
 go and see the movie in the fabulous new Dalby Hall and have a 
 chance to hear John Hagelin and Michael Beckwith talk about the 
 technologies for manifesting yoru intentions!!!
  
 Support of nature - we couldn't begin our group meetings with a 
 better opportunity! See you all there. Any questions please call 
 760 687-5911
  
 Sincerely,
 Susan Sayler


Translation: 

No one expressed the slightest bit of interest
in my group meetings.

I'm going to pretend that it was because of a
film scheduled at the same time (that I was
too 'unsupported by nature' to know about and
plan around) and not because no one buys into
this moodmaking shit I'm trying to peddle.

Furthermore, by sending this out, I'm going to
co-opt anyone who DOES attend the film so that
later I can suggest that they're part of my 
group.





[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology for Manifesting Intentions - meeting is changed!

2008-09-19 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Susan my3paths@ wrote:
 
  Hi everyone, 
  The first meeting of the Technology for Manifesting Intentions 
  group that was scheduled for Sept 19 at 7:30 at Revelations in 
  Fairfield is being postponed due to a very exciting new 
  development. 
   
  Tommorrow night, Sept 19 at 8pm at Dalby Hall in the Argiro 
  Student Center (MUM campus) there is a free showing of the 
  movie THE SECRET and then John Hagelin and Michael Beckwith, 
  both of whom are featured speakers in the movie, will be there 
  live for a discussion afterwards.
   
  So I am postponing our first meeting one week so that everyone 
  can 
  go and see the movie in the fabulous new Dalby Hall and have a 
  chance to hear John Hagelin and Michael Beckwith talk about the 
  technologies for manifesting yoru intentions!!!
   
  Support of nature - we couldn't begin our group meetings with a 
  better opportunity! See you all there. Any questions please call 
  760 687-5911
   
  Sincerely,
  Susan Sayler
 
 
 Translation: 
 
 No one expressed the slightest bit of interest
 in my group meetings.
 
 I'm going to pretend that it was because of a
 film scheduled at the same time (that I was
 too 'unsupported by nature' to know about and
 plan around) and not because no one buys into
 this moodmaking shit I'm trying to peddle.
 
 Furthermore, by sending this out, I'm going to
 co-opt anyone who DOES attend the film so that
 later I can suggest that they're part of my 
 group.


Susan,

Just to follow up a bit, and hopefully a 
bit less snide, the above was my first reaction
to this announcement. This is my second.

I, for one, am not convinced about all this
manifesting intentions stuff. What I have seen
for decades now, among anyone who believes that
what they're doing is manifesting intentions, 
is that what they're really doing is what I 
mentioned once before, Moodmaking, moodmaking, 
moodmaking.

I've heard people say things like (literally),
Yes, I parked my car last night with its tail
end sticking out into the intersection and it
got totalled by a garbage truck this morning, so
I won't be able to use it to drive to the job
interview I should be going to, but all of this
is *really* the support of nature because now I
can use the insurance money I'm going to get for
my car to pay my rent for the next month, and 
don't need to find that job after all. I can just 
sit and meditate and wait for the next 'support 
of nature' event.

Call me an old cynic, but this sounds a lot to me
*not* like support of nature but more like train-
ing oneself to moodmake pretty much anything that
happens into Something good is happening and 
pretend that you're having support of nature.

What ever happened to, if you want something, 
actually *working* to achieve it?

What ever happened to expending a little *effort*
to achieve one's goals, be they personal or universal?

What ever happened to taking some individual respons-
ibility for one's individual karma?

I think Maharishi did tens of thousands of people 
and the whole New Age that emerged from meditation
and Eastern thought being introduced to the West a
huge and terrible disservice. Do less and accom-
plish more and Do nothing and accomplish every-
thing is IMO a lazy, non-evolutionary approach to
life, a way to systematically avoid DOING THE WORK. 

What I suspect (although I may be wrong) is that
your group, if it ever forms, is going to present
a bunch of buzzwords and ways of thinking that allow
people who don't want to or are not willing to DO 
THE WORK to moodmake anything that happens to them
as 1) support of nature, and 2) having manifested
their intentions. 

I have rarely seen anyone *really* manifest their
intentions using any of this New Age crap. But I've
seen a lot of people *claim* that they have. I've
seen them take credit for the weather or for things
that are clearly out of their control or anyone/
anything else's control, I've seen them claim that
serious fuckups and oversights and laziness on their 
part resulted in good things. And basically, I have
seen them waste their lives on this stuff instead
of picking a few *good* intentions and then just
going out and DOING THE WORK necessary to achieve
them. 

Since gathering a group of people around yourself
seems to be one of *your* intentions, and since 
Fairfield seems to have more suckers per square foot
than most places on this planet, I'll be curious to
see whether anyone shows up to your meetings, if 
and when they actually happen. 

But if they do, for me the jury is out on whether 
you are doing them a favor by feeding them all this
manifest your intentions crap, or whether you are
doing them a disservice by luring them -- once again --
into the moodmaking approach and away from the 
approach that REAL successful people have ALWAYS
undertaken -- DOING THE WORK.





Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Technology for Manifesting Intentions - meeting is changed!

2008-09-19 Thread Peter
Hey Turq, Susan certainly gets you, me and Vaj's panties in a bunch, doesn't 
she? Off to manifest some sleep...


--- On Fri, 9/19/08, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 From: TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Technology for Manifesting Intentions - meeting 
 is changed!
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Friday, September 19, 2008, 3:01 AM
 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Susan
 my3paths@ wrote:
  
   Hi everyone, 
   The first meeting of the Technology for
 Manifesting Intentions 
   group that was scheduled for Sept 19 at 7:30 at
 Revelations in 
   Fairfield is being postponed due to a very
 exciting new 
   development. 
    
   Tommorrow night, Sept 19 at 8pm at Dalby Hall in
 the Argiro 
   Student Center (MUM campus) there is a free
 showing of the 
   movie THE SECRET and then John Hagelin and
 Michael Beckwith, 
   both of whom are featured speakers in the movie,
 will be there 
   live for a discussion afterwards.
    
   So I am postponing our first meeting one week so
 that everyone 
   can 
   go and see the movie in the fabulous new Dalby
 Hall and have a 
   chance to hear John Hagelin and Michael Beckwith
 talk about the 
   technologies for manifesting yoru intentions!!!
    
   Support of nature - we couldn't begin our
 group meetings with a 
   better opportunity! See you all there. Any
 questions please call 
   760 687-5911
    
   Sincerely,
   Susan Sayler
  
  
  Translation: 
  
  No one expressed the slightest bit of interest
  in my group meetings.
  
  I'm going to pretend that it was because of a
  film scheduled at the same time (that I was
  too 'unsupported by nature' to know about and
  plan around) and not because no one buys into
  this moodmaking shit I'm trying to peddle.
  
  Furthermore, by sending this out, I'm going to
  co-opt anyone who DOES attend the film so that
  later I can suggest that they're part of my 
  group.
 
 
 Susan,
 
 Just to follow up a bit, and hopefully a 
 bit less snide, the above was my first reaction
 to this announcement. This is my second.
 
 I, for one, am not convinced about all this
 manifesting intentions stuff. What I have seen
 for decades now, among anyone who believes that
 what they're doing is manifesting
 intentions, 
 is that what they're really doing is what I 
 mentioned once before, Moodmaking, moodmaking, 
 moodmaking.
 
 I've heard people say things like (literally),
 Yes, I parked my car last night with its tail
 end sticking out into the intersection and it
 got totalled by a garbage truck this morning, so
 I won't be able to use it to drive to the job
 interview I should be going to, but all of this
 is *really* the support of nature because now I
 can use the insurance money I'm going to get for
 my car to pay my rent for the next month, and 
 don't need to find that job after all. I can just 
 sit and meditate and wait for the next 'support 
 of nature' event.
 
 Call me an old cynic, but this sounds a lot to me
 *not* like support of nature but more like
 train-
 ing oneself to moodmake pretty much anything that
 happens into Something good is happening and 
 pretend that you're having support of
 nature.
 
 What ever happened to, if you want something, 
 actually *working* to achieve it?
 
 What ever happened to expending a little *effort*
 to achieve one's goals, be they personal or universal?
 
 What ever happened to taking some individual respons-
 ibility for one's individual karma?
 
 I think Maharishi did tens of thousands of people 
 and the whole New Age that emerged from meditation
 and Eastern thought being introduced to the West a
 huge and terrible disservice. Do less and accom-
 plish more and Do nothing and accomplish every-
 thing is IMO a lazy, non-evolutionary approach to
 life, a way to systematically avoid DOING THE WORK. 
 
 What I suspect (although I may be wrong) is that
 your group, if it ever forms, is going to
 present
 a bunch of buzzwords and ways of thinking that allow
 people who don't want to or are not willing to DO 
 THE WORK to moodmake anything that happens to them
 as 1) support of nature, and 2) having
 manifested
 their intentions. 
 
 I have rarely seen anyone *really* manifest their
 intentions using any of this New Age crap. But
 I've
 seen a lot of people *claim* that they have. I've
 seen them take credit for the weather or for things
 that are clearly out of their control or anyone/
 anything else's control, I've seen them claim that
 serious fuckups and oversights and laziness on their 
 part resulted in good things. And basically, I have
 seen them waste their lives on this stuff instead
 of picking a few *good* intentions and then just
 going out and DOING THE WORK necessary to achieve
 them. 
 
 Since gathering a group of people around yourself
 seems to be one of *your* intentions, and since 
 Fairfield seems to have more suckers per square

[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology for Manifesting Intentions - meeting is changed!

2008-09-19 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hey Turq, Susan certainly gets you, me and Vaj's panties 
 in a bunch, doesn't she? Off to manifest some sleep...

Maybe that's her intention, and she's manifesting it. :-)

Seriously, it's not her, or this particular...uh...
manifestation of the Get what you want by moodmaking
about it syndrome...it's just the whole syndrome 
itself that gets to me. 

Like many, I've been there done that with this whole
schtick, and believed at the time that my puny-assed
desires were actually influencing nature enough that
it responded to those desires.

In retrospect, I realize that I was guilty of a great
deal of self importance and belief in fairy-tale
assumptions about the universe. Having evolved (or, 
according to Nabby, devolved) into a Buddhist who 
doesn't believe in God or in nature having any 
will of its own or sentience other than the combined 
sentience of its component parts, it's a little diffi-
cult for me to believe in stuff like prayer or yagyas 
or swinging a dead cat around my head in a graveyard
while chanting I *am* manifesting that new car I 
want...I *am* manifesting that new car I want...I 
really, really *am* manifesting that new car I want 
instead of actually working to earn the money to buy 
the new car. Or, better, not needing the new car in
the first place, and putting my energy into something
more important.

I'm not a fan of the New Age, and tend to pronounce
to rhyme with sewage. I think that much of it is based
on unexamined assumptions and self importance and a 
reluctance to take responsibility and actually WORK
for the things one wants. 

But maybe that's just me. Maybe Susan's group will 
get together and swing dead cats over their head and
manifest something way cool. Or maybe they'll just
imagine that they did. Either way, if it makes them
happy, I think they should definitely go for it.

Me, I'm going to put my energy into actually DOING
THE WORK. I know it's old fashioned, but that's just
the way it is...


 --- On Fri, 9/19/08, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  From: TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Technology for Manifesting Intentions
- meeting is changed!
  To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
  Date: Friday, September 19, 2008, 3:01 AM
  --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB
  no_reply@ wrote:
  
   --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Susan
  my3paths@ wrote:
   
Hi everyone, 
The first meeting of the Technology for
  Manifesting Intentions 
group that was scheduled for Sept 19 at 7:30 at
  Revelations in 
Fairfield is being postponed due to a very
  exciting new 
development. 
 
Tommorrow night, Sept 19 at 8pm at Dalby Hall in
  the Argiro 
Student Center (MUM campus) there is a free
  showing of the 
movie THE SECRET and then John Hagelin and
  Michael Beckwith, 
both of whom are featured speakers in the movie,
  will be there 
live for a discussion afterwards.
 
So I am postponing our first meeting one week so
  that everyone 
can 
go and see the movie in the fabulous new Dalby
  Hall and have a 
chance to hear John Hagelin and Michael Beckwith
  talk about the 
technologies for manifesting yoru intentions!!!
 
Support of nature - we couldn't begin our
  group meetings with a 
better opportunity! See you all there. Any
  questions please call 
760 687-5911
 
Sincerely,
Susan Sayler
   
   
   Translation: 
   
   No one expressed the slightest bit of interest
   in my group meetings.
   
   I'm going to pretend that it was because of a
   film scheduled at the same time (that I was
   too 'unsupported by nature' to know about and
   plan around) and not because no one buys into
   this moodmaking shit I'm trying to peddle.
   
   Furthermore, by sending this out, I'm going to
   co-opt anyone who DOES attend the film so that
   later I can suggest that they're part of my 
   group.
  
  
  Susan,
  
  Just to follow up a bit, and hopefully a 
  bit less snide, the above was my first reaction
  to this announcement. This is my second.
  
  I, for one, am not convinced about all this
  manifesting intentions stuff. What I have seen
  for decades now, among anyone who believes that
  what they're doing is manifesting
  intentions, 
  is that what they're really doing is what I 
  mentioned once before, Moodmaking, moodmaking, 
  moodmaking.
  
  I've heard people say things like (literally),
  Yes, I parked my car last night with its tail
  end sticking out into the intersection and it
  got totalled by a garbage truck this morning, so
  I won't be able to use it to drive to the job
  interview I should be going to, but all of this
  is *really* the support of nature because now I
  can use the insurance money I'm going to get for
  my car to pay my rent for the next month, and 
  don't need to find that job after all. I can just 
  sit and meditate and wait

[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology for Manifesting Intentions - meeting is changed!

2008-09-19 Thread feste37
I vote for that as the most mean-spirited, unpleasant post of the
week. Just what is your problem, Turq? 

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Susan my3paths@ wrote:
 
  Hi everyone, 
  The first meeting of the Technology for Manifesting Intentions 
  group that was scheduled for Sept 19 at 7:30 at Revelations in 
  Fairfield is being postponed due to a very exciting new 
  development. 
   
  Tommorrow night, Sept 19 at 8pm at Dalby Hall in the Argiro 
  Student Center (MUM campus) there is a free showing of the 
  movie THE SECRET and then John Hagelin and Michael Beckwith, 
  both of whom are featured speakers in the movie, will be there 
  live for a discussion afterwards.
   
  So I am postponing our first meeting one week so that everyone can 
  go and see the movie in the fabulous new Dalby Hall and have a 
  chance to hear John Hagelin and Michael Beckwith talk about the 
  technologies for manifesting yoru intentions!!!
   
  Support of nature - we couldn't begin our group meetings with a 
  better opportunity! See you all there. Any questions please call 
  760 687-5911
   
  Sincerely,
  Susan Sayler
 
 
 Translation: 
 
 No one expressed the slightest bit of interest
 in my group meetings.
 
 I'm going to pretend that it was because of a
 film scheduled at the same time (that I was
 too 'unsupported by nature' to know about and
 plan around) and not because no one buys into
 this moodmaking shit I'm trying to peddle.
 
 Furthermore, by sending this out, I'm going to
 co-opt anyone who DOES attend the film so that
 later I can suggest that they're part of my 
 group.





[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology for Manifesting Intentions - reminder

2008-09-13 Thread sparaig
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Susan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Reminder
 
 Technology for Manifesting Intentions
 Friday Sept. 19th at 7:30 pm at Revelations Coffee House.
 �Pick something great to do and do it!�
 �Give the future a direction�
 ��������������� -His Holiness Maharishi Mahesh 
 Yogi
 This is a fellowship group focused on doing exactly what the master has asked 
 us to do. 
It is not in any way a deviation from the TM or TM Sidhi program. It is simply 
a way for 
people with a specific vision, and who are of like mind, to support one another 
in the use 
of the tools of consciousness to manifest our full potential and greatest 
dreams. Using 
techniques outlined in films like The Secret and What the Bleep Do We Know, we 
apply our 
imagination and waking thoughts in ways that are supported and furthered by 
natural law.
 I am looking to create a core group of 6-10 people who want to take this 
 manifestation 
technology to the next level and really see it happen in their lives. 
 Please call me if you have any questions: Susan Sayler 760 687-5911.


Ironically John Hagelin denounced The Secret as being too superficial to work.


Lawson





[FairfieldLife] Re: Technology for Manifesting Intentions - reminder

2008-09-13 Thread nablusoss1008
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

 No dome for you, my mala covered samsarini!
 
 --- On Sat, 9/13/08, Susan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 From: Susan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Technology for Manifesting Intentions - 
reminder
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Saturday, September 13, 2008, 9:46 AM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Reminder 
 
 Technology for Manifesting Intentions
 Friday Sept. 19th at 7:30 pm at Revelations Coffee House. 
 Pick something great to do and do it!
 Give the future a direction
     -His Holiness Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
 This is a fellowship group focused on doing exactly what the master 
has asked us to do. It is not in any way a deviation from the TM or 
TM Sidhi program. It is simply a way for people with a specific 
vision, and who are of like mind, to support one another in the use 
of the tools of consciousness to manifest our full potential and 
greatest dreams. Using techniques outlined in films like The Secret 
and What the Bleep Do We Know, we apply our imagination and waking 
thoughts in ways that are supported and furthered by natural law.
 I am looking to create a core group of 6-10 people who want to take 
this manifestation technology to the next level and really see it 
happen in their lives. 
 Please call me if you have any questions: Susan Sayler 760 687-5911.

Susan: Please burn slowly in a very hot place !