Friday, December 29, 2006

On Call Friday

So yeah... It kinda defeats the purpose of having a day off when you're on call later on. Nonetheless, I was able to at least sleep in, and get some running done, before I had to go to work. It's been relatively quiet so far. I should probably sleep, but I am gonna waste time online... maybe watch smallville on youtube or something. I'm a little sleepy, but not tired.... or maybe I'm a little tired but not sleepy? Or maybe I am just sleepwriting..... At least I am not carrying the pager. Definitely looking forward to the long weekend...

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Holidays!

I am officially on break now (12/21 to 12/28), work Thursday morning, all night (unfortunately) on Friday, and then off for a few more days. Work schedule is pretty sweet this month. I am not going anywhere, but I will get to enjoy Hawaii this week :)

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Meebo


So recently I discovered one of the coolest instant messanging related websites ever.... MEEBO. I can use it at work to use a very well designed consolidated IM program. It combines google, yahoo, msn, aim, icq, jabber, etc protocols into one client. And it looks cool. And it works (for now) even on military computers. So if you're at work and can't download software, or if they block the "express" versions of AIM or MSN and you wanna just chat cuz work is booooring sometimes, or because you're on lunch break, meebo is the way to go. Two thumbs up!

2 months already?

Wow,
It's been a while since my last post. That's how much fun you have on rotations - you don't even keep track of time. So I am sure a lot has happened, but I can't be expected to remember it all. As of recently, saw Casino Royale... pretty good acting by Craig.. movie iteself was 7 out of 10. Went to a Lewis Black convert last night at Blaisdell... I thought the opening act of John Bowman was funnier. But it was enjoyable nonetheless. Today, I am sitting in my "office" looking at my appointments in the Adult Medicine Clinic... and guess what.. it's empty. What does this mean? No, I can't go home at 8:30 am.... It means that they're screwing with me. Just when I think I am done, they'll schedule me with 3 patients. So I will eagerly await in the clinic, clicking refresh every 5 min to make sure I don't have patients. Sounds like fun! Woohoo!
Though on a more permanently scheduled note, I have didactics on Wednesday afternoons, so I know I have no work this afternoon. Which means that I am definitely done by 2pm as today's 2pm lecture will be one of those "Hey guys, Have a Happy Thanksgiving, see you next week!" deal.

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Use google for legal online streaming of ANY mp3s on the web

So many people already know about http://www.g2p.org and how you can use google as an mp3 search engine and "anonymously" download music available on the web. The links are not always working, but then that's the web (and "quoth the browser 404" for you Poe fans). What I have found particularly effective is to use a free gigabyte locker at mp3tunes.com (with free music from sideload.com as well), and installing their plugin for firefox/IE which gives you a "SL" icon next to any link for an mp3 in your browser. What this means is that as long as the link is valid, you can directly move or "side/webload" the file into mp3tunes. You don't even need to download anything physically to your computer. Meaning you can sideload ANYTHING you find on the web and be assured that you're not illegally downloading anything. Of course, you can download the files from your locker at superspeed should you choose to do so. I personally just keep them in the locker because they sound great even when streaming, and I can access them from anywhere.

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Test 1st document from ZOHOwriter - to blogger (via hotmail)


This is pretty cool.  I am using an online word processor (zohowriter.com).  It makes typing things online much easier.  Looks good.  And it can paste to blogger and stuff.  I wonder if it will handle pictures... probably not.  I know the plugin for MS Word can't handle pictures.

 sealedmoney-mouth


For some reason, zohowriter won't login to blogger correctly,s o i had to email the text in through hotmail.  I hope they correct the problem, because the website is actually pretty good.

zohowrite image

High Quality Divx File - streaming!!



This is a test to see if I can post from writely straight to blogger. It looks pretty awesome. I even have a right click menu. I can toally use this to write my documents online, or on random computers. Forget using a flash drive and all that nonsense, as long as the information is not sensitive and you may not get screwed if your internet connection dies or if the website in unavailable.

Center Justification

On Call

Soooo I was pretty tired today. Had to rely on mountain dew to keep me focused through developmental clinic this morning. At 4 I started on call for psychiatry so I made a quick trip to Jack in the Box for some extremely unhealthy (but cheap!) tacos before 4pm. Unfortunately, there was already a patient in the ER, but the medical student gets the first patient so, I got time to sit down and eat. After I ate, I just decided to take a nap, cuz you never know when you'll get paged. It felt gooooood to just close my eyes. One of the psych interns woke me up an hour later as she walked into the intern room. I was completely out of it.. couldn't even answer her basic what're you doing this month type questions without 15 secs of processing. Went back to bed until I was paged at about 9pm for another patient in the ED. Took an hour to talk to him, another 30 min or so to disposition him, and didn't even finish the note until a little after 12 am. Didn't feel like it took that much time, but 3-4 hours for one patient seems excessive. But I guess this is the time I learn how to manage my time and get faster. My goal for the next few patients is 1 hr to see/assess/discuss and 1 hour for putting in the orders and writing the note. Two hours seems reasonable. Better than three.

Of course, now it's about 1 am and I am wide awake. I will try lying down. Or maybe I will get a snack.

Ooh, I just remembered I have a doctor's appointment at 9 tomorrow. I guess I will set my PDA alarm clock. Hopefully there will be no more people in the ED. But I would rather have them come in tonight than on Friday night when I am on call again.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

AMV Hell 3: The Motion Picture

This is pretty cool. Over an hour long.

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Benny Benassi - Who's Your Daddy?

This was the Benassi sequel I could not watch for like months until I finally found it on youtube. Great beat, again, but even racier than than satisfaction. Not for kiddos.
Satisfaction (Benny Benassi - censored version)

Awesome (but old) video by Benny benassi. probably the most racy/sexist European music video I had seen until I saw Who's my Daddy. Great song though.. Burger King had used the theme for a commercial if you remember a while back.
Nice View of Tripler Hospital

Here's a clip I took from my apartment.. for some reason the camera quality is awesome on dvd, but looks so-so on the computer. This clip though is really downsized because the original size was 100 megs.

Friday, August 04, 2006

My Kittens



Ok, see if this picture works. Angus is the black one and Hamish is the grey and white one. It looks like Angus has no face when his eyes are closed like that. So, no "Black Angus" jokes, I've heard that one plenty....and Hamish is pronounced like "Hey-mish" not like pig meat. Oh, and they've got middle names. Angus Osbert and Hamish Clark. I don't know if Osbert is Gaelic, but I liked it anyway. And here's a picture of Hamish sleeping upside down. They're both a couple of rag dolls and sleep upside down a lot.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Xbox Softmodding - A Step by Step

So you want to mod your xbox without opening it? That is right, lets mod your xbox without installing a modchip, or flashing the TSOP. We are going to "Soft Mod" it using some EXPERTLY created software!

read more | digg story

Sunday, June 11, 2006

Bad RAZR pic from my lanai

View from my apartment

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Protecting yourself against the BitTorrent bandits!

Copied interesting article from another post here.

[Update: A few hours after publishing on Digg.com, the blocklist referenced in this article stopped working. The reason for this fluke is a change Bluetack made in response to the huge Digg interest. The article now links to alternate files from Bluetack that are in the correct format. It's the same list as before, but this time it's sure to be in the right format.]

If you've been using BitTorrent to download any of the more popular files, such as the latest episode of some major TV show, you may have found yourself receiving lots of "Wasted" data. This is data that has been discarded after being deemed corrupt or invalid by your BitTorrent client. Every so often, you will have received more wasted data than the size of the files you are downloading!

This is happening because Anti-P2P organizations are actively polluting P2P networks with fake peers, which send out fake or corrupt data in order to waste bandwidth and slow down file transfers. At its worst, when downloading major copyrighted torrents, as much as a fourth of the peers you are connected to can be attributed to various Anti-P2P agencies. There is also a much more serious side to this. Once you've established a connection to one of these fake "peers", your IP has been logged and will most likely be sent to the RIAA/MPAA!

But there is a way to fight back! If you are using the latest µTorrent (1.5), you can employ a little known feature called IP filtering. The author of µTorrent has gone out of his way to hide it, but it's there nonetheless. But before we can activate this filter, we need to retrieve a list of currently known Anti-P2P organization IPs.

This is most easily done by downloading the latest blacklist from Bluetack (the same people who wrote SafePeer for the Azureus BT client) at http://www.bluetack.co.uk/config/nipfilter.dat.gz. This list is updated daily, and contains all known Anti-P2P organizations, trackers and peers, aswell as all known Goverment/Military IP addresses as collected by the Bluetack team. Once downloaded, extract and rename the file to "ipfilter.dat" in preparation for the final step.

To make the list available to µTorrent, you need to put it in %AppData%\uTorrent. So type this into the Address Bar, or click Start -> Run and type it there. After placing the ipfilter.dat in this folder, start µTorrent and go into preferences (Ctrl+P), then click on "Advanced". In the right hand pane, make sure that "ipfilter.enable" is set to true, and then close the dialog. That's it for the configuration.

You can verify that the list has been loaded by looking under the "Logging" tab of µTorrent, where you should see the line "Loaded ipfilter.dat (X entries)".

Congratulations! You are now protected against most of the garbage-distributing peers; and the likelyhood of the RIAA or MPAA knocking at your door has been substantially reduced! I'd go as far as to say that you shouldn't be using µTorrent at all without this feature turned on! And even if the law enforcement side of it doesn't bother you, you should still be interested in reducing the amount of garbage data that gets sent your way, which in turn leads to quicker downloads, and isn't that something everybody should strive for? ;)

Note: It's advised that you update the list at least once a month, to keep you updated on the movement of the Anti-P2P organizations. One tool that will aid you getting these updates is the "Blocklist Manager" from the same people who made the list; go to http://www.bluetack.co.uk/ and download it. On a related note, this note from the µTorrent FAQ should come in handy: "To reload ipfilter.dat without restarting µTorrent, simply open the preferences (ctrl+p), and press enter to close it again."


Happy Torrenting!
- jesusisapervert

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Religious Tumor

Here's another great onion article from 2000.

Malignant Tumor Sees Every Day As Gift From God



MUNCIE, IN–On July 12, the cancerous growth imbedded in the brain tissue of Warren Lenders got the news no tumor ever wants to hear: chemotherapy. Facing the prospect of cancer-killing radiation, the six-month-old malignant brain tumor could have cursed the heavens for dealing it such a cruel fate. Instead, it chose to be grateful for the time it has left, viewing each new day as a gift from God.

"God put me on this Earth for a purpose: to attach myself to the parietal lobe of loving husband and father of three Warren Lenders," said the tumor, speaking from the left hemisphere of Lenders' cerebrum. "But if He says it's time to go, then it's time to go. It is not for me to question why."

"As it says in the Good Book," the high-grade cerebellar astrocytoma continued, "'If you have received God's Gift of Grace, rejoice. Enjoy it every day.'"

After tragically losing most of its mass in a June 28 operation, the tumor is now in the midst of 12 grueling weeks of chemotherapy, a procedure doctors say it has a less than 20 percent chance of surviving.

"This has been the greatest trial of my entire life," the tumor said. "Operations, radium bombardment, cesium. You name it, I've been through it. But just as He did with Job, the Lord is presenting me with these hardships as a way of testing my faith."

According to doctors at Indiana University Medical Center, where the tumor is being treated, malignancies of its kind generally have a 60 percent survival rate. But because the tumor was detected early, its chances are far worse.

"Statistically, the odds are against it, no question," chief oncologist Dr. Irwin Patel said. "But this is one tough little tumor, and I wouldn't count it out. It's showing unusual tenacity for a supratentorial growth of its size. We thought the surgery would be the end, but when we got in there to debulk it, we found it had spread all over the place."

Throughout the ordeal, the tumor has found comfort in its strong Christian faith.

"Going into that surgery, I thought, 'Well, this could be the end of the line for me,'" the tumor said. "But, by some miracle, a few of my tendrils had adhered to the occipital lobe without the doctors realizing it, and I made it through the operation. I know in my heart it was God's hand guiding that surgeon's scalpel to the wrong place that day."

After the surgery, the tumor's weight had dropped to 9.8 grams.

"Some tumors might have thrown in the towel right then and there," it said. "But I'm not the type. I need only remember the trials that Jesus went through while in His earthly form to realize that my trials have been nothing."

The tumor sees the fact that it is still alive as "part of God's great plan."

"May I quote The Bible again? 'For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord,'" the tumor said. "I guess I'm so calm because I know that when it's my time to go, a better life awaits me in Heaven, where I will be rewarded for my faith with a glorious bounty of ganglion and glial cells, the likes of which a mortal being like myself cannot even conceive."

With its time possibly drawing to a close, the tumor reflected on its life.

"Honestly, I've been lucky," it said. "I could have been born an easily detectable epidermoid cyst and been destroyed swiftly. But instead, I was hidden by the bone matter of Lenders' skull and went undetected by X-rays for months."

The tumor also draws comfort and strength from its offspring.

"In my life, I've been fortunate enough to metastasize three dozen beautiful little cancerous cell masses, which I've sent off into the cerebrospinal fluid," it said. "Right now, they're just imperceptible growths on the spinal cord and medulla. But, God willing, when I've gone to my maker, they will be there to carry on my work. Praise the Lord."


A recent photo of the brave tumor. Inset: Its place of residence for the past six months.

Weird video from Macho Media




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Friday, May 05, 2006

Trip Update

Yay! I am in Mississippi. It's fun so far. I got to visit elvis's birthplace yesterday.

--

Mobile Email from a Cingular Wireless Customer http://www.cingular.com

Thursday, May 04, 2006

Multimedia message

Elvis at age thirteen, Tupelo, Mississippi.

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Random RAZR Pic

Soumen's car ahead of mine on routes 70 and 73 circle.

Sunday, April 09, 2006

Rob and Julie's Wedding on 4/8/2006

Julie's cake for Rob.


It was an awesome ceremony near Atlantic City. They looked so happy and wonderful together. And I just loved the cake Julie and her sister made.

Thursday, April 06, 2006

Testing mobile device

Monday, March 06, 2006

Articles of the Day

So the anticipated movement to challenge Roe vs. Wade with the appointment of Alito and Roberts has already begun. Governor Michael Rounds of South Dakota recently signed a bill making it illegal to perform abortions unless the pregnancy is an imminent risk to the mother's life. Let's see how drawn out the legal battle over this issue will be now, once it gets to the Supreme Court level.

In some odder news,
Distillery to Revive 184-Proof Whisky

By JENNIFER PRICE
LONDON (AP) - A Scottish distillery said Monday it was reviving a centuries-old recipe for whisky so strong that one 17th-century writer feared more than two spoonfuls could be lethal.

Risk-taking whisky connoisseurs will have to wait, however - the spirit will not be ready for at least 10 years.

The Bruichladdich distillery on the Isle of Islay, off Scotland's west coast, is producing the quadruple-distilled 184-proof - or 92 percent alcohol - spirit "purely for fun," managing director Mark Reynier said.

Whisky usually is distilled twice and has an alcohol content of between 40 and 63.5 per cent.

Bruichladdich is using a recipe for a spirit known in the Gaelic language as usquebaugh-baul, "perilous water of life."

n 1695, travel writer Martin Martin described it as powerful enough to affect "all members of the body."

"Two spoonfuls of this last liquor is a sufficient dose; if any man should exceed this, it would presently stop his breath, and endanger his life," Martin wrote...


In personal news... this past weekend was excelelnt. I visited my parents after a long time, and took two friends home with me to make up for it. Among other things, I made them watch a Hindi movie that I like (with English subtitles). They actually admitted to liking it. We watched Final Destination 3 in a theater and enjoyed it tremendously - it was exactly what I expected: nonstop entertaining, gory deaths. Later on Sunday, Atif came over to my apartment from way up North Jersey as he had to take Step 2 Clinical Skills of USMLE in Philly today. We hung out for a bit yesterday, and as I was working at the hospital, he rocked the CS from 8-4. After he left, I meant to do some productive work, but, alas, here I am with nothing really accomplished. Ooh.. I just remembered... I left my Wal-Mart purchases from today in Soumen's car. I guess I will get them later - there is nothing I need immediately in there anyway. Oh well - time for some music and then off to bed. I have to get up an hour earlier tomorrow.

Friday, March 03, 2006

Cavemen preferred blondes

Apparently Blondes are mutants.

Here's the link.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Watch out, late fee dodgers!

First, here's the article:AOL Money & Finance: - - A New Threat To Your Credit Rating Now. I say good for them! In my mind, if you get a ticket, you have to pay it. If you get a fine, you have to pay it. If you dont return your library books, you have to pay for them! If cities want to start collecting on all these fines, etc. that people owe (and yes, they do owe) I say it's about time. Especially if it will help keep taxes down. It doesnt seem unreasonable to me. I do have to wonder about the cost effectiveness of hiring a collection agency to track down small dollar amounts. I mean, does it make sense to pay a collector $10/hr. to track down a $40 fine? But, I suppose if they werent getting any money out of it they'd come up with a new plan. Or just tax people more. The part that really makes me mad, though, is this Mr. DaCorsi, who seems to be under the impression that the library just gives away books. He says he prided himself on his excellent credit, which would lead one to the conclusion that he's in the habit of paying all his bills on time. So why can't he return his library books? Granted, things happen and whatnot, and library books get returned late, so you have to pay a fine. But c'mon...is 10 cents per day really that much of a financial hardship? PAY YOUR DAMN LATE FEES, DUDE, AND QUIT WHINING ABOUT IT!!! And now the poor DaCorsi children are barred from going to the library. They must go to Barnes & Noble from now on. What, exactly, is he trying to teach his children? The library was wrong to want the late fees/missing books that Mr. DaCorsi owed them? Because, yes, he did owe them! So next time Junior wants a picture book, he's going to have to shell out at least $20 for it. Hmm....Barnes & Noble seems to be profiting greatly from Mr. DaCorsi's situation. Perhaps it's all an evil plot? Who wants to bet that B&N is behind this evil scheme to ruin the credit of all library patrons because they're borrowing books instead of buying them!?

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Tennessee beats Temple 11-6 in low scoring NCAA basketball game

This was feautured in some news articles... I found it very interesting. Talk about a boring game. Look at it on the bright side... 17 points would be very exciting if it were soccer or hockey!

Infamy in 17 points - Flashback: Tennessee 11, Temple 6
Basketball Digest, Dec, 2003 by Chuck O'Donnell
TRUDEAUX TO KNEIB.

Kneib to Trudeaux.

Trudeaux to Kneib.

Two of Temple's best ball-handlers, Rick Trudeaux and John Kneib, stood like Easter Island statues in Chuck Taylors, passing the ball back and forth for minutes at a time. With no shot clock to stop them, the Owls had decided before their game with host Tennessee in the Volunteer Classic on December 15,1973, that no matter how ugly or boring it was, or how badly they desecrated the game of they were going to stall.

For Temple coach Don Casey, this was the Owls' best, and perhaps only, way to best Tennessee.

"Tennessee had a great team," Casey says. "We thought this was going to give us the best chance to win. So we took two guys and put them out by the 28-foot line, had them standing about five feet part, and we had them pass the ball back and forth, back and forth.

"This was uncharted territory. We didn't know exactly what we were doing. It got to the point where we said, "Well, what should we do next?"

Continue articleAdvertisement


Kneib to Trudeaux.

Trudeaux to Kneib.

Kneib to Trudeaux.

As the ball went back and forth and the sands of time oozed through the hourglass, Tennessee held its ground.

"Temple had a good team," says Len Kosmalski, the Volunteers' leading scorer that season. "We were prepared for a good game. Then we got word that Temple didn't think they could play with us. They went into their stall tactics. We played a disciplined style taught by coach [Ray] Mears. We were precise. We'd work the ball around until we got a good shot. Temple thought it would slow the pace down and reverse the roles on us. [Assistant] coach [Stu] Aberdeen told us, 'Just stay in your positions. Be patient.' We stayed back in our zone and they passed the ball back and forth at the top of the key. Six or seven minutes would run off the dock and I'd just be sitting there in the lane, watching the clock wind down.

"The coaches didn't want us to come out of our 2-3 zone. [Temple] had some good inside players. I guess they thought if they could draw us out, it would open things for their inside players. The coaches told us to stay packed in."

Trudeaux to Kneib.

Kneib to Trudeaux.

Trudeaux to Kneib.

The strategy, for lack of a better word, was working Temple held the ball for the final 11:44 of the first half and went into halftime trailing by just two points.

Temple went back into the stall in the second half. The Tennessee crowd, which had lost its patience much earlier, began to well with hostility. The arena echoed with thousands of boos. Seven or eight police officers were summoned to stand guard behind the Owls bench, just in case.

Mears also grew angry. "Once in awhile, we'd look down at them and say, What are you doing? Play some basketball already.'" To which Casey, in his first year as head coach, would yell back, "Why don't you come out and get us?"

Says Casey: "I don't understand why they didn't come out. If they had attacked those two men, there would have been temporary chaos. We wouldn't have known what to do next."

But as it stood, Temple stalled and Tennessee waited. "A war of wills ensued," Casey says, "We had no idea what we were doing. I had no idea how to bring it to a conclusion. It was one of those things where we got so far into it, we didn't know how to get out of it And they didn't do anything to get out of it."

Kneib to Trudeaux.

Trudeaux to Kneib.

Kneib to Trudeaux

Temple didn't allow the Volunteers a single shot from the field in the second half But the Volunteers got four free throws from John Snow to collect an 11-6 victory. It was the lowest-scoring major college game since 1938. Kosmalski topped all scorers with five points.

Tennessee officials forced the Volunteers to play an intrasquad scrimmage after the game. "The people had come to see basketball," Mears says. "I was angry. I told their coach after the game was over that this is a game played for our fans. We invited teams from the east and west so they could see different styles of basketball. Temple had an eastern style. I told Casey, 'I gave you $10,000 to come in here to play and I'm disappointed. I'll never invite you back.'"

Casey says he got letters from psychologists, who were analyzing his personality through how he coached that game. Legendary DePaul coach Ray Meyers, at the game to see Tennessee in action, forever gave Casey grief for ruining his scouting trip. Temple didn't get its $10,000 check for over a year.

To this day, 30 years later, disbelieving fans will come up to Kosmalski and ask him if the final score was really 11-6.

"People see it in the record book and they ask me about it," Kosmalski says. "I'm like, 'Believe it or not, that was the score.'"

COPYRIGHT 2003 Century Publishing
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

Clinton Declares Self President For Life

Since the last article was from the onion, I decided to add one of my favorite onion articles here, published, as you may infer, during Bush and Gore's election fiasco.




November 15, 2000
| Issue 36•41


WASHINGTON, DC–Denouncing the American electoral process as "immoral and corrupt," President Clinton announced Tuesday that he will not step down on Jan. 20, 2001, declaring himself "President For Life."


Enlarge ImageClinton Declares Self President For Life

Clinton greets his subjects from a White House balcony.

Proclaiming Nov. 14 a new national holiday as "Day One of Americlintonian Year Zero," Clinton issued a directive of total martial law over "all territories formerly known as these United States, from now on to be called the Holy United Imperial Americlintonian Demopublic (HUIAD)." He added that all election results are "hereby invalidated under Demopublican provisional law."


"The American people have spoken," Clinton said. "By failing to generate a 51 percent majority for either candidate, they have shown their inability to muster the drive to collective action. The time has come for a new America, a strong Americlintonian Empire, capable of providing the indecisive electorate with direction through one man's sheer force of will."


Dressed in full military regalia and flanked by members of his elite Demopublican Guard, Clinton told reporters, "Let all peoples of the land know this: The era of bipartisan inaction and paralysis has ended. The Age of the Great Cleansing Fire begins today."


A significant portion of the U.S. Armed Forces has sworn loyalty to the Imperial Demopublic Council of Generals, the new military wing of the Clinton regime. But despite such support, many political observers question the constitutionality of Clinton's actions, which include the burning of the Constitution, the dissolution of Congress, and the establishment of "re-education camps" in suburban D.C.


At a sparsely attended press conference, U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno raised the prospect of a Justice Department investigation of "possible illegal activities" on the part of Clinton. Most observers, however, believe that such a probe is unlikely: Less than an hour after Reno spoke, her battered and broken body was publicly fed to Clinton's dogs.


"Let them bring their pitiful reprisals to the impotent courts. Their lawyers and lawsuits shall face the wrath of a people united by the almighty fist," said Clinton, whose divinity as HUIAD's first Emperor-God was ratified late Tuesday night by the Americlintonic High Priest Council. "Let them recount their puny, paper ballots. They shall wither, as will the bankers, lawyers, and lobbyists all, before the Holy Cause of Americlintonia's glorious, righteous might."


Defiant in the face of objections from the Bush and Gore camps, Clinton has consolidated his power over the last several days, ordering armed takeovers of major federal buildings and the systematic collection and display of his enemies' heads on iron pikes.


In a test of the new regime's power outside the nation's capital, Senator-Elect Hillary Clinton, rechristened "Bride of The Lord Clinton On Earth," summarily ordered HUIAD troops to fire on Manhattan crowds, leaving more than 2,500 dead on Wall Street and quickly dispersing protesters loyal to defeated Republican challenger Rick Lazio.


Resistance movements are already forming. The new Legion Of Californians has sworn to defeat HUIAD in the west, and anti-Clinton groups have been reported across the U.S., including Naderist factions in Washington State and Maine.


Clinton has publicly dismissed such insurrections as "pathetic," confident that nothing will stem his authority over "the former U.S."


"The rebels are but mewling kittens who shall taste blood instead of milk," said Clinton, threatening to deploy HUAID-controlled nuclear weapons against members of resistance movements. "The holy power of the atom shall, if it must, cleanse this nation of all infidels."



Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Sudden Elder Death Syndrome

And you thought SIDS was bad.....
Here's an article from the onion.

Millions Of Americans Succumbing To Sudden Elder Death Syndrome

February 8, 2006 | Issue 42•06

McLEAN, VA—Despite remarkable advances in health care and the study of medicine in recent decades, scientists remain baffled by Sudden Elder Death Syndrome, a disorder that cuts long lives short and leaves aggrieved loved ones wondering why.
Millions Of Americans Succumbing To Sudden Elder Death Syndrome

Also known as Craftmatic Adjustable Bed Death, SEDS is the sudden, unexplained passing of an elderly person. In many SEDS cases, even a full autopsy and a review of 80-plus years of health records cannot account for the mysterious death.

"We have no forensic explanation for it," said Dr. Martin Gerrard, chairman of the SEDS Institute. "These seemingly healthy elders—some of whom are performing such normal activities as eating liquefied food, trying to stand up, or taking frequent naps—just stop breathing."

According to a study published by the SEDS Institute, Sudden Elder Death Syndrome is the leading cause of death among people over the age of 85. Nicolai Korsgaard, author of the most comprehensive SEDS investigation conducted in the past decade, said scientists have been unable to replicate his results because study participants often succumb to SEDS before the studies are complete.

"Over 99 percent of elders between the ages of 100 and 105 die of SEDS," Korsgaard said. "As a researcher and caregiver, I can't think of a scenario more gut-wrenching than that of a healthy and contented centenarian slipping into a deep slumber and never awakening."

The earliest recorded SEDS fatality occurred on American soil in 1661, when 58-year-old English-born colonist Jonas Clay died in his sleep in his cabin. While advances in mattress technology and elder care have raised the average age of SEDS victims from 54.5 in 1700 to 78.6 today, the mysterious syndrome kills at exactly the same rate it did three centuries ago.

"Doctors haven't isolated any genetic anomalies or behavior patterns among elders afflicted with SEDS," Gerrard said. "The one constant in the SEDS community is age. We do know that the older one gets, the greater the risk of becoming a victim."

However, independent research group SEDS Prevention Alliance has detected patterns among SEDS victims.

"Nearly 80 percent of SEDS deaths occur in a home setting, such as a nursing home or assisted-living facility," said SEDSPA director Melinda Byrnes. "Inactive elders who lie in their beds all day ingesting prescription medicines are especially susceptible."

For many loved ones of SEDS victims, however, these and other theories offer little comfort. Atlanta resident Mary-Beth Soltis, 34, lost her grandmother Esther, 91, to SEDS in 2003.

"Every day, I think, 'There must have been something I could have done to save Nana,'" Soltis said. "When I left the hospital the night before, I never thought that it would be the last time I saw her. What did I do wrong? I'm a terrible granddaughter."

Byrnes recommends putting elders to sleep on their backs, checking on them regularly, and monitoring them with a device called an electrocardiograph, which emits a sustained electronic tone if your elder is in danger of succumbing to SEDS.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

goddammit :)

Yikes was my reaction to this article.

Here's a blurb:


Starving woman curses God, dies in her sleep


NAIROBI (Reuters) - A starving Kenyan woman placed a powerful tribal curse on God, accusing him of sending famine, and died in her sleep, local newspapers said Thursday.

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Here are some rules on when to storm

GREAT article from ESPN.com by Pat Forde

Thursday, January 26, 2006
Here are some rules on when to storm
By Pat Forde
ESPN.com

Forty names, games, teams and minutiae making news in college basketball ("Bison Beat Bucky!" (1) T-shirts sold separately):

TO STORM OR NOT TO STORM

Within the last 10 days, those crazy college kids from Michigan, Iowa, Indiana, Georgetown, St. John's and Tennessee have stormed the basketball court to celebrate big victories -- and for the chance to act like lunatics on TV. ("Look, Martha, there's our boy! Yes, the shirtless one with his face and torso painted, howling like a savage and jumping on that other child's back. ... Is that a whiskey flask in his back pocket?")

After watching all these giddy group gropes, it's high time to publish the Forde Minutes Court-Storming Protocol Guide. Students are advised to read the following rules and to act accordingly the next time their team agitates them to the edge of hoops ecstasy:

• The Old Money Principle (2): Look up at the ceiling of your gym and count the banners. If your school has won three or more national titles in its history, you shall not rush the floor at any time. Schools affected: UCLA (11 titles), Kentucky (seven), Indiana (five), North Carolina (four), Duke (three).

Your program has won big games before. Act like it.

The Old Money Principle clearly puts the Indiana student body in violation of The Forde Minutes' protocol. Especially when the vanquished team, Illinois, owns zero national titles of its own. How terribly tacky.

The Illini did not even qualify for a Minutes Protocol Exception (3), which states that if your august basketball program has hit the skids to a dispiriting degree (Indiana has missed the last two NCAA Tournaments), a storming is allowable under certain conditions:

Condition A (4): The opponent is ranked No. 1 and/or undefeated at least halfway through the season (14 or more games). Illinois was merely ranked fifth in the ESPN/USA Today coaches' poll and already had a loss on the season.

Condition B (5): Your august program defeats a top-five team on a suitably miraculous shot (25 feet or farther) at the buzzer, spurring spontaneous joy that overrides better impulses. (The Indiana-Illinois game went down to the wire, but it wasn't won at the buzzer on a prayer.)

Condition C (6): You are so intoxicated that you cannot remember the opponent's ranking, or how many titles your school has won. But be forewarned that The Minutes will not pay your bail if you're the lone trespasser on the court and wind up in cuffs.

Ashley Judd
If you see Ashley, storm all you want.

Condition D (7): You see college hoops fan Ashley Judd (8) sitting at the other end of the court, and you know that the shortest distance to her is a straight line.

• The Upper-Middle Class Principle (8): If your school has won multiple national titles, you are generally discouraged from storming the court unless you have defeated one of the above blue bloods, and only at the last second. Schools affected: Kansas, Louisville, Oklahoma State, Cincinnati, San Francisco, Michigan State, Connecticut, North Carolina State.

However, stormings are allowable under the following conditions:

Ancient History Exception (9): If your national titles predate Texas Western's, you are free to storm the court for any dramatic win over a top-five team. Schools affected: Oklahoma State, San Francisco, Cincinnati.

Semi-Ancient History Exception (10): If your national titles predate the 3-point shot, you are free to storm the court for any dramatic win over a No. 1-ranked team. Schools affected: Louisville and North Carolina State; Kansas and Michigan State halfway (one title before the three, one after).

Current power Connecticut (two titles in the last seven years) is discouraged from rushing the court under any but the most extraordinary circumstances, such as beating the No. 1 team on an eyes-closed, left-handed hook shot from half court.

• The Middle Class Principle (11): If your program plays in a major conference, has some basketball heritage and takes itself fairly seriously, court stormings should be reserved for: upsetting a top five team; knocking off an unbeaten league rival of particular dislike; ending a period of extreme and elongated futility against an arch rival; clinching a conference championship.

Under this principle, Iowa is hereby indicted for its floor rush Tuesday night after beating No. 11 Indiana. (In fact, it's flatly inexcusable on any level, other than the boredom that January in Iowa City can precipitate.) Michigan is granted clemency under the elongated-futility-against-an-arch-rival clause. Georgetown, St. John's and Tennessee were all cleared for liftoff last Saturday.

Daniel Horton
Daniel Horton can celebrate; even the UM fans are exempt.

(Although The Minutes fully understands the Rocky Top rush, the SEC did not. It fined the Volunteers $5,000 for failing to keep the students off the floor, a violation of the league's sportsmanship policy. The Minutes fails to see the clear and present danger. This isn't football, where the fans mount heavy metal objects and send them crashing down upon the mob below. First time they tear down a basket stanchion, a fine will be in order. Not until then.)

• The Lower Class Principle (12): If your team plays in a mid-major or low-major league and manages to coax (or trick) a BCS-conference school into visiting and you win the game, a storming is allowed. Exceptions: Memphis, Gonzaga or any other school whose program is demonstrably larger than its conference profile. Also: beating a certifiably horrible BCS-conference school (Baylor, Arizona State, Purdue, South Florida or anyone with an RPI worse than 150) is not worth the effort.

The Bottom Feeder Principle (13): If you're North Dakota State, still on the D-I taxi squad, and you shock Wisconsin? Go crazy. Even if it's a road game. Break into the home gym and storm that sucker.

• The Morehead State Principle (14): The Eagles are 0-15 against NCAA competition. Any 8-0 run is justifiable incentive to rush the floor.

IT'S GETTING LATE EARLY IN THESE LEAGUES

It's still January, but The Minutes is ready to declare winners in a few conference races. (Hey, if they can call states in presidential elections with one percent of the vote counted, we can call a league champion or two before Super Bowl Sunday.) No fewer than five leagues already have one team that has put itself far above the competition:

League: Atlantic Coast Conference (15), where even Billy Packer would have a hard time getting chesty about an ACC with one team in the current RPI Top 20.

Winner: Duke (16). The Blue Devils already are two games up in the loss column over North Carolina State, Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina. Consecutive road games at Carolina and Maryland Feb. 7 and 11 could make the race mildly interesting. Or end it altogether.

Only potential spoiler: N.C. State (17). Wolfpack conceivably could be favored in every remaining game, but it doesn't get a rematch with Duke in Raleigh.

League: Big 12 (18), where the same two words you heard all football season still apply: hook 'em. If you can find another lock NCAA Tournament team in this motley conference right now, your vision is better than The Minutes'.

Team: Texas (19). The Longhorns also have a two-game lead in league play, over a half-dozen pursuers. Nobody has yet come closer than 19 points to the Horns in five Big 12 games.

Only potential spoiler: Oklahoma (20), and we're stretching to say that. The offensively challenged Sooners have averaged 56.4 points per game in 2006 -- but they do get Texas on their home court Saturday.

League: Conference USA (21). You think this league lost something in realignment? Just because eight of the 12 teams are ranked 200 or worse in the RPI? Nooooo.

Winner: Memphis (22). The Tigers have played only three league games, and there are two other unbeatens in C-USA play, but let's get serious: anything less than 13-1 in this conference would be a disappointment for a group with this much talent.

Only potential spoiler: UAB (23). The plucky Blazers are 4-0, play a problematic style and have two shots at Memphis, the first of which is Saturday on the road. But with senior Demario Eddins out for the year with an Achilles tear, The Minutes does not foresee a legitimate threat to the Tigers.

League: West Coast (24). After a couple of pretty good years, there are a whopping two teams with overall winning records.

Winner: Gonzaga (25). With road wins already at Santa Clara, San Francisco and San Diego, if the Zags don't run the table it would be a shock.

Only potential spoiler: Loyola Marymount (26), if you insist. The Fighting Bo Kimbles are 5-1 in WCC play and lost only by a dozen in The Kennel, but five of their final eight games are on the road. The Zags will win the league by at least three games.

League: Big West (27). It isn't very big this year.

Winner: UC Irvine (28). Anytime a team called the Anteaters is in first place, it's a good thing. They're deep and experienced, they lead by two in the loss column and they have five of their remaining eight league games at home (albeit, where they lost earlier this year to D-II Cal State Stanislaus).

Only potential spoiler: Pacific (29). The Tigers owned the league last year, and could again by season's end -- but they'll have to hustle. They've already been beaten by Cal-Irvine once.

COACH WHO EARNED HIS COURTESY CAR

And earned the right to run over a certain Conference USA officiating crew with it: Houston's Tom Penders (30). You probably heard that Penders drew a T last Saturday for having the gall to collapse on the sidelines during the Cougars' loss to UAB -- and that officials upheld the T even after they discovered that, gee, Penders wasn't lampooning a call, but was being wheeled out on a stretcher. Thankfully, Penders feels well enough now to laugh about the incident.

"It's a good thing I didn't die," he told the Houston Chronicle. "They [the Blazers] would have gotten two more free throws and possession."

COACH WHO SHOULD RIDE THE BUS TO WORK

Syracuse's Jim Boeheim (31), whose Orange have led a total of zero minutes and zero seconds in their past three Big East games. Granted, the competition has been brutal (Connecticut, Villanova and Pittsburgh), but since when is Syracuse supposed to roll over like that? They trailed UConn and Villanova 12-0 each before scoring, and were down 7-0 before getting on the board against Pitt. How 'bout answering the opening bell, guys?

SWAPPING E-MAILS WITH...

...Kentucky guard Patrick Sparks (32). Since transferring from Western Kentucky, his shooting has proven to be the true bellwether for the Wildcats: when the senior makes two or more 3s in a game, Kentucky is 23-3. When he doesn't, Kentucky is 18-9. His latest big bomb was a 3-pointer measured by the school's sports information department at 29 feet, and it came with 30 seconds left in a comeback win over South Carolina. The Minutes ruthlessly interrogated Sparks this week on that shot and other pressing topics.

Forde Minutes: A 29-footer with 30 seconds left? Was there even a moment's thought when you were going up that, gee, I'm pretty far out here?
Patrick Sparks: No. I just shot it. We needed a bucket and I was open.

FM: You've now taken three of the most memorable shots in recent UK history: the last-second 3 where you drew the foul against Louisville last year; the rim-dancing 3 against Michigan State in the Elite Eight; and the 29-foot hoist against South Carolina -- fair to say you like taking the big shot?
PS: Yes, I'm willing to take the big shot. I'm not afraid of the outcome. You can't make it if you don't shoot it.

FM: You once scored 71 points in a 32-minute high school game. Kobe (33) scored 81 in 42 minutes Sunday night. You win on points-per-minute. Was your performance better?
PS: I only played 28 minutes, but it wasn't better than 81 in an NBA game. That's impressive.

FM: What's the one thing a visitor to your hometown of Central City, Ky., must see or do?
PS: Great question. Everybody knows Central City for being home of the Everly Brothers (34), but the small-town atmosphere is what's great about living there. Plus, the hunting and fishing is great, too.

FM: What's the craziest thing a UK fan has ever said to you, requested of you or done to you?
PS: We have the greatest fans in college basketball. There's probably nothing I haven't 'John Hancock-ed.' Their passion is what makes playing at UK special.

FASHION POLICE

The Minutes is always vigilant for crimes against basketball fashion, and this year it is pleased to report one positive trend: Headbands have almost universally moved north on the craniums of the players. They're no longer being worn as earmuffs, but actually rest above the ears, as intended when James Naismith or John Wooden or Slick Watts or Bill Walton -- somebody -- invented the garment.

Now, here are the looks that still violate Minutes ordinances:

Knee-high navy blue socks, as worn by Xavier big man Brian Thornton (35). White? Maybe. Dark blue? Ugh.

Tights, as worn by Fairleigh Dickinson guard John Blackgrove (36). Men in tights might work in Sherwood Forest, but not in college basketball.

Sketchy beards, as worn by the Syracuse trio (37) of Gerry McNamara, Darryl Watkins and Eric Devendorf. Is the snow piled too high up there to get to the store and buy a razor?

The hobbit hair of Gonzaga's Adam Morrison (38). You can keep the 'stache. Just do something with that 'do.

Coaches Division: the orange suspenders of Tennessee's Bruce Pearl (39). At least they weren't an orange-and-white checkerboard pattern.

BOX SCORE OF THE WEEK

Massachusetts 60, Temple 34. (40) Nobody's teams are more famously hot-and-cold than John Chaney's. This might have been the game where the Owls reached absolute zero, shooting 26.5 percent from the floor and 10 percent from 3-point range in scoring their fewest points since 1973.

They actually led 13-12 at one point, then proceeded to score two points in the final 9:16 of the first half. They followed that up by scoring three points in the first 9:54 of the second half. That's five points in a span of 19 minutes, 10 seconds -- nearly impossible in modern basketball, unless it's played by kindergartners.

But that's Temple, a team that can beat Army by 32 and Miami by 17, then lose to Auburn by 31 and UMass by 26. When the Chaney mojo is good, it's very good. When it's bad, it's unwatchable. In this case, Mother Nature might have sensed the presence of the bad Owls; angry weather in the area knocked the broadcast off TV for about 10 minutes.

Pat Forde is a senior writer for ESPN.com. He can be reached at ESPN4D@aol.com.

Saturday, January 21, 2006

Craziest day in college basketball

Today had to be one of the most fun sports days I've had the pleasure of experiencing. Especially since I just had an exam on Friday, and have one worry-free week to look forward to great matchups in hockey, basketball, and football.

So, I am a Big East fan. And this year Big East Basketball is just plain sick... six teams outright in the top 25 in the nation and 3-4 more legitimate NCAA contenders. I was upset with Nova's loss at West Virginia which made them drop their perfect start. U Conn was already imperfect. Nonetheless, out of the three remaining undefeated teams, #1 Duke, #2 Florida, and #9 Pitt, Pitt was still representing Big East. Of course, this morning Pitt lost to conference rivals St. John's, and even though I like the Red Storm, I wasn't too happy. Next came Duke against my very own Georgetown. Now I had watched Georgetown play a couple of outstanding games, but they have lost to all the ranked teams they have played so far, including the pesky West Virginia. I gave them no chance in this encounter. Imagine my surprise when they hold an 8-something lead early - very uncharacteristic of Duke games. I figure I would save myself the heartache and check scores at half-time for the damage. I almost fell off my chair when I saw the half-point scores: 42-28 GEORGETOWN.

WTF?? Duke is 17-0, matching its best start EVER. They're so not losing to a mediocre G'town team... but then Georgetown had the misfortune of being coached by an extremely untalented (I could use other words here but I will be PC) Craig Esherick until last year. With another Thompson behind the bench, they could actually win a few important games. But it was too much to hope. But considering the fibrillations G'town basketball tends to cause, I decided to check the score later and watch some TV. Guess what was on when I pushed the power button on the remote? I was now looking at the MCI Center in DC, watching the game live. Oh yeah.. I forgot how every single Duke game is either on ESPN or network TV. Well, since I couldn't avoid the game, I just settled down, expecting G'town to fall apart as I watched, giving me another frustrating performance. Well, after a few mini heart-attacks, I watched the floor of MCI Center get swamped by hundreds of students as G'town "Nuked Duke (espn.com)" defeated its first 1st #1 ranked opponent since it beat St. John's in 1985.

Wow.. so two of the three unranked teams defeated within hours... Seems like Florida may be in trouble. I guess Tennessee must have watched the news, cuz it made sure that Florida's 17-0 win streak was snapped short in the day's fashion.

So you'd think that Duke and Florida's upset would be the biggest headlines in NCAA basketball. Nope. Apparently #13 Wisconsin lost to INDEPENDENT North Dakota (Fargo). FIRST loss to a nonconference player in like 27 games. North Dakota is actually in the middle of going from Division II to Division I, and after beating a good Wisconsin team, it seems that they'd be a good fit come 2008.

And to make a good day even better, NJ Devils won their 9th straight hockey game. Only 4 more games to go to match their franchise best 13 game win streak. Of course, it helps that there are no more ties in NHL starting from this year. Last 3 of their 4 wins have been in shootout. And I was pleased (a little) to see the high flying Carolina hurricanes lose, snapping their rival 9-game winning streak. To the Caps of all people. The MCI Center must have been ridiculous today.

The Devils play the Rangers tomorrow, who won their game today, keeping a six point difference between the Atlantic devision rivals. Since both teams played today, neither has an advantage from fatigue or rustiness tomorrow. Hopefully Devils can win because its a four-point swing closer to the Rangers in the rankings. But the way how the last few games have been so close, I am fully expecting this winning streak to end soon. Which is too bad.. it's nice having an undefeated status for the year.

china is angry?

From shoutwire -

Chinese censors say the film "Memoirs of a Geisha" may be banned in Chinese cinemas, due to the inflamed emotions caused by the casting of Chinese actresses as Japanese geishas.


OK.. now I can understand why people may be upset about casting a Chinese actress (excellent though she may be) in a Japan-centered story.. Do all Asians look alike and so on... Or it may be considered a slap-in-the-face to the many very-talented Japanese actresses.... but why is CHINA upset? Especially as the movie clearly portrays geishas as companions/consorts, not prostitutes.

How to Fold your Shirt before you can say "done"

Here's the video from google. It does work.

Why you smoke less if you're black.....

An interesting article explaining how black teens get a significantly stronger hit of nicotine from cigarettes and take longer to get rid of it from their bodies than white teens. I think they need to throw in some brown people in this equation and see how they figure.

On a similar note... this is a funny analogy of second hand smoking and swimming pool etiquette.

Friday, January 20, 2006

Whale Swims to London

Because I'm too lazy to copy the article....Here's the link:
AOL News - Whale Swims Up River to Central London

Thursday, January 19, 2006

Poe's Birthday

People really irritate me sometimes. Mystery Man Places Roses on Poe Gravesite
By KASEY JONES
AP
BALTIMORE (Jan. 19) - For the 57th straight year, a mystery man paid tribute to Edgar Allan Poe by placing roses and a bottle of cognac on the writer's grave to mark his birthday.
Some of the 25 spectators drawn to a tiny, locked graveyard in downtown Baltimore for the ceremony climbed over the walls of the site and were "running all over the place trying to find out how the guy gets in," according to Jeff Jerome, the most faithful viewer of the event.
Jerome, curator of the Poe House and Museum, said early Thursday he had to chase people out of the graveyard, fearing they would interfere with the mystery visitor's ceremony.
"In letting people know about this tribute, I've been contributing to these people's desire to catch this guy," Jerome said. "It's such a touching tribute, and it's been disrupted by the actions of a few people trying to interfere and expose this guy."
Jerome has seen the mysterious visitor every Jan. 19 since 1976.
"They had a game plan," Jerome said of the spectators. "They knew from previous years when the guy would appear."
But Jerome declined to reveal details of what the Poe toaster was wearing, what he did at Poe's grave, and whether he left anything besides the roses and cognac, such as a note.
It was a the crisp, cold, clear night. "I was hoping for wind and rain in keeping with a Poe story," Jerome said.
But the museum curator was saddened by the disrespectful spectators.
"I hope to preserve this tribute. It's one of those things that make Baltimore so unique," he said.
For decades, a frail figure made the visit to Poe's grave. In 1993 the original visitor left a cryptic note saying, "The torch will be passed." A later note said the man, who apparently died in 1998, had handed the tradition on to his sons.
Poe, who wrote poems and horror stories such as "The Raven" and "The Telltale Heart," died Oct. 7, 1849 in Baltimore at the age of 40 after collapsing in a tavern.

Tuesday, January 17, 2006

As requested, the seven ANCIENT wonders of the world

This is actually a great webpage detailing the ancient wonders of the world.  I have shamelessly copied the relevant portion here for our collective knowledge improvement.


A gigantic stone structure near the ancient city of Memphis, serving as a tomb for the Egyptian Pharaoh Khufu

The Great Pyramid of Giza
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A palace with legendary gardens built on the banks of the Euphrates river by King Nebuchadnezzar II

The Hanging Gardens of Babylon
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An enormous statue of the Greek father of gods, carved by the great sculptor Pheidias

The Statue of Zeus at Olympia
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A beautiful temple in Asia Minor erected in honor of the Greek goddess of hunting and wild nature

The Temple of Artemis at Ephesus
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A fascinating tomb constructed for King Maussollos, Persian satrap of Caria

The Mausoleum at Halicarnassus
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A colossus of Helios the sun-god, erected by the Greeks near the harbor of a Mediterranean Island

The Colossus of Rhodes
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A lighthouse built by the Ptolemies on the island of Pharos off the coast of their capital city

The Lighthouse of Alexandria

Supreme Court Upholds Oregon Suicide Law


This is an article from AOL News, which is very interesting.

Oregon's assisted suicide law covers only those with incurable diseases and six months or less left to live.

Justices, on a 6-3 vote, said that a federal drug law does not override the 1997 Oregon law used to end the lives of more than 200 seriously ill people.

Out of 14,000 who had voted when i read the article, 84% felt the court made the right decision. What do you guys think?

Send Big Files easily to others

This is a great list of free websites with storage/file sending capabilities so you don't have to clog up your email. Plus, if you're not aware, most files emailed actually take up more room than the original so it takes even longer to download them. These websites mainly store the files online and send people links to download, which in most cases will be faster than transferring them via IM programs like MSN and AIM.

I, so far, like eSnips and pando because they have a software interface which makes it much more user friendly and allows for resuming interrupted uploads. Pando makes the downloaders install their software, though which may be annoying, but it probably worth it cuz it's useful. Don't be surprised if I Pando YOU some files.

Thursday, January 12, 2006

New Wonders

At first I thought it was kind of weird that they would be picking 7 new wonders of the world, but then I found out that the only ones that still exist are the pyramids at Giza, so I guess it makes sense that people would want new ones that they can actually see. I also realized that I don't remember what the old ones were, other than the pyramids and the hanging gardens of Babylon. My dad said something about a Colossus of Rhodes, but even he can't remember all seven. Anyway, here's the list of the new ones they're going to vote on and the article. AOL News - New Seven Wonders of World to Be Chosen in 2007 AOL News: Top News - Full List of Candidate Sites