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Mar
6th
Fri
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More Bionic Now

Do you remember the ‘Bionic Man’ of the 70’s? Well, the bionic eye is now a reality. Look for ‘Bionic Vision’ (Cheri Robertson) at YouTube.
Now, we have the i-Limb bionic hand.
From Touch Bionics:

‘Early in his recovery at BAMC, Sgt. Arredondo began to work with Hanger and its clinicians. He has been fitted with multiple prosthetic solutions, both body-powered and myoelectric. The body-powered arm, with a cable that pulls on the arm and rubber bands used for resistance, was “pretty efficient and durable” but awkward and did not move naturally. “It looks like a lobster claw, just opens and closes.”

When he first saw the i-LIMB Hand, Sgt. Arredondo was drawn to how “cool” it looked. Functionally, he sees the i-LIMB hand as bringing together the best of both his previous prostheses, body-powered and myoelectric.’
How long before we have a totally bionic body?

Dec
9th
Tue
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Nov
26th
Wed
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AMERICA’S GUNS

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Here we go again. In some areas of Houston, Texas, sales of military assault weapons have increased by 50%. The reason: They fear that the Obama administration will take their guns away!

The gun lobbyist is the Top Gun shooting gallery and Jeff Trometer, staff at Top Gun claims: ‘He’s (Obama) done everything in his power to restrict those privileges that we have.’ Kevin Connelly, the source of the news, said, ‘The Top Gun shooting gallery could not exist in Europe.’

Nov
12th
Wed
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BABY BOOMERS

Someone sent me this essay. I’ll post it here not to plagiarize but because I think the essay is very profound. I’m sorry but it was written in ‘taglish’ i.e Tagalog-English but it still remains great. I’ll include the author’s name later when I find out who. Just ignore the html script and roll down a little.

REFLECTIONS


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TO ALL THE KIDS WHO WERE BORN IN THE

1950’s, 60’s and 70’s !!

First, some of us s urvived being born to mothers who did not have an OB-Gyne and drank San Miguel Beer while they carried us.

While pregnant, they took cold or cough medicine, a te isaw, and didn’t worry about diabetes.

Then after all that trauma, our baby cribs were made of hard wood covered with lead-based paints, pati na yung walker natin, matigas na kahoy din at wala pang gulong.

We had no soft cushy cribs that play music, no disposable diapers (lampin lang), and when we rode our bikes, we had no helmets, no kneepads , sometimes wala pang preno yung bisikleta.

As children, we would ride in hot un-airconditioned buses with wooden seats (yung JD bus na pula), or cars with no airconditioning & no seat belts (ngayon lahat may aircon na)

Riding on the back of a carabao on a breezy summer day was considered a treat. (ngayon hindi na nakakakita ng kalabaw ang mga bata)

We drank water from the garden hose and NOT from a bottle purchased from 711 ( minsan straight from the faucet or poso)

We shared one soft drink bottle with four of our friends, and NO ONE actually died from this. Or contacted hepatitis.

We ate rice with star margarine, drank raw eggs straight from the shell,  and drank sofdrinks with real sugar in it (hindi diet coke), but we weren’t sick or overweight kasi nga……

WE WERE ALWAYS OUTSIDE PLAYING!!

We would leave home in the morning and play all day, and get back when the streetlights came on. Sarap mag patintero, tumbang preso , habulan at taguan.

No one was able to reach us all day ( di uso ang cellphone , walang beepers ) . And yes, we were O.K.

We would spend hours building our wooden trolleys (yung bearing ang gulong) or plywood slides out of scraps and then ride down the street , only to find out we forgot the brakes! After hitting the sidewalk or falling into a canal (seweage channel) a few times, we learned to solve the problem ourselves with our bare & dirty hands .

We did not have Playstations, Nintendo’s, X-boxes, no video games at all, no 100 channels on cable, no DVD movies, no surround stereo, no IPOD’s, no cell phones, no computers, no Internet, no chat rooms, and no Friendsters……. …WE HAD REAL FRIENDS and we went outside to actually talk and play with them!

We fell out of trees, got cut, broke bones and teeth and there were no stupid lawsuits from these accidents. The only rubbing we get is from our friends with the words..masakit ba ? pero pag galit yung kalaro mo„„ang sasabihin sa iyo..beh buti nga !

We played marbles (jolens) in the dirt , washed our hands just a little and ate dirty ice cream & fish balls. we were not afraid of getting germs in our stomachs.

We had to live with homemade guns ” gawa sa kahoy, tinali ng rubberband , sumpit , tirador at kung ano ano pa na puedeng makasakitan..pero masaya pa rin ang lahat.

We made up games with sticks ( syatong ), and cans ( tumbang preso )and although we were told they were dangerous, wala naman tayong binulag o napatay.paminsan minsan may nabubukulan lang.

We walked, rode bikes, or took tricycles to a friend’s house and knocked on the door or rang the bell, or just yelled for them to jump out the window!

Mini basketball teams had tryouts and not everyone made the team. Those who didn’t pass had to learn to deal with the disappointment. Wala yang mga childhood depression at damaged self esteem ek-ek na yan. Ang pikon, talo.

Ang magulang ay nandoon lang para tignan kung ayos lang ang mga bata, hindi para makialam at makipag-away sa ibang parents.

That generation of ours has produced some of the best risk-takers, problem solvers, creative thinkers and successful professionals ever! They are the CEO’s, Engineers, Doctors and Military Generals of today.

The past 50 years have been an explosion of innovation and new ideas.

We had failure, success, and responsibility. We learned from our mistakes the hard way.


You might want to share this with others who’ve had the luck to grow up as real kids. We were lucky indeed.

And if you like, forward it to your kids too, so they will know how brave their parents were.

It kind of makes you wanna go out and climb a tree, doesn’t it?!

PS - The big letters are because your eyes may not be able to read this if they were typed any smaller (at your age).

Nov
7th
Fri
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MY FIRST

The article below is my first as a professional writer. Please congratulate me:

EDI Software: A Booming Business

 

Is you’re business getting too big for you? Electronic Data Interchange is just what you need.

 

Electronic Data Interchange (EDI software and EDI outsourcing) refers to the structured transmission of data  between organizations by electronic means. It is more than mere E-mail; for instance, organizations might replace bills of lading and even checks with appropriate EDI messages. It also refers specifically to a family of standards, including the X12 series. However, EDI also exhibits its pre-Internet roots, and the standards tend to focus on ASCII-formatted single messages rather than the whole sequence of conditions and exchanges that make up an inter-organization business process.

  EDI has its roots in 1992. That year, some businesses had adopted some form of EDI software but all had not benefited from it but was in fact been disadvantaged by it!

   In 1996, a national institute defined Electronic Data Interchange as “the computer-to-computer interchange of strictly formatted messages that represent documents other than monetary instruments. EDI implies a sequence of messages between two parties, either of whom may serve as originator or recipient. The formatted data representing the documents may be transmitted from originator to recipient via telecommunications or physically transported on electronic storage media. In EDI, the usual processing of received messages is by computer only. Human intervention in the processing of a received message is typically intended only for error conditions, for quality review, and for special situations. For example, the transmission of binary or textual data is not EDI as defined here unless the data are treated as one or more data elements of an EDI message and are not normally intended for human interpretation as part of online data processing. Then EDI outsourcing began.

  EDI can be formally defined as ‘The transfer of structured data, by agreed message standards, from one computer system to another without human intervention’. Most other definitions used are variations on this theme. Even in this era of technologies such as XML web services, the Internet and the World Wide Web, EDI is still the data format used by the vast majority of electronic commerce transactions in the world.

  EDI software is now a really big market. One can even say it’s now the best electronic commerce!

Nov
5th
Wed
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CONGRATS!!

CONGRATULATIONS to OBAMA and all Americans!!

It’s as if a miracle happened!Now the whole world will believe that there’s virtually no racial discrimination in the USA.

Nov
1st
Sat
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TORTURE at GUANTANAMO

I was working on an article about ‘lawyer malpractice’ when I read about Reisner’s crusade against psychiatrist malpractice at Guantanamo jail.

  Both Steven Reisner, a psychiatrist, and Col. Larry James, a psychologist, claim that they work against prisoner torture. But Reisner said that ’psychologists should not be working there…’(Guantanamo). James replied that ‘people who critisize… have never been there.’ Bottom line: Who’s speaking the truth?

Oct
29th
Wed
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DEAD WORM BREATHING

If there’s someone who doesn’t know what the meaning of shame is, it’s this worm Jocjoc Bulate of Philippines. Why? The trick of feigning heart illness to avoid senate investigation is already rotten old.

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IDIOT FILIPINO TV

Jim Paredes is right when he wrote that ‘we need to take control’ of the Filipino media. Our TV programs (especially noontime shows) encourage ‘an immature, childish and dysfunctional’ Filipino image.

  Some flips are really experts in making the TV a truly ‘idiot box’. Like themselves.

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BRITISH PUBS

Whenever I read British literature, fiction or not, ‘pubs’ or ‘locals’ are always mentioned. Now William Underhill says that the pubs ‘which are essential to the national character’ are disappearing because of high prices and low sales.

  A brewer named Jonathan Neame asks: ‘Do we really want to live a society where everyone gets takeaway pizzas in front of a DVD and no one talks to anyone?’

  If Brits are famous for their aloofness or ‘reserve’, why this question?