Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Delete All Those Annoying "Recent Recipients" from iOS Mail

Delete All Those Annoying "Recent Recipients" from iOS MailEvery time you go to type an email address into iOS' Mail app, you get a giant list of everyone you've ever contacted that might fit the letters you've typed. This can get annoying very quickly. Here's how to delete those from your phone for good.

If you're using iOS 6, this is an easy tip for getting rid of those addresses. When you see one that you don't want saved in your recents, just tap the blue arrow next to it. From that new screen, you can just tap the big red "Remove From Recents" button to get rid of it completely. It's obvious once you think about it, yet I never thought to actually click on that blue arrow to see what was behind it.

Sadly, there's no way to mass delete recent addresses, you have to go one-by-one?but at least it's something. Hit the link to read more.

How to Delete Recent Recipients and Access Drafts Quickly on iOS Mail | Guiding Tech

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/Zau6LcIJqjM/delete-all-those-annoying-recent-recipients-from-ios-mail

chick fil a chick fil a rose parade bowl games rose bowl auld lang syne dick clark

How I Finished Barack Obama?s Biography

?After two and a half years of research and a year of writing, I could at last see how I might make it to the end of the manuscript that would become Barack Obama: The Story. On the morning of Sept. 14, 2011?a few days after interviewing President Obama at the White House?I turned to the hard-paper artist?s pad that I always keep next to me on my desk as I?m writing and scratched out a day-by-day plan for the final 40 days to meet my deadline. I never miss deadlines.

Even then, as the book neared its end, I was getting new information. I never stop reporting until the book is going to print. So in this sprint to the end I was adding things here and there to Chapter 9, reshaping Chapters 16 and 17 to accommodate new information, and finishing the second half of the 21,000-word Chapter 18, before spending another week at the end in a last round of fact-checking and polishing. ?Forty days virtually nonstop, from 6 a.m. ?to 10 p.m. many days, with one day off to play golf and watch football, and two days away to give speeches in Fond du Lac and Milwaukee, Wisc.? In those 40 days, I finished two chapters and polished the rest. I wrote the final paragraph on Oct. 23, a Sunday. I have written 10 books, and the feelings at the end are the same every time: exhaustion, relief, joy, and somehow surprise?not emptiness but shock that the work is over.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=d95d8ec2ca874379fae9b4babd6ec7b4

colbert colbert report legionnaires disease underwear bomber unclaimed money godspell media matters

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

BEST PRACTICE: Go Beyond Self Improvement - Idea Champions

January 10, 2013
How to Go Beyond Self Improvement

aa-reading-owl.gif

In 2012, more than five million books were published worldwide.

Of these, a sizable percentage were of the "self-help" variety, a growing genre that promises to help people improve the quality of their lives -- to become happier, healthier, smarter, kinder, thinner, cooler, richer, less depressed, selfish, anxious and, generally speaking, better in countless ways society uses to define what it means to be successful human being.

At the core of the self-help book world is a fundamental assumption around which all of the writing revolves -- that there is a self to improve -- an essence at the core of a human being that is flawed and needs some tweaking.

110423_BuenosAires_mk_482.png

And while this assumption certainly attracts a lot of book buyers, there is another kind of book, beyond self-improvement, that addresses an even more basic theme -- not improving the self, but knowing the self -- what sage Greek philosophers were referring to, centuries ago, when they distilled the purpose of life down into two simple words: know thyself.

This is the province of the newly published The Greatest Truth of All: You Are Alive! (21 excerpted talks of Prem Rawat) -- a 198-page book that awakens, inspires, and demystifies the so-called "search for self".

The message of the book is profoundly simple -- one that Prem Rawat has, primarily, been delivering orally for the past 40 years via live presentations -- that it is possible for all 7 billion people on planet Earth to experience peace -- no matter what their profession, social style, tax bracket, or education

Written in a highly engaging, breezy style, The Greatest Truth of All offers the reader easy access to a topic too often dismissed as esoteric, "spiritual", or woo woo.

Mr. Rawat, very much a modern man with an extraordinarily well-developed sense of humor and a gift for story telling, has found a way to decode the essence of "self-knowledge" and delivers it, to the reader, like a tall, cool drink of water on a hot summer day.

So... if you're looking for a powerful "best practice" to help you connect with the core of who you truly are, this book is for you.


Available on Amazon, $16.00

Posted by Mitch Ditkoff at January 10, 2013 02:54 PM

Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)
Who Are We?

Idea Champions is a consulting and training company dedicated to awakening and nurturing the spirit of innovation. We help individuals, teams and entire organizations tap into their innate ability to create, develop and implement ideas that make a difference.

Our New Book

If you want to know when Mitch Ditkoff's new book, "Wisdom at Work", will be published, enter your email address.

Webinars Powered by
Idea Champions University


Webinars for online training If you enjoy our blog, you will love our newly launched webinars! Our training is now accessible online to the whole world.

Visit IdeaChampionsUniversity.com to find out more.

Source: http://www.ideachampions.com/weblogs/archives/2013/01/_in_2012_more_t.shtml

mario batali lone ranger aaron brooks dave matthews band solar flares 2012 whitney houston will toyota recall

The Origins of Directed Panspermia

The Earth is beaming with life and yet there is no consensus on how life arose or what life is. The origin of life is ?one of the great unsolved mysteries of science? (Crick, F. Life Itself).? While there is no accepted definition of life, most of us [humans] can easily discriminate the living from the non-living (IrisFry?s Book is a good primer on ideas regarding the origins of life). Questions about the origin of life became more prevalent after Pasteur and others showed that life did not arise spontaneously.

The discovery that the raw components of life are present throughout the universe suggests that life could exist elsewhere, and that the origin of life as we know it may have depended on materials that arrived on Earth via inter-stellar travel. Some scientists have speculated that life itself originated elsewhere and made its way to earth.

In 2012 a movie called Prometheus was released. In this stunning movie human scholars find similarities between archeological sites from ancient civilizations separated by centuries have drawn the same pictogram.? The archeologists conclude that the pictogram must be a map, an invitation, from the ?engineers? who not only designed us but have intervened in our affairs. The movie is set in 2093 and researchers decide to go and find them in a quest to further understand the origins of mankind. Despite its several and severe scientific flaws, Prometheus is an interesting film because it addresses that ever mysterious quest to unveil not only how we came to be but how life began.

Mars Curiosity

Life in space has been making the news, and on November 20th 2012, NPR reported that NASA?s Mars Curiosity rover had gathered important data. Mars holds a special place in our world. The principal Mars? rover investigator, John Grotzinger claimed ?This data is gonna be one for the history books. It?s looking really good,?. He refused to give any more details because his team had to confirm their findings. In general, this is good practice because scientists want to avoid finding superfluous results and correlations; however, in this case, it heightened suspicion.

Shortly thereafter NASA tried to downplay Grotzinger?s statements, pointing out that it was the mission which was historic rather than a specific finding.? Despite this backtracking some speculated that organic compounds had been found, some claimed that it was life that had been discovered. On December 3rd NASA confirmed, Curiosity had found Organic compounds but it was uncertain whether they were indigenous to Mars (or had been brought by Curiosity).

Most of the speculation had suggested that organic compounds were the ?historical finding?. These are also important because they confirm that the stuff of life, the raw materials, are far more common than originally thought (as corroborated by the discovery of signs of water and organic molecules in mercury), or the finding of organic molecules in meteorites.? Like the discovery of extremophiles which showed that once life got started it could be found in unexpected places; the advances in the search for extraterrestrial life suggest that the stuff of life, and hence life, could be commonly found throughout the universe.

Molybdenum

Molybdenum

Francis Crick (who co-discovered the structure of DNA with James Watson) and Leslie Orgel once proposed that life on Earth was the result of a deliberate infection, designed by aliens who had purposely flied mother nature?s seed to a new home in the sun.? Crick repeatedly addressed the question of the origin of life between 1971 and 1988 (I am currently working on a historical study of Crick and Orgel?s theory of Directed Panspermia and its reception).

Crick and Orgel proposed their Directed Panspermia theory at a conference on Communication with Extraterrestrial Intelligence, organized by Carl Sagan and held at the Byuraka Observatory in Soviet Armenia in 1971. This theory which they described as an ?highly unorthodox proposal? and ?bold speculation? was presented as a plausible scientific hypothesis. Two years after the conference they published an article in Icarus on 1973.

Crick and Orgel were careful to point out that Directed Panspermia was not a certainty; but rather a plausible alternative that ought to be taken seriously. In the paper Crick and Orgel recognised that they ?do not have any strong arguments of this kind, but there are two weak facts that could be relevant?. The 1973 paper focuses on the universality of the genetic code and the role that molybdenum plays in living organisms (I am likewise working on a history of molybdenum and the origins of life) which is more than one would expected given the abundance of molybdenum on the earth?s crust.

Francis Crick and Leslie Orgel. (Circa 1993)

Crick and Orgel used the universality of the genetic code to support the theory of directed panspermia because if life had originated multiple times or evolved from a simpler genetic code one could expect living things to use a slew of genetic codes. Further, if there was only one code, Crick and Orgel reasoned that as organisms evolved they should evolve to use the same codons to code for different amino acids.

We can draw a parallel to language: while many human populations use the same symbols (letters), they combine them in different ways. These different languages use the same alphabets but different combinations of the same symbols to denote different objects (French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan) as opposed to different codes (languages which uses different alphabets like Spanish and Mandarin); however, what we find is analog to a single universal language.

Their most convincing argument was the importance of molybdenum in organic processes and its relative scarcity on Earth. They had argued that living organisms should bare the stamp of the environment in which they originated. Organisms, Crick and Orgel held, would be unlikely to develop a dependency on elements that were extremely rare as organisms that relied on elements which were more abundant would be favored by selection.? An organisms that was able to substitute the rare element for one which has similar biochemical properties but is more frequent would have a clear advantage.

Crick and Orgel pointed out the ?anomalous abundance of molybdenum? in organisms made it possible that life arose in an environment rich in molybdenum. The abundance of molybdenum in living organisms suggested that life started in a molybdenum rich environment and they found that the Earth is not sufficiently rich in molybdenum (this was later challenged as the amount of molybdenum found in the ocean is higher than in the Earth?s crust). Thus, they suggest that this difficulty could be resolved if life began in a molybdenum rich environment. Likewise, the fact that all organisms use the same codons for the same amino acids could be explained if life had arisen elsewhere and the organisms which were used to infect lifeless planets shared a language.

Crick and Orgel also suggest that the universe is sufficiently old that other intelligent civilizations could had arisen elsewhere. One of these other intelligent civilizations could have built a spaceship and seeded the universe with life. One can easily imagine a not too distant future where humans accept that our planet and all that lives within it will perish. In the unlikelihood that this is the only planet that harbors life in the universe its demise would leave a lifeless universe.

The demise of our kind is hard enough to accept but the prospect of a lifeless universe, a universe that could never come to know itself, a universe so grand and yet with no one to admire it or even dwell in it could be too much to bare. In order to save our kind we can envision our zealous and hard working descendants endeavoring to colonize other worlds (by sending microbes through interstellar journeys). Microorganisms are easier to transport and could more readily adapt to new conditions; sending larger organisms would be too difficult (Crick and Orgel pointed out).

The origins of life remains an unresolved mystery. I argue that Crick and Orgel?s paper was meant both as a serious and plausible scientific alternative and as a means to criticize concurrent origins of life. Considering the life arose elsewhere could also free scientists studying the origin of life from trying to imitate the alleged conditions of a pre-biotic Earth. My ongoing research suggests that while Orgel abandoned Directed Panspermia, Crick continued to advocate for its viability and to argue in its favor. Our continued exploration of space will, presumably, continue to reveal the existence of organic compounds in space (and quite possibly life) and hence suggest that the universe may be beaming with life.

Images: Mars Curiousity by NASA; Molybdenum by Alchemist-hp at Wikimedia Commons; Francis Crick and Leslie E Orgel from FASEB journal.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=6f5949c72d9a9118f0cb2c8c67e680dd

julio cesar chavez jr Topless Kate university of texas UT Austin Lizzie Velasquez NFL Network att

Joomla Website Development- Start Business Journey With New ...

How about this New Year? Are you increasing your business and reputation in market field? 2013 has come and it changes several things in your business portfolio. It is the discussion about the award winning concept on Joomlathat is related to CMS. This New Year has started the rowth in many sectors. Various companies get the prizes and upmost positions in their field. The GR Brains Technologies is one of them and you can say that it is that company who become first among all winners!

The GR Brains Technologies get the award for the BestWeb Design Agencies.com in Joomla Development for the year of 2013! It is the feeling of proud that this company has achieved the current year first prize for this. The competitive market is very tough and if someone is getting the superior work performance then it is the amazing way to celebrate. It?s Superior! Can you believe that there are really 300 million websites on the internet which are using itsfacilities in their website production?? This is the company who belongs to IT sector and you can imagine that it is giving the 100% result by providing the Joomla development methods.

Do you know that thisis the most demanded platform in the attractive creations in website? Actually itis a content management system or CMS program that will ensure the perfection in designing part. What features it can provide? Do you want to know? It can give you:

  • Award Winning Software
  • Tried and tested feature
  • Open source and free license fee structure
  • A lot of Built-In advantages
  • Multilingual creations
  • Complete control on website content
  • Web 2.0 Enabled
  • Numerous add-on specialties
  • Easy To uphold
  • Enhanced usability

The website development is really an interesting part of the work and if you are working on this flexible platform where you can give user and client satisfaction both, you will definitely get the award for that. This is the key of GR Brains Technologies who always work for the users and its clients to give trustworthy environment.

You can go for the Joomla website development for many purposes like:

  • Development of e-commerce website
  • For small business
  • For government sector and etc.

It gives you all types of shapes and sizes in website. GR Brains Technologies is one of the best companies which are providing the excellent quality in Joomla website development and services.

We also offer the following web development services

Contact us for offshore web development partner for outsource your projects.

About us:
GR Brains Technologies ? A complete Joomla development company offering end to end CMS services. Our core expertise is mobile application development, PHP development, Android Application development and custom PHP web application development.

Article Tags : Joomla Development, joomla Development Company, Best web Design 2013, Joomla Development Services, Joomla Development Firm

Source: http://www.workoninternet.com/business/working-online/building-website/222594-joomla-website-development-start-business-journey-with-new-year-award.html

turkey Pumpkin Pie Recipe wii u wii u American Music Awards turkey brine Imessage Not Working

California chapter defies Boy Scouts' gay ban

/

Ryan Andresen had completed the requirements to earning his Eagle Scout award, including his final project of building a "tolerance wall" for victims of bullying like himself, but his Scoutmaster would not sign off on honoring him with the Boy Scouts' highest ranking because he is gay, his mother said. Ryan holds an Eagle Scout pin that was sent to him from a supporter.

By Reuters

A California chapter of the Boy Scouts of America is directly challenging the national organization's ban on gays by formally recommending that an openly gay former Scout be awarded the top rank of Eagle.?

"From what I understand, this has never happened before," Eric Andresen, father of former scout Ryan Andresen, told Reuters.

"It's the first in-your-face (challenge)," said Bonnie Hazarabedian, who chaired the Boy Scout district review board that signed off on Ryan's Eagle scout application and forwarded its recommendation last week to the national headquarters for final approval.




Ryan, 18, and his parents drew national attention in October after his Scoutmaster refused to sign his Eagle scout application because of his sexual orientation.

More than 462,000 people subsequently signed the Andresens' petitions at Change.org calling on the Scoutmaster to sign. Meanwhile, the Andresens pushed Ryan's application up the Boy Scout hierarchy in the San Francisco Bay area, where it landed before Hazarabedian.

"I don't think sexual orientation should enter into why a Scout is a Scout, or whether they are Eagle material," said Hazarabedian. "We felt without a doubt he deserved that rank."

?

Gay Scouts come out, rally around teen's Eagle Scout bid

The Boy Scouts of America did not respond immediately to questions emailed by Reuters on Monday afternoon. At the time Ryan's case grabbed attention last fall, BSA spokesman Deron Smith issued a statement saying Andresen's Boy Scout membership had been revoked.

Hazarabedian told Reuters she acted on Ryan's Eagle application because it was filed before his ejection.

Eric Andresen, who was a Boy Scout leader until his son was ejected, said the national office normally rubber-stamps the district recommendation within 30 to 60 days. Neither Hazarabedian nor the Andresens expect Ryan's Eagle award will come so easily.

"It's gotten to the point that getting the Eagle doesn't matter so much. It's the message that counts. It's the desire that no other Scout should ever have to go through this," Eric Andresen said.

Hazarabedian called the BSA anti-gay policy "something out of the Dark Ages."

Obama opposes Boy Scouts' policy banning gays

In 1981 when Hazarabedian was a teenager, her friend's brother Tim Curran, a gay Eagle Scout, was the plaintiff in what became the landmark case in California upholding the right of the Boy Scouts, and private organizations in general, to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation.

Hazarabedian said she recalls making posters and signing petitions in support of Curran and thinking, "By the time I have a son old enough to be a Scout, that will be years from now, they will have fixed this by then, they'll be more tolerant by then. But here we are, 2013, and the same thing is going on."

Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com?

Ryan, who became something of a celebrity with national television appearances and strangers asking to be photographed with him, wants to focus on his last year of high school, his father said.?

"We assume someday BSA will (change), and maybe at that time Ryan can retroactively get his Eagle award," he said.

California 17-year-old Ryan Andresen is being denied his Eagle Scout award, a top scouting honor. A Boy Scouts official said Andresen is no longer eligible for membership because he does not adhere to scouting's principle of duty to God or the membership standard on sexual orientation.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/08/16414335-california-chapter-defies-gay-ban-tells-scouts-to-award-teen-eagle-rank?lite

spring forward day light savings day light savings daylight saving time 2012 grapes of wrath silent house nfl mock draft

NABJ Proposal: Science 101 for Journalists or So, You want to be a Science Writer?

Still a little groggy from my return from Africa, I came across a serendipitously came across a tweet ? A Call for Proposals for the 2013 Annual Conference of the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ). With less than 2 days to prepare, I reached out to people ? science friends and was approached by new online friends ? journalists who happen to be member of NABJ. And I cranked out two proposals, for the conference, both an effort to attract J-school students to science journalism.

I submitted 2 proposals ? one an introduction to science writing and another about health science news reporting to under-served audiences.? Here are the details from the first proposal.

Workshop:? Science 101 for Journalists or So, You want to be a Science Writer?
Track: Fundamentals

Abstract
The African-American community?s relationship with STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) has been fraught with challenges.? For example, children from African-American (as well as Latino) and low-income families score lower in standardized tests on science and math than white counterparts.? At the college-level, African-Americans received 7 percent of all STEM bachelor?s degrees, 4 percent of master?s degrees, and 2 percent of PhDs, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. One barrier to participation is lack of knowledge about these topics.? Opportunities to report on recent discoveries at local colleges or by African-American scientists has largely been overlooked by the media, including media outlets, targeted at this audience.

Reporting on topics related to climate change, pollution, health, and new biotechnology job opportunities can be overwhelming to general journalists, many of whom may lack the training or background to cover science-related topics.? Moreover, the lack of diversity among science journalists is apparent and the variety and level of discourse on these topics is greatly missing out on important voices.? This workshop will provide an introduction to how journalists interested in covering science-related topics including bringing more in-depth science coverage to general news stories.? The panel will also introduce opportunities for science journalism training and discuss job opportunities related to science journalism.

Summary
Science is the foundation of our very lives. Whether we aware or not, but understanding our bodies, our health and nutrition, as well as the dynamics of the environment ? both the natural and constructed world ? are about processes. This is science.? Cultivating an environment that creates more minority science journalists that write or present from different viewpoints and angles is key to bringing under-represented groups like African-Americans, women, and other minorities to the opportunities provided by science and technology. I envision a diversity of journalists that write about research, discoveries, and profiles of people in all fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) for both major and regional press outlets ? magazine, radio, newspaper, television, internet.?? Moreover, being a member of academic, scientific, and African-American communities affords me a great vantage point.? I see opportunities for connections that could transform how science is shared with the entire public. Helping journalists, both novice and experienced, embrace the opportunity and importance of science journalism for reaching minority audiences is the goal of this workshop.

Slated Participants for the Panel included:

Veronica Mills ? A Communications Coordinator for an International Humanitarian Organization and former member of NABJ
Veronica Mills was born and raised in Miami, Florida. She attended Florida Agricultural & Mechanical School of Journalism 2005-2009. She interned with the U.S Department of Agriculture in New Orleans and Miami for two consecutive summers, as a Bio-technician Aid (assisting research). The next summer she landed an American Association for the Advancement of Science internship with Science Magazine. Her senior year of college she was Copy Desk Chief for the university newspaper. Upon graduation, she moved to Washington D.C . to work as a Multimedia Associate for the American Geophysical Union. She also sourced information and wrote articles for the National Science Foundation. Veronica is currently consulting as a media specialist for various science and health-based non-governmental organizations across Sub-Saharan Africa.

Robin Lloyd ? a News editor for Scientific American
Robin Lloyd is Scientific American?s?news editor, responsible for editing and assigning online stories and managing Scientific American?s home page (www.scientificamerican.com). She also manages?Scientific American?s social media activity on Twitter, Facebook and Google Plus. Previously, she was a senior editor for LiveScience.com and SPACE.com, where she co-managed a team of several reporters and interns. She has additional experience in print journalism (Pasadena Star-News); wire journalism (City News Service in Los Angeles); and network online journalism (CNN.com). She was a National Association of Science Writers board member 2010-2012, and currently chairs NASW?s Program Committee, which evaluates proposals for grants that serve the careers of science writers. She has a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and received a Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for the 1998-1999 academic year.

Emily Willingham, Science Writer and Editor for Double X Science and Forbes
Emily Willingham is co-founder and managing editor of DoubleXScience and a former biology professor. She seeks to improve science literacy in part by targeting women who may find something interesting and go forth and share it with others within their orbit. Her writing has appeared at Slate, Forbes, Scientific American guest blogs, and The Scientist.? Her work focuses on how science filters to consumers and how consumers make decisions about science. Frequent honorable mentions: autism, parenting, and the news media.

I received immediate notification that it was received.

Thank you for your proposal submission, Science 101 for Journalists . Your submission ID is 60. Proposals will be accepted until Wednesday, October 17, 2012.
Proposals will be reviewed based on the following criteria:

Is the topic innovative and relevant?
Is the session well organized and designed to meet the needs of this particular audience?
Are the session objectives and ?takeaways? for participants clearly explained in the proposal?

As I stated in my post yesterday, Is there a way to get more science news in the Black Press? I presented this proposal as one approach ? engage Black Journalists and communicate with them the need to communicate science and educate them on the professional opportunities in science journalism.? I?m not sure of the exact numbers but I am aware that the National Association of Science Writers (NASW) does not have a very diverse membership.? And I wonder, is this approach to engage minority journalists an effective strategy? I would really like to engage NABJ or UNITY Journalists, as well as NASW members in this conversation.? Please share your thoughts. How could I strengthen this proposal? What other professional conferences should I have proposed this to? Are there additional panel members I should have considered?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=22cf4b73fe2098b94c509588c1378800

saturday night live julio cesar chavez jr Topless Kate university of texas UT Austin Lizzie Velasquez NFL Network