Poisoned
I remember when I was much younger, first entering the working world, trying to act “normal”.
I failed miserably. I’m sure a lot of you did too.
Thanks to the cartoons and the blog I eventually figured out a way to be functional and prosperous, while still being as quirky as I pleased. If you’re not very good at something, it’s very hard to compete with people who are. I don’t know why the world expects us to even try…
via .
rePost :: San Miguel eyes Clark airport terminal, bullet train deals | ABS-CBN News Online Beta
Hope this happens. Clark to our house in Balanga Bataan takes about 1hour, less if my brother drives. By bullet train I estimate a less than 30 minute journey from QC North Ave. Damn. Puwede akong mag uwian. City salary level , provincial type life. woot.
San Miguel eyes Clark airport terminal, bullet train deals
Reuters | 03/26/2010 5:09 PM
MANILA, Philippines – Philippine conglomerate San Miguel Corp. said on Friday it is looking at investing in an airport terminal and a bullet train to further expand its business interests to speed up future growth.
In response to media reports, San Miguel said it was evaluating whether to invest in a consortium looking to develop a second terminal at the Diosdado Macapagal International Airport in the Clark freeport zone in Pampanga, north of the capital.
“We further advise that the company commissioned a group that includes international experts to prepare an in-depth study relating to the construction and operation of bullet train facilities that will run the Laoag-Manila-Bicol route,” San Miguel told the stock exchange.
No further details were given of the bullet train for the main Luzon island, which would be the first in Southeast Asia.
Shares of San Miguel’s A-shares, which only Filipinos can buy, ended flat at P74 on Friday. Its B-shares, open to all, were also unchanged at P74, underperforming a 0.3% gain in the main index.
via San Miguel eyes Clark airport terminal, bullet train deals | ABS-CBN News Online Beta.
Better Government Regulators Please!!!! :: (UPDATE 2) MTRCB suspends 'Showtime' for 1 month | ABS-CBN News Online Beta
Better Government Regulators Please!!!!
(UPDATE 2) MTRCB suspends ‘Showtime’ for 1 month
abs-cbnNEWS.com | 03/26/2010 3:49 PM
ABS-CBN to appeal ruling; show still on
MANILA, Philippines – The Movie & Television Review & Classification Board (MTRCB) has ordered a 1-month suspension of ABS-CBN’s hit talent show “Showtime.”
In its ruling, the MTRCB said the uncalled for utterances of actress Rosanna Roces in the episodes aired on January 4 and 7, 2010 violated its rules and regulations.
The suspension also applies to “Magpasikat, the show that temporarily replaces “Showtime” when it’s not on air, and any other similar shows.
The MTRCB also directed the filing of criminal charges against Florida Tan, ABS-CBN vice-president for programming, and other officers “responsible for the violation.”
In an official statement sent to abs-cbnNEWS.com, Bong R. Osorio, head of ABS-CBN’s Corporate Communications said the MTRCB’s decision is not yet final. He said the network will appeal the decision before the Office of the President.
He said the penalty cannot be enforced yet, despite the fact that the decision states it is “effective immediately.”
“The decision was not totally unexpected. The MTRCB committee hearing the case could not have contradicted the Chairman, who had earlier issued a preventive suspension order of Showtime,” Osorio said.
“ABS-CBN questioned the validity of the preventive suspension order and filed a complaint with the Ombudsman against the MTRCB chairman for violation of the anti-graft and corrupt practices act.”
“The MTRCB decision is not final and executory. ABS-CBN disagrees with the decision and will appeal such to the Office of the President. Meantime, SHOWTIME goes on!,” Osorio said.
via (UPDATE 2) MTRCB suspends ‘Showtime’ for 1 month | ABS-CBN News Online Beta.
Learned :: How to Increase Your Self-Control Without Really Trying | PsyBlog
Automatic, unconscious self-control
The results showed that, when participants were thinking concretely, they tended to unconsciously see candy bars in a positive light and apples in a negative light. But this was reversed when participants were thinking abstractly. Just as predicted, abstract thinking automatically made people unconsciously think of candy bars as the devil’s own food.
To back this up they asked participants in the two conditions whether they would like an apple or a candy bar, right now. They found that when participants were thinking in a concrete low-level way, they chose the apple over the candy bar only 50% of the time. But when they were thinking abstractly this percentage shot up to 76%. Not bad for such a simple manipulation.
via How to Increase Your Self-Control Without Really Trying | PsyBlog.
Movies :: Scott Pilgrim vs. The World – Movie Trailers – iTunes
Geek static movie. Watch the trailer at the linked site!
Synopsis
Meet charming and jobless Scott Pilgrim (Michael Cera). A bass guitarist for garage band Sex Bob—omb, the 22—year—old has just met the girl of his dreams…literally. The only catch to winning Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead)? Her seven evil exes are coming to kill him. Genre—smashing filmmaker Edgar Wright (Hot Fuzz, Shaun of the Dead) tells the amazing story of one romantic slacker’s quest to power up with love in Scott Pilgrim vs. the World. Scott Pilgrim has never …
via Scott Pilgrim vs. The World – Movie Trailers – iTunes.
rePost :: SWS gets back at detractors – INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos
Based on my lay man’s reading of this. It’s not that they are being biased etc. It’s that the way they are doing the surveys are really not reliable and have thus been discontinued in the US and most industrialized nations. I hope Philippine Statistics Companies go with the best techniques etc to dispell the doubts. An example of this can be seen in the exit polls conducted during the 2007 elections. In the US exit polls are almost never wrong. This wasn’t true of the exit polls conducted here.
SWS gets back at detractors
By Richel Umel
Inquirer Mindanao
First Posted 13:38:00 03/26/2010
Filed Under: Research, Eleksyon 2010, Opinion surveys, Elections, Politics
CEBU CITY – “Hindi kami bayaran [We are not for sale].”
This was what Dr. Mahar Mangahas, president of the Social Weather Stations (SWS), said when asked about claims that surveys could be twisted in favor of those who commissioned them.
Several politicians had said that they had stopped believing in surveys because these did not reflect the real sentiment of the voters as far as the May 10 elections were concerned.
Some of them even accused survey outfits of deliberately twisting results in favor of those who commissioned the polls.
via SWS gets back at detractors – INQUIRER.net, Philippine News for Filipinos.
RIP :: Sir James Black (1924-2010) – Physician, Pharmacologist, Gentleman : Terra Sigillata
The best obituary I have seen memorializing Sir James comes from the UK Telegraph.
Black was called the father of analytical pharmacology and was said to have relieved more human suffering than thousands of doctors could have done in careers spent at the bedside. Certainly, no man on earth earned more for the international pharmaceutical industry.Yet though he became joint winner of the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1988, Black derived little personal financial benefit from his discoveries. Among businessmen he had a reputation as an irascible maverick and this prickly independence, combined with an antipathy to big institutions, led him to flounce out of jobs whenever he felt corporate short-sightedness was getting in the way of research.
Others can be read at The Independent, The Times, The Guardian, The Scotsman, and BBC News.
It is rare for a scientist to discover one drug that makes it to market. Sir James not only led the discovery of two major drugs, propranolol and cimetidine. As if that were not enough, each drug was a “first-in-class” agent, the first approved drug that acts via a novel mechanism of action.
via Sir James Black (1924-2010) – Physician, Pharmacologist, Gentleman : Terra Sigillata.
rePost :: 5 Travel Lessons You Can Use at Home
Rolf Potts is one of my favorite writers, and his book Vagabonding was one of only four books I recommended as “fundamental” in The 4-Hour Workweek. It was also one of two books, the other being Walden; Or, Life in the Woods, that I took with me during my 15+-month mini-retirement that began in 2004.
The following is a guest post from Rolf on the art and lessons of travel, all of which you can apply at home.
….
1) Time = Wealth
By far the most important lesson travel teaches you is that your time is all you really own in life. And the more you travel, the more you realize that your most extravagant possessions can’t match the satisfaction you get from finding new experiences, meeting new people, and learning new things about yourself. “Value” is a word we often hear in day-to-day life, but travel has a way of teaching us that value is not pegged to a cash amount, that the best experiences in life can be had for the price of showing up (be it to a festival in Rajasthan, a village in the Italian countryside, or a sunrise ten minutes from your home).
Scientific studies have shown that new experiences (and the memories they produce) are more likely to produce long-term happiness than new things. Since new experiences aren’t exclusive to travel, consider ways to become time-rich at home. Spend less time working on things you don’t enjoy and buying things you don’t need; spend more time embracing the kinds of activities (learning new skills, meeting new people, spending time with friends and family) that make you feel alive and part of the world.
2) Be Where You Are
A great thing about travel is that it forces you into the moment. When you’re celebrating carnival in Rio, riding a horse on the Mongolian steppe, or exploring a souk in Damascus, there’s a giddy thrill in being exactly where you are and allowing things to happen. In an age when electronic communications enable us to be permanently connected to (and distracted by) the virtual world, there’s a narcotic thrill in throwing yourself into a single place, a single moment. Would you want to check your bank-account statement while exploring Machu Picchu in Peru? Are you going to interrupt an experience of the Russian White Nights in St. Petersburg to check your Facebook feed? Of course not — when you travel, you get to embrace the privilege of witnessing life as it happens before your eyes. This attitude need not be confined to travel.
At home, how often do you really need to check your email or your Twitter feed? When you get online, are you there for a reason, or are you simply killing time? For all the pleasures and entertainments of the virtual-electronic world, there is no substitute for real-life conversation and connection, for getting ideas and entertainment from the people and places around you. Even at home, there are sublime rewards to be had for unplugging from online distractions and embracing the world before your eyes.
via 5 Travel Lessons You Can Use at Home.
Quote :: some things need to be believed to be seen. :: Corner Office – Guy Kawasaki – I Want 5 Sentences, Not ‘War and Peace’ – Question – NYTimes.com
A few levels above me, I learned from Steve Jobs that people can change the world. Maybe we didn’t get 95 percent market share, but we did make the world a better place. I learned from Steve that some things need to be believed to be seen. These are powerful lessons — very different from saying we just want to eke out an existence and keep our heads down.
via Corner Office – Guy Kawasaki – I Want 5 Sentences, Not ‘War and Peace’ – Question – NYTimes.com.
Best Read Sentence :: The .Plan: A Quasi-Blog: The hard part of managing
You can develop an absolutely incorrect perception of yourself as a great manager when, in fact, you haven’t implemented anything. You haven’t fired anybody. You haven’t introduced a product. You haven’t supported a customer. All you’ve done is make spreadsheets and PowerPoint presentations.
You can also throw venture capital into this pile. Going into venture capital straight out of school is a big mistake because entrepreneurs start sucking up to you and ask you stuff you know nothing about — like how to run a company.
Jobs for college graduates should make them gain knowledge in at least one of these three areas: how to make something, how to sell something or how to support something.
–Guy Kawasaki on the difference between recommending and doing. HT: Alex Tsai
via The .Plan: A Quasi-Blog: The hard part of managing.
