Monday, October 22, 2007

A Tranny's Remorse

New Times
By Ashley Harrell
Michael Berke looks the biker-dude part. He's a solid six feet in tattoos, Harley jeans, a black cut-off T-shirt, a narrow ginger beard, the beginnings of a Fu Manchu, and a freckled, clean-shaven head.

On a recent Tuesday, he climbs a wooden ladder in a suburban Delray Beach garage and enters the attic. Ninety percent of what's up here belonged to Michelle, he says. "She had so many purses and things," Berke says, unsealing a blue plastic bin. He lifts out a knee-high black XOXO boot and studies it. "These were Michelle's favorite pair of shoes. What's neat about them is that you can see the skin through the laces."

It has been two years since those D-size breasts, beautiful legs, fire-red hair, and killer smile belonged to him. Literally. Yep, Berke used to be a woman who used to be a man. He's an m-t-f-t-m. An ex-tranny. The taker of a surgical U-turn. Add up all of Berke's surgeries, including breast implants, a brow lift, a nose job, cheek implants, and more, and the cost equals about $80,000. "She bankrupted me," Berke says.

The truth is, not every tranny lives in gender bliss ever after. Sometimes surgery doesn't fulfill expectations. :: READ MORE::

Just the weird: The Entrepreneurial Spirit!

Reuters
A Japanese clothing manufacturer, Kochou-fuku, announced in August a line of air-conditioned shirts, with two tiny battery-operated fans inside to evaporate perspiration (for the equivalent of about $95). (One drawback: The shirt billows out, suggesting that the wearer is overweight.)

Among the recent recipients of Marin County (Calif.) Green Business certificates of environmental awareness was Pleasures of the Heart, a sex-toy and lingerie store that sells, among other items, rechargeable vibrators and erotic undergarments made of organic bamboo fabric. [Marin Independent Journal, 8-15-07] ::READ MORE::

Sunday, October 21, 2007

13 writing tips from the genius behind Fight Club

by Chuck Palahniuk

Twenty years ago, a friend and I walked around downtown Portland at Christmas. The big department stores: Meier and Frank… Fredrick and Nelson… Nordstroms… their big display windows each held a simple, pretty scene: a mannequin wearing clothes or a perfume bottle sitting in fake snow. But the windows at the J.J. Newberry's store, damn, they were crammed with dolls and tinsel and spatulas and screwdriver sets and pillows, vacuum cleaners, plastic hangers, gerbils, silk flowers, candy - you get the point. Each of the hundreds of different objects was priced with a faded circle of red cardboard. And walking past, my friend, Laurie, took a long look and said, "Their window-dressing philosophy must be: 'If the window doesn't look quite right - put more in'."

She said the perfect comment at the perfect moment, and I remember it two decades later because it made me laugh. Those other, pretty display windows… I'm sure they were stylist and tasteful, but I have no real memory of how they looked.

For this essay, my goal is to put more in. To put together a kind-of Christmas stocking of ideas, with the hope that something will be useful. Or like packing the gift boxes for readers, putting in candy and a squirrel and a book and some toys and a necklace, I'm hoping that enough variety will guarantee that something here will occur as completely asinine, but something else might be perfect.

Number One: Two years ago, when I wrote the first of these essays it was about my "egg timer method" of writing. You never saw that essay, but here's the method: When you don't want to write, set an egg timer for one hour (or half hour) and sit down to write until the timer rings. If you still hate writing, you're free in an hour. But usually, by the time that alarm rings, you'll be so involved in your work, enjoying it so much, you'll keep going. Instead of an egg timer, you can put a load of clothes in the washer or dryer and use them to time your work. Alternating the thoughtful task of writing with the mindless work of laundry or dish washing will give you the breaks you need for new ideas and insights to occur. If you don't know what comes next in the story… clean your toilet. Change the bed sheets. For Christ sakes, dust the computer. A better idea will come.

Number Two: Your audience is smarter than you imagine. Don't be afraid to experiment with story forms and time shifts. My personal theory is that younger readers distain most books - not because those readers are dumber than past readers, but because today's reader is smarter. Movies have made us very sophisticated about storytelling. And your audience is much harder to shock than you can ever imagine.

Number Three: Before you sit down to write a scene, mull it over in your mind and know the purpose of that scene. What earlier set-ups will this scene pay off? What will it set up for later scenes? How will this scene further your plot? As you work, drive, exercise, hold only this question in your mind. Take a few notes as you have ideas. And only when you've decided on the bones of the scene - then, sit and write it. Don't go to that boring, dusty computer without something in mind. And don't make your reader slog through a scene in which little or nothing happens.

Number Four: Surprise yourself. If you can bring the story - or let it bring you - to a place that amazes you, then you can surprise your reader. The moment you can see any well-planned surprise, chances are, so will your sophisticated reader.

Number Five: When you get stuck, go back and read your earlier scenes, looking for dropped characters or details that you can resurrect as "buried guns." At the end of writing Fight Club, I had no idea what to do with the office building. But re-reading the first scene, I found the throw-away comment about mixing nitro with paraffin and how it was an iffy method for making plastic explosives. That silly aside (… paraffin has never worked for me…) made the perfect "buried gun" to resurrect at the end and save my storytelling ass.

Number Six: Use writing as your excuse to throw a party each week - even if you call that party a "workshop." Any time you can spend time among other people who value and support writing, that will balance those hours you spend alone, writing. Even if someday you sell your work, no amount of money will compensate you for your time spent alone. So, take your "paycheck" up front, make writing an excuse to be around people. When you reach the end of your life - trust me, you won't look back and savor the moments you spent alone.

Number Seven: Let yourself be with Not Knowing. This bit of advice comes through a hundred famous people, through Tom Spanbauer to me and now, you. The longer you can allow a story to take shape, the better that final shape will be. Don't rush or force the ending of a story or book. All you have to know is the next scene, or the next few scenes. You don't have to know every moment up to the end, in fact, if you do it'll be boring as hell to execute.

Number Eight: If you need more freedom around the story, draft to draft, change the character names. Characters aren't real, and they aren't you. By arbitrarily changing their names, you get the distance you need to really torture a character. Or worse, delete a character, if that's what the story really needs.

Number Nine: There are three types of speech - I don't know if this is TRUE, but I heard it in a seminar and it made sense. The three types are: Descriptive, Instructive, and Expressive. Descriptive: "The sun rose high…" Instructive: "Walk, don't run…" Expressive: "Ouch!" Most fiction writers will only use one - at most, two - of these forms. So use all three. Mix them up. It's how people talk.

Number Ten: Write the book you want to read.

Number Eleven: Get author book jacket photos taken now, while you're young. And get the negatives and copyright on those photos.

Number Twelve: Write about the issues that really upset you. Those are the only things worth writing about. In his course, called "Dangerous Writing," Tom Spanbauer stresses that life is too precious to spend it writing tame, conventional stories to which you have no personal attachment. There are so many things that Tom talked about but that I only half remember: the art of "manumission," which I can't spell, but I understood to mean the care you use in moving a reader through the moments of a story. And "sous conversation," which I took to mean the hidden, buried message within the obvious story. Because I'm not comfortable describing topics I only half-understand, Tom's agreed to write a book about his workshop and the ideas he teaches. The working title is "A Hole In The Heart," and he plans to have a draft ready by June 2006, with a publishing date set in early 2007.

Number Thirteen: Another Christmas window story. Almost every morning, I eat breakfast in the same diner, and this morning a man was painting the windows with Christmas designs. Snowmen. Snowflakes. Bells. Santa Claus. He stood outside on the sidewalk, painting in the freezing cold, his breath steaming, alternating brushes and rollers with different colors of paint. Inside the diner, the customers and servers watched as he layered red and white and blue paint on the outside of the big windows. Behind him the rain changed to snow, falling sideways in the wind.

The painter's hair was all different colors of gray, and his face was slack and wrinkled as the empty ass of his jeans. Between colors, he'd stop to drink something out of a paper cup.

Watching him from inside, eating eggs and toast, somebody said it was sad. This customer said the man was probably a failed artist. It was probably whiskey in the cup. He probably had a studio full of failed paintings and now made his living decorating cheesy restaurant and grocery store windows. Just sad, sad, sad.

This painter guy kept putting up the colors. All the white "snow," first. Then some fields of red and green. Then some black outlines that made the color shapes into Xmas stockings and trees.

A server walked around, pouring coffee for people, and said, "That's so neat. I wish I could do that…"

And whether we envied or pitied this guy in the cold, he kept painting. Adding details and layers of color. And I'm not sure when it happened, but at some moment he wasn't there. The pictures themselves were so rich, they filled the windows so well, the colors so bright, that the painter had left. Whether he was a failure or a hero. He'd disappeared, gone off to wherever, and all we were seeing was his work.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Fearing Crime, Japanese Wear the Hiding Place

Torin Boyd/Polaris, for The New York Times
Though street crime is relatively low in Japan, quirky camouflage designs like this vending-machine dress are being offered to an increasingly anxious public to hide from would-be assailants. :: READ MORE::
click here for slide show

Friday, October 19, 2007

Increase in War Funding Sought

$42 Billion Boost Would Raise 2008 Total to $190 Billion
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates asked Congress yesterday to approve an additional $42.3 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, bringing the Bush administration's 2008 war funding request to nearly $190 billion -- the largest single-year total for the wars so far. ::READ MORE::

Media Execs Arrested

Two executives from Village Voice Media — a company that owns a number of alternative weeklies including The Village Voice, The LA Weekly and The Phoenix Times — were arrested Thursday night in Phoenix on charges that a story published earlier in the day in The Phoenix New Times revealed grand jury secrets. ::READ MORE::

Creating life in the laboratory

The race to create life version 2.0 is under way.

And rumors abound that closest to the finish line in constructing a life form in the laboratory is US genome-entrepreneur Craig Venter's research team.

The J Craig Venter Institute scientists are aiming to craft a "minimal genome"- the smallest group of genes an organism needs to survive and function - and insert it into an empty cell. ::READ MORE::

Witchy woman

In the 18th century, supposedly enlightened Europeans beheaded the continent's 'last witch.' Now Anna Göldi is celebrated with a new museum and an effort to clear her name. click here to watch the video.
Today, historians trying to explain the flights of anxiety that sparked witch hunts blame everything from high inflation to cyclical poor weather and low crop yields to the tensions of the Protestant Reformation and Catholic Counter-Reformation of the day.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Slow News Day

Welcome to Miami... Here's what's news:
HEADLINE

Another Cow Spotted Roaming In Miami Lakes

subhead

Cow Has Not Been Caught

Monday, October 15, 2007

Expecting an afternoon nap can reduce blood pressure

Where does the benefit lie in an afternoon nap? Is it in the nap itself -- or in the anticipation of taking a snooze? UK researchers found that the time just before you fall asleep is where beneficial cardiovascular changes take place. :: READ MORE::
Afternoon naps, or siestas, are practiced in many Mediterranean and Latin American countries such as Spain and Argentina. They are typically short naps or rest periods of no more than an hour that are taken in the afternoon.

While earlier studies on siestas have found that this practice may slightly increase the risk of heart attack, newer and more controlled studies have shown an inverse relationship between siesta taking and fatal heart attacks. In a recent epidemiological study of 23,000 people in Greece, those who regularly took siestas showed a 37% reduction in coronary mortality compared to those who never nap, while individuals who occasionally napped in the afternoon had a reduction of 12%.

Why do afternoon naps affect cardiovascular function" One reason could be changes in blood pressure. At night, our blood pressure and heart rate decreases as we sleep. Some researchers hypothesize that the lower blood pressure reduces strain on the heart and decreases the risk of a fatal heart attack.

Related link:
Bringing Back The Power Nap
Why Not Take a Nap?
Taking Power Naps for Your Health

It's just a joke...

The guys at LaughLab are hunting down the world's funniest joke... ::READ MORE::
Two hunters are out in the woods when one of them collapses. He doesn't seem to be breathing and his eyes are glazed. The other guy whips out his phone and calls the emergency services. He gasps, "My friend is dead! What can I do?". The operator says "Calm down. I can help. First, let's make sure he's dead." There is a silence, then a shot is heard. Back on the phone, the guy says "OK, now what?"

Can you stay fit and strong as a vegan?

The Guardian UK Her teenage son starts university next year, and she's worried that a vegan diet will expose him to colds and infections. Three experts try to boost his diet - and her confidence. ::READ MORE::

For optimum nutrition, a vegan diet should contain two or three protein foods and cereals, vegetables, fruits and fats daily. Soya (including soya milk), Quorn, beans, pulses and nuts contain protein.

Friday, October 12, 2007

right v. left


http://www.news.com.au/perthnow/story/0,21598,22492511-5005375,00.html

The Right Brain vs Left Brain test ... do you see the dancer turning clockwise or anti-clockwise? If clockwise, then you use more of the right side of the brain and vice versa. Most of us would see the dancer turning anti-clockwise though you can try to focus and change the direction; see if you can do it.

FUNCTIONS OF:


LEFT BRAIN.......................RIGHT BRAIN



uses logic..................................................Uses feelings

detail oriented.........................."big picture" oriented

facts rule...........................................Imagination rules

words and language....................Symbols and Images

present and past............................Present and future

math and science...................Philosophy and Religion

can comprehend...................Can 'get it' (i.e. meaning)

knowing...........................................................Believes

acknowledges............................................Appreciates

order/pattern perception................Spatial perception

knows object name.....................Knows object function

reality based..............................................Fantasy based

forms strategies..............................Presents possibilities

practical.............................................................Impetuous

safe.....................................................................Risk taking

Prototype Phone Gives Fitness Check

A new prototype "Wellness Phone" has been developed. It can take your pulse, check your body fat, time your jogs and tell you if you have bad breath. It even assesses stress levels and inspires you with a pep talk. Meet your new personal trainer: your cell phone.
"The companies are reportedly still testing some of the phone's more advanced technology, including a function to keep track of meals and calculate calorific intake, as well as a network capacity to let users share data. The companies haven't said when nor how much they will sell the phones. Plus it doesn't look like they be sold in the US anytime soon either."

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Native American journalists launch a new site

ReznetNews.org, an award winning online student newspaper for Native American journalists have redesigned their Web site. Check out "View to a Disaster" story and audio slideshow by Mary Hudetz, who was the first reporter on the scene of the Minneapolis bridge collapse.

Are you underpaid?

According to Salary.com's 2006/2007 Employee Job Satisfaction and Retention Survey, 62 percent of employees plan on looking for a new job in the next three months. Dissatisfied employees have cited a variety of reasons for their desire to leave their company, including lack of opportunity for advancement, no recognition for achievements, insufficient benefits and even boredom.

Trumping all reasons for why employees want to leave their current job is that they think they are underpaid. Nearly 50 percent of employees cited inadequate compensation as the primary reason they want to walk out the door. To determine if the employee claims were valid, Salary.com's team of Certified Compensation Professionals conducted extensive analysis by comparing the job title, industry, geography and company size reported by each respondent to the Salary.com database of human resource (HR) reported salary data.

The results indicated that only 22 percent of the survey respondents were actually underpaid, while 15 percent may actually be overpaid (paid well above their fair market value) and 33 percent were paid reasonably close to their fair market value.

Language evolution

TaeKwonDood
"We all know language has evolved but mathematicians are trying to take how it has changed in the past to predict what it will be like in the future."

From the article: "Mathematical analysis of this linguistic evolution reveals that irregular verb conjugations behave in an extremely regular way -- one that can yield predictions and insights into the future stages of a verb's evolutionary trajectory," says Lieberman, a graduate student in applied mathematics in Harvard's School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and in the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, and an affiliate of Harvard's Program for Evolutionary Dynamics. "We measured something no one really thought could be measured, and got a striking and beautiful result."

When we change our clocks

On the way to work this morning, I remembered that fall also means daylight saving time (DST). Oh wonderful time of the year when 6 p.m. feels like 10 p.m. So I got to talking and a lot of people would just want DST to go away.

I have no idea if this letter to the editor was facetious or sincere, I only know that it's worth a good laugh...

Beginning in 2007, DST will begin on the second Sunday in March and end the first Sunday in November. The Secretary of Energy will report the impact of this change to Congress. Congress retains the right to resume the 2005 Daylight Saving Time schedule once the Department of Energy study is complete.

With many IT applications relying on accurate time information and many having automatic adjustments for DST, how will the IT world handle this change?

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Mobile web

The mobile web is the future of connectivity. Google knows this, that's why they bought up Jaiku, a Finnish company that provides a mobile instant messaging service.

There’s a FAQ about the acquisition on Jaiku’s website...

Got a mobile web project of your own? If it’s related to local news and based around a particular community, check out the Knight News Challenge - you could win funding for your ideas.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

How to Eat With Chopsticks

Wiki How There's nothing quite as clumsy as trying to use chopsticks for the first time.

But to get the full experience from Asian food, chopsticks are a necessity. Not the children chopsticks with a rubber band at the end. After all, you're an adult. You may have timidly watched others use them with dexterous skill, but a little practice can quickly bring you to the same level. To impress your friends and family, try these steps at home before going out to your favorite Asian restaurant. Read on:::

We put the states in United States

They want to break U.S. apart!
Here's a convention you might have missed. A national movement, called the secession project, wants to due away with the...UNITED STATES.
This is a must watch report from Current.tv, a great site for videos and citizen journalism.

Double Your Salary* (*Without a Second Job)

Somewhere, someone like you is doing a job just like yours and earning twice the money. Here's how...READ MORE:::

Monday, October 8, 2007

READ: A Three Dog Life

By Abigail Thomas
HERE is how I get my husband into the car: I lie.

“I’m going to buy us something for dinner. Will you come with me?”

Earlier on this rainy October afternoon I stuck a fake log into the fireplace and lighted it, and since then we have been spending what Rich used to call the shank of the day in each other’s company, dozing and waking to firelight. It has been like our marriage as it used to be. Read MORE:::

Comically large things

Americans are obsessed with large things. From houses to cars to the pickles we buy. Hold up, did I just say that? Sure, check out the giant pickle, giant noodle soup, giant video game controller, giant watermelon, giant ritz crackers, giant phone, giant penny, giant safety pin and giant blue box of dental floss. If it is oversized to point of absurdity, this blog will cover it.

The blog also has categories so that if you are only interested in comically large pens and pencils you can find them.

The technology behind 3D movies

Artificially created 3D images all share a basic design: sending two slightly different views to each eye. With the images, your brain can reconstruct depth, just as it does in real-world sight, from the two slightly different vantage points.

The Dolby 3D system relies on a spinning filter wheel to alternate rapidly between two slightly different sets of primary colors. Corresponding filters on 3D glasses only let the appropriate light into the left or right eyes after the light reflects off the screen. The filter wheel is synchronized with the digital projector, which switches back and forth between the images for the left and right eyes six times per frame, or 144 times per second.

Credit: Dolby Laboratories

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Can A High School Diploma Reduce Alzheimer's Risk?

Reuters
People who don't complete high school are at a higher risk of developing dementia and Alzheimer's disease than those who receive further education, a Finnish study says. The results are regardless of lifestyle choices and other factors such as physical activity, smoking, occupation, and income. When researchers compared subjects who had completed the Finnish equivalent of elementary (5 years or less), middle (6-8 years), or high school level education (9 or more years), they found that the risk of developing dementia was 40% lower in the mid-level education group and 80% lower among those in the high education group when compared to the least educated group. More ...

Two cents related articles

Saturday, October 6, 2007

The technology of tomorrow?

TechCrunch is showcasing 40 startup companies. And guess what? The way to choose your favorite has a lot to do with the story below. Here's a hint:(Vote on your favorite TC40 and BigCo companies using your cell phone!)

Text the vote?

The Nation
A new study from the New Voters Project, a non-partisan organization that registers youth voters, shows that text messaging may be the most effective form of election-day voter mobilization. Not only did it increase turn-out during the 2006 election more than traditional methods such as phone calls, flyering, and door-to-door canvassing, it was by far the cheapest, costing $1.56 per vote generated, as opposed to $30-60 for other methods.
MORE::

Friday, October 5, 2007

News Challenge deadline is almost here


The Knight News Challenge contest awards $5 million for ideas using digital media to deliver news and information in real time to people in real places. The Oct. 15 application deadline for year two is fast approaching. The streamlined application takes less than 20 minutes to complete. The contest is open to anyone, anywhere.

If you are 25 and under, you can select the Young Creators Award -- up to $500,000 for young innovators.

For more, go to www.newschallenge.org. Pass it along!

Thursday, October 4, 2007

S. Koreans cheer their soccer team

humans can still perform as good as an LCD screen.

Monday, October 1, 2007

You owe $30,000

As the national debt heads toward the $10-trillion mark, generous Americans are sending checks to the federal government.

According to the folks who follow this stuff closely, the national debt has been rising by an average of $1.36 billion per day since September of last year.

And each citizen now has a share of nearly $30,000.