Tidbits From The Web Tidbits From The Web...: February 2010

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Tidbits From The Web #63



The contortionist archer...
Office prank FAIL!
Just remember this during tax season... (watch the video)
Batman beats Superman...
Life in Iran via the comics...
Beware the electric smog that surrounds you!
What are all those camera modes for anyways?
A twist on Romeo and Juliet...
Before getting any vaccination remember this...
Anybody for some $15,000 cognac?
Who needs art...get some badass decals for that wall instead!
Looking forward to some July flames...
Free point and click game...Beneath a Steel Sky... (you must register)
Root beer Mozart...
Introducing artist...Tim Lillis...
Don't bore yourself to death...
Remember this when you get a soda...
Pacman illusion...
Cancer's secret weakness...
10 things you didn't know about the Brat Pack...
Run with the wolves...



Connections -- The Trigger Effect



The first in the Connections series Both the beginning and the end of the story are here. The end is our present dependence on complex technological networks illustrated by the NYC power blackouts. Life came almost to a standstill: support systems taken for granted failed. How did we become so helpless? Technology originated with the plow and agriculture. Each invention demands its own follow-up: once started, it is hard to stop. This segment ends in Kuwait, where society has leapt from ancient Egypt to the technology of today in 30 years.


Illuminati III Murdered by The Monarchs



The Illuminati Volume 3: Murdered by the Monarchy is the latest release from Enigma Motion Pictures. It takes a long hard look at the gruesome history of the 'Royals' and shows how they bludgeoned, murdered and tortured their way to power. It also looks at events surrounding Princess Diana's untimely death and reveals information the Royals would rather stay hidden. After seeing this film 'Royal' is the last word you'll use to describe them.
Chris Everard’s new film, released through Enigma Motion Pictures, continues this rebellious British director’s assault on the senses, combining a thoroughly educational, historical documentary, which at once is erudite and shocking. A film most definitely not for the feint of heart, but essential viewing for those of us who want to make sense of the wickedness at the pinnacle of government and society.


Today's Message

LEAVE THE WORLD A BIT BETTER
by Ron White

Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote a poem on success. One of his measures of success in that poem was to, “Leave the world a bit better.” That line has always stuck in my head. Emerson said you have succeeded if you leave the world a bit better. I have made that line part of my life philosophy. When the tide goes out, there is a mark where the water was. When the waters of life recede from the shore of my being and my heart pumps for the last time, my desire is that there will be a mark where I stood. My aim is that the mark will say, “For some decades, a man occupied this space that saw others more important than himself and made an effort to leave the world a better place for them and those yet to come.”

Our society tells us that success is measured by bank accounts, power, beauty and wealth. These are often the result of hard work, luck or birth. They are not evil and I strive for some of them daily. However, they are not the marks by which I will measure the success of my life.

So how do you do it? How do you “leave the world a bit better?”

- Give a percent of your income away to a charity or church. This makes your community better.
- Save a percentage of your income to pass down to your family when you leave.
- Volunteer your time for those who are less fortunate. Are you volunteering anywhere?
- Mentor someone who needs a positive direction in life.
- Follow and get involved in politics. Our laws and leaders will determine the future. You can have a hand in that future.

Or you can amass as much wealth as you can, spend it as fast as you can on the fading desires of your heart and seek to please yourself first. Our culture might tell you that this is success. Emerson tells us that it is not. I encourage you to realize that the waters of your life will eventually withdraw from the shore. When it does, will there be a watermark?


Knowledge

ARTCYCLOPEDIA, The Guide to Great Art on the Internet

Artcyclopedia's 'mission is to become the definitive and most effective guide to museum-quality fine art on the Internet.' You'll find 'a comprehensive index of every artist represented at hundreds of museum sites, image archives, and other online resources.' Additionally, there are 'links for most well-known artists to keep you surfing for hours.' Over 2,600 art sites plus 140,000 links artworks by 9,000 renowned artists will be at your fingertips. Just enter the artist's name and let the Artcyclopedia search facility do the rest. If browsing is more your style, you can do so by Artist's Name, Medium, Subject, Nationality, Women Artists and also by the particular Movements in the art world, whether it be abstract expressionism, regionalism, the Renaissance or wildlife art, in addition to many other categories. Here's the ultimate site for art study as well as developing an appreciation of works of art and the artists who created them.


North American Mammals


"Welcome to the National Museum of Natural History's North American Mammals web site. This is a searchable database of all living mammals of North America." 'Based on The Smithsonian Book of North American Mammals, by Don E. Wilson and Sue Ruff (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1999) and Mammals of North America, by Roland W. Kays and Don E. Wilson (Princeton University Press, 2002),' over 400 mammals native to North America are included. A map of the entire continent can be checked for specific locations for particular species; Species Name search capability in addition to searches by Family Tree, Conservation Status and Special Collections that allows you to search by skull and/or bone and teeth images are available. The user can look up mammals native to a certain area then print a guide for actual field study. This resource is invaluable for general reference and more detailed study of particular species.


uPrint Personal 3D Printer
http://ct.email.engineeringtv.com/rd/cts?d=33-67856-894-433-2001-3428293-0-0-0-1-2-192 As a personal 3D printer, uPrint makes 3D printing immediate and convenient through every design iteration. Designed for the desktop, uPrint requires only a 25 x 26 in. footprint and features an 8 x 6 x 6 in. build envelope. Using Dimension's proven FDM technology, uPrint builds models with Stratasys ABSplus - a material on average 40 percent stronger than the company's standard ABS material, making it ideally suited for testing the form, fit and function of models and prototypes. uPrint also features a soluble support removal system, allowing for hands-free removal of the model support material.

D-Link Boxee Box
Boxee Box by D-Link, winner of the CES Best of Innovations award in the Home Entertainment category, delivers movies, TV shows, music, and photos from a user’s computer, home network, and the Internet to their HDTV with no PC needed. Instead of sifting through millions of confusing Web sites, when users search on Boxee, TV shows and movies are delivered to them with the click of a remote control.


Insight

Absence sharpens love, presence strengthens it.
-- English Proverb

The same wind snuffs candles yet kindles flames; so, where absence kills a little love, it fans a great one.
-- Francois de la Rochefoucauld






What the Past Tells Us
David Walker
New York, New York

Perhaps because we are a young country, Americans tend not to pay much attention to the lessons of history. Well, we should start, because those lessons are brutal. Power, even great power, if not well tended, erodes over time. Nations, like corporations and people, can lose discipline and morale. Economic and political vulnerability go hand in hand. Remember, without a strong economy, a nation's international standing, standard of living, national security, and even its domestic tranquility will suffer over time.

Many of us think that a superpowerful, prosperous nation like America will be a permanent fixture dominating the world scene. We are too big to fail. But you don't have to delve far into the history books to see what has happened to other once-dominant powers. Most of us have witnessed seismic political shifts in our lifetime. In 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev settled into his job as the Soviet Union's young and charismatic new leader and began acting on his mandate to reenergize the socialist empire. Seven years later that empire collapsed and disappeared from the face of the Earth. Gorbachev runs a think tank in Moscow now.

In a sense, the larger world is starting to resemble the nasty and brutish life that long has characterized the corporate world. Just ask Jeffrey Immelt, chairman and CEO of General Electric. Of the twelve giants that made up the first Dow Jones Industrial Average in 1896 - all of them once considered too big to fail - only GE remains. The other towering names of the era - the American Cotton Oil Company, the US Leather Company, the Chicago Gas Company, and the like - all have faded away. And as GE stands against the winds of today's financial challenges, ask Immelt whether there is such thing as a company that is too big to fail.

I love to read history books for the lessons they offer. After all, as the homily goes, if you don't learn from history, you may be doomed to repeat it. Great powers rise and fall. None has a covenant to perpetuate itself without cost. The millennium of the Roman Empire - which included five hundred years as a republic - came to an end in the fifth century after scores of years of gradual decay. We Americans often study that Roman endgame with trepidation. We ask, as Cullen Murphy put it in the title of his provocative 2007 book, are we Rome?

The trouble is not that we see ourselves as an empire with global swagger. But we do see ourselves as a superpower with global responsibilities - guardians if not enforcers of a Pax Americana. And as a global power, America presents unsettling parallels with the disintegration of Rome - a decline of moral values, a loss of political civility, an overextended military, an inability to control national borders, and a growth of fiscal irresponsibility by the central government. Do these sound familiar?

Finally, there is what Murphy calls the "complexity parallel": Mighty powers like America and Rome grow so big and sprawling that they become impossible to manage. In comparing the two, he writes, one should "think less about the ability of a superpower to influence everything on earth, and more about how everything on earth affects a superpower."

A superpower that is financially reliant on others can be vulnerable to foreign influence. The British Empire learned this in 1956, when Britain and France were contesting control of the Suez Canal with Egypt. The Soviet Union was threatening to intervene on Egypt's side, turning the regional dispute into a global showdown between Moscow and Washington. The Eisenhower administration wanted to avoid that, and the United States also happened to control the bulk of Britain's foreign debt. President Eisenhower demanded that the British and French withdraw. When they refused, the United States quietly threatened to sell off a significant amount of its holdings in the British pound, which would have effectively destroyed Britain's currency. The British and French backed down and withdrew from Suez within weeks.

The US dollar has never come under a direct foreign attack (though its vulnerability is growing). A direct foreign attack would result in a dramatic move away from the dollar. That would lead to a significant decline in its value, as well as higher interest rates. This is often referred to by economists as a "hard landing." In lay terms, it's more like a crash landing. Still, Americans have become intimately acquainted with the shocks of financial instability. Americans of a certain age still vividly recall the depths of the Depression in the 1930s and the chaos of inflation and long gasoline lines during the oil shock of the 1970s. We will also remember the financial collapse that began in 2008, and we pray for nothing worse. Some of our smartest financial thinkers are praying right along with us. "I do think that piling up more and more and more external debt and having the rest of the world own more and more of the United States may create real political instability down the line," investor Warren Buffett has said, "and increases the possibility that demagogues [will] come along and do some very foolish things."


America 2030: Why We Must Act - Now
By David Walker
New York, New York

Those of you who are parents (and I'm a parent) may want to reject out of hand the idea that we are in effect stealing from our children's future and bequeathing to them a far less prosperous life. But if we don't begin to address our fiscal challenges soon, it's only a matter of time before the consequences begin to show up, most likely starting with higher interest rates. As things get worse, our children will slowly see their living standards decline. We can still prevent these things from happening. The ultimate goal of cleaning up our fiscal policy is not to avoid a recession or even to balance the budget per se - it's to pass on the kind of healthy, vibrant nation that we inherited.

It's easy to fall back on generalities - that America is a great country, and that we always rise to great challenges and will do so again. True, but we can only succeed by taking action, and we have a lot of action to take. Let's say we do take only small steps to address our fiscal crisis. Let's say we stop cutting taxes, but we don't increase them radically either. Let's say our government continues to take in about the same level of historical revenues, but we hold discretionary spending to 2008 levels as a percentage of the economy, and we don't expand health care or other entitlements any further. That sounds pretty benign, but it's actually a disaster scenario for our children.

Let's take the example of kids born in early 2000, when our national budget was in balance and the technology-powered future seemed bright.

During the first eight years of their lives, we have learned, the nation's financial hole grew by 176 percent to $56.4 trillion. And the number is not standing still. That was its size as of September 30, 2008 - before the official declaration of a recession, before the significant market declines of October 2008, and before the big stimulus and bailout bills designed to jump-start the economy and address our immediate financial crisis. In fiscal 2007, recall, our budget deficit was $161 billion, or 1.2 percent of the economy. By 2009, the deficit soared to $1.42 trillion, which is about 9.9 percent of the economy. Just think about that for a second. Our federal deficit grew by almost nine times in the past two fiscal years!

Given our scenario - no benefit cuts, no tax hikes - the government would have to finance this gaping hole mainly by borrowing money from domestic and foreign investors, with interest. Don't forget, according to the GAO's latest long-range budget simulation, even without an increase in overall interest rates, our interest payments would become the largest single expenditure in the federal budget in about twelve years. And what do we get for that interest?

Nothing!

Of course, something will have to give before we get to that point. However, the government has overpromised and underdelivered for far too long. How can we fix things? Will we cut benefits, those mandatory payments that are chiseled into law? Or will we raise taxes to onerous levels? We will probably have to do some combination of both. That is, we will have to renegotiate the social contract with our fellow citizens and raise taxes. However we do that, our kids will pay the price. And the bigger the bill we pass on to them, the bleaker the future we will bequeath to them.

Let's assume that Washington policy makers continue to punt on making tough spending choices and ultimately raise taxes to address the growing deficits. Nobody will reach in our kids' pockets and take their money because the government will take it before it even reaches their pockets. What will that mean for their after-tax income? Right now, on average, Americans pay about 21percent of their income in federal taxes and another 10 percent to state and local governments. By 2030, to pay our rising bills, that amount could be at least 45 percent - higher even than the average 42 percent that most Europeans pay. By 2040, it would be at least 53 percent and climbing. In reality, total taxes in 2030 and 2040 would be even higher than these estimates because of the fiscal challenges facing state and local governments - such as Medicaid costs, unfunded retiree health care promises, underfunded pension plans, deferred maintenance and other critical infrastructure needs, and higher education funding.

With reductions in disposable income like that, the children of 2000 will inherit a much different kind of America in 2030. That's when they will be turning thirty, entering their most productive years.

So much of their money will be devoted to keeping the government afloat that they'll have relatively little for everything else in life. Their homes will be smaller and drabber. There will be less to spend for cars, vacations, dinners out, and big TV sets, all of which their parents took for granted. They'll still read about the consumer society and conspicuous consumption, but mainly in history texts. Maybe it's a good idea for America to become less materialistic - but the idea should be to give our children that choice, not to impoverish them.


Peace, love, and happiness...until next time...

Friday, February 12, 2010

Tidbits From The Web #62



The Strangest Secret...
Would you gentlemen pay $7000 for this?
Some games for you to play on your computer...
Time to give up that plastic...
10 years of Remi Gaillard...
A test to determine Alzheimer's risk...
Is the war in Afghanistan about terror...or heroin...
This is just tip of iceberg about climate change being nonsense...
You got some ET...I got some ET...we all got some ET in us...
Brendan Fraser remixed...
Maybe a secret banking cartel does run the world...
I always wanted to be a piece of bacon...
A day in the life of a cardboard box...
2 ghost riders and a lioness...
40 stunning hi-res photos...
The hidden life of garbage...


Apple started with the iPad...this will soon follow...

Mag+ from Bonnier on Vimeo.







Lifestyle Changes That Will Keep You Alive
Posted by: Dr. Mercola


healthy lifestyle, exerciseAmericans spend billions every year on a dizzying array of health schemes. But some of the best approaches to health care are cheap and within your grasp, if only you can find the will to make some lifestyle changes.

1. Experience the benefits of sex

Sex has many apparent health benefits. Studies suggest sex can boost your immune system and reduce stress.

2. Keep your teeth clean

Diabetes, low birth weight babies and heart disease have all been linked to gum and bone disease in your mouth. Even heart attacks have been linked to bad dental hygiene.

3. Use the sun

A little sunshine is good for your mood and allows your body to produce necessary vitamin D, which is lacking in some 70 percent of American kids these days.

4. Drink less

After years of hearing that moderate drinking is good for your health, a study in November, 2009 found that having a drink or two each day might be something that healthy people do, rather than the drinks being the cause of their good health. And if you're having more than a couple drinks a day, then you're at higher risk for liver damage and diabetes.

5. Wash your hands

Hand washing remains the best prevention against the flu and many other diseases.

6. Get some rest

Serious lack of sleep -- less than six or seven hours a night -- has been associated with increased risks of high blood pressure, hypertension, obesity, diabetes and cancer. Lack of sleep can also contribute to auto accidents and on-the-job injuries.

7. Stop smoking

About half of all smokers die from smoking, and of these, about half die around age 50 or sooner.

8. Don't stress

Stress kills. It causes deterioration in everything from your gums to yourheart and can make you more susceptible to a range of ills, from colds to cancer.

9. Exercise

Over and over, studies find a host of exercise benefits, not just for your body: It can raise kids' academic performance and stimulate adult brains. Exercise makes bones stronger and alleviates many types of chronic pain. Regular exercise has even been associated with a lower risk of cancer.

10. Eat better

Choose real food instead of sugar laced with traces of real food. Cook at home rather than eating fast food, and use spices, rather than gobs and gobs of oil or sugar, to spice up your meals.


New ARM Powered Mobile Devices
ARM’s Jeff Chu demos some of the hottest new ARM powered devices, including the Sharp NetWalker PC-Z1, the Dell Latitude Z600 Laptop, and the Tegra-based Mobinnova Netbook.


Today's Message

THE TIME TO ACT
by Jim Rohn

Engaging in genuine discipline requires that you develop the ability to take action. You don’t need to be hasty if it isn’t required, but you don’t want to lose much time either. Here’s the time to act: when the idea is hot and the emotion is strong.

Let’s say you would like to build your library. If that is a strong desire for you, what you’ve got to do is get the first book. Then get the second book. Take action as soon as possible, before the feeling passes and before the idea dims. If you don’t, here’s what happens…

YOU FALL PREY TO THE LAW OF DIMINISHING INTENT.

We intend to take action when the idea strikes us. We intend to do something when the emotion is high. But if we don’t translate that intention into action fairly soon, the urgency starts to diminish. A month from now the passion is cold. A year from now it can’t be found.

So take action. Set up a discipline when the emotions are high and the idea is strong, clear and powerful. If somebody talks about good health and you’re motivated by it, you need to get a book on nutrition. Get the book before the idea passes, before the emotion gets cold. Begin the process. Fall on the floor and do some push-ups. You’ve got to take action; otherwise the wisdom is wasted. The emotion soon passes unless you apply it to a disciplined activity. Discipline enables you to capture the emotion and the wisdom and translate them into action. The key is to increase your motivation by quickly setting up the disciplines. By doing so, you’ve started a whole new life process.

Here is the greatest value of discipline: self-worth, also known as self-esteem. Many people who are teaching self-esteem these days don’t connect it to discipline. But once we sense the least lack of discipline within ourselves, it starts to erode our psyche. One of the greatest temptations is to just ease up a little bit. Instead of doing your best, you allow yourself to do just a little less than your best. Sure enough, you’ve started in the slightest way to decrease your sense of self-worth.

There is a problem with even a little bit of neglect. Neglect starts as an infection. If you don’t take care of it, it becomes a disease. And one neglect leads to another. Worst of all, when neglect starts, it diminishes our self-worth.

Once this has happened, how can you regain your self-respect? All you have to do is act now! Start with the smallest discipline that corresponds to your own philosophy. Make the commitment: “I will discipline myself to achieve my goals so that in the years ahead I can celebrate my successes.”



Insight

THOUGHTS ON AGING


Only of one thing I am sure: When I dream, I am always ageless.

Elizabeth Coatsworth


The man who works and is never bored is never old. Work and interest in worthwhile things are the best remedy for age.

Pablo Casals


Today's Quotes

BEING THE BEST

“The big rewards come to those who travel the second, undemanded mile.” -Bruce Barton

“You are not here merely to make a living. You are here in order to enable the world to live more amply, with greater vision, with a finer spirit of hope and achievement. You are here to enrich the world, and you impoverish yourself if you forget the errand.” -Woodrow Wilson

"Give to the world the best you have, and the best will come back to you." -Ella Wheeler Wilcox

"True success is not necessarily about being the best at all cost. It's about DOING your best at all times. If you do that long enough, who knows, you might just end up being the best." -Tope Popoola





THE STORY OF THE EARTH ...
avatar

... IN REVERSE
by David Icke

The whole global political and economic system is run by dark-suits trapped in left-brain reality. This is why we live in a left-brain society and the right-brain perspective is ridiculed or condemned as 'crazy'. The human invaders in Avatar personify this left-brain domination.


They had no appreciation or understanding of the interconnected harmony and mutual respect between the Na'vi, animals, trees and plants. It was just mumbo-jumbo to them. The humans lived in the 'real world' of physical 'apartness' with the philosophy of see-want-take. In this case, take the unobtainium.

If that means destroying the home and way of life of people who happen to live on the resource deposits that you want to make your fortune, then so be it. What does it matter? They are just primitive savages and we are only destroying a forest.

Who cares? Send the boys in.

The left-brain mentality has no empathy with the consequences for others of its actions, because empathy comes from making a connection to other expressions of life, be they people, trees, plants or animals, and putting yourself in their situation.

Left-brain prisoners can't do this when they are decoding everything as 'individual' with only 'space' in between. The right-brain knows that there is no 'space in between' - only a single energetic field that connects us all.

It is this sense of, and literal, connection between all apparently 'individual' form that gives us a sense of empathy, the fail-safe system that prevents extreme behaviour and actions that cause suffering for others.

avatar_2

They always say time changes things, but you actually have to change them yourself.

- Andy Warhol



Peace, love, and happiness...until next time...

Friday, February 5, 2010

Tidbits From The Web #61



Some awesome photos...
Living together...the lion, and tiger, and bear ..OH MY!
A prophetic cartoon?
Introducing the 3 little pigs sandwich...
Works of Mario art...
Being a winner sometimes has its drawbacks...
A classic game of red square...
The Federal Reserve must die...
Disney made one movie and has been retracing it since!
A prophetic game of things to come?
Beware the coming of the bug bots!
Don't talk to the police...
Why does the US have an empire in Asia?
Hollow Moon...
No no no...the moon is living!
What is Project Blue Beam?
The tribes of Wall Street...part I...part II...part III...
6 sounds we love the most...
Stop motion Mario...
Play Mortimer Beckett and the Time Paradox...
Do remember living in the 80s?
Now that is one cool fireplace...
50 years of space exploration...
Is this what Siberian farmland life is like?


More than junk science...



When first presented in 1989 cold fusion was quickly dismissed as junk science. But, as Scott Pelley reports, there's renewed buzz among scientists that cold fusion could lead to monumental breakthroughs in energy production.

What you need to know about GM foods...



Expert Jeffrey M. Smith, author of Seeds of Deception and Genetic Roulette, reveals shocking facts about genetically modified organisms (GMOs). Smith links GMOs to toxins, allergies, infertility, infant mortality, immune dysfunction, stunted growth, and death.


Project Camelot interviews Jordan Maxwell...



THE TAKEOVER OF PLANET EARTH: Project Camelot interviews Jordan Maxwell

-- This is a long-awaited, long-requested blockbuster of an interview with one of the greatest alternative researchers of our time. Here Jordan Maxwell tells all: and builds, through the three hour video, to present his firm conclusions about what is happening on Planet Earth.

-- According to Jordan, the picture is not pretty: the Earth is not controlled by human beings; that the human race is currently being mutated; and, to put it mildly, we are all in some degree of trouble.

-- The dire conclusions Jordan has reached are mitigated by his own fascinating personal story: that he was groomed and prepared for his current role by nothing less than a group of benevolent ETs - one of whom he met in person in the guise of the father of a girl he met when he was just 19. He was explicitly told by this remarkable (but very ordinarily human-looking) man - who told him details of his life that no-one could possibly know - that he would have a very important job to do later, in years to come. It is very clear that he is doing that job right now.

-- In this video Jordan goes places in his testimony that he has not spoken about publicly before in any venue. The reptilians are real, he states: to support this, he recounts a fascinating and extraordinary story told to him of one woman's first-hand experience as a young girl on a US Air Force base. He talks about the reality (and return) of the Anunnaki. And he cites Masonic symbolism, that is to be found in ancient texts, the former USSR, Nazi Germany, and the Obama administration - as well as in the forthcoming TV remake of the classic Sci-Fi series 'V' - that shows the interconnectedness of all these themes and cultures: that something or someone is expected to return, and that this event may or may not be in humanity's best interests.


Today's Message:


"The Hidden Jewel Within You"

Once upon a time, there was a man who fell into a drunken sleep while far from home with a friend. His friend stayed by him as long as he could, but being compelled to go on, and fearing that his drunken friend might have difficulty finding his way, this man hid a valuable jewel in his drunken friend's garment.

When the man recovered, not realizing that his friend had hidden a precious jewel in his garment, he wandered in poverty and hunger from place to place trying to find his way home for a long time.

Many years after they parted, the poor man met his friend again. After hearing his many stories of woe, the friend told him about the jewel which had been in his garment all along.

Like the drunken man of the story, so many of us wander about suffering in this life, unconscious of what is hidden away deep inside of us, pure and untarnished - the priceless treasure of divine nature. So you are never poor if you know how to access the hidden gems.

This is Kristos, reminding you to look deep within your soul - each one of you - and you will find your gems. Some may be externally beautiful, while others may be rough stones, but all have inner beauty - so start polishing them today.







Eleven Ways to Think Outside the Box
Posted by: Dr. Mercola

think outside the box













Thinking outside the box is more than just a business cliché. It means approaching problems in new, innovative ways and conceptualizing problems differently. Here are 11 ways to beef up your out-of-the-box thinking skills.

1. Study another industry

Go to the library and pick up a trade magazine in an industry other than your own, or grab a few books from the library, and learn about how things are done in other industries.

2. Learn about another religion

Religions are the way that humans organize and understand their relationships not only with the supernatural or divine but with each other.

Learning about how such relations are structured can teach you a lot about how people relate to each other and the world around them.

3. Take a class

Learning a new topic will not only teach you a new set of facts and figures, it will teach you a new way of looking at and making sense of aspects of your everyday life or of the society or natural world you live in.

4. Read a novel in an unfamiliar genre

Try reading something you’d never have touched otherwise -- if you read literary fiction, try a mystery or science fiction novel; if you read a lot of detective novels, try a romance; and so on. Pay attention not only to the story but to the particular problems the author has to deal with.

5. Write a poem

While most problem-solving leans heavily on your brain’s logical centers, poetry neatly bridges your more rational left-brain thought processes and your more creative right-brain processes.

6. Draw a picture

Drawing a picture is even more right-brained, and can help break your logical left-brain’s hold on a problem the same way a poem can.

7. Turn it upside down

Turning something upside-down, whether physically by flipping a piece of paper around or metaphorically by re-imagining it can help you see patterns that wouldn’t otherwise be apparent.

8. Work backwards

Just like turning a thing upside down, working backwards breaks your brain’s normal conception of causality.

9. Ask a child for advice

Children think and speak with an ignorance of convention that is often helpful.

10. Invite randomness

Embracing mistakes and incorporating them into your projects, developing strategies that allow for random input, working amid chaotic juxtapositions of sound and form -- all of these can help you to move beyond everyday patterns of thinking into the sublime.

11. Take a shower

There’s some kind of weird psychic link between showering and creativity. Who knows why? So maybe when the status quo response to some circumstance just isn’t working, try taking a shower and see if something remarkable doesn’t occur to you!





PupilTube

Get schooled by the Web

While plenty of online videos're just a waste of time, others can be truly informative: you can discover truly interesting things like how to muddle mint, and LEEEEEEROOOOY JENNNNNNNNNNKINS! For a catalog of clips that'll learn you good, hit PupilTube.
Thrillist - PupilTube
Developed by a Dutch econ student after he realized the Internetz could teach him more about his subject than textbooks could, Pupil's a hundreds-strong compilation of vetted-for-quality how-to vids and tutorials from across the Web, tackling subjects from finance to self defense, but sadly, none on how to procure cheeseburgers for cats who've just learned they can haz them. Categories range from Sports & Vehicles, to Food & Drink, to Music and Entertainment, with each how-to clip (from YouTube joints to vids from advice-specific sites like MonkeySee) getting an out-of-5-star user rating informing helpfulness, plus a button to save it to your favorites, so you're not late for work each day searching for that one on how to tie your shoes. Choice tutorials include a comprehensive 7-minute piece on how to brew your own beer hosted by a suds-loving Scottish dude, relationship advice like how to get your girlfriend into video games as explained by a Playboy Playmate, and the most basic of life skills: how to drift your car using the e-brake, taught and demo'd by a retired Japanese pro driver known as the "Drift King", who is also the mortal enemy of Mr. Plow.


If you find a video somewhere else that might be a good fit for Pupil, you can upload it, and if it's deemed legit & helpful by the site's team they'll keep it up there, especially if it teaches how to make geeky multiplayer video games fun, by getting high and screaming your name like you mean it.

Lose It: Graphite

Committed to paunch-dropping? Set your goals (lbs to lose per week, target weight/date), then record daily diet/exercise/weight, and Graphite'll slap together a visual timeline/line graph comparing what you're taking in vs. what you're burning, which lately's been mainly joints, and that's the fundamental nature of your weight issues, dude.

Quit bitching about being fat, and get back in shape with help from MyGraphite.com



Today's Quotes

ATTITUDE

“A great attitude does much more than turn on the lights in our worlds; it seems to magically connect us to all sorts of serendipitous opportunities that were somehow absent before the change.” —Earl Nightingale

“I find that it is not the circumstances in which we are placed, but the spirit in which we face them, that constitutes our comfort.” —Elizabeth T. King

“You cannot tailor-make the situations in life, but you can tailor-make the attitudes to fit those situations before they arise.” —Zig Ziglar

“There is little difference in people, but that little difference makes a big difference. That little difference is attitude. The big difference is whether it is positive or negative.” —W. Clement Stone


Fun

Security Questions

It was the standard series of check-in questions that every traveler gets at the airlines counter, including, "Has anyone put anything in your baggage without your knowledge?"

"If it was put there without my knowledge," I asked, "how would I know?"

The agent behind the counter smiled smugly. "That's why we ask."

Odd Job


Our daughter took the afternoon off from her job at the funeral home to visit her daughter in preschool. When one of the kids asked what she did for a living, my granddaughter answered for her: "She sells underground furniture."



Where You Headed?

A taxi passenger tapped the driver on the shoulder to ask him a question. The driver screamed, lost control of the car, nearly hit a bus, went up on the footpath, and stopped centimeters from a shop window.

For a second everything went quiet in the cab, then the driver said, "Look mate, don't ever do that again. You scared the daylights out of me!"

The passenger apologized and said, "I didn't realize that a little tap would scare you so much."

The driver replied, "It's okay, thats not really your fault. Today is my first day as a cab driver. I've been driving a funeral van for the last 25 years."




The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:

Most people see "inflation" when it hits the prices of the goods and services they purchase. They don't realize that this is merely the consequence of inflation. Why does this subtle nuance even matter and, more importantly, how should it inform the way you invest? Guest columnist, Puru Saxena, has the details...


Inflation 101
By Puru Saxena
Hong Kong, China

Inflation is a hidden tax, an insidious crime against the public. It is the easiest way for any government to confiscate the savings of the public and for generations, wealth has been transferred in this manner.

Remember, money is supposed to be a store of value, however due to reckless central bank-sponsored inflation, it can no longer fulfill this critical role. Unfortunately, nobody questions the inexplicable loss of the purchasing power of their savings, thus, central banks get away with financial murder.

Inflation distorts the economy, it brings great harm to the public and it encourages speculation and mindless risk-taking. In fact, inflation acts as a poison for retired people since they are no longer able to earn more money in order to maintain their standard of living. So, thanks to inflation, most senior citizens are unable to enjoy the fruits of their labor.

Before we delve further, we want to make it absolutely clear that inflation is defined as the increase in the quantity of money and debt within an economy. And contrary to what the governments want you to believe, inflation is certainly not an increase in the general price level within an economy. Instead, an increase in the general price level within an economy is a consequence of inflation. Allow us to explain this subtle yet critical difference:

For the sake of simplicity, let us assume that America's money-supply is US$100 and this is the amount available to buy the five oranges its economy produces. Common-sense dictates that under this situation, each orange will cost US$20. Now, let us introduce a banking-cartel called the Federal Reserve, which is able to extend credit (via its debt-based fractional reserve banking system); thereby inflating the supply of money within America to US$1,000. Under this scenario, with a 10-fold increase in money available to purchase the same amount of produce, each of the five oranges will now cost a whopping US$200! An orange is still an orange; it does not change. What changes is the purchasing power of the paper money that is used to buy that orange.

Hopefully, you can see from the above-simplified example, how an inflation in the supply of money and debt causes prices to increase within an economy.

Furthermore, in its attempt to manipulate the masses, the establishment does everything in its power to suppress the official 'inflation barometer'. Governments achieve this goal by shamelessly doctoring their Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Producer Price Index (PPI) calculations via various seasonal and hedonistic adjustments. The chart below highlights the discrepancy between the CPI-U published by America's Bureau of Labor Statistics and the SGS Alternate CPI, which is calculated by Shadow Government Statistics using the old methodology. As you can see, over the past 20 years, prices have been rising much faster than the officials would have you believe.

Understating Inflation

Let there be no doubt, inflation is a total disaster and our world will be a better place without this reckless money-creation. Contrary to official dogma, our world experienced tremendous progress during the 19th century, and there was no inflation during that period. The chart below shows the changes in America's Consumer Price Index (CPI) over the past two centuries. As you will observe, the CPI fell for most of the 19th century as the purchasing power of the American currency rose. However, since the formation of the Federal Reserve in 1913, the CPI has exploded causing the purchasing power of the US dollar to spiral downwards.

CPI Since 1800

Given the fiat-based monetary system and banks' vested interest in expanding credit, we have no doubt that most nations will experience very high inflation over the coming decade. Accordingly, we suggest that long-term investors protect their purchasing power by allocating capital to precious metals, commodity producers and fast-growing businesses in the developing world.

Joel's Note: Puru Saxena publishes Money Matters, a monthly economic report, which highlights extraordinary investment opportunities in all major markets. In addition to the monthly report, subscribers also receive "Weekly Updates" covering the recent market action. Money Matters is available by subscription from www.purusaxena.com.

Puru is also the founder of Puru Saxena Wealth Management, his Hong Kong based firm, which manages investment portfolios for individuals and corporate clients. He is a highly showcased investment manager and a regular guest on CNN, BBC World, CNBC, Bloomberg, NDTV and various radio programs.


Peace, love, and happiness...until next time...