Friday, December 11, 2009

Top 10 Bad Things That Are Good For You

By Heather Whipps / Source: Live Science


Beer quells heart disease and chocolate staves off cancer? Though often tagged with a disclaimer, studies that tell us to eat, inhale and generally indulge in "bad stuff" is music to our ears. So go ahead and enjoy these bad-for-you remedies — everything in moderation, as they say — until the next study inevitably overturns the research.

BEER: The newest bad kid on the block, beer has long been overshadowed by its healthier alcoholic cousins. While no one's suggesting you switch that glass of antioxidant-rich Pinot Noir for a tall glass of lager—there's still that beer gut to worry about—new research has suggested that moderate beer intake can actually improve cardiovascular function. Now if only a scientist will discover the health benefits of ballpark franks and chicken wings. Heaven.
ANGER: If you're one of those people who tends to bottle things up, only to explode ... don't hold it in so long. Studies show that bursts of anger here and there are good for the health, and can be an even more effective coping mechanism than becoming afraid, irritated or disgusted. Anger, like the consumables in this list, however, is best in moderation: stay angry for long periods of time and you'll be plagued with a host of health issues, like blood pressure, sleep disorders and lung damage.
COFFEE: Java is one of the most debated substances around. Is it good for you? Is it bad for you? Both? The consensus, now anyways, seems to favor those who enjoy their morning jolt—unrelated studies claim coffee is a major source of antioxidants in our diet and can help lower your risk of diabetes. Something in the beans is also thought to ease the onset of cirrhosis of the liver and pancreatitis, good news for those who like to party hard all night before their morning caffeine boost.
LSD: We're definitely not in the business of advocating drug use. But check out this interesting science: In heavy drinkers, small doses of LSD have been thought to help bypass the rock-bottom stage of alcoholism and prevent relapses. These studies—some decades old—were done in closely monitored, clinical settings; many patients haven't had a drink in the many years since. It's an interesting finding that needs a lot more investigation, and not a remedy that should ever be tried at home. Meantime—and this may come as no surprise—a recent study of 36 volunteers who took an LSD-like drug in a lab setting had them reporting mystical experiences and behavior changes that lasted for weeks.
SUNLIGHT: Exposure to the sun's rays is necessary to survive, but can also kill you in gross, cancerous quantities. Asthmatics, at least, could benefit from measured doses of ultraviolet rays, according to scientists. Sunlight suppressed the immune reactions that cause asthma in some lab studies with mice and could be used to treat humans afflicted with the disease in the future. And sunlight—even if indirect, such as on a shaded porch—is known to boost the mood. Extra sunlight can help office workers avoid afternoon drowsiness, a recent study found. There's still no excuse to head outside and bake, however.
MAGGOTS: They're creepy, slimy and altogether ooky, but maggots can save your life. These squirmy larvae are science's newest wonder-cure and were approved in 2003 as the Food & Drug Administration's only live medical device. Placed on serious wounds, maggots mimic their "wild" lifestyle and munch on bacteria and dead tissue, stimulating healing and helping to prevent infection.
MARIJUANA: It's medicinal, we swear! Marijuana, often associated with memory loss, is ironically now being hyped as a way to stave off the ultimate form of memory loss—Alzheimer's. Recent studies on mice suggest that anti-inflammatories found in the drug prevent the clumping of brain proteins, one major cause of the disease. So when should you start preventative therapy? We suggest waiting for the human studies to wrap up.
RED WINE: A crucial ingredient in the diets of the world's heart-healthiest populations—like those Bordeaux-guzzling French—red wine has long been known to have potent anti-cancer and artery-protecting benefits. The key, some studies indicate, is an antioxidant found specifically in the skin of red wine grapes, called resveratrol. The latest studies even link resveratrol to greater endurance, a reduction in gum disease and Alzheimer's. White wine, which is fermented after the skins are removed, is less beneficial according to some studies.
CHOCOLATE: Chocolate lovers rejoice: study after study lately has touted the magical benefits of the indulgent treat, which is packed with the antioxidant flavonols that prevent certain cancers and keep your arteries from clogging. The most recent news? These powerful chemicals may even increase blood flow to the brain, warding off dementia. Just stick to the highest cocoa content possible—the bars packed with sugar don't help your health one bit.
SEX: Scientists have found that the benefits of sex go beyond immediate, ahem, gratification and satisfying the goal of procreation. Besides the obvious evolutionary purposes, we can all take pleasure in the news that having sex is an easy way to reduce stress, lower cholesterol and improve circulation throughout the body. As if you needed another excuse.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

What 16 Movies Can Teach Us About Life and Leadership


Movies can be an amazing source of insight and inspiration.  They fill our  hearts and heads with heroes, stories, songs, and scenes we can draw from.
Maybe you think of the theme song to Rocky when you work out.  Maybe you think of “waxing the car” or “painting the fence” while you master your craft.  What’s important is that you choose the stories, scenes or heroes that  serve you.
Here is a sampling of 16 movies and what they can teach us about life and leadership:
  1. 300 – Play to your strengths.
  2. The Bad News Bears – The right coach can turnaround any team, from worst, to first.  It’s about the journey and the destination.
  3. Kung Fu Panda – The right team can kick arse.  You’re the sum of your network (remember the Furious Five.)
  4. Peaceful Warrior – Make every move about the move.  A warrior acts, only a fool reacts.  Don’t become a victim of your own limiting beliefs.  The people that are the hardest to love, probably need it the most.  Want more? … check out Lessons Learned from Peaceful Warrior.
  5. Surf’s Up – Find a way, because that’s what winners do.  When there’s no wave to ride, make one.
  6. The 13th Warrior – Your competition always has a weakness.
  7. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest – Win the heart, the mind follows.  Find the best in everyone.
  8. Star Wars – Keep your ego in check (and carry a big light saber.)  Your intuition can serve you well if you master it.
  9. Raiders of the Lost Ark – Make every project an adventure.
  10. The Lord of the Rings – The best heroes can come from the strangest places (who would have thought to check the shire?)
  11. Rear Window – Use your emotions and intuition as input.  Check your facts.
  12. The Wizard of Oz – You had it in you all along.  You just needed somebody else to bring it out.
  13. Slumdog Millionaire – Smart and gets results can change your lot in life.
  14. Bonnie and Clyde – Passion + smarts makes for a great team.
  15. Rocky – You gotta have heart.  Sometimes it’s about going the distance.
  16. It’s a Wonderful Life – Know your value and what you bring to the table.
What movies do you draw from?

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

What Star Wars teaches us about career management

It's been really difficult using the Force to convince your HR manager or boss to see things your way.By Thomas Wailgum
29 Oct 2009

FRAMINGHAM, 28 OCTOBER 2009 - It's been really difficult using the Force to convince your HR manager or boss to see things your way: Your threats of turning fellow workers to the Dark Side sound hollow and that Jedi mind trick you've been working on for the past six months doesn't seem to be getting you anywhere. Your big promotion? You might as well be working in the Spice Mines of Kessel.
So what's left? Use the implicit wisdom and shared experiences of those inhabitants of a galaxy far, far away to raise your profile and keep your reputation free from coworkers' derogatory "bantha fodder" references.
"You have failed me for the last time, Admiral." -Darth Vader
File Under: Employer Selection; Workplace Culture; Employee Grievances
Star Wars Moment: Several Empire commanders are either choked, threatened or murdered for challenging Imperial authority and/or failing on their respective missions. In one memorable scene in Episode V, Captain Piett is quickly promoted to Admiral Piett just after the former Admiral Ozzel is choked to death by Lord Vader, due to his clumsiness and stupidity.
Real-World Lesson: If your company's chain-of-command allows for the somewhat indiscriminate sacking and/or killing of employees for speaking up or failing on business initiatives, find a job elsewhere.

"I suggest a new strategy, R2: Let the Wookiee win." -C-3PO
File Under: CRM; Relationship Building; Networking
Star Wars Moment: C-3PO advises R2-D2 to allow Chewbacca to win at a space-age chess game aboard the Millennium Falcon. Wookiees can "pull people's arms out of their sockets when they lose," advises Han Solo. "Wookiees are known to do that."
Real-World Lesson: Always allow your boss or most important customer to beat you at golf, get the best seat at a restaurant and tell the same story you've heard 30 times before.
Read More Here http://bit.ly/1LmJuc

Space hotel says it's on schedule to open in 2012


BARCELONA (Reuters) – A company behind plans to open the first hotel in space says it is on target to accept its first paying guests in 2012 despite critics questioning the investment and time frame for the multi-billion dollar project.
The Barcelona-based architects of The Galactic Suite Space Resort say it will cost 3 million euro ($4.4 million) for a three-night stay at the hotel, with this price including an eight-week training course on a tropical island.
During their stay, guests would see the sun rise 15 times a day and travel around the world every 80 minutes. They would wear velcro suits so they can crawl around their pod rooms by sticking themselves to the walls like Spiderman.
Read more here http://bit.ly/3cMDGf

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Top 10 Money Tips for Women

by CNBC Staff
Wednesday, October 28, 2009


When it comes to women and finance, sometimes there's a disconnect between what women know and how they act, their ability as achiever and their financial underachieving, and between the power they have within reach and the powerlessness that rules their actions.
Financial expert Suze Orman gives her list of the top 10 money tips for women to follow:
1. Listen to Your Gut
2. NEVER Co-Sign for ANYONE
3. Save Yourself First
4. Don't Hand Over Finances to Your Husband or Partner
5. Don't Put Yourself on Sale
6. Protect Your Assets: Get a Pre-Nuptial Agreement
7. No Blame, No Shame
8. Take Care of Your Money
9. Don't Make Your Underage Children Life-Insurance Beneficiaries -- It's a No-No!
10. Own the Power to Control Your Own Destiny


For full article, please go to http://tiny.cc/EKgIS

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

How to Get Found (in the Cyberworld)


Oct 27, 2009 -
Brian Halligan is the founder and CEO of HubSpot, an Internet marketing software company that helps small and medium-sized businesses get found on the Internet and converts website visitors into leads and customers. He is also the author of Inbound Marketing: Get Found In Google, Blogs, and Social Media.
It used to be that you could efficiently grow your businesses by interrupting potential customers with outbound marketing methods like cold calls, email spam, and advertising. Today people and businesses are tired of being the targets of so much outbound marketing and they're getting better and better in blocking it out.
At the same time, people and businesses have fundamentally changed the way they shop and learn, turning more and more to Google, social media sites and blogs to find what they want. Inbound marketing helps companies take advantage of these shifts by helping them get found by customers in the natural way in which they shop and learn. The following are Brian’s five steps to help you get “get found.”
1. Be remarkable. 
2. Create content.
3. Optimize content.
4. Promote content.
5. Measure results. 
To read full article, please go to http://tiny.cc/wzNd5 

5 Tips for Making a Corporate Blog Stand Out

Michelle Bowles on Oct 23rd, 2009
These days it seems as if every corporation has tried its hand at blogging. The more corporate blogs that exist in the blogosphere, the more difficult it becomes to gain blog subscribers by creating one that’s truly unique. To ensure your corporate blog stands out from the crowd, follow these 5 tips:


1. Talk about something other than yourself.
2. Keep your blog focused.
3. Give your blog a distinct personality.
4. Have some fun.
5. Provide readers with something they can’t get anywhere else.




To read the full article, please go to http://tiny.cc/KtVEn 

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Eight qualities of a good leader during a recession


By Rachel Lebeaux | Feb 26, 2009
When money is tight, employee layoffs loom and spirits are dwindling during a recession, CIOs and other IT executives must take the qualities of a good leader to another level.
These eight qualities of a leader, culled from CIOs and leadership experts, will guide you through good times and bad -- yet are especially pertinent today to keep your staff engaged and ensure that IT meets changing expectations in uncertain times.
1. The ability to inspire
2. Communication skills (including listening)
3. Operational credibility in driving results
4. The ability to prioritize
5. Creativity and flexibility (aka, the ability to embrace change)
6. The ability to be a "fish out of water" leader
7. The ability to position one's organization as a mecca for talent
8. Consistency


Click Here to Read Full Article: http://tiny.cc/fPiBY 

Study reinforces that kids watch a lot of TV



NEW YORK – It's not called the electronic baby sitter for nothing. The Nielsen Co. says in a study released Monday that children ages 2 to 5 watch more than 32 hours of television each week. Kids 6 to 11 spend a little less time in front of a TV screen _ more than 28 hours. But that's partly because they have to go to school.
According to the study, the television viewing by children 2 to 11 is the most since 1995. The younger kids, or at least their parents, are tech-savvy. The 32 hours of TV-watching includes an hour and a half of shows taped on a digital video recorder, and 4 1/2 hours of programs on a DVD. Nielsen also says children ages 6 to 11 play video games on a television for nearly 2 1/2 hours a week on average.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

5 Traits of the New Creative Leader :: Management Tip of the Day :: October 14, 2009 :: HarvardBusiness.org

Yesterday's leadership skills will not work in today's fast-moving and evolving world. Only creative leaders who are visionary and empathetic will succeed. Here are five things you can do to succeed as a creative leader:
  1. Instead of commanding, coach your team and organization toward success.
  2. Don't manage people, empower them. The know-how, experience, and solutions are often out there; it's a matter of helping people discover them.
  3. Cultivate respect by giving it, instead of demanding it.
  4. Know how to manage both success and failure.
  5. Show graciousness in your management rather than greediness. Be humble about your successes and whenever possible, give someone else the opportunity to shine.

Taken from Harvard Management Tip of the Day

Information Security: Why Cybercriminals Are Smiling - Knowledge@Wharton

Information Security: Why Cybercriminals Are Smiling - Knowledge@Wharton

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Pay for What You Get: Putting Performance-based Contracting to the Test - Knowledge@Wharton

Pay for What You Get: Putting Performance-based Contracting to the Test - Knowledge@Wharton


Early Tremors: Is It Time for Another Social Network Shakeout? - Knowledge@Wharton

Early Tremors: Is It Time for Another Social Network Shakeout? - Knowledge@Wharton


To Change Effectively, Change Just One Thing - Peter Bregman - HarvardBusiness.org

To Change Effectively, Change Just One Thing - Peter Bregman - HarvardBusiness.org

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Top 10 Rules for Having a Strong Personal Brand | Personal Branding Blog - Dan Schawbel

Top 10 Rules for Having a Strong Personal Brand | Personal Branding Blog - Dan Schawbel

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Blog Action Day 2009: Climate Change

Blog Action Day 2009: Climate Change

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The Nut Graph | The shape of books to come?

The Nut Graph | The shape of books to come?

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Disney debuts do-it-yourself thrill ride - CNN.com

Disney debuts do-it-yourself thrill ride - CNN.com

D-I-Y Roller coaster rides!! Wow! cheers n out!

Analyzing Your Competition

Analyzing Your Competition

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7 Free or Cheap Ways to Effectively Promote Your Business Online

7 Free or Cheap Ways to Effectively Promote Your Business Online

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Wednesday, October 14, 2009

The Top Ten Keys to Manifesting Your Desires

By Apryl Jensen

1. Know there is a purpose in your desires.  

You have your desires for a reason, and the more you seek increased life for all, the more the Universe can express through you.

You do not have your desires to frustrate you, but to inspire the emotion needed to carry your dreams into physical reality. I have come to realize my desires are a gift from God, meant to be fulfilled.

2. Emotion is the key.  

Emotion is what strengthens your desires, and gives them power to create. We communicate with the Universe through our feelings--emotions, and our emotions are "energy in motion."

Our emotions are  what puts manifestation into motion. Feel your desires, feel the joy you will experience when you achieve them but feel it now.

3. Be Decisive.  

One's own hesitancy or self-doubt can bring the momentum you've created  through strong emotion to a halt. It's like pulling something toward you in one instance, and pushing it away in the next.

Be certain of what you desire, and if you are not, seek first to manifest certainty.



4. Know you are here to learn manifesting.  

Learning to create is one of life's most rewarding purposes. Practice it, learn it so well that it becomes "second nature" to you, for in time, you will see it is your TRUE nature.  

Be the creator that you are, and were always meant to be.

5. Be content to create on the mental realm, and allow time for the physical to transpire. 

Understand that your thoughts and focus, backed by emotion, bring about the experiences of your life. Pay attention to your life, and notice the synchronicities that begin to appear.  

Soon you will be convinced of the connection between your thoughts, and what transpires in your reality.

6. Know the mental (spiritual) reality is just as real as the physical. It is matter, only in a finer, incipient form.  

The Universe has been defined as "matter unorganized seeking to be organized", and you, are an organizer.  Consider how much we never knew existed... until a powerful enough microscope was 
invented to reveal it to us.  

Much exists unseen to our natural eyes. Become comfortable with this truth.

7. Understand the world around you is results and feedback. 

It is a reflection of how you have been thinking and what you have attracted so far.  Remember, in each new moment, you can choose again.  

Everything is first created spiritually, and later evolves and crystallizes into physical form.

8. Connect with God, the Universe or Infinite Intelligence as your source of joy and enlightenment.  

Know there is a wisdom greater than your own, and be open to being lead and guided by this wisdom. Reuniting with this connection is another  amazing purpose for your life.

9. Detach, especially from the physical world.  

This does not mean don't want anything or don't care about things. Not in the least. Desire. You are created to do so. But detach from the details, the how's, the when's; release the need to know 
or predict how an experience will show up for you.  

Give the Universe freedom to use its vast store of wisdom. Trust.

10. Know you are loved.  

Probably the most wonderful lesson I've learned from manifesting is that we are all intimately loved and cared about.  

Practice manifesting in your life, call on the heavens for assistance, so you can know the sweet joy and peace that comes as you see your desires being listened to and brought about.  
Experience the sweetness of knowing the secrets of your heart are no secret to God and/or the Universe. As you do so, you will experience the most sublime of gratitudes, and be inspired to 
go forth and manifest again.


Five Awesome and Five Awful Conversation Topics

Five Awesome and Five Awful Conversation Topics

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Twitter: Latest vehicle for scam artists | Greeley Tribune

http://www.greeleytribune.com/article/20090719/BUSINESS/907179945/1006/NONE&parentprofile=1001

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Book of Odds - The Odds of Everyday Life

Book of Odds - The Odds of Everyday Life

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Free the Slaves - 2009 Freedom Awards Douglass Award Winner


Free the Slaves - 2009 Freedom Awards Douglass Award Winner


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The Internet is for the poor, the unfortunate and the unlucky

The Internet is for the poor, the unfortunate and the unlucky

I guess it's true, just look at Twitter, people trying to promote stuff to no end. A'way cheers n out!

Super rich men in Asia-Pacific growing fast

Super rich men in Asia-Pacific growing fast

mmm what about super-rich women? cheers n out!

The Most Important Things in Life Are Free


Guy Kawasaki (Alltop)

Oct 13, 2009
 -
Chris Anderson, the editor of Wired and author of Free, recently gave a keynote speech at Garage’s Revenue Bootcamp. The main points of his speech were:
  • Digital economics has created a deflationary economy in which there is near zero marginal costs for distribution. Hence, content is getting cheaper and approaching free.
  • Today’s generation expects things for free because people have internalized these digital economics. Adults, by contrast, grew up believing that “free” is a gimmick—i.e. “There’s no such thing as a free lunch.” (Watch this panel of young people to see the accuracy of this observation.)
  • Quality is more and more defined by relevance and not price. Thus, you can’t use price to win market share when everything is free. You have to use product differentiation and relevance.
  • The challenge for companies is to create premium goods and services that they can sell to “free” customers. Companies need to offer people ways to save time, increase their status, or heighten their reputation and convert these ways to cash.
If you’re in a content or online service business, you’re well aware of the pressure to lower your prices to free. The key point is that what customers are willing to buy is far more important than what you’re willing to sell. To learn more about Chris’s concept, watch his keynote here.