Thanks for visiting

I created this mirror-site to appease the Google gods some time ago.
If you like what you see & read here please be sure to follow my original blog and content over at WordPress.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Evernote Clearly....

Evernote Clearly Arrives on Firefox

December 21, 2011 | Posted by Andrew Sinkov in Product updates

Today, we have some great news. Evernote Clearly, our browser extension that creates a beautiful online reading experience for blogs and articles, is now available for Firefox.

Install Evernote Clearly now »

How it works

When you come to a site that you’d like to read, click the Clearly lamp icon in your browser bar. The page is transformed—all distractions are removed, leaving only the content you want to read. Then, once you’re done, click on Clearly again and you’re back on the regular article.

Imagine getting through an article without clicking on a bunch of links before reaching the end. Now you can, with Clearly.

Save it to Evernote
If you don’t have time to finish the page you’re reading, click on the Evernote icon in the Clearly sidebar to save it into Evernote. In Preferences, you can also set a tag that will be associated with the pages you clip.

Multi-page clips
If you click Clearly on an article that’s broken up across multiple pages, Clearly will put everything into a single, long page.

Themes
Clearly arrives with three attractive built-in themes: Newsprint, Notable and Nightowl. If you’re a fan of customization, you can make your own by going into the Preferences.

Enjoy!

By removing distractions, Clearly makes reading online truly pleasurable. Enjoy.

Gonna give this a go...

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Test

Just a test post

A day to remember

Media_httpl1yimgcombt_tfdhk

via
Rare, Unseen Photos: Aftermath of Pearl Harbor Pictures - Yahoo! News

A humbling day of remembrance.

Monday, December 5, 2011

YOUR LIFE: Your words, your dreams, and your thoughts

Your words, your dreams, and your thoughts have the power to create conditions in your life. What you speak about, you can bring about.

  • If you keep saying you can’t stand your job, you might lose your job.
  • If you keep saying you can’t stand your body, your body can become sick.
  • If you keep saying you can’t stand your car, your car could be stolen or just stop operating.
  • If you keep saying you’re always broke, guess what? You’ll always be broke.
  • If you keep saying you can’t trust a man or trust a woman, you will always find someone in your life to hurt and betray you.
  • If you keep saying you can’t find a job, you will remain unemployed.
  • If you keep saying you can’t find someone to love you or believe in you, our very thoughts will attract more experiences to confirm your beliefs.

Turn your thoughts and conversations around to be more positive and power packed with faith, hope, love and action. Don’t be afraid to believe that you can have what you want and deserve. Watch your “Thoughts,” they become words; Watch your “Words,” they become actions; Watch your “Actions,” they become habits; Watch your “Habits,” they become character; Watch your “Character”, for it becomes your “Destiny” So…….To prevent any obstacles……. GET OUT OF YOUR OWN WAY! Enjoy every minute you live!!

via

 

Sometimes the hardest thing to do is get out of your own way. Life is not to be lived in a passive aggressive manner. Live it, love it, and earn it. You'll be thankful you did.

2011 Year In Review -Inspiring Moments of 2011

Courtesy of Yahoo..

Saturday, December 3, 2011

A hypnotic that awakens the comatose??

Wayne jumped out of bed and raced down to the driveway, where he knelt over his son’s limp frame and tried frantically to elicit a breath or a heartbeat. As he pumped Chris’s chest and scooped out the vomit that had collected in his mouth, Judy ran to the kitchen and steadied herself long enough to call for an ambulance.

Chris was 26. He had not been well. An A.T.V. accident the previous August left him with debilitating back pain that physical therapy did nothing to alleviate. His doctor had recently prescribed Oxycontin. His parents learned later that he had taken too much.

By the time the ambulance arrived, Chris’s heart had been still for at least 15 minutes. It took the paramedics another 15 to get it pumping again; even then, doctors had little hope he would survive. Brain cells begin dying off just five minutes after blood stops delivering oxygen. After 30 minutes, there is likely to be more dead tissue than living.

Nonetheless, the emergency-room staff members at the local hospital did their best. They hooked Chris up to a tangle of tubes and machines and injected him with drugs to stabilize his heart rate. Wayne and Judy watched helplessly from the hallway. After four hours, a doctor finally summoned them to a secluded corridor.

Chris was in a coma, the doctor said, and in all likelihood had suffered severe, irreversible brain damage. He was breathing only with the help of a ventilator and would probably have a series of heart attacks in the night.

“First they asked us to let them pull the plug,” Judy recalled one recent afternoon, as we sat in the living room of the Coxes’ house in a Memphis suburb. “Then they tried getting us to sign a do-not-resuscitate order.” Without one, the doctor explained, hospital staff would be forced to revive Chris each time he started slipping away, which could mean cracking his ribs and shocking him with electricity. Even if they managed to keep his body alive, what was left of his brain would surely die in the days ahead.

Wayne and Judy refused to sign. “This is not some dog we’re talking about putting down,” Wayne shouted. “This is our son.” Chris still lived with his parents. He was a good kid, a joker, but bashful, especially around girls. He liked playing basketball and fishing in the pond near his house. He was planning to take over the family repo business when Wayne retired in a few years. Before the A.T.V. accident, he’d never given them much trouble at all. He deserved every chance the hospital could give him.

The heart attacks never came. Four days later, Chris woke up.

It was not the awakening of Hollywood movies in which the patient comes to, just as he was, speaking full sentences and completely mobile. Three years later, Chris still cannot talk. Although he breathes on his own, his lungs battle a steady barrage of infections; a feeding tube provides all his sustenance, and his muscles have contracted into short, twisted knots. He can move only the slightest bit — his fingers and eyelids twitch, but his arms and legs remain mostly immobile — and his neck is not quite strong enough to hold up his head, which leans against a crescent-shaped support around his wheelchair headrest.

Still, Wayne and Judy say that his cognition is improving. On good days, they say, he can respond to basic commands — blink his eyes for yes, wiggle his finger for no, give a thumbs up when asked. Doctors agree that Chris has progressed beyond a vegetative state, to a hazy realm known as minimal consciousness. What that means — what it says about his experience of the world around him or his prospects for further recovery — is something they are still trying to figure out.

Jeneen Interlandi lives in New Jersey and writes frequently about science and medicine.

Editor: Vera Titunik

This is full of "what the.......?"

Interesting.