Is it important to be connected? Well, consider this: If Facebook were a country, it would have the sixth largest population in the world.
The truth is, we no longer live in a world of six degrees of separation. In fact, we're now down to only six pixels of separation, which changes everything we know about doing business.
This book integrates digital marketing, social media, personal branding, and entrepreneurship in a clear, entertaining, and instructive manner that everyone can understand and apply.
Through the use of timely case studies and stories, SIX PIXELS OF SEPARATION offers a complete set of the latest tactics, insights, and tools that allow you to reach a global audience and consumer base-and, best yet, you can do this pretty much for free. Digital marketing expert Mitch Joel unravels this fascinating world of new media-but does so with a brand-new perspective that is driven by compelling results. The smarter entrepreneurs and top executives are leveraging these digital channels to get their voice "out there"-connecting with others, becoming better community citizens, and, ultimately, making strategic business moves that are increasing revenue, awareness, and overall success in the marketplace-without the support of traditional mass media.
Six Pixels of Separation
The Solar Cooker Project
Women in Darfur are threatened by the simple task of leaving their refugee camp to gather firewood for cooking. The chances of their being attacked, raped or murdered are high.
The Solar Cooker Project protects women by allowing them to remain with their families and cook using solar cookers.
So, this project not only serves to protect women, but also provides them with income opportunities through manufacturing solar cookers, training others to use the cookers, and making carrying bags to increase the cookers life span. It gives the women a sense of pride to be able to contribute to their household.
This project is active in the e Iridimi, Touloum and Oure Cassoni refugee camps in Chad. Jewish World Watch plans to initiate this project in other refugee camps with the goal of reducing the number of crimes committed against refugee women.
A large number of organizations support this project.
A $30 contribution starts a family using two cookers.
Watch this video about the project.
http://solarcookerproject.org
About Other Charity Recommendations
The Smile Train
Water Projects
Solar Cooker Project
The Solar Cooker Project protects women by allowing them to remain with their families and cook using solar cookers.
So, this project not only serves to protect women, but also provides them with income opportunities through manufacturing solar cookers, training others to use the cookers, and making carrying bags to increase the cookers life span. It gives the women a sense of pride to be able to contribute to their household.
This project is active in the e Iridimi, Touloum and Oure Cassoni refugee camps in Chad. Jewish World Watch plans to initiate this project in other refugee camps with the goal of reducing the number of crimes committed against refugee women.
A large number of organizations support this project.
A $30 contribution starts a family using two cookers.
Watch this video about the project.
http://solarcookerproject.org
About Other Charity Recommendations
The Smile Train
Water Projects
Solar Cooker Project
Homes For Our Troops
At the end of year, like many of you, I look for good causes. Part of that search is no doubt connected to the end of the tax year (charitable deductions), and part of it is the holiday season, but I'd like to believe that there's more to it.
It has been a tough year, especially economically, for many people. This is the time of the year that I reflect on how grateful I should be for my own life situation.
My wife and I picked three causes to support this year. On this post, I'll write about one of those - Homes for Our Troops.
Homes for Our Troops is a national non-profit, non-partisan 501(c)(3) organization founded in 2004. They focus on helping our returning soldiers who have serious disabilities and injuries.
They assist severely injured Servicemen and Servicewomen and their immediate families by raising donations of money, building materials and professional labor and to coordinate the process of building a customized home that provides maximum freedom of movement and the ability to live more independently.
The homes provided by Homes for Our Troops are given at NO COST to the Veterans.
On their website, you can look to see their activities in your own state or region.
The American Institute of Philanthropy, one of the country’s premier charity watchdog organizations, has included Homes for Our Troops in their “Top-Rated Veterans & Military Charities” listing. Only 5 of the 32 Veterans charities rated by AIP are included in the Top-Rated Category.
About Other Charity Recommendations
The Smile Train
Water Projects
Solar Cooker Project
It has been a tough year, especially economically, for many people. This is the time of the year that I reflect on how grateful I should be for my own life situation.
My wife and I picked three causes to support this year. On this post, I'll write about one of those - Homes for Our Troops.
Homes for Our Troops is a national non-profit, non-partisan 501(c)(3) organization founded in 2004. They focus on helping our returning soldiers who have serious disabilities and injuries.
They assist severely injured Servicemen and Servicewomen and their immediate families by raising donations of money, building materials and professional labor and to coordinate the process of building a customized home that provides maximum freedom of movement and the ability to live more independently.
The homes provided by Homes for Our Troops are given at NO COST to the Veterans.
On their website, you can look to see their activities in your own state or region.
The American Institute of Philanthropy, one of the country’s premier charity watchdog organizations, has included Homes for Our Troops in their “Top-Rated Veterans & Military Charities” listing. Only 5 of the 32 Veterans charities rated by AIP are included in the Top-Rated Category.
About Other Charity Recommendations
The Smile Train
Water Projects
Solar Cooker Project
Blogger Includes Amazon Link To Funny Book From The Onion in Post
I always pick up a copy of the satirical newspaper, The Onion, when I see it. Unfortunately, I don't live in a hip enough area to find it very often, so I usually read the stories online.
Online is good though, because there is also Onion video news. But it's the headlines that grab my attention. That makes sense, since Onion editors start with the headlines and the stories are written to match the headline's humor.
The Onion's latest book release is Our Front Pages. It's a big book (really - more than a foot tall) with a big subtitle: "21 Years of Greatness, Virtue and Moral Rectitude" and headlines stolen from the pages of "America's Finest News Source."
Now really, - don't you want to read some of these stories?
Gay Couple To Add Exciting Big City Feel To Small Town
Vatican Employees Unable To Relax At Holiday Party With Pope Around
Field-Trip Mishap Fulfills Child's Dream To Be Oscar Meyer Wiener
Chipotle Employee Just Gave Guy In Front Of You More Rice
Hijackers Surprised To Find Selves In Hell
NPR Host Raises Voice
Factual Error Found On Internet
U.S. Vows To Defeat Whoever It Is We're At War With
New Solar System Discovered Four Feet From Earth
Hugging Up 76,000 Percent
Road-Kill Squirrel Remembered as Frantic, Indecisive
Two Dozen More Bodies Found In Lake Wobegon
Our Dumb World: The Onion's Atlas of the Planet Earth, 73rd Edition


The Onion: 2010 Calendar of the Planet Earth
Our Dumb Century: The Onion Presents 100 Years of Headlines from America's Finest News Source
Online is good though, because there is also Onion video news. But it's the headlines that grab my attention. That makes sense, since Onion editors start with the headlines and the stories are written to match the headline's humor.
The Onion's latest book release is Our Front Pages. It's a big book (really - more than a foot tall) with a big subtitle: "21 Years of Greatness, Virtue and Moral Rectitude" and headlines stolen from the pages of "America's Finest News Source."
Now really, - don't you want to read some of these stories?
Gay Couple To Add Exciting Big City Feel To Small Town
Vatican Employees Unable To Relax At Holiday Party With Pope Around
Field-Trip Mishap Fulfills Child's Dream To Be Oscar Meyer Wiener
Chipotle Employee Just Gave Guy In Front Of You More Rice
Hijackers Surprised To Find Selves In Hell
NPR Host Raises Voice
Factual Error Found On Internet
U.S. Vows To Defeat Whoever It Is We're At War With
New Solar System Discovered Four Feet From Earth
Hugging Up 76,000 Percent
Road-Kill Squirrel Remembered as Frantic, Indecisive
Two Dozen More Bodies Found In Lake Wobegon
Our Dumb World: The Onion's Atlas of the Planet Earth, 73rd Edition
The Onion: 2010 Calendar of the Planet Earth
Our Dumb Century: The Onion Presents 100 Years of Headlines from America's Finest News Source
Internet Archaeologist Finds Ruins of "Friendster" Civilization
An Internet archaeologist has found the ruins of a lost civilization known as "Friendster."
Check ou this video report.
Internet Archaeologists Find Ruins Of 'Friendster' Civilization
Check ou this video report.
Internet Archaeologists Find Ruins Of 'Friendster' Civilization
The Age of Wonder
Amazon.com has Oliver Sacks giving a guest review for The Age of Wonder, which makes me want to read it.
I am a Richard Holmes addict. He is an incomparable biographer, but in The Age of Wonder, he rises to new heights and becomes the biographer not of a single figure, but of an entire unique period, when artist and scientist could share common aims and ambitions and a common language--and together create a "romantic," humanist science. We are once again on the brink of such an age, when science and art will come together in new and powerful ways. For this we could have no better model than the lives of William and Caroline Herschel and Humphry Davy, whose dedication and scientific inventiveness were combined with a deep sense of wonder and poetry in the universe. Only Holmes, who is so deeply versed in the people and culture of eighteenth-century science, could tell their story with such verve and resonance for our own time.
I love Oliver Sacks's books too. He is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and lives in New York City, where he is a practicing neurologist.
Good Oliver Sacks Reads
- The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat: And Other Clinical Tales
- Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain, Revised and Expanded Edition
- Migraine
An Anthropologist On Mars: Seven Paradoxical Tales
- Awakenings
Cleaving
I always liked the word "cleave." It's what I used to call a contronym. Now, I find that it is referred to as an auto-antonym (sometimes spelled autantonym), or contranym. Either way, it's a word with a homograph (a word of the same spelling) that is also an antonym (a word with the opposite meaning). Basically, it's a word with multiple meanings, one of which is defined as the reverse of one of its other meanings.
Not to get too buried in language here, but true homographs are distinct words with different etymology (origins) which happen to have the same form. "Cleave" meaning "to separate" is from the Old English clēofen, while cleave meaning the opposite "to adhere" is from Old English cleofian, which was pronounced differently.


And all that is just a lead-in to a new book called Cleaving: A Story of Marriage, Meat, and Obsession
by Julie Powell. She's the blogger who cooked her way through Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking and got her own book and movie deal out of it.
After that success, her marriage is threatened by an insane love affair, and she decides to leave town and do what so many others have done in that situation - learn to be a butcher.
She finds a butcher shop (Fleischer’s) and learns how to break down a side of beef and "French" a rack of ribs (something Ms. Childs probably never did).
Then, banked by her previous success (or her publisher), she travels to find fellow butchers from South America to Europe to Africa.
What are the connections between mastering the art of hacking at meat and mastering your heart?
The book's subtitle is "A Story of Marriage, Meat, and Obsession." And cleave is a contronym, so...
It has gotten some harsh reviews harsh reviews and puzzled some readers - which, of course, makes me want to check out the book.
Her What Could Happen blog is at juliepowell.blogspot.com and her official site is at http://juliepowellbooks.com
Not to get too buried in language here, but true homographs are distinct words with different etymology (origins) which happen to have the same form. "Cleave" meaning "to separate" is from the Old English clēofen, while cleave meaning the opposite "to adhere" is from Old English cleofian, which was pronounced differently.
And all that is just a lead-in to a new book called Cleaving: A Story of Marriage, Meat, and Obsession
After that success, her marriage is threatened by an insane love affair, and she decides to leave town and do what so many others have done in that situation - learn to be a butcher.
She finds a butcher shop (Fleischer’s) and learns how to break down a side of beef and "French" a rack of ribs (something Ms. Childs probably never did).
Then, banked by her previous success (or her publisher), she travels to find fellow butchers from South America to Europe to Africa.
What are the connections between mastering the art of hacking at meat and mastering your heart?
The book's subtitle is "A Story of Marriage, Meat, and Obsession." And cleave is a contronym, so...
It has gotten some harsh reviews harsh reviews and puzzled some readers - which, of course, makes me want to check out the book.
Her What Could Happen blog is at juliepowell.blogspot.com and her official site is at http://juliepowellbooks.com
The Lovely Bones and Lucky
I'm curious to see the new film directed by Peter Jackson based on Alice Sebold's novel, The Lovely Bones
In the story, a 14-year-old girl who has been murdered watches over her family. She is also watching the person who raped, murdered and dismembered her. It sounds grim as a novel or film in this holiday season. The novel wasn't as depressing as one might expect. There were parts that are quite happy, hopeful and humorous.
The girl watches and is both protective of her family - wanting healing and wanting revenge. She tracks the investigation. She moves to and from "heaven" and even returns briefly to life in the body of a classmate. If this all sounds too Ghost Whisperer for you, don't be put off. It sounds that way in the 50 words-or-less summary, but it did not feel that way in the reading.
"These were the lovely bones that had grown around my absence: the connections — sometimes tenuous, sometimes made at great cost, but often magnificent — that happened after I was gone. And I began to see things in a way that let me hold the world without me in it. The events my death brought were merely the bones of a body that would become whole at some unpredictable time in the future. The price of what I came to see as this miraculous lifeless body had been my life."
Alice Sebold
A policeman investigating the case eventually tells her that a young woman had been murdered in the same place and so she should consider herself "lucky" - which Sebold uses as the book's title.
Lucky: A Memoir
Personally, I can't imagine laying out my life on paper in this kind of detail. After the rape, she becomes addicted to heroin. She reveals that the rape was her "first real sexual experience." And, though the book deals with rape as a social issue, it's her personal story that hit me in the face.
The Lovely Bones movie trailer
International Human Rights Day and Tibet
Today, December 10th, is International Human Rights Day - a day to take action for those who have been denied their human rights. Today also marks 20 years since His Holiness the Dalai Lama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of his tireless pursuit for a peaceful resolution to the Tibet issue.
Inside Tibet, the struggle for human rights and freedom continues. Just days ago, Tibetans in eastern Tibet made an emotional appeal to Chinese authorities to grant revered Buddhist leader, Tenzin Delek Rinpoche, a re-trial. He is currently serving a life sentence for a crime he did not commit. Read more: http://is.gd/5imMy
Please Take 5 Simple Actions for Human Rights in Tibet:
1. Send a Human Rights Day message to the Chinese government: http://actionnetwork.org/ campaign/rights
2. Call for the release of Tibetan heroes like Tenzin Delek Rinpoche and other Tibetan political prisoners: http://www.freetibetanheroes. org
3. Support Climate Justice for Tibetan Nomads and follow SFT's team at the Copenhagen Climate Summit.
Under the guise of environmental protection, Chinese authorities have displaced hundreds of thousands of Tibetan nomads off their traditional land. Speak out against this culturally and environmentally destructive policy: http://is.gd/5im6f
Follow our Copenhagen team – under the banner of "Tibet Third Pole" – on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/ TibetThirdPole and join the "Tibet Third Pole" Facebook fan page: http://www.facebook.com/ tibetthirdpole
Visit the blog where they will post daily videos, photos, and updates: http://www.tibetthirdpole.org/ updates-from-cop15
4. Vote in the Chase Challenge and help SFT win $25,000: http://www. studentsforafreetibet.org/ chase
The challenge ends at midnight tomorrow, Friday, December 11th and the 100 organizations with the most votes will each win $25,000. There's no donation needed, just the click of your mouse. http://studentsforafreetibet. org/chase.
5. Help "Put Tibet Back on the Map": http://www. puttibetbackonthemap.org
SFT has joined forces with the International Tibet Support Network to launch this unique initiative. By purchasing a "tile" on the online map of Tibet you will help to remove the wash of red color - symbolizing China's occupation - and reveal the vibrant and colorful map of Tibet hidden beneath.
Inside Tibet, the struggle for human rights and freedom continues. Just days ago, Tibetans in eastern Tibet made an emotional appeal to Chinese authorities to grant revered Buddhist leader, Tenzin Delek Rinpoche, a re-trial. He is currently serving a life sentence for a crime he did not commit. Read more: http://is.gd/5imMy
Please Take 5 Simple Actions for Human Rights in Tibet:
1. Send a Human Rights Day message to the Chinese government: http://actionnetwork.org/
2. Call for the release of Tibetan heroes like Tenzin Delek Rinpoche and other Tibetan political prisoners: http://www.freetibetanheroes.
3. Support Climate Justice for Tibetan Nomads and follow SFT's team at the Copenhagen Climate Summit.
Under the guise of environmental protection, Chinese authorities have displaced hundreds of thousands of Tibetan nomads off their traditional land. Speak out against this culturally and environmentally destructive policy: http://is.gd/5im6f
Follow our Copenhagen team – under the banner of "Tibet Third Pole" – on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/
Visit the blog where they will post daily videos, photos, and updates: http://www.tibetthirdpole.org/
4. Vote in the Chase Challenge and help SFT win $25,000: http://www.
The challenge ends at midnight tomorrow, Friday, December 11th and the 100 organizations with the most votes will each win $25,000. There's no donation needed, just the click of your mouse. http://studentsforafreetibet.
5. Help "Put Tibet Back on the Map": http://www.
SFT has joined forces with the International Tibet Support Network to launch this unique initiative. By purchasing a "tile" on the online map of Tibet you will help to remove the wash of red color - symbolizing China's occupation - and reveal the vibrant and colorful map of Tibet hidden beneath.
Footwear
Footwear - or not.
She said, "Wow, that's a surprisingly sexy photo."
I said, "You think so?"
Le Beaujolais Nouveau Est Arrive
The Beaujolais [BOE-zjoh-lay] Nouveau wine has arrived.
It is always released the third Thursday of November, regardless of the start of the harvest. Americans generally associate it with Thanksgiving and Christmas.
My wife got me started on it. Neither of us are wine snobs, and this Beaujolais is not for snobs anyway.It sells for under ten bucks.
The 2009 vintage is said to be the best vintage in 50 years due to perfect growing conditions in France.
Beaujolais is 34 miles long from north to south and 7 to 9 miles wide. There are nearly 4,000 grape growers who make their living in this pretty region just north of Lyon.
They pick all the grapes by hand. These are the only vineyards, along with Champagne, where hand harvesting is mandatory. Beaujolais grows lots of Gamay grapes (AKA Gamay noir). This is not white wine country. Beaujolais Nouveau can only be made from grapes coming from the appellations of Beaujolais and Beaujolais-Villages.
The wines are fruity and higher in acid - perfect to drink in their youth and well suited for food.
I suppose there are other labels, but we have been buying a few bottles of Georges Duboeuf Beaujolais Nouveau for the past 35 years to drink to end the year and start the year. It's a nice tradition.
Beaujolais Nouveau is meant to be drunk young, so finish it off before spring. They say that the excellent vintages (such as 2000 as 2009) can live longer - maybe until the next harvest.
I found a bottle of 2008 vintage in the basement this past week that had been forgotten. I guess 2008 was not an excellent vintage. Down the drain.
Lesson learned. Drink the 2009 for the holidays.
Serve it pretty cool (recommended 55 degrees Fahrenheit, but I like it colder) though I have read that it is "more refreshing and its forward fruit more apparent" when served at room temperature.
By the way, what IS "room temperature?" Remember, that term comes from a time when homes were not well heated or air-conditioned. So, we are talking 14-18 Celsius (about 57-64 for Americans).
Not sure about serving temperature? Err on the side of caution and serve the wine a little too cold. The wine warms up quickly in the glass and releases pleasing aromas as it does - no easy way to cool a wine served too warm when it's in your glass.
It is always released the third Thursday of November, regardless of the start of the harvest. Americans generally associate it with Thanksgiving and Christmas.
My wife got me started on it. Neither of us are wine snobs, and this Beaujolais is not for snobs anyway.It sells for under ten bucks.
The 2009 vintage is said to be the best vintage in 50 years due to perfect growing conditions in France.
Beaujolais is 34 miles long from north to south and 7 to 9 miles wide. There are nearly 4,000 grape growers who make their living in this pretty region just north of Lyon.
They pick all the grapes by hand. These are the only vineyards, along with Champagne, where hand harvesting is mandatory. Beaujolais grows lots of Gamay grapes (AKA Gamay noir). This is not white wine country. Beaujolais Nouveau can only be made from grapes coming from the appellations of Beaujolais and Beaujolais-Villages.
The wines are fruity and higher in acid - perfect to drink in their youth and well suited for food.
I suppose there are other labels, but we have been buying a few bottles of Georges Duboeuf Beaujolais Nouveau for the past 35 years to drink to end the year and start the year. It's a nice tradition.
Beaujolais Nouveau is meant to be drunk young, so finish it off before spring. They say that the excellent vintages (such as 2000 as 2009) can live longer - maybe until the next harvest.
I found a bottle of 2008 vintage in the basement this past week that had been forgotten. I guess 2008 was not an excellent vintage. Down the drain.
Lesson learned. Drink the 2009 for the holidays.
Serve it pretty cool (recommended 55 degrees Fahrenheit, but I like it colder) though I have read that it is "more refreshing and its forward fruit more apparent" when served at room temperature.
By the way, what IS "room temperature?" Remember, that term comes from a time when homes were not well heated or air-conditioned. So, we are talking 14-18 Celsius (about 57-64 for Americans).
Not sure about serving temperature? Err on the side of caution and serve the wine a little too cold. The wine warms up quickly in the glass and releases pleasing aromas as it does - no easy way to cool a wine served too warm when it's in your glass.
The region of Beaujolais was first cultivated by the Romans who planted the areas along its trading route up the Saône valley. From the 7th century through the Middle Ages, most of the viticulture and winemaking was done by the Benedictine monks. In the 10th century, the region got its name from the town of Beaujeu, Rhône and was ruled by the Lords of Beaujeu till the 15th century when it was ceded to the Duchy of Burgundy. The wines from Beaujolais were mostly confined to the markets along the Saône and Rhône rivers, particularly in the town of Lyon.
New Yorker Cartoons Animated
If you are a fan of the cartoons in The New Yorker, then you should check out the animated versions they offer online. They have been offered for a few years as video podcasts and as streamed videos.
newyorker.com/video
Here's a little study in relativity with Al Einstein.
newyorker.com/video
Here's a little study in relativity with Al Einstein.
Online-Only Catalogs
I like looking at the catalogs from Patagonia, even if the clothing is too expensive for me. Lots of companies have online catalogs along with their print ones. But we know that print is dead - or dying.
So, Patagonia has its first-ever online-only catalog. Great photography, videos and interactive product pages. And it happens to be their surf line catalog just in time for the big waves of winter.
Share the catalog electronically with friends http://www.patagonia.com/surfcatalog
Patagonia is also quite environmentally/socially conscious.
The Environmental Defense Fund's Paper Calculator is a cool tool that can show the resources they saved by not printing this catalog:
WOOD USE – 175 tons/1,222 trees
NET ENERGY – 2,805 million BTUs
GREENHOUSE GASES – 598,206 lbs. CO2 equivalent
WASTEWATER – 1,506,301 gallons
SOLID WASTE – 220,860 lbs.
Assicons
Everyone has seen those emoticons that indicate an emotion via a few keyboard characters.
:) for a smile and :( is a frown, with some variations like :-) or :-( or that winking ;-}
I got my first emails recently using "assicons" that represent various types of - well, asses.
I don't know that they will catch on as much as the other emoticons, but, just to keep you informed...
(_!_) a regular ass
(__!__) a fat ass
(!) a tight ass
(_*_) an ass hole
(_o_) an ass that's been around
(_x_) kiss my ass
(_X_) leave my ass alone
(_zzz_) a tired ass
(_E=mc2_) a smart ass
(_$_) has money coming out of his ass
(_?_) Dumb Ass
:) for a smile and :( is a frown, with some variations like :-) or :-( or that winking ;-}
I got my first emails recently using "assicons" that represent various types of - well, asses.
I don't know that they will catch on as much as the other emoticons, but, just to keep you informed...
(_!_) a regular ass
(__!__) a fat ass
(!) a tight ass
(_*_) an ass hole
(_o_) an ass that's been around
(_x_) kiss my ass
(_X_) leave my ass alone
(_zzz_) a tired ass
(_E=mc2_) a smart ass
(_$_) has money coming out of his ass
(_?_) Dumb Ass
American black ducks in NJ
American black ducks in the winter at Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge, New Jersey.
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