Wednesday, June 27, 2012

I wonder if the clothes in China say, 'Made around the corner.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Facebook is 1) An obsession. 2) A distraction. 3) A tracking device. 4) Where drama lives. 5) Everybodys diary
Cashiers are always checking me out !!!! ^-^

Monday, June 18, 2012

The secret to happiness, in life and in business....

Find something you love to do so much, you can’t wait for the sun to rise to do it all over again

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Every morning in Africa, a Gazelle wakes up. It knows it must run faster than the fastest lion or it will be killed. Every morning a Lion wakes up. It knows it must outrun the slowest Gazelle or it will starve to death. It doesn't matter whether you are a Lion or a Gazelle... when the sun comes up, you'd better be running.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Best way to get out of SMS/text conversation : "The message could not be delivered due to a temporary network setup error. Please try later. Error 2128-226110"

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

At the age of 20, we don't care what the world thinks of us; at 30, we worry about what it is thinking of us; at 40, we discover that it wasn't thinking of us at all.... at it goes on and on !!

Monday, June 11, 2012

What's In A Name?


That answer to that, would be...fish.  But we'll get to that in a minute.
This isn't even a Fin-nish story. It's Swedish, and has to do with the name of that fabulously popular group from the 1970s and 80s, called "ABBA", or sometimes "Abba".
All of the members of ABBA, had some experience with music prior to forming their own group.  Benny Andersson, and Bjorn Ulvaeus would cross paths in the late 1960s, and finding common interests, began writing songs together.  Each of them continued on with their own bands, and it would be Bjorn's group "The Hootenanny Singers" which brought him together with a young talent, Agnetha Faltskog.  They married in 1971, in Sweden's version of a celebrity ceremony.  Anni-frid Lyngstad would meet up and become a couple with Benny, and so the four came together, all of them musical, but going their own ways.
Benny and Bjorn's entry in the major Eurovision Song Contest in 1972, won them a third place.  With the feedback from that, they decided to take another crack at writing and this time performing their entry for 1973, a song titled "Ring, Ring", which again placed third.  But this time it was performed by the group "Bjorn, Benny, Agnetha and Frida" (Frida being Anni's nickname).  They went on to record a moderately successful album under the song title, which was a lot shorter than the group's name.  That was when Benny decided to shorten it to the first letters of their names: A, B, B, A.  Their entry in the contest for 1974, was the now famous "Waterloo", which won first place for ABBA.
But before taking the name on the road, they had to negotiate permission with a Swedish canning company of the same name...which sold fish.
My bank is the worst. They're charging me money for not having enough money in my account. Apparently, I can't even afford to be broke.

From Twigs to Toothbrushes


It was a long way from chewing twigs, to the first Oral-B toothbrush, created by Dr. Robert Hutson, a periodontist.
But 5000 years ago, twigs were just what ancient Egyptians used to clean their chompers. The slender tip of a tree branch was broken off, and then chewed until the end was frayed. This served as a brush to clean around their teeth, and had the benefit of being easy to find next time they needed a new one.
The first tool actually made in brush form for the teeth, originated in China, circa 1498A.D., when the bristles from a hog's neck, were embedded in handles of bone or bamboo. European adventurers brought the invention back to their home countries, where it seemed that horsehair replaced the pig bristles. It was a while catching on though, as those few who did practice dental care, generally used the "old-fashioned" Roman toothpick.
Not until 1938, when the Dupont Company invented nylon, would the modern toothbrush take the form of a plastic or wood handle with nylon bristles. In the 1940s, Hutson produced the Oral-B 60, so named for its 60 rounded, soft bristles. The company name was derived from "oral hygiene" with a "B" for "better".

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Customer Is King and King never bargain!

A Growing Problem


The number of births that occur in India each year is higher then the entire population of Australia.

China and India are two of the most populous countries on Earth, and have the fastest growing population numbers, a fact that has brought about some highly controversial practices in both countries.
India, with a population of just over one billion people, sees a birth rate of 2-3% per year, although the mean average has dropped over the last ten years. Still, that figure represents more new people each year, than live in all of Australia.
Part of the problem is that some 70% of the country's population is rural. That means farming for existence, and sons are highly desirable in order to provide labor, and security for parents in their old age. Many families will continue to have children until there are at least two sons, with women averaging 3.7 children each. Daughters are lost to a family when they marry, and thus of less value. Unfortunately, that has brought about a surge of infanticide in recent years, with estimations as high as 10,000 deaths of female infants every year. The average of female births to male births is dropping, with abortion and infanticide given as the reasons.
Only in one province, Kerala, which has a low birth rate, and also a low infant mortality rate, was the proportion of females to males, higher than anywhere else in India. It is also the province with the highest literacy rate.
Efforts directed at population control, are now targeting males in rural locations, partly because their literacy rate is higher on average than women, at 75% compared to 52%, and partly because contraception has become more acceptable in urban locales. Projects are now extending to the regions where population is rising faster, and where there is a significant number of educated males who will understand the consequences of a growing population problem. 
If you tell a lie, always rehearse it. If it don't sound good to you, it won't sound good to anybody.

Monday, June 4, 2012

All That Glitters Is Not Gold


The 1912 Olympics were the last Olympics to give out medals made entirely of gold.

The rewards from the modern Olympics are a far cry from the ancient games, where first prize was an olive wreath to wear, and hang outside your door afterwards, to signify a champion lived here. Now, the champion's face appears on almost every conceivable kind of advertising venue, because winning a gold medal is literally worth its weight in endorsements.
But the gold is no longer real gold. And even the first gold medals were silver. That's because in 1896, when the game were revived, gold was considered an inferior metal, and the first place winners received medals made of silver. That was changed to gold in 1904 at the St. Louis' games, but given the price and paucity, it was changed once more, and the last pure gold medals were given out in 1912.
Today, Olympic medals must meet stringent requirements for content and size, with some flexibility in design. A gold medal must be a minimum of just under 2 1/2 inches wide, and 1/8 of an inch thick. The main form must be made of 92.5 percent pure silver, coated with at least six grams of pure gold. Silver medals are made of the same grade of silver, and bronze is made of...well, bronze. 
The poor wish to be rich, the rich wish to be happy, the single wish to be married, and the married wish to be dead.