Archive for June 16th, 2007

June 16, 2007: 10:43 pm: adminUniversity of Security

Handy Tips

  • Compile a list of electricians with their names, contact numbers, addresses and operating hours. Locate those situated nearby and those which operate 24 hours.

  • Phone lines may not be affected when there is a power failure so make sure there is a non-cordless phone in the house. You see, once the electricity is cut off, that hi-tech, stylish and sleek cordless phone becomes utterly useless! But calls can still be made with a non-cordless phone.

  • Definitely a good idea to keep a charged cell phone handy.

  • Place a flashlight or tap-light near the entrance of the house or apartment, in case the blackout occurs late in the night and you have just reached the doorstep. Also place them near stairways, bathrooms, kids’ play room and in the kitchen.

  • Buy battery-less flashlights that light up by hand crank.

  • Store lots of candles, lighters and matches. They are the light saviours and they have no expiry dates!

  • Candles can be kept indefinitely in the fridge until a blackout occurs. The cold temperature can further harden the candle wax so that the candle can burn for an even longer period of time. Try to get good quality candles, i.e. candles that will not collapse but will hold their shapes and burn till the end.

  • Convert candle holders out of glass plates, jars or any piece of metal board/tray or unwanted metal cookwares.

  • Keep a small flashlight in the bag which will come in handy during an emergency like getting trapped in a dark confined space like the lift, public restroom, subway train or in a hotel room.

  • Wrist watches with bright back-lit lights or with illuminators might just prove themselves useful in a blackout.

  • Draw away curtains or blinds to allow daylight or street/building lights to pass through.

  • Install an emergency generator as a backup if certain critical electrical appliances must not come to a halt.

  • Connect up to a UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) to protect against any loss of important computer data. Always save your current working files every 5-10 minutes.

  • Make sure a battery-operated portable radio is working. It could be the only device to receive instructions if the blackout has struck the entire estate or beyond.

  • Understand that a blackout can happen anytime, anywhere to anyone. Do not get complacent. Got to be ready for it NOW.

Article link : http://www.tipsofallsorts.com/blackout.html

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: 10:41 pm: adminArts & Crafts

“Darkness”

Uneven … the glow

a glow … supposed

a tool shown to mystery guests

and traveling pests.
Unraveled in harvested moons
your tunes
wrestled tunes
yet oh … my captured wounds.

I wrap them around cellophane hearts

a tour … be proud

somehow lost in a crowd

glasses high

toast to the note-cards

that sort out my mind against hypocrisies

I sort out my mind … in the end

PS

There are days of unregistered rhymes

and they seem to be advancing upon undying darkness

“What changes us?”

What makes us decide ‘one day’…. that ‘this day’ we will do better?

‘This day’ we will smile on everything as if we were seeing it for the first
time.

‘This day’ we will take time out for our own selves.

‘This day’ we will climb that emotional mountain that seemed
inconceivable ‘yesterday’.

‘This day’ we ‘will’ do what we had only ‘hoped’ we would do ‘before’.

‘This day’ we will FLY.

BE PROUD!

“Now”

I seem to have new pathways to assemble.

The steam reaches out and irons out the discontentment of time.

I step past memories and longings and reach out.

Life is unclear
impossible to be real.

Days go by and I find myself in a new reality,

a reality of happy.

You lend me the fragrance of freedom,

the air of pause,

in the water and substance there is a tranquility I have never known.

My soldier of old,

my lament,

I am always so afraid they’ll take you from me.

I dare not completely touch today

or sleep and find you gone,

and learn you have never been with me at all.

So I smile on the pathway

maneuver my continence.

I cannot live in the shadow of regret

and not see what is right there in front of me.

This spirit being now and present, not meant to be over analyzed.

There are doors belonging to freedom

and they all have special handles.

I can decorate them, understand them, hold them, charm them,

or let them go.

“Tiny Remains”

Unconnected thoughts that ring in much decay,

where the survivors scramble and tears never end.

Emotions run high and moods decide,

generosity is a cure for strangers,

but you and I….. divide into equal parts,

and squabble over tiny remains.

“Sunsets”

She travels with magic on a mystical ride.

She walks in the moonlight

and covers my mind.

She travels the road down past the pines,

where the mist meets the morning

‘fore the river turns ice.

We gather up petals

from the flowers that have died.
She travels with magic

on a mystical ride,

pointing out sunsets

and ponies to ride.

So just see how it goes
how the magic unfolds

how the children you’ve known

lend out sea covered rhymes
still fasting
but no longer cold.

“Autumn Has Seasoned Me Well”

Content to be understood in a casual way and yet…

He was a most attentive healer.

Every space and corner he defined in me.

I so tastefully wore a crown.
No one around.
Stayed and stayed…

he remembered he had not seen me in full bloom.

All things considered I should have waited to hear the rest,

but patients gathered in the hallways,

wounds too deep to mind.

Who can contend with such a lover?
At least I know that I don’t heal well.
There were reprieves I had not considered,
but Autumn…

Autumn has seasoned me well.

“Break Not Your Heart”

a song:

1)

There will be times

and treasures I’ve known,

there will be rivers

melted with snow.

2)

There will be dreams

attached to autumn leaves,

there will be springtime

and reasons to flee.

Chorus:
And break not your heart

hold back the wounds

however inflicted

they were not meant for you.

3)

There will be seas

only airplanes and ships adorn
there will be silence

for a sorrow too worn.

4)
There will be sighs

as the ruler points wrong

yet… there will be comfort

in the rainbow of song.

Chorus

Break:

Time passes by

I plot to hear you call

and yet I know why

and have accepted it all.

Chorus

“Reality”

a song:

Magic motions used to set my soul ablaze,

until I noticed in the most spectacular form
that little heartbeats

are most easily swayed

and had most certainly swayed me.

My only restitutions being

the crudeness of reality.

A springboard to what I thought would be

the very end of me

turned out to be

the very depths of me.
Oh… unkind blow

vexation of my heart

the knife that penetrated ever so deeply

gave me reality.

“Before We Go”

(a poem for Diana and Robert)

The heros of selfish wounds
owned by summer

not forgotten by fall.

As silent as glances
down a long dark hall.

Their end is as painful as their deed,

chosen so hastily.
There are looks I’d like to share,

silences I would treasure.
There are smiles I’d like to say
silenced now forever.

Their children picked flowers at the neighbors

running across the street saying,

“Before we go, before we go.”
Heros are owned by children,
if they choose to remember them that way.

“The Hero Wore Black”

The hero wore black.

The echo bore gifts,

and no one knows

the broken hope

as much as you and I.

Shadows dancing

in the dark.

The honorable heartbeat

in the chest.

Do you know I hope for you?

Save hope for you?

“Miles Away”

a song:

Chorus:
It rains miles away, miles and miles away

It rains miles away, miles and miles away

1)

I don’t want to steal your dreams away.

I don’t want my presence to intrude…

on you.
I used a compass to find this place.

I used the moon to guide me through

your moods.

You say…

you’re only miles away.

2)
She smiled and said, “Well yes I know,

there’s an element that seems to grow,

in all of us.

I think you’ve learned

to talk very far.

You give the feeling that your sorrow never ends,

but it’s not as if the rain didn’t fall here too,
when it fell on you.”

Chorus

3)

There is an element of conscience,

that keeps blowing thru cool winds,

and I think if you don’t stop to listen,

I might lose before I win.

New things are hard to handle.

It’s unclear of what’s to gain,

But after all

its’ like you say

you’re only miles away.

Chorus

About Me
Kathy Ostman-Magnusen
Hawaii, United States

Aloha! I am a figurative artist and Illustrator. If you check out my website
you will see that I am very prolific in oils. My paintings are collected
worldwide. I also do sculpture; images available upon request. I have
illustrated for Hay House Inc. , Neil Davidson, who was considered for
the Pulitzer Prize in feature writing, and several other publications. I also
enjoy story writing and poetry. All of the paintings,stories and poems on
my site and blogs are written by me. Website: http://www.kathysart.com and
one of my blogs: http://kathysart.blogspot.com/
Aloha!

: 7:43 pm: adminUniversity of Security

A week or so ago, I received an inquiry from a man in Indonesia about buying multiple copies of certain items on my website. I immediately suspected fraud, so I explained that I only had one piece of each. The man, who wrote impeccable English, said that was fine. I asked why he wanted to buy so much money’s worth of jewelry (it was around $250). He said it was for his wife and daughters.

He then asked if he could email me the billing and shipping info instead of using
the catalog. I told him the catalog was better, since it was more secure, and figured
if he was a scammer, it would be too much work for him.

No such luck. He was unusually together. He placed an order for the same items he
had asked about (most scammers forget). I started allowing myself to feel happy
about such a large order and the money that would bring. At the same time, I
started researching shipping to Indonesia, as well as fraud protection, and found
that a) Indonesia is second only to Nigeria in credit card fraud levels, and b) jewelry
is prohibited to ship to Indonesia.

Per suggestions on another site, I asked the customer for a CVV number, the bank
listed on the credit card, and the customer service number on the card. He sent me
the CVV and customer service number. He also said he had just received a diamond
ring sent to him, so he didn’t think the prohibition existed.

Today I started checking. I called the customer service phone number he gave me; it
was for a Canadian bank, and the number didn’t belong to one of their cards. The
fishy smell grew stronger.

I then contacted an American bank to find out where the number originated. They
gave me the
runaround for a while until someone there gave me the number for Visa
International, 800-847-2911, since the card number started with a 4. Visa
International told me which bank to call.

When I finally got to the right bank, and told them I was a merchant checking on
fraud, they confirmed my suspicions. The card was at an American address, and it
had no other suspicious charges on it. I asked if there were any tiny charges, like for
penny amounts. Indeed there were. This part is important!

In Indonesia, they are very sophisticated; one of the ways they get credit card
numbers is to run random computer-generated numbers with expiration dates until
they get some that go through. They put through charges for tiny amounts that
people won’t bother to contest, and if the charge goes through, they know it’s good.
So do watch out for penny amounts showing up on your credit card bills.

I asked the woman to check the CVV number as well, and she said it did not check
out. So the charge would not have gone through anyway, but I feel better having
checked, even if it took way too much time.

Lesson: the scammers are getting more sophisticated all the time. They can also
read materials on the internet that give warning signs about scammers. So they are
trying to avoid some of the more obvious signs. If it sounds too good to be true, it
probably is!

Author Susan Midlarsky of Aspiring
Arts handcrafts jewelry with stones that harmonize well and are beneficial to
the human body, color combinations that are connected to refinement, and
sometimes offerings from nature. She has also recently started making glass beads;
you can see her progress at her online blog. Susan loves the magical glow people feel upon finding
a piece of jewelry that is exactly right for them.

: 7:10 pm: adminUniversity of Security

All of us at Vertex are interested in new developments in surveillance. We try to look at new technology and new equipment and systems as they come out, and we keep an interested eye on new applications for existing security systems technology.

We’re also active proponents of using technology as a tool to improve safety, whether it’s that of your family and home – the people and things that matter to you – or your business. Private property is one of the keystones of our nation’s heritage, and we think back fondly to the old saying, “A man’s home is his castle.” Protecting it and the people who live there is the most natural impulse of humankind, though from time to time it’s good to remember the origin of the phrase.

Used to be in Merrye Olde England that the King could do no wrong. Used to be that people who lived in “the realm” were subjects, not citizens, meaning they were subject to the rules set by the king, dukes, earls, and other appointed or self-appointed rulers. Those guys (and the occasional queen or duchess) had complete rights over their subjects. They owned the land, they took a portion of its produce, they could take the men as soldiers and the women as – well, whatever men wanted the women for – and they could demand that the people house and feed their royal troops. Nobody had the right to keep anyone who outranked him out of his house.

One of the happy results of the American Revolution that freed us from the whims of monarchy and the vestiges of feudalism was that the founding fathers insisted on the Fourth Amendment – to protect every American citizen from being subject to the power of the state. As a US citizen, you can’t be forced to allow troops – whether it’s the Army, the Marines, or your local police department – to enter your home and search it, UNLESS they’ve gone to court to get a warrant listing probable cause and the reasons for the search.

That’s because, in America, it’s not just the King and the aristocracy who live in castles – every man’s home is his castle here.

The point of all this is that we Americans, from the founding of our nation, have insisted on the right to be left alone. And when we own (or rent, through a lease-hold) private property, we have the same right to protect it as an earl does. Though not many of us have a castle keep or a moat, we do have peepholes, police locks, intercom systems, hired guards (doormen), and security webcams and suchlike.

That right to be left alone, and the related right to protect ourselves and our loved ones and property, derive from our forefathers’ decision to LIMIT the rights of anybody else to intrude on us, physically or otherwise. You don’t have to let anyone into your home (without a warrant), and it’s nobody’s business what you do while you’re inside it (unless it’s illegal, like making bombs, in which case they still need a warrant to come in and catch you). But otherwise, it’s nobody’s business what books you read, what TV shows you watch, what endearments you use to your spouse or significant other. In other words, we as Americans are at complete liberty to put a spy cam on our property facing out, but the government – the state, the king, the whoever it may be – has no liberty to put a spycam outside facing in (again, without probable cause and a warrant).

That’s why we sometimes are bothered by the growing trend towards public surveillance, like the town in Alaska that we reported on a few weeks ago. And that’s why we have mixed feelings about the following news tidbit.

The Associated Press reported on Thursday, June 8, that Texas Gov. Rick Perry “wants to round up a virtual border posse through webcams.” The plan, which would cost about $5 million, is to cover the Texas-Mexico border by live video cameras placed on private land. The state would get permission from landowners. The video would be shown live on the Internet, allowing anyone who has a computer to keep an eye on the border. There would be a toll-free hotline number to call to report border crossings or anything else they see that strikes them as suspicious.

While this might sound like a concept out of “1984,” the fact is that the US Border Patrol already has cameras all along the Mexican border. Those, however, feed only to law enforcement, not the public. The head of the Border Patrol employees’ union, T. J. Bonner, is concerned that by feeding the videos live to the Internet, the number of calls coming in could overwhelm the Patrol’s ability to respond. He also was skeptical that the cameras would remain undiscovered by smugglers and immigrants.

And while the Border Patrol Chief, David Aguilar, expressed willingness to meet with the governor and “align our forces,” he pointed out that the state’s plan was devised independently.

That story suggests to me that collectively the American people want to protect ourselves the same way individuals want to – to keep intruders out by keeping an electronic eye on them. Nothing wrong with that, in principle, but it does make me wonder: if we reach the point at which all our streets, intersections, borders, post offices, toll booths, highways, and every other public place in the United States is watched by a camera, will we have started pointing the camera in at ourselves? Is there, in other words, a place, or moment, where being out in public is still private? If a married man goes to Central Park to meet with his mistress, knowing that his wife is at work on Long Island, is it appropriate that – in theory – she could later scan on-line videos and review his every movement from the time he leaves his office to the time he holds his tryst?

I think about some of the situations in which many of us would hate to be videotaped “in public” when we think it’s private – the guy who steps behind a tree when nature calls, or the middle aged lady picking her nose, to take two fairly innocuous and mundane examples. Would we want the police, or the Border Patrol, or “the gummint,” as they call it in Texas, watching while we unzip?

So, while we’re all in favor of you and your neighbors and your company colleagues utilizing the best state-of-the-art equipment to protect your own privacy and property and family, we have a few reservations about invading everyone else’s. There have certainly been enough abuses already reported to make us cautious about the extent we’re willing to go with public surveillance.

Originally published HERE

Andrew Reed grew up in Asheville, North Carolina. He moved to New York in 1970, and following his undergraduate studies at Columbia University he became a marketing specialist with National Broadcasting and other companies. He returned to the WNC mountains in 1993, where he works as an editor, freelance writer, and marketing consultant. He operates a web-based editing and marketing company, http://www.myowneditor.com, and specializes in writing for web sites.

: 6:58 pm: adminLiving With Software

Create professional quality documents with Microsoft Word by taking advantage of the software’s exceptional formatting tools.

The cardinal rule of word processing should be followed by students and businessmen alike: “Key in your data first, format last.”

Why? Efficiency – by typing up your 30 page research paper, 20 page report or two page memo, you will be able to focus on content without the distraction of stopping, highlighting (selecting your text) and applying formatting on the fly. Since Microsoft Word is designed with powerful formatting tools, you will be able to apply paragraph and character formats later with simple clicks of your mouse. Save valuable time by sticking to this rule.

Formatting when used in this context is simply the appearance of your text, e.g., font size, bold, italics, underlines, color etc.

The following guide should be followed AFTER you’ve completed your deliverable, e.g., essay, thesis paper, or letter. Once it’s been proof read, you can then take full advantage of MS Word’s formatting tools.

Let’ say that you plan on placing emphasis on specific words throughout your document using an underline, making the word(s) bold or a different color. MS Word will speed up this task by enabling you to format once and then to reapply it over again with a click of your mouse.
You can use Format Painter on the Standard toolbar to apply text formatting and some basic graphics formatting, such as borders and fills.
Note If you don’t see the Standard toolbar (Standard toolbar: A toolbar that performs some of the most common tasks in a Microsoft Office application, such as opening, saving, and printing files.), on the View menu, point to Toolbars, and then click Standard.

1. Select the text or graphic that has the formatting that you want to copy.


2. On the Standard toolbar, click Format Painter . The pointer changes to a paintbrush icon.
To apply formatting to more than one block of text or graphic, double-click Format Painter.


3. Click the text or graphic that you want to format.

If you’re creating a lengthy document, e.g., term paper, thesis or newsletter you may want to incorporate Word styles. A style is a set of formatting characteristics that you can apply to text, tables (table: One or more rows of cells commonly used to display numbers and other items for quick reference and analysis. Items in a table are organized into rows and columns.), and lists in your document to quickly change their appearance. When you apply a style, you apply a whole group of formats in one simple task.
For example, instead of taking three separate steps to format your title as 16 pt, Arial, and center-aligned, you can achieve the same result in one step by applying the Title style.
The following are the types of styles you can create and apply:

1. A paragraph style controls all aspects of a paragraph’s appearance, such as text alignment, tab stops, line spacing, and borders, and it can include character formatting.


2. A character style affects selected text within a paragraph, such as the font and size of text, and bold and italic formats.

If the Styles and Formatting task pane (task pane: A window within an Office application that provides commonly used commands. Its location and small size allow you to use these commands while still working on your files.) is not open, click Styles and Formatting on the Formatting toolbar (toolbar: A bar with buttons and options that you use to carry out commands. To display a toolbar, click Customize on the Tools menu, and then click the Toolbars tab.).

1. In the Styles and Formatting task pane, click New Style.


2. In the Name box, type a name for the style (style: A combination of formatting characteristics, such as font, font size, and indentation, that you name and store as a set. When you apply a style, all of the formatting instructions in that style are applied at one time.)


3. In the Style type box, click Paragraph, Character, Table, or List to specify the kind of style you are creating.


4. Select the options that you want, or click Format to see more options.


By utilizing styles throughout your document, you will be able to create professional indexes or a table of contents (TOC) more effectively. The biggest benefit of applying styles in your document is consistency. Main topics, headings all the way down to sub-topics will have identical formats. Moreover, your table of contents will become dynamic, i.e., if you add or delete pages to your document, the TOC can update with the click of the mouse without having to manually renumber your pages.

Anthony M. Magno, president of MMC, Inc., has 10+ years experience developing and implementing successful corporate learning, leadership and development programs. Learn about getting a Free Needs Analysis at: http://www.MagnoConsulting.com Anthony can be reached at 949.350.2872 (e-mail: amm@magnoconsulting.com)

: 4:30 pm: adminArts & Crafts

Something that you hear
It is a common phrase
Take a look back in time
Because “Those were the days”
When tin baths were used
One washed, who was next?
Hand-me-down clothes
No talk about sex
“Run for the shelter!”
The siren is crying
Hiding in the darkness
Whilst the soldiers are dying
No video players
Hardly ever saw a car
No expensive posh pets
Just a tadpole in a jar
There were marbles and jacks
Porcelain dolls, hopscotch too
A seat in the flea pit
Cost a shilling or two
Mrs Dales Diary on the wireless
Bag of coal for the fire
Squeeze the washing through a mangle
To the laundrette for a washer and dryer
Chicken once a year at Christmas
Plain crisps with a bag of salt
There were steam trains and trams
Kodak box cameras – front doors without bolts
Black polish on hobnailed boots
No GCSE’s, for us – eleven plus
Pack of ten woodbines
A conductor on the bus
A guinea or a threpence
Quill pens you dipped in ink
Best clothes on a Whitsun
Pigtails with ribbons of pink
An annual trip to somewhere
It was all we could afford
Bag of chips and some scrumpy
We were happy, never bored
No talk of the ozone layer
We had lots of the sun’s rays
Families were big and we were poor
We didn’t care because those were the days!

Age: 35
Gender: female
Astrological Sign: Gemini
Zodiac Year: Dog
Industry: Manufacturing
Occupation: Self Employed Manufacturer ~~ & e-shop owner
Location: Bristol : England : United Kingdom
About Me:
I was born in May 1970 and although the default setting here has made my starsign ‘Gemini’ it is in fact Taurus. I have had birth charts done in the past and i know that Taurus is the correct sign.

“When your science teacher smashed a frozen rose with a hammer, did you warm the petals to bring them back to life?”
Yes, I did!!!

: 4:02 pm: adminThe Technology Way

A greatly overlooked element of owning a PDA is that you actually need to take care of them if you want them to last. For most people this will mean two things – getting some software protection for your PDA and getting it a physical case to stop it getting knocked around.

As everyone knows, desktop and laptop computers need to be protected with firewalls and antivirus software. With so much malware, spyware and adware around it is pretty much a necessity. Unfortunately the same thing has to be done for your PDA. A good money saving tip is to search for software that can be used on both your computer and your PDA. There are tons of options available with Avast4 PDA Edition and Airscanner software both being very popular choices for protecting PDAs. Installing this software should be very high on your agenda when getting a new PDA as an unsecured device is just as vulnerable to attack as an unsecured PC.

The other thing you will need to consider is some physical protection for your PDA. The fact is that PDAs will get knocked around a lot in general use (even more if you are a PDA addict!). For this there are luckily an incredible amount of choices. You can go with a soft case or a hard case. The choice should really depend on how heavily you use the PDA – with heavier users perhaps being well-advised to stick with hard cases. Soft cases are fine for general users, but obviously they will not stand up to the same level of abuse as a hard case. Of course having a cool looking case is important too! Luckily there are no shortage of funky cases either!

By protecting your PDA both physically and from a software point of view you will extend its effective life significantly. As with any investment it is wise to protect it and get your money’s worth!

Rob Wood runs a PDA Accessory website at http://pda-assistant.info

: 3:42 pm: adminArts & Crafts

While some collectors look for only coins of value, misprints, and oddities, the resulting collections tend to become an investment hidden away in a safe or an attic.

The world coin collector is more a person who is interesting in building an intriguing collection based more on geography, gathering coins from every country, or from each mint. The focus is more on creating a structured set and can be geared toward many different interests, ie. Animal coins of Europe, Silver coins of the world, North American coins sorted by year, ect… The point is to create a ‘show piece collection’ rather then just for monitary value.

Collecting world coins is a great starting point for children due to many inexpensive currencies. They can be found in penny jars, at banks, coin/jewelry shops, or just walking down the street.

If you do any world traveling, visit a local bank and get a set of local coins at face value. When friends and reletive travel, let them know you are collecting, and that you will buy any coins they bring back, or that they make a great inexpensive souvinier.

Many hobby shops carry display cases to pretect and show off your collection, and specific collector cases such as for the new US quarters, and yearly pennies, nickles and dimes can sometime be found at your local Target or Walmart.

A good way to find more information and meet other collectors is simply searching the net for collecting forums and blogs, try the world coin collecting blog, or stop by Ebay and see what’s up for auction–ebay.

Adam Kirby
Avid collector of coins, stamps, and Disney merchandise since 1983 :)
world coin collecting blog
world coin collecting

: 3:16 pm: adminArts & Crafts

With the name of poet Sukanta Bhattacharya the first thing that comes into my mind is “Ranar,” the famous poem. I read it first in my class five Bengali text book. The poem was later sung as a song by Hemanta Mukhopaddhay.

Shukanta was born in Calcutta in 1926. By the time he grew up Second World War was going on and the heat of the war was also felt in the British ruled Bengal. It was a crucial time in the history of Bengal. The anti British movement was going on and also the economy of Bengal was in a very bad condition which resulted in a man made famine in 1943. Sukanto was born, observed and depicted the problems of society and suffering of people of that time. Sukanta during his school life became involved into leftist political movement. He was deeply influenced by Marxist thoughts and ideals.

In his poems he described the contemporary social problems such as famine, war, suffering of poor people especially farmers and day laborers. During the famine of 1943 he became a relief worker for the peasants who came to calcutta. He also worked with jute mill trade organizations. Sukanta died of tuberculosis when he was only twenty one years old. Within such a short span of time he wrote many poets and plays. Some of his works are Chhadpatra (1947), Purbabhas (1950), Mithekada (1951), Abhiyan (1953), Ghum Nei (1954), Hartal (1962), Gitiguchchha (1965).

In my writing I want to talk about two of his famous poems and they are my most favorite as well. The first is “Chhadpatra,” a poem where the poet talks about an infant who has just taken birth and declaring his arrival through crying. The poet says that the baby has come to this world and now we have to make place for this baby. The poet says that some times the baby is crying, sometimes laughing and making noise but nobody understands it. The people are getting irritated but the poet understands his language. It is the hope of a new world, a new place. The people will die and this new born baby will take their place and in this way the cycle of human life will move forward. Here the poet is actually referring to the contemporary condition of his time war, piece, famine and instability in life. The poet did not lose his faith on human being. He hopes that the next generation will learn from the faults of their elders and try to make the world a better place. The new born baby is that sign of hope.

Another poem is “Ranar”. It is the story of a simple mail man or Daak Harkara. In those days the communication system was not very developed. The function of the mailman is to move letters and money orders and other important messages from one post-office to another post-office. This was a very tiring job and risky as well. The mail man has to go long distance and work at night. There are dacoits and muggers hiding on the way. Ranar is such a mail man who risking his life everyday carries important letters and money for people. Ranar is a very poor person. He carries letter for every body but there is no body who wants to know about him. He lives from hand to mouth. Ranar here is the representative of the labor class. The poet here depicts the suffering of those poor people who goes unrecognized but whose hard works contribute to the human society.

Both of these poems are very neat and well written. They are charged with highly emotional words. Both poems focus on the same subject a new dawn of human society a ray of hope. The hope of a new world where people will not oppress or destroy each other. It will be a world free of war, disease and famine. The new born child, and Ranar are the messenger of that new world.

S M Mehdi Hasan is finishing his BA in English literature from a University in Bangladesh. He writes for http://write-translate.blogspot.com/

: 1:34 pm: adminLiving With Software

The textile and Fashion industries are the second largest industrial sector in the world, second only to the food industry. As in any high volume sector, the textile and fashion industries include a large variety of sub sectors: from elite fashion designers in Europe and the United States to mass production sewing workshops in India and China, from exclusive car upholstery designers to bedding products manufacturers etc.

Given the fact that a mere 30% of textile and fashion designers and manufacturers use computer aided design (CAD) software for the design process, these sectors hold substantial market growth potential in coming years.

When you keep in mind that the other 70% still work in a completely manual process using scissors and cardboards, there is a great deal of operational and production effectiveness this industry still has to achieve in order to catch up to its complementary industries (car, aircraft, elite fashion etc.).

Given the fact that all these factories with non-computerized work processes do use different software solutions for other processes, a non-dependent software solution is necessary – if only for its hardware flexibility and the abilities to fit into any existing or newly acquired hardware.

There are a few fashion design software firms who have picked up that flag, and now make software solutions that are easier to implement. Hopefully this process in which fashion design software companies have made a step towards their clients, will make the switch to computer aided design in the fashion and textile industries an easier and faster one.

Michal Moreno is a copywriter who writes for OptiTex™ Fashion design software, which specializes in the development of innovative, easy-to-operate, 2-D and 3-D CAD/CAM Fashion Design software.
Michal is also a project manager at Moreno’s Inernet marketing Experts
http://www.optitex.com