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Dec 7, 1941 - Things were so different then. Right?

Filed under: Strictly Personal

Dec
7
2007

Posted by Scott Clark @ 11:15 am | Make a Comment  

Take Apart: Great Rainy Day Activity for Children of Geeks

Filed under: Hardware, Just for Fun

Dec
3
2007

The weather was crappy this last weekend, we were all a bit under the weather, and I wanted to leave the TV and video games turned off.  So headed into the electronics graveyard and pulled some CDROM drives.  And the fun begins.

Those old electronics parts are fun to disassemble, and it is a terrific teaching experiment for kids. But the key to me is that it takes the “mystery” of out technology. I see that as one of the major obstacles to the professional advancement of so many out there. “I don’t like computers” or “I don’t understand those things” is such a common excuse for people who are stuck in today’s economy. Get a small electronics screwdriver set before you start.

I don’t have an agenda with the kids. They can stop whenever they want. I don’t do lectures. I just answer questions. Like… what a belt drive is for. What’s amazing is how many questions there are. It’s a terrific bonding experience.

In many cases, you should seek out a recycling solution for working computers. I know which parts are going to be useful and which are not, and if they ever get a decent recycling program here in Kentucky for PCs you bet I’ll participate! As for now, they want you to take stuff for >1 hour drives unless you live in Louisville. Someone chime in if I missed something.

If you have good stuff to get rid of, use a Manufacturer’ Take-Back Program

Dell Corp. - Dell Recycling
Gateway Corp. - Trade-In Program
HP/Compaq - HP Planet Partners
IBM Corp. - IBM PC Recycling Service for individuals and businesses.
Toshiba - Trade-In and Recycling Program

Oh yeah, don’t forget. Some things have hazardous materials in them. especially monitors and batteries (yes, even flat screens.) Other things are sharp and so forth. So use common sense in what you take apart. Look online for information about this. And never, ever break hard plastic or do any hammering without safety glasses on. This you knew, but I had to say it. Be smart about this stuff. And if you’re smart enough to do this with your kids, you’re smart enough to know that little bitty parts do not belong in toddlers’ bellies, right?

Posted by Scott Clark @ 11:19 am | Comment (1)  

Hell Yeah, I’m Thankful

Filed under: Strictly Personal

Nov
22
2007

Every client could fire me, Google could ban me, My computers could fry, and my Digg friends could bolt. It wouldn’t matter when you got this.

 

Happy Thanksgiving

 

Thanks for the comments on my Thanksgiving Theme everyone!
Here are a few others, along with some links to Thanksgiving-related stuff from SEO Roundtable.

Postscript re photo above:  Yep, she just claws her way up the door frame anytime she wants.   When I look for her around the house, I look left, right, down and up.

Posted by Scott Clark @ 11:29 am | Comments (2)  

African Dolls A Tiny Step in Overcoming Racial Stereotypes?

Filed under: Ideas, Strictly Personal

Nov
21
2007

From an article on Final Call: African Doll

Two dolls sit on the table, one Black, and One White. Every feature other than race is identical. The reassuring female voice asks the preschool-aged Black Girl a question “Can you show me the doll that looks bad?” She chose the Black doll over a White one that is identical in every respect except complexion. “And why does that look bad?” “Because she’s Black,” the little girl answers emphatically. “And why is this the nice doll?” the voice continues. “Because she’s White.” “And can you give me the doll that looks like you?” The little girl hesitates for a split second before handing over the Black doll that she has just designated as the uglier one.

New research has been released lately.

The Pew Research Center finds that 67% of black men and 74% of black women think rap music is a bad influence on black America. In fact, 59% of black men and 63% of black women think the whole hip-hop industry from fashion to attitude is detrimental to African-American progress in the US.

The proportion of young black people in the 18-29 age group who condemn the current media images of black people is 31 percent — higher than the 25 percent of blacks between the ages of 30-49, and the 17 percent of blacks in the 50-64 age group with similar disdain for black images in the media.

Similarly, when asked if the portrayal of black people on television and in the movies is harmful, it is young black people who agree most. More than half of 18- to 29-year-old African Americans agree that black people are presented in a negative way in popular media. 50% of black people ages 34-49 agree. White and Hispanic Americans agree, too. The Pew poll finds 64% of whites and 59% of Hispanics agree on the damaging impact of hip hop (including the one writing this blog post.

The full report from Pew is here.

While hardly as sophisticated as the testing that Malcolm Gladwell refers to in “Blink” the results are more than troubling. Many think that this comes from subtle cultural clues, such as microaggressions.

But one must be careful about these surveys, as well as experiments like the one with the little girl. Since they had to explain much during the survey, did they answer with their hearts? Did she?

Since the little girl anticipated being asked “why” did she automatically go for the answer that would be easiest to explain (in terms of forming an explanation, not in explaining society.)
This scrutiny of such results is frequently discussed by Gladwell. If you’ve not read “Blink” you simply must.

Gladwell on Oprah: “Those kinds of snap decisions that make up so much discrimination or … our thoughts and feelings, they’re a product of the worlds we live in,” Malcolm says. “And if you live in a world, as we do, where you … turn on the television and you see a TV show and the crack dealer’s always a black guy and the judge is always a white person … those images start to matter. They start to change the way the software in your head works. And that’s regardless of what race you are.

One of my clients has drawn my attention back to the split-second racial stereotype issues in recent weeks. The maker of the Eithidolls has an African Doll perfectly suited for African American Girls and other races too! Everything about it is in support of African micro-industry, fair trade, and authenticity. The story of Makeda, Queen of Sheba is inspiring and perfect bedtime material. It won’t change the world alone, but it’s nice to see a positive step. If my girls weren’t bursting at the seams with such toys I’d definitely have one here.

I worry that lots of people, especially white people, avoid the truly extraordinary products if they must explain their purchases to others.  If you buy a black doll for a white girl, you must explain yourself to many in our culture.   That should not be.

I came across these links related to this Topic. I hope you enjoy them.

Kwanzaa Kidz
Offers African centered childrens products and online games that educate and entertain.

A Caramel Kids eStore
A Caramel Kids eStore is one of the best multicultural e-Stores for African American,.

Dolls Like Me: Multicultural Dolls
Toy store featuring African American, Asian, Biracial, and Latino dolls and puppets.

Street Legends Ink
Hip-Hop Store specializing in High Quality Urban Comics and collectible toys.

Black Toys and Games
Find websites that showcase Black - African - Ethnic Toys and Games.

Queens of Africa Project
The Queens of Africa Project

Tyrone Geter
Dolls by one of the curators of Ponder Gallery at Benedict College, the fourth large HBCU (Historical Black Colleges and Universities) in the United States

The African Queen
Photos of an amazing African Queen Doll

Kwanzaa
A Great Page of Information

Kwanzaa - A Celebration of African Culture
All About The Holiday

Jasmyne Cannick
A Powerful, Well-Written Blog that digs into issues that are dividing us. Lots of thoughtful commentary. Allow some time to go through her posts.

Kwanzaa on Second Life

eShopAfrica
African Fair Trade


PLEASE DIGG THIS STORY

Posted by Scott Clark @ 2:53 pm | Comment (1)  

My Street’s On Fire! [pic] (fall color)

Filed under: Strictly Personal

Nov
17
2007


Ashland Park, Lexington KY - Autumn 2007

Posted by Scott Clark @ 5:06 pm | Make a Comment  

Migraine Headache Cure (for me at least)

Filed under: Strictly Personal

Oct
26
2007

Well, it’s not a “TOTAL” migraine cure, but damn close - for me. I wanted to share this online in case others might find success. My history:

Average Migraines Per Month:

Month Severe Migraines
June 13
July 14
August 12
September 2 *
Oc 2

“Severe” meaning that I had to stop whatever I was doing until it lifted..

*The only change:

Shifting from Equal (aspartaime - Phenylalinine, Methanol, and Aspartic Acid) to Spenda (sucralose) sweetener (or plain sugar.) 100% of the time.

Diet Coke with Splenda is the main thing that I did to cure my migraines, and I drink Ale-8-One when I want a small change (it’s a Kentucky thing.) I talked with a representative at Coke about it and they told me this wasn’t selling well (thus the difficulty getting it in some cities.)

Coke may Kill This Drink….Click here to tell Coke to keep carrying it.

I hope this helps you.

Posted by Scott Clark @ 11:09 am | Make a Comment  
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