Archive for June, 2006

24
Jun

DETROIT ELECTRONIC MUSIC FESTIVAL 2006 PICZ

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Uncategorized

as promised……and yes i know that some pictures came out like the poo, but some did not……..so blah! (i hate using a flash, and i always attempt the impossible without a tripod…..)

i especially didn’t get as many pictures of artists as I wanted, but I simply could not get close enough to get good, clean pictures…..which sucked, especially being that i carried that damn camera everyfuckingwhere.

i have much more, but they are MINEZ!!!

BANDWITH INTENSIVE!

http://audiomind.us/pictures/MEMORIES/2006%20DEMF/

22
Jun

Consider the Consequences

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Uncategorized

The mark of the superior thinker is his or her ability to accurately predict the consequences of doing or not doing something. The potential consequences of any task or activity are the key determinants of how important it really is to you and to your company. This way of evaluating the significance of a task is how you determine what your next frog really is.

Long Time Perspective

Doctor Edward Banfield of Harvard University, after more than 50 years of research, concluded that “long-time perspective” is the most accurate single predictor of upward social and economic mobility in America. Long time perspective turns out to be more important than family background, education, race, intelligence, connections or virtually any other single factor in determining your success in life and at work.

Your attitude toward time, your “time horizon,” has an enormous impact on your behavior and your choices. People who take the long view of their lives and careers always seem to make much better decisions about their time and activities than people who give very little thought to the future.

Think About Your Future

Successful people have a clear future orientation. They think five, ten and twenty years out into the future. They analyze their choices and behaviors in the present to make sure that they are consistent with the long-term future that they desire.

In your work, having a clear idea of what is really important to you in the long-term makes it much easier for you to make better decisions about your priorities in the short-term.

Determine The Consequences

By definition, something that is important has long-term potential consequences. Something that is unimportant has few or no long-term potential consequences. Before starting on anything, you should always ask yourself, “What are the potential consequences of doing or not doing this task?”

The clearer you are about your future intentions, the greater influence that clarity will have on what you do in the moment. With a clear long-term vision, you are much more capable of evaluating an activity in the present and to assure that it is consistent with where you truly want to end up.

Make it a Top Priority

If there is a task or activity with large potential positive consequences, make it a top priority and get started on it immediately. If there is something that can have large potential negative consequences if it is not done quickly and well, that becomes a top priority as well. Whatever your frog is, resolve to gulp it down first thing.

Keep Motivated

Motivation requires motive. The greater the positive potential impact that an action or behavior of yours can have on your life, once you define it clearly, the more motivated you will be to overcome procrastination and get it done quickly.

Thinking continually about the potential consequences of your choices, decisions and behaviors is one of the very best ways to determine you true priorities in your work and personal life.

Action Exercises

Review your list of tasks, activities and projects regularly. Continually ask yourself, “Which one project or activity, if I did it in an excellent and timely fashion, would have the greatest positive impact on my life?”

Whatever it is that can help you the most, set it as a goal, make a plan to achieve it and go to work on your plan immediately. Remember the wonderful words of Goethe, “Just begin and the mind grows heated; continue, and the task will be completed!”

15
Jun

Today’s News Stories

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Uncategorized

Microsoft’s Anti-Piracy Tool Draws Criticism, Changes Planned
In addition, the software maker has come under fire for failing to make it clear to users installing Windows Genuine Advantage that the application communicates with Microsoft on a daily basis.
http://techweb.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=188703441
(don’t act surprised now…..!)

Women’s Brains React Surprisingly Fast to Erotic Images. Previous research indicated men are more aroused by erotic images than women, so Anokhin and his colleagues expected women to respond with lower levels of brain activity compared to men. “But that was not the case,” Anokhin said. “Women have responses as strong as those seen in men.”
http://www.livescience.com/humanbiology/060614_ero_images.html
(i knew you were a pervert lipan!! :_*_])

9
Jun

CAN YOU “UNHURT” SOMEONE?

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Uncategorized

I love the story of the little boy who had a bad temper. To solve the problem, his dad gave him a bag of nails and told the little boy that every time he lost his temper he had to go out and drive a nail into a fence post. Over a period of time, the youngster gained full control of his temper.

Then, the father instructed the lad to pull the nails out. He did, and returned to tell his father the job was done. The father pointed out that though the nails were no longer there, the holes were left as a reminder that the nails had been driven into the post. Yes, the nails had been removed, but the holes remained.

That’s the way it is when we lose our temper and offend and/or hurt someone else. We can apologize, but frequently it takes a considerable length of time for the wound to heal. Fortunately, we can control our temper far better than we realize.

Example: There has probably been a time when you and your friend or associate have been involved in one of those “knock-down, drag-out” arguments when, during the heat of the argument, the telephone rang, and you reached over, lifted the receiver and pleasantly said, “Hello.” In short, when it became important to control your temper, you did.

Suggestion to myself: The next time you’re in a heated discussion and it is getting out of hand, just start patting your foot and repeating, “Telephone.” Remember, you can control your temper. Besides, it’s far too valuable to lose. If I take that approach I might have something to smile about.

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19025556.200?DCMP=NLC-nletter&nsref=mg19025556.200

“I AM continually shocked and appalled at the details people voluntarily post online about themselves.” So says Jon Callas, chief security officer at PGP, a Silicon Valley-based maker of encryption software. He is far from alone in noticing that fast-growing social networking websites such as MySpace and Friendster are a snoop’s dream.

New Scientist has discovered that Pentagon’s National Security Agency, which specialises in eavesdropping and code-breaking, is funding research into the mass harvesting of the information that people post about themselves on social networks. And it could harness advances in internet technology – specifically the forthcoming “semantic web” championed by the web standards organisation W3C – to combine data from social networking websites with details such as banking, retail and property records, allowing the NSA to build extensive, all-embracing personal profiles of individuals.

Americans are still reeling from last month’s revelations that the NSA has been logging phone calls since the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001. The Congressional Research Service, which advises the US legislature, says phone companies that surrendered call records may have acted illegally. However, the White House insists that the terrorist threat makes existing wire-tapping legislation out of date and is urging Congress not to investigate the NSA’s action.

Meanwhile, the NSA is pursuing its plans to tap the web, since phone logs have limited scope. They can only be used to build a very basic picture of someone’s contact network, a process sometimes called “connecting the dots”. Clusters of people in highly connected groups become apparent, as do people with few connections who appear to be the intermediaries between such groups. The idea is to see by how many links or “degrees” separate people from, say, a member of a blacklisted organisation.

By adding online social networking data to its phone analyses, the NSA could connect people at deeper levels, through shared activities, such as taking flying lessons. Typically, online social networking sites ask members to enter details of their immediate and extended circles of friends, whose blogs they might follow. People often list other facets of their personality including political, sexual, entertainment, media and sporting preferences too. Some go much further, and a few have lost their jobs by publicly describing drinking and drug-taking exploits. Young people have even been barred from the orthodox religious colleges that they are enrolled in for revealing online that they are gay.

“You should always assume anything you write online is stapled to your resumé. People don’t realise you get Googled just to get a job interview these days,” says Callas.

Other data the NSA could combine with social networking details includes information on purchases, where we go (available from cellphone records, which cite the base station a call came from) and what major financial transactions we make, such as buying a house.

Right now this is difficult to do because today’s web is stuffed with data in incompatible formats. Enter the semantic web, which aims to iron out these incompatibilities over the next few years via a common data structure called the Resource Description Framework (RDF). W3C hopes that one day every website will use RDF to give each type of data a unique, predefined, unambiguous tag.

“RDF turns the web into a kind of universal spreadsheet that is readable by computers as well as people,” says David de Roure at the University of Southampton in the UK, who is an adviser to W3C. “It means that you will be able to ask a website questions you couldn’t ask before, or perform calculations on the data it contains.” In a health record, for instance, a heart attack will have the same semantic tag as its more technical description, a myocardial infarction. Previously, they would have looked like separate medical conditions. Each piece of numerical data, such as the rate of inflation or the number of people killed on the roads, will also get a tag.

The advantages for scientists, for instance, could be huge: they will have unprecedented access to each other’s experimental datasets and will be able to perform their own analyses on them. Searching for products such as holidays will become easier as price and availability dates will have smart tags, allowing powerful searches across hundreds of sites.

On the downside, this ease of use will also make prying into people’s lives a breeze. No plan to mine social networks via the semantic web has been announced by the NSA, but its interest in the technology is evident in a funding footnote to a research paper delivered at the W3C’s WWW2006 conference in Edinburgh, UK, in late May.

That paper, entitled Semantic Analytics on Social Networks, by a research team led by Amit Sheth of the University of Georgia in Athens and Anupam Joshi of the University of Maryland in Baltimore reveals how data from online social networks and other databases can be combined to uncover facts about people. The footnote said the work was part-funded by an organisation called ARDA.

What is ARDA? It stands for Advanced Research Development Activity. According to a report entitled Data Mining and Homeland Security, published by the Congressional Research Service in January, ARDA’s role is to spend NSA money on research that can “solve some of the most critical problems facing the US intelligence community”. Chief among ARDA’s aims is to make sense of the massive amounts of data the NSA collects – some of its sources grow by around 4 million gigabytes a month.

The ever-growing online social networks are part of the flood of internet information that could be mined: some of the top sites like MySpace now have more than 80 million members (see Graph).

The research ARDA funded was designed to see if the semantic web could be easily used to connect people. The research team chose to address a subject close to their academic hearts: detecting conflicts of interest in scientific peer review. Friends cannot peer review each other’s research papers, nor can people who have previously co-authored work together.

So the team developed software that combined data from the RDF tags of online social network Friend of a Friend (www.foaf-project.org), where people simply outline who is in their circle of friends, and a semantically tagged commercial bibliographic database called DBLP, which lists the authors of computer science papers.

Joshi says their system found conflicts between potential reviewers and authors pitching papers for an internet conference. “It certainly made relationship finding between people much easier,” Joshi says. “It picked up softer [non-obvious] conflicts we would not have seen before.”

The technology will work in exactly the same way for intelligence and national security agencies and for financial dealings, such as detecting insider trading, the authors say. Linking “who knows who” with purchasing or bank records could highlight groups of terrorists, money launderers or blacklisted groups, says Sheth.

The NSA recently changed ARDA’s name to the Disruptive Technology Office. The DTO’s interest in online social network analysis echoes the Pentagon’s controversial post 9/11 Total Information Awareness (TIA) initiative. That programme, designed to collect, track and analyse online data trails, was suspended after a public furore over privacy in 2002. But elements of the TIA were incorporated into the Pentagon’s classified programme in the September 2003 Defense Appropriations Act.

Privacy groups worry that “automated intelligence profiling” could sully people’s reputations or even lead to miscarriages of justice – especially since the data from social networking sites may often be inaccurate, untrue or incomplete, De Roure warns.

But Tim Finin, a colleague of Joshi’s, thinks the spread of such technology is unstoppable. “Information is getting easier to merge, fuse and draw inferences from. There is money to be made and control to be gained in doing so. And I don’t see much that will stop it,” he says.

Callas thinks people have to wise up to how much information about themselves they should divulge on public websites. It may sound obvious, he says, but being discreet is a big part of maintaining privacy. Time, perhaps, to hit the delete button.


http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa003&articleID=0002491F-755F-1473-B55F83414B7F0000




The smoke from burning marijuana leaves contains several known carcinogens and the tar it creates contains 50 percent more of some of the chemicals linked to lung cancer than tobacco smoke. A marijuana cigarette also deposits four times as much of that tar as an equivalent tobacco one. Scientists were therefore surprised to learn that a study of more than 2,000 people found no increase in the risk of developing lung cancer for marijuana smokers.

“We expected that we would find that a history of heavy marijuana use–more than 500 to 1,000 uses–would increase the risk of cancer from several years to decades after exposure to marijuana,” explains physician Donald Tashkin of the University of California, Los Angeles, and lead researcher on the project. But looking at residents of Los Angeles County, the scientists found that even those who smoked more than 20,000 joints in their life did not have an increased risk of lung cancer.

The researchers interviewed 611 lung cancer patients and 1,040 healthy controls as well as 601 patients with cancer in the head or neck region under the age of 60 to create the statistical analysis. They found that 80 percent of those with lung cancer and 70 percent of those with other cancers had smoked tobacco while only roughly half of both groups had smoked marijuana. The more tobacco a person smoked, the greater the risk of developing cancer, as other studies have shown.

But after controlling for tobacco, alcohol and other drug use as well as matching patients and controls by age, gender and neighborhood, marijuana did not seem to have an effect, despite its unhealthy aspects. “Marijuana is packed more loosely than tobacco, so there’s less filtration through the rod of the cigarette, so more particles will be inhaled,” Tashkin says. “And marijuana smokers typically smoke differently than tobacco smokers; they hold their breath about four times longer allowing more time for extra fine particles to deposit in the lungs.”

The study does not reveal how marijuana avoids causing cancer. Tashkin speculates that perhaps the THC chemical in marijuana smoke prompts aging cells to die before becoming cancerous. Tashkin and his colleagues presented the findings yesterday at a meeting of the American Thoracic Society in San Diego.

7
Jun

Common-Sensical Parenting

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Uncategorized

Parenting is common-sensical.

Let me explain what I mean by that?

I think all Earth’s creatures inherently know how to properly raise their young. If a certain creature did not possess that knowledge, the species simply wouldn’t survive. We humans have survived because we know how to raise children. We knew how to be parents long before the scene became saturated with people like psychologists, psychiatrists, counselors, school teachers, nurses, doctors, mental health ‘professionals’, etc., constantly giving parenting advice. In fact, I think we did a generally better job of raising children before there were people like that. Ironically, I happen to believe that parents will begin to regain the common sense of raising children when they stop listening to people like that. I think our collective common sense concerning children has been swamped by a tidal wave of psychobabble that’s lasted some 40 years now.

Thoughts?

7
Jun

Noncustodial Parents – The Big Picture

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Uncategorized

Here’s the big picture folks:

The more that I listen and pay attention, the more everyone’s story starts to sound the same – and when people’s stories are the same, then their problems tend to stem from the same source…

Here’s what I think the source of this problem is based on what I have learned so far over the last few years:

‘We’ are part of a welfare system that requires the large-scale production of a predetermined outcome in order to remain operational; that outcome is the creation of a child-support paying noncustodial parent. Arrival at this predetermined outcome will be reached by whatever means necessary through the state courts (by use of PPO’s, false allegations, falsified or ignored psychological reports, forced mediation or arbitration, etc…) because reaching this outcome is required for the states to receive mass amounts of federal money through Title IV-D of the Social Security Act. Title IV-D covers Child Support Enforcement, and without court-created “absent” (aka. noncustodial) parents – there would be no child support to collect or orders to enforce, and thus no need to employ thousands in the support enforcement bureaucracy – which would in-turn mean no federal funding flowing into the states, and no help balancing state budgets. This is why they try to collect more and more by increasing the amount of support you pay – even after your kids graduate and your payments are supposed to decrease or stop…

Because this federal welfare program (Child Support Enforcement IS inherently defined as a welfare program because it is part of the federal laws that created welfare) provides BILLIONS of free money to the states ($4.2 Billion in 2006), the states have devised ways to profit from this program and to use this federal funding to balance state budgets while operating bloated bureaucracies that employ thousands of people in NC/SC alone.

From a statewide perspective, the courts and their agents/employees (aka. friends of the court in NC/SC) are dividing-and-conquering those who turn to the family courts for help with their family problems by creating the illusion that every case is individual. The courts put up a smoke-screen and fool parents into giving up their parental authority to the state/court through the use of intimidation tactics. The people employed by the system have no problem sleeping at night because they themselves don’t even know how the system works entirely – they just know that people bring their problems to them, and they have to solve them by creating a noncustodial parent who pays child support… They make use of whatever intimidation tactics made available to them by our state laws and beyond (threat of jail, removal of parenting time, etc…) to accomplish the task of noncustodial parent creation and child support collection – because “that’s just how it has to be” if people are going to turn to the court for help and leave the decision making up to the courts and their agents.

The courts have found a way to capitalize on people’s problems, so the courts reward one parent for bringing their problems into court: The more problems that are brought to them, the more noncustodial parents they can create, the more child support is due and enforceable, and the more people they can hire and expand their “business” of administering welfare services to the middle-class. It’s a little-known fact that middle-class family cases make up an overwhelming majority (approximately 75-80%) of the state’s circuit courts’ caseload – that’s a cash-cow that keeps people employed, and creates new government jobs for others – which is a win-win for the state, and for newly mass-produced child support recipient custodial parents.

Federal Title IV-D welfare funding provides monetary incentives to the state courts to manufacture “absent parent” environments – so the inadvertent incentive of receiving free money (aka “child support”) is also given/handed down to one parent as well: Since one parent MUST be labeled “noncustodial” and ordered to pay support, that means that the OTHER parent will inevitably be the RECIPIENT of that support (unless the court can get rid of both parents and make them both pay the state – which is a different story covered under Title IV-E)… so the court rewards a parent for creating problems and bringing them to the court to solve. What a better way for a vindictive person to get back at their soon-to-be ex spouse than by “winning” possession of the kids in court – and possession of the checkbook!!! How’s that for an incentive?

The courts do such a good job of dividing-and-conquering and smoke-screening people that almost EVERYONE in the system thinks that either they are alone or that the system is just biased towards fathers/men. These things couldn’t be farther from the truth – and they have been helping to successfully distract the public from the real issue. The state and the state/family courts are NOT biased; instead they ARE color-blind: They see only ONE color… GREEN. They have figured out a way to make money on people’s problems and they justify it by making the public think that they are helping KIDS.

The system has become so successful because it is SO complicated that no average person wants to or has the resources to figure out how it all works from the top down – all the public hears is that kids are being helped, so they think everything is peachy-keen. It’s easy for those working to perpetuate the system to say that their main focus is “helping kids” because nobody really understands how and why the system is actually instead HURTING kids – nobody knows how it all really works.

If you follow the money though, you will inevitably trace your seemingly individual problem back to bigger issue of the Social Security Act, welfare, and Child Support Enforcement. You will find that your individual problem is not so individual at all. You will find that the Carolina’s alone have mass-produced MILLIONS of fatherless/single-parent homes just so that the state can remain financially operational – all at our CHILDREN’S expense.

The sad reality is this: Once you are in the system – you are done-for. Your details may differ, but your outcome will be no different than the millions of others who have faced the same fate as you. Nobody wants to deal with this reality though – so people tend to individualize things because that makes the problem easier to deal with. This problem has nothing to do with any individual though. Everyone in this group with an existing case may be experiencing different specific things – but the outcome is all the same: The state has created a child-support paying noncustodial parent and is using whatever means available to force that parent into paying as much as possible so the state can collect the money and in-turn receive federal funding for doing so… Plain and simple.

Because everyone tends to individualize things, they start believing that litigation must be the answer – and that somehow “justice” will prevail. The truth couldn’t more opposite. The truth is that there is no answer for your individual case… Let me repeat myself: YOU ARE DONE-FOR.

Here’s the deal… Once you become involved in this system, you have two choices: 1) Shut-up and pay-up, or face jail – or 2) Educate yourself and others on how the system works, then raise your voice and demand change… and face jail as well for doing so.

Either way, the threat of going to jail will never cease… but the choice is yours to make whether or not you are going to do nothing and risk jail – or do something and help change things for when your kids are older.

Whatever decision is made, always remember that our only crime is that we demand equal time… and their solution to our family problems is to further the destruction of our already fracturing families simply because it keeps people employed.

1
Jun

Ion iTTUSB Turntable with USB Record

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Uncategorized

woah……

Product Features

  • USB 1.1 turntable that makes it a snap to convert vinyl collection to CD or MP3 formats
  • Includes Audacity PC/Mac recording software and trial version of Bias Soundsoap 2
  • Adjustable anti-skating control for increased stereo balancing; adjustable pitch control (+/- 8 percent)
  • Support for high-speed vinyl recording; works with both 33-1/3 and 45 rpm speeds
  • Line-level outputs for easy stereo connection; 1/8-inch line-level input; weighs 7.7 pounds.

Not exactly a DJ turntable, but a blessing nonetheless!

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