Yes, I’m an Oakland A’s fan who lives in GA. The Braves are my 2nd favorite team, so I am enjoying their both being in 1st place.
Start Slide Show with PicLens LiteYes, I’m an Oakland A’s fan who lives in GA. The Braves are my 2nd favorite team, so I am enjoying their both being in 1st place.
Start Slide Show with PicLens LiteI’ve made some decent clouds before, but I can’t wait to try this method.
Start Slide Show with PicLens LiteFrom Microsoft:
The best things in life are free. You’ll find more than 5,000 downloads from over 2,000 companies in our Free Downloads Center.
Here is an outstanding article by Justin Gimelstob, who has been a playing pro for a while.
Tennis is the only sport that requires both aerobic and anaerobic
conditioning, as well as the highest level of hand-eye coordination,
all while placing the burden of success and failure solely on the
athlete. Tennis is a year-round, international sport, in which I have
competed on three different continents in three successive weeks.I
have to chuckle when I hear basketball and baseball players complain
about their brutal travel schedules and demands when they’re traveling
on private planes, and their idea of a long trip is from New York to
Miami. I would love for them to try to play in Los Angeles, South Korea
and Reunion Island (a small island in the middle of the Indian Ocean)
in successive weeks, as I did in 2002. I’d also like to see how they’d
handle a six-week offseason, like we have in tennis.
This is the best sunlight map I’ve seen. Take a look at the Gulf of Mexico right now.
We don’t need no stinking badges!
Well, sometimes we actually might. Here’s a site with tons of them. Example:

Here is a very interesting site about fake photos and some tips on recognizing them.
Start Slide Show with PicLens LiteA fake image can be defined as an image of an object or scene that
wasn’t captured as the image would imply. In general, fake images are
created to generate a deception, but not all fake images are bad. The
motivation may be simply for harmless entertainment, which accounts for
most fake images generated today. Fake images can be generated for
research and development purposes, e.g. to understand image quality
issues with different camera designs. The fake images that concern us
most are those that are created to perpetuate a lie. Some people will
generate fake images for profit, such as a picture of an alien, a
ghost, or an alien ghost of Elvis that they can then sell to a tabloid.
Probably the most dangerous motive for generating fake images is to
alter the public’s perception of truth for political reasons. It would
be nice a reliable method existed for determining if an image is real
or fake, but unfortunately none exists. We can hope to catch most of
the fake images, however, if we understand how fake image are made and
what characteristics to look for.
College football has a new poll - the Harris Poll. 114 voters will help decide the BCS teams beginning this fall. Some famous names are:
There are lot of places you can check you connection speed, but this is the coolest I’ve seen.
These are my results with Adelphia Cable.
Start Slide Show with PicLens LiteThis is a photo of one of the teachers from the Arizona school that has ditched textbooks for laptops. I hope we see more of this in the future!
Teacher Becky Ogle, standing, holds her laptop computer as she explains
how to use a spreadsheet to students at Empire High School in Vail,
Arizona, on Tuesday. Empire High School issued Apple laptop computers
to every student instead of traditional textbooks.
These all look correct to me!
Here is a link to our department’s current list of educational grant opportunities. There are some really good ones!
This is from the Atlanta Journal/Constitution. Since it requires registration, I will post the entire article.
Ariz. School Trades Textbooks for Laptops
By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
Associated Press WriterVAIL, Ariz. — Students at Empire High School here started class this year with no textbooks — but it wasn’t because of a funding crisis.
Instead, the school issued iBooks — laptop computers by Apple
Computer Inc. — to each of its 340 students, becoming one of the first
U.S. public schools to shun printed textbooks.School officials believe the electronic materials will get students
more engaged in learning. Empire High, which opened for the first time
this year, was designed specifically to have a textbook-free
environment."We’ve always been pretty aggressive in use of technology and we
have a history of taking risks," said Calvin Baker, superintendent of
the Vail Unified School District, which has 7,000 students outside of
Tucson.Schools typically overlay computers onto their instruction "like
frosting on the cake," Baker said. "We decided that the real
opportunity was to make the laptops the key ingredient of the cake. …
to truly change the way that schools operated."Two years ago, about 600 school districts nationwide had pilot
projects to provide laptops for each student — a figure that’s likely
doubled since then, said Mark Schneiderman, director of federal
education policy for the Software and Information Industry Association
in Washington.But most still issue textbooks — for now.
"Because most schools are not starting from scratch … most
districts are using a blended approach now and will phase out their
printed textbooks," he said.For example, in the Henrico County school system near Richmond, Va.,
students in 23 middle and high schools will be using laptops for the
fifth straight year, though teachers still use textbooks, said
spokesman Mychael Dickerson.Many publishers of traditional textbooks are offering digital
formats to address the growing use of computers, and that provided some
of the material for Empire High’s curriculum. Teachers also used
subscription services and free Web resources.Students get the materials over the school’s wireless Internet
network. The school has a central filtering system that limits what can
be downloaded on campus. The system also controls chat room visits and
instant messaging that might otherwise distract wired students.Students can turn in homework online. A Web program checks against
Internet sources for plagiarized material and against the work of other
students, Baker said. "If you copy from your buddy, it’s going to get
caught," he said.Before Empire High opened, officials looked at the use of laptops in
other schools and decided that high school students were more engaged
when using computers. Unlike many adults, teens weaned on digital
material seem to have little difficulty adapting to reading primarily
on computer screens, Baker said.But educators also decided they could do more with the technology.
In addition to offering up-to-date information, teachers can make
the curriculum more dynamic. For example, lessons in social studies,
which might previously have been done in summaries, can include links
to full Supreme Court rulings or an explorer’s personal account of a
discovery.Social studies teacher Jeremy Gypton said the transition was easier
than expected. Gypton said he assigns readings based on Web sites,
lists postings to news articles, uses online groups and message boards
to keep the students connected on weekends and asks them to comment on
each other’s work.One of the more surprising things, he said, was finding that
students’ proficiency at video games and e-mail hasn’t always
translated into other computer skills."One of the greatest challenges actually is getting the kids up to
speed in using Word, in using an Internet browser for other than a
simple global search," Gypton said.All of Empire’s students knew about the laptop-only setup when they
enrolled, and students who were uncomfortable with it were allowed to
enroll in the district’s other, more traditional schools. But Empire
has a waiting list.Julian Tarazon, a freshman, said he doesn’t miss lugging around a bag full of books.
"It was kind of hard at first, because you had to put things in
folders," Julian said, referring, naturally, to virtual folders on his
computer’s desktop. "After a couple of days, you kind of get used to
it."Freshman Morgan Northcutt said the computer system has made it easier to do assignments, and she isn’t as likely to lose them.
"There’s complications like hooking up with the Internet, but other than that it’s been pretty easy," Morgan said.
The school isn’t entirely paperless, however. It has a library, and students are often assigned outside reading.
"We’re not trying to eliminate books," Baker said. "We love books."
Some of these can be very handy.