To you and your families, please receive our best wishes for a peaceful and joyous holiday season.

This is always a jubilant time of the year. Not only is it a time in which we have given thanks for the many blessings in our lives, but it is a season which celebrates the joy within each of us.

Please pray for our brave men and women in uniform. We are grateful for their service to us and our country, and for the support and sacrifice of their families. During these next few weeks, we also hope that you will pause to reflect on the many contributions you have made this year in service of your faith, your family and your community.

Many opportunities are before us, and we look forward to what the New Year has in store. May the peace and goodwill of the season fill every heart and warm every home. Happy Holidays, Merry Christmas, and Happy New Year ~ f

11/28/2010

Babylonian Beatles

Read a very interesting article by Curt Hopkins regarding archaeoacoustics (a/k/a acoustic archaeology), an emerging field of science which seeks to understand how sound influenced a given culture. Even more fascinating is how we too can experience these sounds from the past. For more, Acoustic Archaeology? Meet the Web

Hopkins leaves us with a “take-away” thought, “What does it all mean? … What sounds will our descendants find us to have valued?”


An increasing number of electromagnetic radiation sources (WiFi, mobile phones, etc) could play a role in the deteriorating health of trees finds a Netherlands’ report conducted by Wageningen University and commissioned by the city of Alphen aan den Rijn.  Trees were exposed for more than three months to six sources of radiation [frequencies ranging from 2412 to 2472 MHz].  Leaves towards the radiation source during the study period showed a metallic luster appearance, a discoloration of the leaves that appeared to result in the disappearance of the outer cell layer of the leaves. This metallic luster was followed by desiccation and death of a portion of the leaf.

For more insights, please read: Wi-Fi Makes Trees Sick, Study Says - PCWorld Business Center


NOVEMBER 9, 2010 – CHARLESTON, SC -- In a “first-of-its kind” collaboration, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD), the U.S. Department of Interior (DOI), the National Park Service, Fort Sumter National Monument, South Carolina Research Authority (SCRA), and the Center for Hydrogen Research (CHR) will work together to deploy a family of technologies that will establish Fort Sumter National Monument as an energy self-sufficient island...
Read more at... http://www.swampfox.ws/2010/11/09/fort-sumter-reassumes-national-focus-after-150-years

11/09/2010

TV Cord-Cutters


There's a trend out there - TV Cord-Cutting - and it is gaining momentum every week! Are consumers reducing the amount of time they watch TV in favor of other media like gaming, social networks, or other Internet-based media? And in this trend, are they cancelling their digital TV subscriptions altogether?? When a household bill to the cable company exceeds $150/month - something has to go.

Hordes of articles addressing the phenomenon:


Follow the discussion!

11/01/2010

Analog Sunset

As December 31st approaches, so does the unleashing of the Trojan Horse we allowed into our homes. Our mass acceptance of content in high-definition format was the seduction. But as quickly as “HD” came to the forefront of the electronic age (and into our lives), so too will be the void as content providers start restricting our access to it. In “great conspiracy” deduction, there were a few events this year that led us to believe that the Illuminati, Bilderberg Group, Bohemian Club, Club of Rome, Council on Foreign Relations, Rhodes Trust, Skull and Bones, Trilateral Commission, Freemasons, Elders of Zion, (however you wish to identify the conspirators) were hard at work.

This year multitudes of Avatar fans rushed out to purchase James Cameron’s blockbuster movie, only to be disappointed when their BluRay players would not play the movie. By loading the movie, the owners had inadvertently released a virus that impacted the function of the player. Keep in mind, this is all legal, using such terms as “digital token only” or “image constraint token”, to which the owners have agreed by purchasing the player (and “using” not owning the software that drives the device).

Even more interesting were anomalies that required ALL the devices [i.e. HDTV and AV Surround receivers], if connected with HDMI, to have firmware updates.

Technicians also documented cases where the players were totally disabled, unable to properly function, regardless of disc, until the updates had been performed. Welcome your Trojan Horse!

The next event which gives rise to the conspiracy is “sunset analog,” the first in a series of HD signal limitations being enacted at the end of 2010. Analog sunset refers to the AACS (Advanced Access Content System) licensing restrictions placed on the analog video outputs (anything other than HDMI) from BluRay players. Licensed BluRay players produced after 2010 and playing protected content must limit analog video output to standard definitions (480i/576i), and licensed BluRay players produced after 2013 will no longer have analog outputs at all.

Presently, the actions under analog sunset only pertain to BluRay. In fact, the US, FCC regulation 47 CFR 76.1903 prohibits the disabling of analog outputs on cable and satellite set-top boxes. That is until conspiracy event #3 when in May of 2010 the FCC granted approval of an MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) petition to modify this regulation so that analog outputs may be selectively controlled by the program content.

The final conspiracy event (or at least as of the time of this article) is the entertainment industry’s movement away from the physical media content [i.e. DVDs] to streaming and other cloud based access. What better way to excerpt control over the viewing of the content.

With the use of so many acronyms, it is no wonder that we all remain confused: AACS; NTSC; ATSC; HDMI; DVI; DisplayPort; ICT; DOT; 480i; 1080p; and more! What is certain is that the conspiracy will continue as the distribution of entertainment further evolves.

For more interesting articles, read eLifespaces' quarterly newletter, InFocus.

10/23/2010

Talk Backwards

“Talk backwards to me” is a favorite expression around our household. The jest of the expression meaning to tell me your purpose in speaking with me – then you may present whatever details you think necessary. This allows me to properly “tune in” and listen to details that are helpful to me in understanding. Even my recorded cell answering message ask the caller to please NOT leave a message, but to call me at my office or send me a txt message. Peer pressure ended that message, and yes – this approach lands me in the “dog house” with my spouse on many occasions.

It was a pleasure to read The New Yorkers article, e-Mail Auto Response, by Martin Marks this morning. ‘Spot on” in capturing how many of us really feel in receiving wordy, brain-dump email correspondence. Great read, please take a moment and visit.

In graduate school, a professor of strategic policy required that you provide case study analyses in 200 words or less, the consequences of non-compliance resulted in a failing mark. Another professor provided the basis for ‘talking backwards’ – write how you speak and let me know what you want in the first sentence; otherwise you fail.