&
Advertise Here with Today.com
 

Archive for July, 2008

Jul 13 2008

Eating out alone is not bad, really

Published by wiqqy under United states Edit This

Whats wrong with eating by yourself in a restaurant. Today, a co-worker came into the employee room with food from a thrif class outlet like Wendy’s. I asked in general as to why he didnt eat there and had to come back ( wasting time). He said, ” Hell No! I aint eating alone man, it looks depressing”.

YOUR ON YOUR FREAKING BREAK!!! what is wrong with eating alone. I see that Mtv and Vh1 are ruining teens( wait…. i am too) .  As a matter of fact, there is nothing wrong with  watching movies alone either. But I wont go there yet due the majority of people who would think I’m crazy.

I usually eat at home because I have my Hi-Def and all the other stuff like top and off course, a cleannnnn environment. But I will never  hesitate to eat alone( yoju dont have to act clean and all, and you can bite that thing like theres no tomorrow,hahahaha).

Advertise Here with Today.com

2 responses so far

Jul 12 2008

Does the Bluetooth look stupid?

Published by wiqqy under Uncategorized Edit This

     I see people going around talking to themselves. Or so it seems. The other day i was down main st. when i saw this guy laughing and smiling to himself. I couldnt figure out what the heck was wrong with him, until i saw the dreadful thing stuck in his left ear.

Its understandable that one would use it in a car. But i find it incredibly stupid for someone to be talking via bluetooth when the new phones are less than 20 grams. What about the iphone? how many people have you seen taking the thing out and using it the old fashion way? Thats because they want everyone to see it. Hence, the only reason why someone would use the blueshit is to hide their old modeled phone. But then again, wokers who use their hands for work( duh? ) have no choice but to have that thing. Hey wait? if your working or driving, you shouldnt be talking anyway!

No responses yet

Jul 11 2008

iPhone Already has problems

Published by wiqqy under Uncategorized Edit This

NEW YORK (AP) — The launch of Apple Inc.’s much-anticipated new iPhone turned into an information-technology meltdown on Friday, as customers were unable to get their phones working.

“It’s such grief and aggravation,” said Frederick Smalls, an insurance broker in Whitman, Mass., after spending two hours on the phone with Apple and AT&T Inc., trying to get his new iPhone to work.

In stores, people waited at counters to get the phones activated, as lines built behind them. Many of the customers had already camped out for several hours in line to become among the first with the new phone, which updates the one launched a year ago by speeding up Internet access and adding a navigation chip.

A spokesman for AT&T, the exclusive carrier for the iPhone in the U.S., said there was a global problem with Apple’s iTunes servers that prevented the phones from being fully activated in-store, as had been planned.

Instead, employees are telling buyers to go home and perform the last step by connecting their phones to their own computers, spokesman Michael Coe said.

However, the iTunes servers were equally hard to reach from home, leaving the phones unusable except for emergency calls.

The problem extended to owners of the previous iPhone model. A software update released for that phone on Friday morning required the phone to be reactivated through iTunes.

“It’s a mess,” said freelance photographer Giovanni Cipriano, who updated his first-generation iPhone only to find it unusable.

Apple shares fell $4.05, or 2.3 percent, to close Friday at $172.58 amid a general decline in U.S. stocks.

When the first iPhone went on sale a year ago, customers performed the whole activation procedure at home, freeing store employees to focus on sales. But the new model is subsidized by carriers, and Apple and AT&T therefore planned to activate all phones in-store to get customers on a contract.

The new phone went on sale in 21 countries on Friday, creating a global burden on the iTunes servers.

The iPhone has been widely lauded for its ease of use and rich features, but Apple is a newcomer to the cell-phone business, and it’s made some missteps. When it launched the first phone in the U.S. a year ago, it initially priced the phones high, at $499 and $599, then cut the price by $200 just 10 weeks later, throwing early buyers for a loop.

Rollouts to other countries were slow, as Apple tried to get carriers on board with its unusual pricing scheme, which included monthly fees to Apple. The business model of the new phone follows industry norms, and the price is lower: $199 or $299 in the U.S.

On Thursday, Apple had problems with the launch of a new data service, MobileMe. The service is designed to synchronize a users personal data across devices, including the iPhone, but many users were denied access to their accounts.

Enthusiasm was high ahead of the Friday morning launch of the new phone.

Alex Cavallo, 24, was one of hundreds lined up at the Fifth Avenue store, just as he had been a year ago for the original iPhone. He sold that one recently on eBay in anticipation of the new one. In the meantime, he has been using another phone, which felt “uncomfortable.”

“The iPhone is just a superior user experience,” he said. The phone also proved a decent investment for him: He bought the old model for $599 and sold it for $570.

Nick Epperson, a 24-year-old grad student, spent the night outside an AT&T store in Atlanta, keeping his cheer up with bags of Doritos, three games of Scrabble and two packs of cigarettes. Asked why he was waiting in line, he responded simply “Chicks dig the iPhone.”

IPhone fever was strong even in Japan, where consumers are used to tech-heavy phones that do restaurant searches, e-mail, music downloads, reading digital novels and electronic shopping. More than 1,000 people lined up at the Softbank Corp. store in Tokyo and the phone quickly sold out.

“Just look at this obviously innovative design,” Yuki Kurita, 23, said as he emerged from buying his iPhone, carrying bags of clothing and a skateboard he had used as a chair during his wait outside the Tokyo store. “I am so thrilled just thinking about how I get to touch this.”

The phone went on sale first in New Zealand, where hundreds of people lined up outside stores to snap it up right at midnight — 8 a.m. Thursday in New York.

“Steve Jobs knows what people want,” Web developer Lucinda McCullough told the Christchurch Press newspaper, referring to Apple’s chief executive. “And I need a new phone.”

In Germany, sales were brisk at local carrier T-Mobile’s stores, particularly in Munich, Hamburg and Cologne, said spokeswoman Marion Kessing.

AP Business Writers George Frey in Frankfurt, Germany, Yuri Kageyama in Tokyo and Greg Bluestein in Atlanta contributed to this report.

No responses yet

Jul 10 2008

Uneducated Israeli Education Minister

Published by wiqqy under International Edit This

Yuli Tamir, Israeli education minister

Yuli Tamir: may or may not have called opponent a bad word

Israel’s education minister used the ’s’-word during a televised session of a parliamentary committee on Tuesday - and it didn’t stand for school.

‘She just told me, “piece of sh*t,”‘ legislator Ronit Tirosh, a former director-general of the Education Ministry, exclaimed suddenly after Education Minister Yuli Tamir whispered something into her ear.

‘I can’t believe it,’ she added.

Tamir spoke up quickly: ‘No, what I said was that I am still cleaning up the trash and shit you left behind in the (educational) system.’

Spectators at the hearing of the Education, Culture and Sport Committee responded with nervous giggles to what was, even for Israel’s often boisterous parliament, unusually strong language.

No responses yet

Jul 10 2008

Gay man sues Religion

Published by wiqqy under United states Edit This

CASCADE TOWNSHIP, Mich. — A gay man is suing two heavyweight Christian publishers, claiming their versions of the Bible that refer to homosexuality as a sin violate his constitutional rights and have caused him emotional pain and mental instability.

Bradley LaShawn Fowler of Canton, Mich., is seeking $60 million from Zondervan, based in Cascade Township, and $10 million from Nashville-based Thomas Nelson Publishing.

 

Fowler filed the suit in federal court against Zondervan on July 7, the same day U.S. District Judge Julian Abele Cook Jr. refused to appoint an attorney to represent him in his case against Thomas Nelson.

Fowler filed a suit against Thomas Nelson in June. He is representing himself in both claims.

“The Court has some very genuine concerns about the nature and efficacy of these claims,” the judge wrote.

Fowler, 39, alleges Zondervan’s Bibles referring to homosexuality as a sin have made him an outcast from his family and contributed to physical discomfort and periods of “demoralization, chaos and bewilderment.”

The intent of the publisher was to design a religious, sacred document to reflect an individual opinion or a group’s conclusion to cause “me or anyone who is a homosexual to endure verbal abuse, discrimination, episodes of hate, and physical violence … including murder,” Fowler wrote.

Fowler’s suit claims Zondervan’s text revisions from a 1980s version of the Bible included, and then deleted, a reference to homosexuality in 1 Corinthians without informing the public of the changes.

The other suit, against Thomas Nelson and its New King James Bible, mirrors the allegations made against Zondervan.

One response so far

Jul 09 2008

Gay man sues Religion, <>

Published by wiqqy under United states Edit This

 

CASCADE TOWNSHIP, Mich. — A gay man is suing two heavyweight Christian publishers, claiming their versions of the Bible that refer to homosexuality as a sin violate his constitutional rights and have caused him emotional pain and mental instability. ( lmao )

Bradley LaShawn Fowler of Canton, Mich., is seeking $60 million ( richest fag alive ) from Zondervan, based in Cascade Township, and $10 million from Nashville-based Thomas Nelson Publishing.

 

Fowler filed the suit in federal court against Zondervan on July 7, the same day U.S. District Judge Julian Abele Cook Jr. refused to appoint an attorney to represent him in his case against Thomas Nelson.

Fowler filed a suit against Thomas Nelson in June. He is representing himself in both claims.

“The Court has some very genuine concerns about the nature and efficacy of these claims,” the judge wrote.

Fowler, 39, alleges Zondervan’s Bibles referring to homosexuality as a sin have made him an outcast from his family and contributed to physical discomfort and periods of “demoralization, chaos and bewilderment.”

The intent of the publisher was to design a religious, sacred document to reflect an individual opinion or a group’s conclusion to cause “me or anyone who is a homosexual to endure verbal abuse, discrimination, episodes of hate, and physical violence … including murder,” Fowler wrote.

Fowler’s suit claims Zondervan’s text revisions from a 1980s version of the Bible included, and then deleted, a reference to homosexuality in 1 Corinthians without informing the public of the changes.

The other suit, against Thomas Nelson and its New King James Bible, mirrors the allegations made against Zondervan.

article from usatoday.com 

No responses yet

Jul 09 2008

Dont buy Lottery tickets, its a scam

Published by wiqqy under Uncategorized Edit This

By Jason Carroll and Susan Chun
CNN’s American Morning
NEW YORK (CNN) — When Scott Hoover bought a $5 scratch-off ticket in Virginia called “Beginner’s Luck” last summer, he carefully studied the odds. Even though he figured his chances of winning were a long shot, he felt the odds were reasonable.

Lottery tickets

In July, USA Today estimated about half of the 42 states with lotteries sold tickets after top prizes were claimed.

Hoover, a business professor at Washington and Lee University in Virginia, wasn’t surprised when his tickets didn’t bring him the $75,000 grand prize, but he was shocked to learn the top prize had been awarded before he bought the ticket.

“I felt duped into buying these things,” Hoover said.

He discovered the Virginia State Lottery was continuing to sell tickets for games in which the top prizes were no longer available. Public records showed that someone had already won the top prize one month before Hoover played. He is now suing the state of Virginia for breach of contract. Video Is this a scratch-off scandal? »

“It’s one thing to say it’s a long shot to win the $75,000, but it’s another thing to say you have no shot to win it,” said John Fishwick, Hoover’s attorney.

Through a request filed under the Freedom of Information Act, Fishwick’s firm was able to obtain records that showed the Virginia State Lottery sold $85 million in tickets for which no top prize was available. Fishwick says the state should pay $85 million in damages.

Paula Otto, executive director of the Virginia State Lottery, said the state’s games are fair and the top prize money is actually a small percentage of the money given out to lottery players. Most of the players win through the second, third or fourth-place prizes, she said. Otto also said it’s no longer possible in the state of Virginia to purchase tickets with no top prizes available.

“We absolutely have always been very open and honest with our players about the way our scratch tickets are distributed,” Otto said. “Yes, there were times when there was a scratch game out there that might’ve said “zero” in terms of the number of top prizes, but our players knew that.”

Otto would not comment on the lawsuit, but said she stands by the integrity of the games in Virginia and looks forward to vigorously defending them.

Virginia isn’t the only state to sell tickets that have no top prizes available. USA Today estimates that about half of the 42 states that have lotteries were, as of early July, continuing to sell tickets after the top prizes are claimed. Lottery officials from some states say the practice is fair because lesser prizes are still available, and they say tickets and lottery Web sites make that clear.

In New Jersey, tickets for the “$1,000,000 Explosion” scratch-off game were still on sale last week, even though the million-dollar grand prize was already awarded.

Lottery ticket buyers outside a New Jersey convenience store were stunned to hear the news.

“Oh really? I didn’t know that,” one shopper told CNN. Another added, “That’s just not right.”

Dominick DeMarco, a spokesman with the New Jersey Lottery, said information about winning tickets and prizes is readily available on the lottery Web site and at retail outlets. However, officials are still looking for ways to improve on their procedures.

Still, Hoover hopes his lawsuit will alert lottery players in all states to be careful before they place their bets.

No responses yet

Jul 09 2008

Ticks on a Plane

Published by wiqqy under Uncategorized Edit This

ES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Some wayward ticks delayed a United Airlines flight from Denver, Colorado, to Des Moines, Iowa.

Ticks can spread diseases, including Lyme disease.

Ticks can spread diseases, including Lyme disease.

Flight 1178 was delayed for nearly six hours on Tuesday after a passenger informed a flight attendant that she found a tick in economy class during a flight from Washington, D.C., to Denver.

The airline decided it couldn’t fly the plane until it was cleaned of ticks, so passengers had to wait while another plane was flown from Colorado Springs to Denver. The flight was further delayed because of thunderstorms in the Denver area.

United spokeswoman Robin Urbanski said between one and three ticks were discovered. Urbanski said the airline hasn’t figured out how the ticks got on the plane or what type of ticks were found.

“I don’t know if we’ll be able to find that out,” Urbanski said. “When possible, we do try to look into those type of things, and hopefully try to look for its origin.”

The replacement plane shuttled the 107 passengers to Des Moines.

The plane with ticks had begun its day in Chicago, Illinois. It was cleaned of ticks, checked and put back into service.

No ticks were found on passengers.

Ticks can pass along a number of illnesses to humans, including Lyme disease.

One response so far

Jul 06 2008

1.3 Billion Dollar Scholarships? Really?

Published by wiqqy under United states Edit This

I am a student. So you can expect me to know a little about scholarships and grants.  I am very amazed at the numbers that most websites like FastWeb post regarding the cumulative amount of those scholarships. I am even more surprised that I ( going to a prestigious Uni. ) cannot find anyone who actually qualified for them. Now I am actually a good student with decent grades, but I received scholarships from my institution and the federal government.

I am not saying that they exist, but to see how a single website claims that there are 1.3 billion dollars in total for education alone, that seems little off. I actually searched the entire website, and found that the scholarship  database is only 4 pages. This included the 500 or less scholarships too. In actuality, they include the money * you would get * if you were to join the military or some government bond. Whats you say in this matter? Have you received or * have been deceived* from these scholarship people?

No responses yet

Jul 05 2008

Is it worth buying an expensive phone / deal

Published by wiqqy under United states Edit This

Ok so my friend got his hands on the new iphone. I asked him how much he paid and what he * will pay for the next two years *. Woah! $200 for the phone, and $ 90 ( including taxes ) per month for the services.

The Calculations:

$ 200 + 90( 24) = $2360 and there are only 450 minutes / month

The Calculation With No contract

$400 for the Phone. yeah. Thats it. So go ahead and get a $30 plan ( if possible ). You will be saving 60 bucks a month.

Should You Buy It?

  • If you like it , go ahead. Theres nothing better than getting what you want :)
  • Will you be using the crazy stuff on the phone? You can get something $400 cheaper for same options (almost)

I myself think its insane to buy something with such a harsh contract. Too expensive for me. I bought $350 Ngage Nokia, but I ended up using the crappy Lg phone because the nokia turned off after some rings. The other guy ( lifes Good = LG )  is made for destruction. Besure to leave your comments.

No responses yet

Next »

Advertise Here