Saturday, March 13, 2010
50 self-help classics: 50 inspirational books to transform your life, from ... By Tom Butler-Bowdon
Laugh and learn: 95 ways to use humor for more effective teaching and training By Doni Tamblyn
While Laugh and Learn offers plenty to keep smiles on the faces of trainers and their students, it's not a collection of one-liners and knock-knock jokes. It's an enlightening and practical look at how teachers and training professionals can inject elements of entertainment, creativity, humor, and emotion into their existing methods, even when dealing with serious or technical topics. Filled with fun, challenging, and thought-provoking exercises to help readers feel more comfortable being funny, the book also provides dozens of workshop activities and techniques to introduce humor into the learning environment.
Combining the latest brain studies and humor research with the author's own 23 years of experience in comedy and corporate training, Laugh and Learn is a fascinating look at what makes learners perk up, pay attention -- and remember!
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Google on antitrust - blame Microsoft(LATEST NEWS)
Samsung Jet 2 – 3.1-inch touchscreen mobile phone(latest news)
The detailed features of the new Samsung Jet 2 mobile phone are:
- 3.1-inch WVGA AMOLED display
- 800MHz application processor
- Google Push Email
- Media content sharing technology among DLNA certified devices
- English dictionary
- Media Browser
- Samsung Dolphin Internet browser
- motion control
- social networking sites shortcuts
- 3D media gate UI and motion-response UI
- TouchWiz 2.0 User interface
- ‘one finger zoom,’
- 5 mega-pixel camera
- GPS with AGPS
- DNSe & SRS Sound Effect technology
- DivX and XviD video support
Satelloons and lunar lasers: communicating in space
Robots to rescue soldiers
Retrieving casualties while under fire is a major cause of combat losses, says a posting on the Pentagon's small business technology transfer website (bit.ly/aRXXQU). So the army wants a robot with strong, dexterous arms and grippers that can cope with "the large number of body positions and types of locations in which casualties can be found".
It should be capable of planning an approach and escape route without prior knowledge of the local terrain and geography. The army also wants the robot to be able to cooperate with swarms of similar machines for mass rescues.
Inventors have until 24 March to file their ideas.