Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Today, everyone is online. There are a vast number of social networks such as Facebook, Twitter and Myspace, but there are also many blog sites as well Blogspot, Wordpress, etc.). So what are ways that you can save money getting online. Let’s review.

1. Purchase your own domain name. –While this does cost money, the price for a domain name is fairly cheap and will last for a year. Most people renew annually or sign up for 2 or more years (which does give you a cheaper price most of the time depending on where you buy it from.) I personally use GoDaddy for my domain services.

2. FREE HOSTING- The KEY point of having a domain name of your own (www.yourname.com) is that you will forward it to a free hosting site to save money. Nowadays, you can find places like www.wix.com or www.webs.com to host your site and contain all of your information and instead of giving out your generic site name from the free hosting sites, you forward everyone from your own domain name that leads them straight there. Plus it looks more professional this way. I would rather go to www.yourname.com than www.wix.com/yourname or any other generic site name that most free hosting plans give out.

If you blog, the same theory applies. Go find a free hosting plan such as Blogger.com or Wordpress.com, sign up for a blog and then forward your domain to the blog. Simple as pie.

3. Uploading files, videos and pictures- instead of finding a web hosting plan to upload your media files, use YOUTUBE for uploading your vids (FREE) as well as other places like FLICKR.com (FREE) for pictures. You can always get the html code or url address to your photos when you are creating your webpages on a free hosting plan.

Most free hosting plans do not give you upload power for tons of stuff, so to skip that part, upload your media files to places online that are free and link them back to your site. Another simple and free way to save money online.

4. Generating Traffic to your website- No website is really a website in my book unless it has visitors. Free ways of getting visitors is to join social networks and let people know you are online and have content that they want to know about. You do not need to be annoying to do this and most sites will not let you mass post for fear of spam, but you can promote and market yourself in simple ways such as:

  • posting to twitter and facebook status feeds whenever you post an article or upload a new picture or video
  • email friends and family letting them know about your new website
  • join other social networks that are in the same topic or interest as your website and discuss your work
  • keep fresh content flowing- which tells the search engines that your site is not just sitting there.

These 4 simple things can save you hundreds of dollars each year if you want to get online and get heard. For more professional tips for people on a budget, visit my website at http://www.trendyhippiemom.wordpress.com for more tips!

10:34 PM K.aRieL

Today, everyone is online. There are a vast number of social networks such as Facebook, Twitter and Myspace, but there are also many blog sites as well Blogspot, Wordpress, etc.). So what are ways that you can save money getting online. Let’s review.

1. Purchase your own domain name. –While this does cost money, the price for a domain name is fairly cheap and will last for a year. Most people renew annually or sign up for 2 or more years (which does give you a cheaper price most of the time depending on where you buy it from.) I personally use GoDaddy for my domain services.

2. FREE HOSTING- The KEY point of having a domain name of your own (www.yourname.com) is that you will forward it to a free hosting site to save money. Nowadays, you can find places like www.wix.com or www.webs.com to host your site and contain all of your information and instead of giving out your generic site name from the free hosting sites, you forward everyone from your own domain name that leads them straight there. Plus it looks more professional this way. I would rather go to www.yourname.com than www.wix.com/yourname or any other generic site name that most free hosting plans give out.

If you blog, the same theory applies. Go find a free hosting plan such as Blogger.com or Wordpress.com, sign up for a blog and then forward your domain to the blog. Simple as pie.

3. Uploading files, videos and pictures- instead of finding a web hosting plan to upload your media files, use YOUTUBE for uploading your vids (FREE) as well as other places like FLICKR.com (FREE) for pictures. You can always get the html code or url address to your photos when you are creating your webpages on a free hosting plan.

Most free hosting plans do not give you upload power for tons of stuff, so to skip that part, upload your media files to places online that are free and link them back to your site. Another simple and free way to save money online.

4. Generating Traffic to your website- No website is really a website in my book unless it has visitors. Free ways of getting visitors is to join social networks and let people know you are online and have content that they want to know about. You do not need to be annoying to do this and most sites will not let you mass post for fear of spam, but you can promote and market yourself in simple ways such as:

  • posting to twitter and facebook status feeds whenever you post an article or upload a new picture or video
  • email friends and family letting them know about your new website
  • join other social networks that are in the same topic or interest as your website and discuss your work
  • keep fresh content flowing- which tells the search engines that your site is not just sitting there.

These 4 simple things can save you hundreds of dollars each year if you want to get online and get heard. For more professional tips for people on a budget, visit my website at http://www.trendyhippiemom.wordpress.com for more tips!

Thursday, May 26, 2011

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9brT4tU-sE&fs=1&hl=en_US]
9:29 AM K.aRieL
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9brT4tU-sE&fs=1&hl=en_US]

Thursday, April 21, 2011

This pregnancy has been a very long and hard journey. In life, to achieve a goal, most often we have to endure pain, suffering and complications. Only then can we master self and spirit and overcome negative thoughts and feelings associated with our pain. The journey is almost complete. 2 more months to go. Whoo hooh!
3:44 PM K.aRieL
This pregnancy has been a very long and hard journey. In life, to achieve a goal, most often we have to endure pain, suffering and complications. Only then can we master self and spirit and overcome negative thoughts and feelings associated with our pain. The journey is almost complete. 2 more months to go. Whoo hooh!

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Time Management Tips for Moms
Need A Few Extra Hours? Try These Time Management Tips!

By Elizabeth Scott, M.S., About.com Guide
http://stress.about.com/od/stressmanagementtools/a/time_management.htm
Updated May 10, 2010

Time management is a big concern for mothers these days. Between kids’ activities, household responsibilities and, for many, the demands of a stressful workplace, many mothers have given up on the fight to find time for themselves and are just trying to get everything done. The following time management tips can be used by busy moms everywhere to take some of the stress out of life, and create more time for fun times with children, quality time with their partner, or even that coveted and nearly forgotten alone time.

Be Organized
It’s been said that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, and nowhere is this adage more applicable than when discussing time management tips for moms. Simply being organized can eliminate stress from forgotten appointments, double-booking, lost homework, and many other stress traps that busy moms face. What does it mean for a mom to ‘be organized,’ and to what extent is this even possible? If you focus on a few key areas of organization, a little work can go a long way. In a nutshell, being organized with your schedule, with your house and with your discipline strategy is one of the best time management tips I can give you. See this article for more on getting organized.

Delegate!
Yes, when they come to us, they are so sweet and helpless, we end up doing everything for them, and these habits are difficult to break. But then we have their children, and realize that it’s impossible for one person to do it all.

While it’s tempting to cover all household responsibilities yourself (to ensure that everything is done quickly and correctly), putting some effort into getting men and children to pitch in can really pay off in the long run. The trick is to break chores into simple tasks and reward people for doing them. See this article on learning how to delegate tasks for more.

Multitask, But Only When Appropriate
Multitasking was once praised as the time management tip to top all time management tips. (Imagine: Getting twice as much done in a day.) Then people started seeing that multitasked projects weren’t completed as accurately, and suddenly ‘staying focused on one thing’ became the new time management fad. I suggest a compromise: Pair mindless tasks with focus-dependent ones when it’s appropriate. For example, you can make business calls while taking your daily walk (don’t forget exercise as an important stress reliever), or quiz your kids on test questions while you clean the kitchen. But if you feel more harried than helped, it’s time to shelve the multitasking for a bit.

Learn When To Say No
Learning to say ‘no’ to people’s requests may be an obvious time management tip for moms, but that doesn’t make it an easy one. Mothers encounter many different worthy requests for their time and attention, that saying no will often disappoint someone. However, what we don’t always realize is that when we say ‘yes’ too much, people also get disappointed because we can’t do our best when we’re spread too thin. That’s why it’s important to look at your priorities and learn to say no to time demands that aren’t absolutely necessary.

Take Shortcuts
As a recovering perfectionist, I’m a big advocate of doing a good-enough job, especially if you’re a busy mom. If you can get pre-cut vegetables or canned sauce for dinner, do it. If you can afford one of those dishwashers that can handle un-rinsed dishes, even better. The time management tip to remember here is to find the shortest route to where you need to be (getting to the office, getting homework done, getting the house clean), and take it. (Here are some more ideas for household shortcuts).

Have a Routine
Routine are a time management tip that can save you mental energy and stress. I’m not talking about merely getting up and going to sleep at the same time, but even having things like the dinner menu, chore rotation and even sex with your partner on a rotation (you have your needs, too.) This may sound a little ‘too automated,’ but hear me out. When you don’t have to worry about reinventing the wheel each week (“What haven’t we eaten in a while?” “When was this floor last mopped?” “When is the last time we…?”), your mind is free to focus on the rest of your day, and the time it takes to plan these things each week is freed as well.

Be Flexible
While it’s important to have an idea of how you’d like your schedule to look, it’s important to keep things flexible enough to accommodate the unexpected things that moms encounter -- sick kids, spilled milk and the occasional meltdown. Having a rhythm for your day but a time cushion and some backup plans can take the stress out of the unexpected, and keep one schedule hiccup from throwing off your whole day (or week).

Take Care of Yourself, Too!
While taking care of parental, relationship, household and workplace responsibilities, it’s easy for mothers put taking care of themselves last on the list. However, not only is self-care a good idea of physical and emotional health, it’s a good time management tip for moms as well. When we’re tired or haven’t had enough healthy food to function at our best, we’re often less productive and organized, and this lack of clarity can translate into more time wasted throughout the day and less time available to get everything done that needs doing. So get quality sleep, eat a healthy diet, and follow other self care strategies for mothers, and you’ll be operating at your best -— and less stressed.
3:53 PM K.aRieL
Time Management Tips for Moms
Need A Few Extra Hours? Try These Time Management Tips!

By Elizabeth Scott, M.S., About.com Guide
http://stress.about.com/od/stressmanagementtools/a/time_management.htm
Updated May 10, 2010

Time management is a big concern for mothers these days. Between kids’ activities, household responsibilities and, for many, the demands of a stressful workplace, many mothers have given up on the fight to find time for themselves and are just trying to get everything done. The following time management tips can be used by busy moms everywhere to take some of the stress out of life, and create more time for fun times with children, quality time with their partner, or even that coveted and nearly forgotten alone time.

Be Organized
It’s been said that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, and nowhere is this adage more applicable than when discussing time management tips for moms. Simply being organized can eliminate stress from forgotten appointments, double-booking, lost homework, and many other stress traps that busy moms face. What does it mean for a mom to ‘be organized,’ and to what extent is this even possible? If you focus on a few key areas of organization, a little work can go a long way. In a nutshell, being organized with your schedule, with your house and with your discipline strategy is one of the best time management tips I can give you. See this article for more on getting organized.

Delegate!
Yes, when they come to us, they are so sweet and helpless, we end up doing everything for them, and these habits are difficult to break. But then we have their children, and realize that it’s impossible for one person to do it all.

While it’s tempting to cover all household responsibilities yourself (to ensure that everything is done quickly and correctly), putting some effort into getting men and children to pitch in can really pay off in the long run. The trick is to break chores into simple tasks and reward people for doing them. See this article on learning how to delegate tasks for more.

Multitask, But Only When Appropriate
Multitasking was once praised as the time management tip to top all time management tips. (Imagine: Getting twice as much done in a day.) Then people started seeing that multitasked projects weren’t completed as accurately, and suddenly ‘staying focused on one thing’ became the new time management fad. I suggest a compromise: Pair mindless tasks with focus-dependent ones when it’s appropriate. For example, you can make business calls while taking your daily walk (don’t forget exercise as an important stress reliever), or quiz your kids on test questions while you clean the kitchen. But if you feel more harried than helped, it’s time to shelve the multitasking for a bit.

Learn When To Say No
Learning to say ‘no’ to people’s requests may be an obvious time management tip for moms, but that doesn’t make it an easy one. Mothers encounter many different worthy requests for their time and attention, that saying no will often disappoint someone. However, what we don’t always realize is that when we say ‘yes’ too much, people also get disappointed because we can’t do our best when we’re spread too thin. That’s why it’s important to look at your priorities and learn to say no to time demands that aren’t absolutely necessary.

Take Shortcuts
As a recovering perfectionist, I’m a big advocate of doing a good-enough job, especially if you’re a busy mom. If you can get pre-cut vegetables or canned sauce for dinner, do it. If you can afford one of those dishwashers that can handle un-rinsed dishes, even better. The time management tip to remember here is to find the shortest route to where you need to be (getting to the office, getting homework done, getting the house clean), and take it. (Here are some more ideas for household shortcuts).

Have a Routine
Routine are a time management tip that can save you mental energy and stress. I’m not talking about merely getting up and going to sleep at the same time, but even having things like the dinner menu, chore rotation and even sex with your partner on a rotation (you have your needs, too.) This may sound a little ‘too automated,’ but hear me out. When you don’t have to worry about reinventing the wheel each week (“What haven’t we eaten in a while?” “When was this floor last mopped?” “When is the last time we…?”), your mind is free to focus on the rest of your day, and the time it takes to plan these things each week is freed as well.

Be Flexible
While it’s important to have an idea of how you’d like your schedule to look, it’s important to keep things flexible enough to accommodate the unexpected things that moms encounter -- sick kids, spilled milk and the occasional meltdown. Having a rhythm for your day but a time cushion and some backup plans can take the stress out of the unexpected, and keep one schedule hiccup from throwing off your whole day (or week).

Take Care of Yourself, Too!
While taking care of parental, relationship, household and workplace responsibilities, it’s easy for mothers put taking care of themselves last on the list. However, not only is self-care a good idea of physical and emotional health, it’s a good time management tip for moms as well. When we’re tired or haven’t had enough healthy food to function at our best, we’re often less productive and organized, and this lack of clarity can translate into more time wasted throughout the day and less time available to get everything done that needs doing. So get quality sleep, eat a healthy diet, and follow other self care strategies for mothers, and you’ll be operating at your best -— and less stressed.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

"Action expresses priorities". - Mohandas K. Gandhi. Therefore it is what you do that show everyone where your mind & heart are. If you sit all day & do nothing, you are really showing the world that you have nothing to offer. ACT on each thought through prayer that guides our steps & you will be rewarded in this world and in the world to come.
3:04 PM K.aRieL
"Action expresses priorities". - Mohandas K. Gandhi. Therefore it is what you do that show everyone where your mind & heart are. If you sit all day & do nothing, you are really showing the world that you have nothing to offer. ACT on each thought through prayer that guides our steps & you will be rewarded in this world and in the world to come.

Monday, March 14, 2011

‎"My child LIVES in COLOR! While "we" grown ups go 'too and fro' with all of our busy lives, rules & regulations, obligations and social statuses that we feel we have to comply with...my child LIVES in COLOR- fun, loving, laughs, giggles & hugs. My CHILD is FREE because WE love on her & show her LOVE- which COLORS her life with joy....what are YOU giving your children?"

-a poem by me

Copyright 2011

 

We can always tell what kind of love or lack of is given to a child by the way they act, behavior and how they talk or shy in the corner....just always remember that if we don't show and give them love first, they will try so hard to get it our in the world when they get older and the world is a tough and hard place that can not possible love back. It will always live them broken hearted. And never tell your children that they get on your nerves and other things like that (even when they do) OMG, they know what you are saying and it does hurt them (even at young ages), they try to hide to it but those who work with kids know what I'm talking about.... children are not creatures who lack feelings and they are not supposed to be raised with lack of feelings, quiet creatures that show no joy and happiness. Children make sound and when they don't then something is wrong. I think the grown ups need to learn more from them sometimes

-My words of wisdom for the day

8:59 AM K.aRieL

‎"My child LIVES in COLOR! While "we" grown ups go 'too and fro' with all of our busy lives, rules & regulations, obligations and social statuses that we feel we have to comply with...my child LIVES in COLOR- fun, loving, laughs, giggles & hugs. My CHILD is FREE because WE love on her & show her LOVE- which COLORS her life with joy....what are YOU giving your children?"

-a poem by me

Copyright 2011

 

We can always tell what kind of love or lack of is given to a child by the way they act, behavior and how they talk or shy in the corner....just always remember that if we don't show and give them love first, they will try so hard to get it our in the world when they get older and the world is a tough and hard place that can not possible love back. It will always live them broken hearted. And never tell your children that they get on your nerves and other things like that (even when they do) OMG, they know what you are saying and it does hurt them (even at young ages), they try to hide to it but those who work with kids know what I'm talking about.... children are not creatures who lack feelings and they are not supposed to be raised with lack of feelings, quiet creatures that show no joy and happiness. Children make sound and when they don't then something is wrong. I think the grown ups need to learn more from them sometimes

-My words of wisdom for the day

Thursday, March 3, 2011

How the iPad 2 stacks up against the competition

Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs introduces the iPad 2 on stage during an Apple event in San Francisco

Reuters – Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs introduces the iPad 2 on stage during an Apple event in San Francisco, California …

 

By Ben Patterson Wed Mar 2, 2:57 pm ET

Now that we've finally got the official details for the next iPad, those in the market for a new tablet can begin comparison shopping in earnest.

On paper, it looks like the iPad 2 (read the announcement details right here) adds the features it needs to keep up with its upcoming tablet competitors. For example, we're talking a faster, dual-core processor (essential for speedy performance and smooth multitasking), dual cameras (including a front-facing lens for video chat, a key omission in the original iPad), and a thinner and lighter form factor. The second iPad also keeps a couple of key qualities from the first: 10 hours of battery life, and a $499 price tag for the cheapest, 16GB Wi-Fi-only model.

But several of the tablets listed below, including the Dell Streak 7, the Samsung Galaxy Tab, and (eventually) the dual-core processor-packing Motorola Xoom come with Flash support (the Xoom is still awaiting a software update from Flash developer Adobe), while the LG G-Slate and the PlayBook will connect with bleeding-edge 4G data networks. (The Xoom will ultimately do so as well, although you'll have to ship it back to Verizon Wireless for hardware and firmware tweaks.)

Any true head-to-head evaluation of these tablets will have to wait until we get them in for testing, of course. For now, though, I've gone ahead and compiled a list of specs for the top iPad competitors that are either available now in the U.S. or are on their way soon.

We're still waiting for full details and pricing on some of 2011's most-anticipated upcoming tablets, but hey—I figured you'd want to see the details we do have, at least.

Specifications are supplied by the manufacturers—particularly when it comes to battery life. If I've reviewed or had hands-on time with any of the tablets, you'll find a link below the list of specs.

All set? Then here we go...

Apple iPad 2


Dimensions: 9.5 by 7.31 by 0.34 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 9.7 inches, 1,024 by 768
Weight: 1.3 pounds (Wi-Fi-only), 1.33 pounds (Wi-Fi + 3G)
Processor: 1GHz dual-core Apple A5
Cameras: VGA in front, 720p video capture-capable in back
Battery: 10 hours of Wi-Fi surfing
Ports: 30-pin dock connector
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 3G
Platform: iOS 4.3
Price: $499 (for 16GB Wi-Fi version) up to $829 (for 64GB Wi-Fi + 3G model)
Release date: March 11 (U.S.), March 25 (additional countries)
Click here for more details

Dell Streak 7

Dimensions: 7.9 by 4.7 by 0.5 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 7 inches, 800 by 480
Weight: 1 pound
Processor: Dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2
Cameras: 5MP (rear), 1.3MP (front)
Battery: 2780 mAh, four hours video playback
Ports: microUSB, microSD
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 4G
Platform: Android 2.2
Price: $449 (no contract, T-Mobile), $199 (with two-year T-Mobile contract)
Release date: Available now
Click here for my review

HP TouchPad


Dimensions: 9.45 by 7.48 by 0.54 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 9.7 inches, 1,024 by 768
Weight: 1.6 pounds
Processor: 1.2GHz dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon APQ8060
Camera: 1.3MP (front)
Battery: 6300 mAh
Ports: microUSB
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 3G
Platform: WebOS
Price: Unknown
Release date: Summer
Click here for more details

LG G-Slate


Dimensions: Unknown
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 8.9 inches, resolution unknown, 3D (anaglyph) capable
Weight: Unknown
Processor: Dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2
Cameras: 5MP (rear, dual-lens stereoscopic), front-facing lens (unknown resolution)
Battery: Unknown
Ports: Unknown
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 4G
Platform: Android 3.0 "Honeycomb"
Price: Unknown
Release date: Spring 2011 (T-Mobile)
Click here for more details

Motorola Xoom


Dimensions: 9.8 by 6.6 by 0.5 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 10.1 inches, 1,280 by 800
Weight: 1.6 pounds
Processor: 1GHz dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2
Cameras: 5MP (rear), 2MP (front)
Battery: 10 hours Wi-Fi browsing
Ports: MicroUSB, mini-HDMI, microSD (not enabled yet)
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 3G, 4G later this year (must be shipped to carrier for upgrade)
Platform: Android 3.0 "Honeycomb"
Price: $800 (32GB), or $600 with a two-year Verizon Wireless contract
Release date: Available now
Click here for my review

Samsung Galaxy Tab


Dimensions: 7.48 by 4.74 by 0.47 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 7 inches, 1,024 by 600
Weight: 13.6 ounces
Processor: 1GHz Cortex A8 "Hummingbird"
Cameras: 3MP (rear), 1.3MP (front)
Battery: 7 hours
Ports: microUSB, microSD
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 3G
Platform: Android 2.2
Price: $249 with two-year contact on T-Mobile, $299 with two-year Sprint contract, $549 on AT&T, no contract, $599 on Verizon, no-contract, or $299 with two-year Verizon contract.
Release date: Available now
Click here for my review

Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1


Dimensions: 0.43 inches thick
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 10.1 inches, 1,280 by 800
Weight: 1.3 pounds
Processor: 1GHz dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2
Cameras: 8MP (rear), 2MP (front)
Battery: 6860 mAh
Ports: microUSB
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 4G
Platform: Android 3.0 "Honeycomb"
Price: Unknown
Release date: Spring (Europe), unknown (U.S.)
Click here for more details from CNET

RIM BlackBerry PlayBook


Dimensions: 7.6 by 5.1 by 0.4 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 7 inches, 1024 by 600
Weight: 0.9 pounds
Processor: 1GHz dual-core Cortex A9
Cameras: 5MP (rear), 3MP (front)
Battery: 8 hours (or so RIM is promising)
Ports: microUSB, mini-HDMI
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 4G (summer, through Sprint)
Platform: QNX
Price: Unknown (but expected to be $500 or less)
Release date: Q1 2011
Click here for my hands-on impressions

— Ben Patterson is a technology blogger for Yahoo! News.

6:08 AM K.aRieL

How the iPad 2 stacks up against the competition

Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs introduces the iPad 2 on stage during an Apple event in San Francisco

Reuters – Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs introduces the iPad 2 on stage during an Apple event in San Francisco, California …

 

By Ben Patterson Wed Mar 2, 2:57 pm ET

Now that we've finally got the official details for the next iPad, those in the market for a new tablet can begin comparison shopping in earnest.

On paper, it looks like the iPad 2 (read the announcement details right here) adds the features it needs to keep up with its upcoming tablet competitors. For example, we're talking a faster, dual-core processor (essential for speedy performance and smooth multitasking), dual cameras (including a front-facing lens for video chat, a key omission in the original iPad), and a thinner and lighter form factor. The second iPad also keeps a couple of key qualities from the first: 10 hours of battery life, and a $499 price tag for the cheapest, 16GB Wi-Fi-only model.

But several of the tablets listed below, including the Dell Streak 7, the Samsung Galaxy Tab, and (eventually) the dual-core processor-packing Motorola Xoom come with Flash support (the Xoom is still awaiting a software update from Flash developer Adobe), while the LG G-Slate and the PlayBook will connect with bleeding-edge 4G data networks. (The Xoom will ultimately do so as well, although you'll have to ship it back to Verizon Wireless for hardware and firmware tweaks.)

Any true head-to-head evaluation of these tablets will have to wait until we get them in for testing, of course. For now, though, I've gone ahead and compiled a list of specs for the top iPad competitors that are either available now in the U.S. or are on their way soon.

We're still waiting for full details and pricing on some of 2011's most-anticipated upcoming tablets, but hey—I figured you'd want to see the details we do have, at least.

Specifications are supplied by the manufacturers—particularly when it comes to battery life. If I've reviewed or had hands-on time with any of the tablets, you'll find a link below the list of specs.

All set? Then here we go...

Apple iPad 2


Dimensions: 9.5 by 7.31 by 0.34 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 9.7 inches, 1,024 by 768
Weight: 1.3 pounds (Wi-Fi-only), 1.33 pounds (Wi-Fi + 3G)
Processor: 1GHz dual-core Apple A5
Cameras: VGA in front, 720p video capture-capable in back
Battery: 10 hours of Wi-Fi surfing
Ports: 30-pin dock connector
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 3G
Platform: iOS 4.3
Price: $499 (for 16GB Wi-Fi version) up to $829 (for 64GB Wi-Fi + 3G model)
Release date: March 11 (U.S.), March 25 (additional countries)
Click here for more details

Dell Streak 7

Dimensions: 7.9 by 4.7 by 0.5 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 7 inches, 800 by 480
Weight: 1 pound
Processor: Dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2
Cameras: 5MP (rear), 1.3MP (front)
Battery: 2780 mAh, four hours video playback
Ports: microUSB, microSD
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 4G
Platform: Android 2.2
Price: $449 (no contract, T-Mobile), $199 (with two-year T-Mobile contract)
Release date: Available now
Click here for my review

HP TouchPad


Dimensions: 9.45 by 7.48 by 0.54 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 9.7 inches, 1,024 by 768
Weight: 1.6 pounds
Processor: 1.2GHz dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon APQ8060
Camera: 1.3MP (front)
Battery: 6300 mAh
Ports: microUSB
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 3G
Platform: WebOS
Price: Unknown
Release date: Summer
Click here for more details

LG G-Slate


Dimensions: Unknown
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 8.9 inches, resolution unknown, 3D (anaglyph) capable
Weight: Unknown
Processor: Dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2
Cameras: 5MP (rear, dual-lens stereoscopic), front-facing lens (unknown resolution)
Battery: Unknown
Ports: Unknown
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 4G
Platform: Android 3.0 "Honeycomb"
Price: Unknown
Release date: Spring 2011 (T-Mobile)
Click here for more details

Motorola Xoom


Dimensions: 9.8 by 6.6 by 0.5 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 10.1 inches, 1,280 by 800
Weight: 1.6 pounds
Processor: 1GHz dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2
Cameras: 5MP (rear), 2MP (front)
Battery: 10 hours Wi-Fi browsing
Ports: MicroUSB, mini-HDMI, microSD (not enabled yet)
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 3G, 4G later this year (must be shipped to carrier for upgrade)
Platform: Android 3.0 "Honeycomb"
Price: $800 (32GB), or $600 with a two-year Verizon Wireless contract
Release date: Available now
Click here for my review

Samsung Galaxy Tab


Dimensions: 7.48 by 4.74 by 0.47 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 7 inches, 1,024 by 600
Weight: 13.6 ounces
Processor: 1GHz Cortex A8 "Hummingbird"
Cameras: 3MP (rear), 1.3MP (front)
Battery: 7 hours
Ports: microUSB, microSD
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 3G
Platform: Android 2.2
Price: $249 with two-year contact on T-Mobile, $299 with two-year Sprint contract, $549 on AT&T, no contract, $599 on Verizon, no-contract, or $299 with two-year Verizon contract.
Release date: Available now
Click here for my review

Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1


Dimensions: 0.43 inches thick
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 10.1 inches, 1,280 by 800
Weight: 1.3 pounds
Processor: 1GHz dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2
Cameras: 8MP (rear), 2MP (front)
Battery: 6860 mAh
Ports: microUSB
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 4G
Platform: Android 3.0 "Honeycomb"
Price: Unknown
Release date: Spring (Europe), unknown (U.S.)
Click here for more details from CNET

RIM BlackBerry PlayBook


Dimensions: 7.6 by 5.1 by 0.4 inches
Diagonal screen size/resolution: 7 inches, 1024 by 600
Weight: 0.9 pounds
Processor: 1GHz dual-core Cortex A9
Cameras: 5MP (rear), 3MP (front)
Battery: 8 hours (or so RIM is promising)
Ports: microUSB, mini-HDMI
Connectivity: Wi-Fi, 4G (summer, through Sprint)
Platform: QNX
Price: Unknown (but expected to be $500 or less)
Release date: Q1 2011
Click here for my hands-on impressions

— Ben Patterson is a technology blogger for Yahoo! News.

Friday, February 25, 2011

It’s amazing that whenever HaShem wants me to mediate on things and be still, he sends a bird. Not just any bird but a red bird. Sometimes a brown and red bird with a very red beak. Crazy right….well, not exactly.

According to the deeper spiritual teachings, anything that makes you stop what you are physically doing to think and rest upon something is considered a “mystical” experience. Things like prayer, supernatural visits from angels or even visions and dreams are all ways in which HaShem speaks to us.

Sometimes, little things like the red bird at my window is all it takes to make someone’s soul open to what HaShem is showing them.

There is a big tree in front of my window. It’s very very big and takes up the living room window and the bedroom window. The entire tree has leaves and is full green except for one branch. This branch is where my heavenly and air rider messengers perch. They just perch and sit and wait for my thoughts, my mind to clear and my soul to open. And at that moment, they often leave, flying away and never to be seen until the next time I need to clear my soul and Selah.

One pair of birds always come in their pair. They are brown and very pretty. Different looking from the other birds around here, which are plain black. The other two birds, the all red one and the brown and red bird with the all red beak, only come every once in a while separate. And these two birds always KNOCK.

Did I say KNOCK? Yes I did. They knock the window, and hit it and will keep on hitting the window until I pull the blinds back to see them. Then they sit only for a few moments before leaving.

This time to get proof, I ran away to get my camera, only to come back to find the red bird had vanished, flew away….It just knew I was trying to take a picture of it…lol.

Which brings me to a point in the human mind. We need proof, even when the supernatural is calling us, even I, a person who has had many supernatural visions and dreams and have seen things that normal people without a spiritual eye just would not understand.

Nevertheless, the bird at my window has once again intrigued me and brought me closer to HaShem through the view of His lovely creation. Selah.

2:00 PM K.aRieL

It’s amazing that whenever HaShem wants me to mediate on things and be still, he sends a bird. Not just any bird but a red bird. Sometimes a brown and red bird with a very red beak. Crazy right….well, not exactly.

According to the deeper spiritual teachings, anything that makes you stop what you are physically doing to think and rest upon something is considered a “mystical” experience. Things like prayer, supernatural visits from angels or even visions and dreams are all ways in which HaShem speaks to us.

Sometimes, little things like the red bird at my window is all it takes to make someone’s soul open to what HaShem is showing them.

There is a big tree in front of my window. It’s very very big and takes up the living room window and the bedroom window. The entire tree has leaves and is full green except for one branch. This branch is where my heavenly and air rider messengers perch. They just perch and sit and wait for my thoughts, my mind to clear and my soul to open. And at that moment, they often leave, flying away and never to be seen until the next time I need to clear my soul and Selah.

One pair of birds always come in their pair. They are brown and very pretty. Different looking from the other birds around here, which are plain black. The other two birds, the all red one and the brown and red bird with the all red beak, only come every once in a while separate. And these two birds always KNOCK.

Did I say KNOCK? Yes I did. They knock the window, and hit it and will keep on hitting the window until I pull the blinds back to see them. Then they sit only for a few moments before leaving.

This time to get proof, I ran away to get my camera, only to come back to find the red bird had vanished, flew away….It just knew I was trying to take a picture of it…lol.

Which brings me to a point in the human mind. We need proof, even when the supernatural is calling us, even I, a person who has had many supernatural visions and dreams and have seen things that normal people without a spiritual eye just would not understand.

Nevertheless, the bird at my window has once again intrigued me and brought me closer to HaShem through the view of His lovely creation. Selah.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

A won’t name my friend who asked a question on his facebook page, just to keep it friendly and confidential, but the situation goes like this:

 

He asked everyone what was their defining trait…you know, something that everybody knows you from or describes you.

 

Now, I wrote that my headwraps was my trait because everyone know me when they see someone walk in with a headwrap, most likely it’s me.

 

Other folk wrote, my butt or breast, or “You know (fill in a name), that girl so fine…..” Etc.

 

Ok, my beef is this. That is not a defining trait. PERIOD. And it shows just how much we value ourselves and lack of value therein.

 

This is the reason why….if ten people say the same thing, which they all did- “butt and breast and being fine”, then it means that is someone yells out in a crowd, “Hey fine girl with the big butt and breast”, that 10 women will turn around.

 

Not cool. Women were created to have some form of breast and a butt, so what’s so special about it that makes it a “Defining trait”. NOTHING AT ALL.

 

But if you tell them, they get mad and upset and say, “its always somebody….” Well, yeah I’m that one person that’s gonna tell you that if that is all you have to offer and is your defining trait, you are shallow with no depth and this is why the term “baby mama” exist.

It’s not just the physical aspect of this conversation, because the post was meant to be fun. Have everyone list that one trait, but when everyone list the same thing…..come on now.

So in conclusion, we can tell a lot about people by first impressions and what they do or say when they first open their mouth to speak or type. If this is the first thing that a woman will say, then what hope is their for them? None.

So why are these the same women who complain when men dog them or leave them to be with another women….because you all have the same doggone defining trait……

Now that’s some real talk.

2:37 PM K.aRieL

A won’t name my friend who asked a question on his facebook page, just to keep it friendly and confidential, but the situation goes like this:

 

He asked everyone what was their defining trait…you know, something that everybody knows you from or describes you.

 

Now, I wrote that my headwraps was my trait because everyone know me when they see someone walk in with a headwrap, most likely it’s me.

 

Other folk wrote, my butt or breast, or “You know (fill in a name), that girl so fine…..” Etc.

 

Ok, my beef is this. That is not a defining trait. PERIOD. And it shows just how much we value ourselves and lack of value therein.

 

This is the reason why….if ten people say the same thing, which they all did- “butt and breast and being fine”, then it means that is someone yells out in a crowd, “Hey fine girl with the big butt and breast”, that 10 women will turn around.

 

Not cool. Women were created to have some form of breast and a butt, so what’s so special about it that makes it a “Defining trait”. NOTHING AT ALL.

 

But if you tell them, they get mad and upset and say, “its always somebody….” Well, yeah I’m that one person that’s gonna tell you that if that is all you have to offer and is your defining trait, you are shallow with no depth and this is why the term “baby mama” exist.

It’s not just the physical aspect of this conversation, because the post was meant to be fun. Have everyone list that one trait, but when everyone list the same thing…..come on now.

So in conclusion, we can tell a lot about people by first impressions and what they do or say when they first open their mouth to speak or type. If this is the first thing that a woman will say, then what hope is their for them? None.

So why are these the same women who complain when men dog them or leave them to be with another women….because you all have the same doggone defining trait……

Now that’s some real talk.

The Shah of Iran's descendant tells his story from Jerusalem.

by Sara Yoheved Rigler

Moshe (not his real name, lest the wrong people read this) looks like any other religious Jewish man in Jerusalem — dark hair, dark beard, wire-rimmed glasses, poring over a Talmudic tome in a yeshiva. No one would suspect that he is the great-great-grandson of a former Shah of Iran.

altMoshe’s life has had more dramatic twists than the Disney movie. He is a scion not of the Pahlavi dynasty, which was deposed by the Islamic Revolution after two short generations, but rather of the Qajar dynasty, which proudly ruled Persia for ten generations. He remembers visiting his great-grandmother, the daughter of Mohammed Ali Shah Qajar, whom they called the “Little Princess” until her death at age 99, who used to regale him with stories of growing up in the palace, in the shadow of the Peacock Throne. He also remembers escorting his great-uncle into a room of Persian expatriates in Europe; everyone bowed to his uncle and called him, “shazdejeun, great son of the king.”

It was the first of three times in her life that Mina would lose everything in a single night.

Moshe’s grandmother was married off to an aristocrat whose fiefdom was far from Tehran. “In great aristocratic families, it’s not good to work,” explains Moshe. “All his life, my grandfather didn’t work, but he gambled and did opium.” One fateful night, when Moshe’s mother Mina was nine years old, her father gambled away everything he owned — his palace, his landholdings, his stable of Arabian stallions. The family was cast out of their home with barely food to eat.

It was the first of three times in her life that Mina would lose everything in a single night.

The family retreated to Tehran and was given an apartment in the palatial home of the Little Princess, Mina’s grandmother. The family had lost its wealth, but not its prestige. “People in Persia are very proud of their origin,” comments Moshe. “People respected my mother because she was high-born. Even if you lost all your money, you are still respected. Persians are very proud, and if you are aristocracy, it’s even more so.”

But at age 17, Mina risked losing even her status. She fell in love with Charles, a European Christian living in Tehran. When she revealed to her mother that she intended to marry this man who was neither Persian nor even Muslim, her mother threatened to disown her. Mina did not back down. At the end of a raging argument in which her mother told her she never wanted to see her again, the door was closed behind Mina, leaving her on the street with a single suitcase.

Too chaste to go to Charles’s apartment, Mina sought shelter with a friend. The friend took her to a large house filled with women and gave her a room. After some time, a French man entered the room. It turned out that the place was a brothel. She escaped and fled to Charles.

Charles, at age 22, was a budding scientist and a man of eloquence and charisma. He went to Mina’s mother and eventually convinced her to accept the marriage. Although Mina had a strong belief in God, like most of the Persian aristocracy she was a lukewarm Muslim. She converted to Christianity and the couple had three weddings: civil, Christian, and Moslem.

Related Article: The Jew from Kuwait

Childhood and the Revolution

They lived in Tehran and Charles launched a company based on his scientific discoveries. In 1971, their second son Henry (later to become Moshe) was born. Strangely enough, his grandmother insisted on having him circumcised on the eighth day. He was also baptized as a baby. He was not given a Persian name, nor did his father permit him to learn to read and write Persian. Charles wanted his son to feel that the world was his home; his fate was to grow up with no home.

Charles’s business was successful, and Henry was raised in the lap of luxury: his own horse, skiing every weekend, vacations in European capitals, and an Occidental school attended by the upper class. He remembers the privileged precincts of North Tehran as “a paradise for children. People were extremely good and friendly, we had a huge family, and I watched English television.”

His idyllic childhood was ended by the Islamic Revolution of 1979. “People were killing each other in the streets.”

His idyllic childhood was ended by the Islamic Revolution of 1979. “People were killing each other in the streets,” Moshe recalls. “I used to go to my school in a school bus. One day one of the school buses was blown up by a rocket. All the children on the bus were killed. Two days later my brother and I were in Europe.”

They arrived in their new boarding school in the European countryside in a chauffeured Rolls Royce. None of the locals had ever seen such a sight. They thought the boys were from the family of the fleeing Shah.

During the first phase of the Revolution, Iranians across the political and religious spectrum were united in their desire for liberty and to get rid of the Shah. Had Mina been a Pahlavi, she would have been executed. Instead, she was from the revered Qajar dynasty. Like many of the aristocracy, she made an amiable alliance with the new government. A year later, she brought her sons back to Iran.

For Henry’s family, the national chaos was exacerbated by personal tragedy. Unscrupulous Western concerns had been trying to buy Charles’s innovative technology, but he had repeatedly refused. Finally, two Harvard men came to Tehran and over a period of a few months implemented a carefully plotted scheme to win Charles’s confidence. One night they plied him with liquor and got him to sign his business away. Overnight, the family lost everything. A broken Charles went to Europe, where he tried to start over again. A few months later, the family was notified that Charles was found dead, apparently of a heart attack.

Protégé of the Ayatollah

Mina was now alone, but undaunted. She approached a company that had been associated with her husband and asked to work for them. They offered her a lowly position as a salesperson. She converted a room in their small apartment into an office, and started from scratch. Her efforts, however, were undermined by rampant government corruption.

“Any time you have a problem, just call the office of Ayatollah Khomeini and he will take care of it.”

Mina went directly to Ayatollah Khomeini. Henry remembers the servants in his home during his halcyon childhood speaking of the coming of the Messiah. When Ayatollah Khomeini returned to Persia at the outset of the Revolution, virtually the entire populace regarded him as the Messiah. Mina, shrewd and secular, was an exception. But when she spoke directly with him to complain about government corruption, she became star-struck. Khomeini would not look directly at a woman’s face. Nevertheless, by the end of the interview, Mina had become his faithful protégé. Upon arriving home, she received a phone call saying, “Any time you have a problem, just call the office of Ayatollah Khomeini and he will take care of it.”

For the rest of Khomeini’s life, even during the most violent days of the regime, Mina enjoyed his personal protection. “The government feared my mother,” asserts Moshe. Several years later Mina had become a fantastically successful businesswoman.

Meanwhile the Revolution had entered a repressive phase. The religious zealots began to kill off all the other factions. Moshe remembers watching the movie Z in the home of the first Minister of Justice after the Revolution. Two years later, that Minister was murdered by Islamic radicals.

“Tehran became like the Chicago of the 20s,” remembers Moshe. “People with machine guns were gunning down other people in the streets. They closed the Occidental school my brother and I attended.”

Mina wanted her sons to become educated, cosmopolitan people. She decided that they had no future in the new Iran. A year after bringing them back, she again sent them to Europe, this time for good. Henry was nine years old when he bid his final farewell to the only home he would know until he created his own in Jerusalem.

The boys attended a Christian boarding school. They were completely alone in a foreign country. They had no contact with their father’s relatives, who had failed to attend Charles’s funeral; Mina had severed all ties with them. Mina visited two or three times a year, taking them on vacations to the United States, Vancouver, Hawaii, Spain, etc., but even on vacation her attention was on her business.

For high school, the boys attended the International School of Valbonne on the French Riviera. Known as “the school of geniuses,” it was the academy of choice for the sons of heads of state from every continent.

Throughout his teenage years, Henry engaged in a quest to find ultimate Truth. He read copiously in literature and philosophy. He dabbled in Spiritualism, Epicurean philosophy, art, and theater. He experimented with Zen meditation; after just a few months he attained “a sort of Nirvana.” With shoulder-length hair and all black clothing, he walked barefoot around Valbonne’s campus.

His quest for Truth did not take him to religion. Having been raised by monks in Christian schools, he did not take Christianity seriously. Having been exiled by Islamic zealots, he had no respect for Islam. His quest was intellectual, not religious, and God played no part in his life.

Then one day while he was in college, Henry had a mystical experience. He was suddenly, powerfully gripped by a consciousness of God as real and immanent. This state, which was not drug-induced, lasted a fortnight. After it ended, Henry wanted nothing else as much as to re-experience that God-consciousness. As an intellectual, he trusted his mind and knew that what he had experienced was an unadulterated dose of Reality. But where could he find God again?

Related Article: Shrek's Mazel

Discovering Judaism

One evening while in law school, some of his secular Jewish friends mentioned that they were going to a Jewish class that evening. Henry invited himself along. As Henry attests, “Everything the rabbi said, I felt, ‘This is what I have been seeking.’” His Jewish friends soon stopped attending the weekly class, but Henry continued. He resonated completely with the teachings. In a bookstore, he found some classic Jewish texts, such as the Kuzari and The Path of the Just. Reading them, he was overwhelmed by the sense, “Yes, this is what I want.”

The Path of the Just, an 18th century text describing the ascending levels of character refinement and spiritual attainment, became for Henry a map back to the God-consciousness he had known and lost.

After law school, Henry decided that it was not enough to study Judaism; he had to live it. He made up his mind to convert to Judaism, but when he tried to make an appointment to initiate the conversion process at the city’s Beit Din(Jewish court), he was ignored. Finally he phoned the Beit Din and asked to speak to the Chief Rabbi “about something very important and private.” The secretary asked what he wanted to speak about, but Henry insisted it was private. He was given an appointment, but as soon as he told the Chief Rabbi why he had come, the Rabbi told him, “I have ten minutes, not one minute more, to give you.” An hour later, he was still engaged in an intense conversation with Henry. At the end, the Rabbi told him, “Come back in one year. In one year, I will accept you.”

“For an aristocratic Persian, becoming a Jew is the most awful thing you can do.”

Henry understood that it was a test of his sincerity and persistence. The Rabbi did not know that he was dealing with the undauntable Qajar breed. A year later, Henry came back. After two years of studying how to be a Jew, Henry converted at the age of 28. Six months later, he married Noa, and they made aliyah to Israel, where he studies in yeshiva.

Converting to Judaism meant forfeiting his aristocratic prestige, his mother’s approval, and all connection to his extended family. “For an aristocratic Persian, becoming a Jew is the most awful thing you can do,” declares Moshe. “It’s simply unimaginable. It’s shameful.”

During the long conversion process, he never became discouraged by the prospect of losing all the privileges of his birth and upbringing. “I believed something,” Moshe attests. “I believed that Torah is the Truth, and I wanted to have it. I didn’t want to just learn about it. I wanted to reach the spiritual heights described in The Path of the Just.

After his conversion, Moshe had a conversation with his brother. “Why don’t you convert?" Moshe asked him. "You know Judaism is true.”

Moshe’s brother replied, “I know it's true but I can’t convert. I love luxury and comfort too much.”

Sitting in his simple Jerusalem apartment, surrounded by his wife and children, Moshe ponders the trade-off he made in choosing truth over comfort. Did he get more than he lost? Moshe’s answer is a broad smile.

Sara Yoheved Rigler plans to come to America in May to give workshops (seewww.kesherwife.com), Shabbatons, and lectures. To invite her to your community, please write to Shaindy at slewsi@aol.com

11:02 AM K.aRieL

The Shah of Iran's descendant tells his story from Jerusalem.

by Sara Yoheved Rigler

Moshe (not his real name, lest the wrong people read this) looks like any other religious Jewish man in Jerusalem — dark hair, dark beard, wire-rimmed glasses, poring over a Talmudic tome in a yeshiva. No one would suspect that he is the great-great-grandson of a former Shah of Iran.

altMoshe’s life has had more dramatic twists than the Disney movie. He is a scion not of the Pahlavi dynasty, which was deposed by the Islamic Revolution after two short generations, but rather of the Qajar dynasty, which proudly ruled Persia for ten generations. He remembers visiting his great-grandmother, the daughter of Mohammed Ali Shah Qajar, whom they called the “Little Princess” until her death at age 99, who used to regale him with stories of growing up in the palace, in the shadow of the Peacock Throne. He also remembers escorting his great-uncle into a room of Persian expatriates in Europe; everyone bowed to his uncle and called him, “shazdejeun, great son of the king.”

It was the first of three times in her life that Mina would lose everything in a single night.

Moshe’s grandmother was married off to an aristocrat whose fiefdom was far from Tehran. “In great aristocratic families, it’s not good to work,” explains Moshe. “All his life, my grandfather didn’t work, but he gambled and did opium.” One fateful night, when Moshe’s mother Mina was nine years old, her father gambled away everything he owned — his palace, his landholdings, his stable of Arabian stallions. The family was cast out of their home with barely food to eat.

It was the first of three times in her life that Mina would lose everything in a single night.

The family retreated to Tehran and was given an apartment in the palatial home of the Little Princess, Mina’s grandmother. The family had lost its wealth, but not its prestige. “People in Persia are very proud of their origin,” comments Moshe. “People respected my mother because she was high-born. Even if you lost all your money, you are still respected. Persians are very proud, and if you are aristocracy, it’s even more so.”

But at age 17, Mina risked losing even her status. She fell in love with Charles, a European Christian living in Tehran. When she revealed to her mother that she intended to marry this man who was neither Persian nor even Muslim, her mother threatened to disown her. Mina did not back down. At the end of a raging argument in which her mother told her she never wanted to see her again, the door was closed behind Mina, leaving her on the street with a single suitcase.

Too chaste to go to Charles’s apartment, Mina sought shelter with a friend. The friend took her to a large house filled with women and gave her a room. After some time, a French man entered the room. It turned out that the place was a brothel. She escaped and fled to Charles.

Charles, at age 22, was a budding scientist and a man of eloquence and charisma. He went to Mina’s mother and eventually convinced her to accept the marriage. Although Mina had a strong belief in God, like most of the Persian aristocracy she was a lukewarm Muslim. She converted to Christianity and the couple had three weddings: civil, Christian, and Moslem.

Related Article: The Jew from Kuwait

Childhood and the Revolution

They lived in Tehran and Charles launched a company based on his scientific discoveries. In 1971, their second son Henry (later to become Moshe) was born. Strangely enough, his grandmother insisted on having him circumcised on the eighth day. He was also baptized as a baby. He was not given a Persian name, nor did his father permit him to learn to read and write Persian. Charles wanted his son to feel that the world was his home; his fate was to grow up with no home.

Charles’s business was successful, and Henry was raised in the lap of luxury: his own horse, skiing every weekend, vacations in European capitals, and an Occidental school attended by the upper class. He remembers the privileged precincts of North Tehran as “a paradise for children. People were extremely good and friendly, we had a huge family, and I watched English television.”

His idyllic childhood was ended by the Islamic Revolution of 1979. “People were killing each other in the streets.”

His idyllic childhood was ended by the Islamic Revolution of 1979. “People were killing each other in the streets,” Moshe recalls. “I used to go to my school in a school bus. One day one of the school buses was blown up by a rocket. All the children on the bus were killed. Two days later my brother and I were in Europe.”

They arrived in their new boarding school in the European countryside in a chauffeured Rolls Royce. None of the locals had ever seen such a sight. They thought the boys were from the family of the fleeing Shah.

During the first phase of the Revolution, Iranians across the political and religious spectrum were united in their desire for liberty and to get rid of the Shah. Had Mina been a Pahlavi, she would have been executed. Instead, she was from the revered Qajar dynasty. Like many of the aristocracy, she made an amiable alliance with the new government. A year later, she brought her sons back to Iran.

For Henry’s family, the national chaos was exacerbated by personal tragedy. Unscrupulous Western concerns had been trying to buy Charles’s innovative technology, but he had repeatedly refused. Finally, two Harvard men came to Tehran and over a period of a few months implemented a carefully plotted scheme to win Charles’s confidence. One night they plied him with liquor and got him to sign his business away. Overnight, the family lost everything. A broken Charles went to Europe, where he tried to start over again. A few months later, the family was notified that Charles was found dead, apparently of a heart attack.

Protégé of the Ayatollah

Mina was now alone, but undaunted. She approached a company that had been associated with her husband and asked to work for them. They offered her a lowly position as a salesperson. She converted a room in their small apartment into an office, and started from scratch. Her efforts, however, were undermined by rampant government corruption.

“Any time you have a problem, just call the office of Ayatollah Khomeini and he will take care of it.”

Mina went directly to Ayatollah Khomeini. Henry remembers the servants in his home during his halcyon childhood speaking of the coming of the Messiah. When Ayatollah Khomeini returned to Persia at the outset of the Revolution, virtually the entire populace regarded him as the Messiah. Mina, shrewd and secular, was an exception. But when she spoke directly with him to complain about government corruption, she became star-struck. Khomeini would not look directly at a woman’s face. Nevertheless, by the end of the interview, Mina had become his faithful protégé. Upon arriving home, she received a phone call saying, “Any time you have a problem, just call the office of Ayatollah Khomeini and he will take care of it.”

For the rest of Khomeini’s life, even during the most violent days of the regime, Mina enjoyed his personal protection. “The government feared my mother,” asserts Moshe. Several years later Mina had become a fantastically successful businesswoman.

Meanwhile the Revolution had entered a repressive phase. The religious zealots began to kill off all the other factions. Moshe remembers watching the movie Z in the home of the first Minister of Justice after the Revolution. Two years later, that Minister was murdered by Islamic radicals.

“Tehran became like the Chicago of the 20s,” remembers Moshe. “People with machine guns were gunning down other people in the streets. They closed the Occidental school my brother and I attended.”

Mina wanted her sons to become educated, cosmopolitan people. She decided that they had no future in the new Iran. A year after bringing them back, she again sent them to Europe, this time for good. Henry was nine years old when he bid his final farewell to the only home he would know until he created his own in Jerusalem.

The boys attended a Christian boarding school. They were completely alone in a foreign country. They had no contact with their father’s relatives, who had failed to attend Charles’s funeral; Mina had severed all ties with them. Mina visited two or three times a year, taking them on vacations to the United States, Vancouver, Hawaii, Spain, etc., but even on vacation her attention was on her business.

For high school, the boys attended the International School of Valbonne on the French Riviera. Known as “the school of geniuses,” it was the academy of choice for the sons of heads of state from every continent.

Throughout his teenage years, Henry engaged in a quest to find ultimate Truth. He read copiously in literature and philosophy. He dabbled in Spiritualism, Epicurean philosophy, art, and theater. He experimented with Zen meditation; after just a few months he attained “a sort of Nirvana.” With shoulder-length hair and all black clothing, he walked barefoot around Valbonne’s campus.

His quest for Truth did not take him to religion. Having been raised by monks in Christian schools, he did not take Christianity seriously. Having been exiled by Islamic zealots, he had no respect for Islam. His quest was intellectual, not religious, and God played no part in his life.

Then one day while he was in college, Henry had a mystical experience. He was suddenly, powerfully gripped by a consciousness of God as real and immanent. This state, which was not drug-induced, lasted a fortnight. After it ended, Henry wanted nothing else as much as to re-experience that God-consciousness. As an intellectual, he trusted his mind and knew that what he had experienced was an unadulterated dose of Reality. But where could he find God again?

Related Article: Shrek's Mazel

Discovering Judaism

One evening while in law school, some of his secular Jewish friends mentioned that they were going to a Jewish class that evening. Henry invited himself along. As Henry attests, “Everything the rabbi said, I felt, ‘This is what I have been seeking.’” His Jewish friends soon stopped attending the weekly class, but Henry continued. He resonated completely with the teachings. In a bookstore, he found some classic Jewish texts, such as the Kuzari and The Path of the Just. Reading them, he was overwhelmed by the sense, “Yes, this is what I want.”

The Path of the Just, an 18th century text describing the ascending levels of character refinement and spiritual attainment, became for Henry a map back to the God-consciousness he had known and lost.

After law school, Henry decided that it was not enough to study Judaism; he had to live it. He made up his mind to convert to Judaism, but when he tried to make an appointment to initiate the conversion process at the city’s Beit Din(Jewish court), he was ignored. Finally he phoned the Beit Din and asked to speak to the Chief Rabbi “about something very important and private.” The secretary asked what he wanted to speak about, but Henry insisted it was private. He was given an appointment, but as soon as he told the Chief Rabbi why he had come, the Rabbi told him, “I have ten minutes, not one minute more, to give you.” An hour later, he was still engaged in an intense conversation with Henry. At the end, the Rabbi told him, “Come back in one year. In one year, I will accept you.”

“For an aristocratic Persian, becoming a Jew is the most awful thing you can do.”

Henry understood that it was a test of his sincerity and persistence. The Rabbi did not know that he was dealing with the undauntable Qajar breed. A year later, Henry came back. After two years of studying how to be a Jew, Henry converted at the age of 28. Six months later, he married Noa, and they made aliyah to Israel, where he studies in yeshiva.

Converting to Judaism meant forfeiting his aristocratic prestige, his mother’s approval, and all connection to his extended family. “For an aristocratic Persian, becoming a Jew is the most awful thing you can do,” declares Moshe. “It’s simply unimaginable. It’s shameful.”

During the long conversion process, he never became discouraged by the prospect of losing all the privileges of his birth and upbringing. “I believed something,” Moshe attests. “I believed that Torah is the Truth, and I wanted to have it. I didn’t want to just learn about it. I wanted to reach the spiritual heights described in The Path of the Just.

After his conversion, Moshe had a conversation with his brother. “Why don’t you convert?" Moshe asked him. "You know Judaism is true.”

Moshe’s brother replied, “I know it's true but I can’t convert. I love luxury and comfort too much.”

Sitting in his simple Jerusalem apartment, surrounded by his wife and children, Moshe ponders the trade-off he made in choosing truth over comfort. Did he get more than he lost? Moshe’s answer is a broad smile.

Sara Yoheved Rigler plans to come to America in May to give workshops (seewww.kesherwife.com), Shabbatons, and lectures. To invite her to your community, please write to Shaindy at slewsi@aol.com

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

To my surprise, Windows 7 has easily achieved a 9 out of 10 for almost being a perfect operating system. Being used to using Apple’s Leopard, Windows 7 almost feels like I knew it before. The similarities are close yet so different.

 

Apple’s key features

For example, Apple has always had menus at the top and a submenu at the bottom for all of your most used tasks. This makes it very easy to find programs without having to look for the Applications folders. The other thing Apple takes advantage of is multi windows (running several different apps at the same time.) Any Windows XP user knows how frustrating and slow it was to run two things at once. Apple mastered this and is superior at it.

leopard_desk01

Furthermore, Apple uses the menu at the bottom to group apps together so that you do not take up space and does the same thing for folders if placed in the menu. A folder will open with a list of everything instead, making it easy to find documents and tasks so that you do not need to open folders and go looking. The new Snow Leopard also incorporates icon menus like the iPone and iPad where you can instantly view the apps right on the screen instead of going inside folders. I liked this feature a lot.

screenshots-leopard-snow--1

 

Windows 7 likeness to Apple

The new Windows 7 has an “Apple feel to it”. Meaning that any Apple user will almost feel at home using the new Windows operating system. For the ease of using, Windows now has favorites on the taskbar at the bottom where you can pin favorite apps. It also makes it easy to run several programs at once. (If you have a new computer that has enough RAM, memory and harddrive). Running Windows 7 on older computers is not really recommended. It will make your laptop run hot, fan blow like crazy and overheat. But if all you have is an older computer and you want to try Windows 7, I recommend upgrading EVERYTHING on it, even graphics cards, memory, etc.

 

Windows 7 has the ability to shrink 2 windows so that you can work in them at the same time. One on the left and the other on the right. This is not like Apple’s free flowing apps that you can place a bunch of apps in the window but it is still a great improvement to the Windows operating environment.

Capture

The other thing I love about the new operating system is that you can type an app or folder or anything you need in the search form in the START button. This feature is also in Apple and I love using them in either system. It’s very convenient.

 

What I love about Windows 7

 

I love the fact that Windows 7 looks GOOD! AWESOME! It is update with the times, Windows XP always had a older old school look. More like Windows 98 or something. Like it never really got a makeover. Both Windows Vista, even in its many flaws and the improved Windows 7 are very handsome. The themes are cool and the transparent Aero functions of the bars and windows are great. You can fully customize your design.

 

In addition to this, the menus, windows and everything are a nice size, not over-powering and DOES not have that corporate work look that XP had. Many users got Windows 7 based on HOW it looked. You can’t blame them, windows users where stuck with the same design for years!

 

The applications run smooth and people are starting to create third party apps to use that are free like developers did for Apple. On my Apple, 85% of my apps where free, legal apps that open-source developers created and users maintained. This makes it easy for users because NO ONE WANTS TO SPEND TONS OF MONEY ON SOFTWARE. I actually have a list on my blog of different free software that works wonders to replace use of some apps that cost over $500 to buy.

And lastly, I love playing games on Windows 7! If you play any kind of online gaming, you had slow graphics on XP and crashes on Vista, etc. GAMING is awesome on the Windows 7-provided that you have a new computer or upgraded one that can run them smoothly. Social networking is an ease, just as if you are texting or updating your Twitter or facebook status from your phone because Windows 7 also has cool widgets that you can download and place on the desktop.  Apple also had dashboard, but what I did not like about dashboard was that sometimes it was annoying and I disabled it from popping up. Widgets in Windows 7 stay on the desktop out of the way unless you want to clear them out. Check weather, dictionary, time, calendar, Outlook email, Facebook, etc. all from the desktop.

 

All in all, I love Windows 7 and actually or the first time in life recommend it over an Apple any day. Now this is my opinion before Apple releases the Apple Lion OS system within the next few years. That is supposed to top all OS systems….so we will see.

4:29 AM K.aRieL

To my surprise, Windows 7 has easily achieved a 9 out of 10 for almost being a perfect operating system. Being used to using Apple’s Leopard, Windows 7 almost feels like I knew it before. The similarities are close yet so different.

 

Apple’s key features

For example, Apple has always had menus at the top and a submenu at the bottom for all of your most used tasks. This makes it very easy to find programs without having to look for the Applications folders. The other thing Apple takes advantage of is multi windows (running several different apps at the same time.) Any Windows XP user knows how frustrating and slow it was to run two things at once. Apple mastered this and is superior at it.

leopard_desk01

Furthermore, Apple uses the menu at the bottom to group apps together so that you do not take up space and does the same thing for folders if placed in the menu. A folder will open with a list of everything instead, making it easy to find documents and tasks so that you do not need to open folders and go looking. The new Snow Leopard also incorporates icon menus like the iPone and iPad where you can instantly view the apps right on the screen instead of going inside folders. I liked this feature a lot.

screenshots-leopard-snow--1

 

Windows 7 likeness to Apple

The new Windows 7 has an “Apple feel to it”. Meaning that any Apple user will almost feel at home using the new Windows operating system. For the ease of using, Windows now has favorites on the taskbar at the bottom where you can pin favorite apps. It also makes it easy to run several programs at once. (If you have a new computer that has enough RAM, memory and harddrive). Running Windows 7 on older computers is not really recommended. It will make your laptop run hot, fan blow like crazy and overheat. But if all you have is an older computer and you want to try Windows 7, I recommend upgrading EVERYTHING on it, even graphics cards, memory, etc.

 

Windows 7 has the ability to shrink 2 windows so that you can work in them at the same time. One on the left and the other on the right. This is not like Apple’s free flowing apps that you can place a bunch of apps in the window but it is still a great improvement to the Windows operating environment.

Capture

The other thing I love about the new operating system is that you can type an app or folder or anything you need in the search form in the START button. This feature is also in Apple and I love using them in either system. It’s very convenient.

 

What I love about Windows 7

 

I love the fact that Windows 7 looks GOOD! AWESOME! It is update with the times, Windows XP always had a older old school look. More like Windows 98 or something. Like it never really got a makeover. Both Windows Vista, even in its many flaws and the improved Windows 7 are very handsome. The themes are cool and the transparent Aero functions of the bars and windows are great. You can fully customize your design.

 

In addition to this, the menus, windows and everything are a nice size, not over-powering and DOES not have that corporate work look that XP had. Many users got Windows 7 based on HOW it looked. You can’t blame them, windows users where stuck with the same design for years!

 

The applications run smooth and people are starting to create third party apps to use that are free like developers did for Apple. On my Apple, 85% of my apps where free, legal apps that open-source developers created and users maintained. This makes it easy for users because NO ONE WANTS TO SPEND TONS OF MONEY ON SOFTWARE. I actually have a list on my blog of different free software that works wonders to replace use of some apps that cost over $500 to buy.

And lastly, I love playing games on Windows 7! If you play any kind of online gaming, you had slow graphics on XP and crashes on Vista, etc. GAMING is awesome on the Windows 7-provided that you have a new computer or upgraded one that can run them smoothly. Social networking is an ease, just as if you are texting or updating your Twitter or facebook status from your phone because Windows 7 also has cool widgets that you can download and place on the desktop.  Apple also had dashboard, but what I did not like about dashboard was that sometimes it was annoying and I disabled it from popping up. Widgets in Windows 7 stay on the desktop out of the way unless you want to clear them out. Check weather, dictionary, time, calendar, Outlook email, Facebook, etc. all from the desktop.

 

All in all, I love Windows 7 and actually or the first time in life recommend it over an Apple any day. Now this is my opinion before Apple releases the Apple Lion OS system within the next few years. That is supposed to top all OS systems….so we will see.



Do you want advise or help with taking your business online? Are you tired of having a plain ole' website that is sitting on the web with dust in the corners-no traffic, no customers, no leads? If any of these situations apply to you, contact me. I'll be glad to help you turn your website into a dominant force on the world wide web.

Contact us today for your Free Consultation concerning the improvement of YOUR presence on the web.

We specialize in:



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  • TRAINING you to do the same to make you the most out of your investment!




-Follow me on twitter and facebook. I'm on there all the time. Kisses!





























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3:50 AM K.aRieL


Do you want advise or help with taking your business online? Are you tired of having a plain ole' website that is sitting on the web with dust in the corners-no traffic, no customers, no leads? If any of these situations apply to you, contact me. I'll be glad to help you turn your website into a dominant force on the world wide web.

Contact us today for your Free Consultation concerning the improvement of YOUR presence on the web.

We specialize in:



  • Webdesign, social network marketing, and email marketing

  • Business Cards, Letterheads, and other promotional materials

  • Wordpress theme customization & SEO plugins

  • TRAINING you to do the same to make you the most out of your investment!




-Follow me on twitter and facebook. I'm on there all the time. Kisses!





























Web Design, Graphics & Branding Services
Your Name*
Your Email Address*
Services Needed*











Image Verification
captcha
Please enter the text from the image:

[Refresh Image][What's This?]