Thursday, January 05, 2012

Most of us could not afford one when they first came on the scene.
"It's the 30th anniversary of the Commodore 64 this week — news that has made more than a few gaming enthusiasts feel their age. This story looks back at some of the peculiarities that made the machine so special — a true mass-market computer well into the era where a computer in every home was a novelty idea, not a near reality."
 http://www.commodoreusa.net/CUSA_C64.aspx

We have fired some customers over the years. They always were demanding and payed so little for their demands. Now we are very careful to profile and to pre~ qualify before we will work for anyone. Here is some great wisdom:
 "Tyler Nichols learned an obvious but important lesson with his freemium Letter from Santa site: 'most people who want something for free will never, ever think of paying you, no matter how valuable they find your service.' He also discovered that non-paying customers are more demanding than paying customers, which only stands to reason: If someone likes your service enough to pay for it, they probably have an affinity for your brand and will be kinder."

 Pentagon-supported physicists on Wednesday said they had devised a "time cloak" that briefly makes an event undetectable

  Alot of snow today in Sweden

  A Boy and his Golden Eagle

  Old, million-dollar violins don't play better than the new models [top violinists can't tell difference in new double-blind test]

 Hovering in the sky, this rainbow cloud over Mount Everest took an astonished astronomer by surprise. Oleg Bartunov, 51, caught the spectacle on camera during a Himalayas expedition in Nepal. Kerosene based geoengineered cloud

My dog and I went for a walk. She made a friend who proceeded to follow us home.

  A friend of mine beatboxin' on the the flute. Enough said.

 Look what I got for $1 at a flea market...

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