can i have my own halfpipe that i can only get to by helicopter also??

love the shot of the halfpipe in the middle of a mtn in the middle of nowhere.  awesome.  can’t wait for snowboarding season!  although…very apprehensive of my first snowboarding adventure on the east coast mtns…

himmelsblog:

dbreunig:

VW stamped the map on Euros with a route, showing how far you’ll go on the fuel bought with the given denomination.
They enlisted their dealers to help distribute the media, by stamping their daily cash deposits. Folks, it doesn’t get any cheaper or smarter than this. (Via Directdaily)

Amazing. Another example of how “social media” isn’t digital only.

I guess how the heck do you measure impressions on this?  Think probably the buzz is worth it.  Great idea.

himmelsblog:

dbreunig:

VW stamped the map on Euros with a route, showing how far you’ll go on the fuel bought with the given denomination.

They enlisted their dealers to help distribute the media, by stamping their daily cash deposits. Folks, it doesn’t get any cheaper or smarter than this. (Via Directdaily)

Amazing. Another example of how “social media” isn’t digital only.

I guess how the heck do you measure impressions on this?  Think probably the buzz is worth it.  Great idea.

prototype of a flexible laptop made of a flexible LED screen.

pretty sweet, wish they were lighter to lug around in my purse!

now one for everything going on in mobile-dynamic data on things happening now.

mobile data sources:

  • TechCrunchies – Mobile Video Viewers Statistics
  • AdMob June 2009 Mobile Metrics Report
  • PortioDirect Mobile Factbook 2009
  • MashableCITA report – 4.1 Billion SMS Messages Are Sent Daily USA
  • iPolicy UK – SMS messaging has a bright future
  • Research and Markets Global Mobile Broadband – Statistics and Trends
  • Smartbrief Sharp Increase in Mobile Internet Adspend…
  • ABI Research In 2014 Monthly Mobile Data Traffic Will Exceed 2008 Total
  • HotHardware Huge Growth in Daily Mobile Web Access
  • Ecoustics
  • Cio GPS Enabled Mobile Phone Shipments to More than Double Over Next Five Years
  • Nielsen Americans Watching More TV Than Ever: Web and Mobile Video Up too

Via Tribal DDB Italy

Tips from your Parents

From the Huffington Post

Parents really do know best, don’t they?

Balanced Life: Excellent Tips For Living That My Parents Gave Me

Light_bulb

Sometimes you don’t have to go very far or do much research to get advice on how to be happier. Here are eight excellent tips for living my parents gave me.

My mother:
- “Stay calm.” My mother probably reminds of this three or four times each time I see her. I really need this advice. Every day.
- “The things that go wrong often make the best memories.” My mother told me this when we were getting ready for my wedding. It’s a very good thing to keep in mind, because it’s absolutely true, and it can also help you laugh at a bad situation while it’s happening.
- “You like to have a few things that you really like, instead of lots of choices.” Okay, this advice might not be widely applicable, but it was a huge revelation to me about my own nature. My mother made this comment in the context of clothes, but it’s true in many areas of my life.
- “That’s so wonderful! Be grateful, because you worked hard for what you got, and you deserved it, but others also worked hard, and people don’t always get what they deserve.” My mother made this observation when I called home to report that I’d been elected the editor-in-chief of the Yale Law Journal. I repeated her remark to a friend, who thought it sounded a little unenthusiastic, but in fact, it was reassuring, especially in the long run. Because it’s TRUE. You don’t always get what you deserve, even when you work hard, and my mother’s observation has been very comforting to me in other circumstances, when things didn’t go my way.

My father:
- “If you’re willing to take the blame, people will give you the responsibility.” This was perhaps the best advice for the workplace I ever got.
- “Energy.” Very true. The first chapter of The Happiness Project is devoted to energy. (Here are nine tips for giving yourself an energy boost in the next ten minutes .)
- “Enjoy the process.” If you can enjoy the process, you are less concerned about outcomes. That’s a big help in the world.
- “All you have to do is put on your running shoes and let the front door shut behind you.” Good advice for all those couch potatoes trying to pick up an exercise habit. Just do that much! That counts!

My parents never gave me relationship advice or weighed in on my boyfriends (true, I only had two real boyfriends, one of whom I married, but I’m sure it was hard to resist nevertheless).

However, once when I was home for vacation, both of my parents remarked on the requirements of a happy relationship. Maybe they’d had a conversation between themselves, which was why it was on their minds. Anyway, it was so unusual for them to make this kind of remark that both statements made a big impression on me:
- My mother said: “In a relationship, it’s important that a person is kind, because eventually, if he’s not kind to other people, he won’t be kind to you.”
- My father said: “In a relationship, it’s important that a person be able to have fun, because you’re not going to have a happy life with someone who can’t have fun.”

Have you received any great advice from your parents?



Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gretchen-rubin/balanced-life-excellent-t_b_328198.html?view=print

Tchaikovsky’s 1812 overture simulated with 1000 phone ringtones.

For Vodafone.

one of the most nuts performances i’ve ever seen, from the chinese state circus.  watch at around 2:00, it will blow. you. away.

this is swan lake on steroids!  what’s even more hilarious is that my mom forwarded this to me!

Mid-Afternoon Snack

me: (standing in front of office vending machine) snickers? peanut m&ms. snickers? peanut m&ms.

office mate: decisions, decisions, huh?

me: yeah, but i don’t have enough money! they raised the prices to 95 cents.

office mate: well i’m getting peanut m&ms.

me: yeah, those are usually my go-to.

office mate: i’ll give you my change so you can get one too. (beep beep, selects peanut m&ms.)

………………………….

vending machine pauses and gets stuck on peanut m&ms.

……………………………..

me: nooooooooo!

vending machine continues and drops not one, but TWO, peanut m&ms.

me: YESSS! score!

ah, the delights of my afternoon.

Sell the Vatican, Feed the World.  Sarah Silverman does it again.

Close Encounter with Shamu

i guess technically it’s a humpback whale.  who cares, this is nuts!

saw dolphins the other week while surfing in LA, but that happens almost every time i go.  this is on a whole ‘nother level!

Ice is down at Rockefeller rink. Winter is here.

Ice is down at Rockefeller rink. Winter is here.

Iced coffee, you just made my morning a little better.

Iced coffee, you just made my morning a little better.

Save Cal

berkeley was indeed a special place when i attended. i think there’s a certain perspective you get from a attending public university when a good portion of your classmates are from lower income families and are the first in their family to attend college.  the dialogue is different. i really hope it will survive the budget crisis and that alums can step up in these times.

via the NY Times

Cracks in the Future

Berkeley, CA

By Bob Herbert

While the U.S. has struggled with enormous problems over the past several years, there has been at least one consistent bright spot. Its system of higher education has remained the finest in the world.

Now there are ominous cracks appearing in that cornerstone of American civilization. Exhibit A is the University of California, Berkeley, the finest public university in the world and undoubtedly one of the two or three best universities in the United States, public or private.

More of Berkeley’s undergraduates go on to get Ph.D.’s than those at any other university in the country. The school is among the nation’s leaders in producing winners of the Nobel Prize. An extraordinary amount of cutting-edge research in a wide variety of critically important fields, including energy and the biological sciences, is taking place here.

While I was roaming the campus, talking to students, professors and administrators, word came that scientists had put together a full analysis and a fairly complete fossilized skeleton of Ardi, who is known to her closest living associates as Ardipithecus ramidus. At 4.4 million years of age, this four-foot tall, tree-climbing wonder is now the oldest known human ancestor.

Give Berkeley credit. The school’s Tim White, a paleoanthropologist, led the international team that worked for years on this project, an invaluable advance in human knowledge and understanding.

So it’s dismaying to realize that the grandeur of Berkeley (and the remarkable success of the University of California system, of which Berkeley is the flagship) is being jeopardized by shortsighted politicians and California’s colossally dysfunctional budget processes.

Berkeley is caught in a full-blown budget crisis with nothing much in the way of upside in sight. The school is trying to cope with what the chancellor, Robert Birgeneau, described as a “severe and rapid loss in funding” from the state, which has shortchanged Berkeley’s budget nearly $150 million this year, and cut more than $800 million from the higher education system as a whole.

This is like waving goodbye to the futures of untold numbers of students. Chancellor Birgeneau denounced the state’s action as “a completely irresponsible disinvestment in the future of its public universities.”

(The chancellor was being kind. Anyone who has spent more than 10 minutes watching the chaos of California politicians trying to deal with fiscal and budgetary matters would consider “completely irresponsible” to be the mildest of possible characterizations.)

Berkeley is laying off staffers, reducing faculty through attrition and cutting pay. Student fees will no doubt have to be raised, and the fear is that if the financial crisis continues unabated it will be difficult to retain and recruit the world-class scholars who do so much to make the school so special.

Chancellor Birgeneau said he is optimistic that Berkeley will be able to maintain its greatness and continue to thrive, but he told me candidly in an interview, “It’s hard to see when we are going to get back to a situation where we can start rewarding people properly.”

We should all care about this because Berkeley is an enormous and enormously unique national asset. As a public university it offers large numbers of outstanding students from economically difficult backgrounds the same exceptionally high-quality education that is available at the finest private universities.

Something wonderful is going on when a school that is ranked among those at the very top in the nation and the world is also a school in which more than a third of the 25,000 undergraduates qualify for federal Pell grants, which means their family incomes are less than $45,000 a year. More than 4,000 students at Berkeley are from families where the annual income is $20,000 or less.

More than a third are the first in their families to attend a four-year college.

Berkeley is aggressively pursuing alternative funding sources. The danger is that as public support for the school declines, it will lose more and more of its public character. Substantially higher fees for incoming students would be the norm, and more and more students from out of state and out of the country (who can afford to pay the full freight of their education) would be recruited.

This would most likely hurt students from middle-class families more than poorer ones. Those kids are caught between the less well-off, who are helped by a variety of financial aid programs, and the wealthy students, whose families have no problem paying for a first-class college education.

The problems at Berkeley are particularly acute because of the state’s drastic reduction of support. But colleges and universities across the country — public and private — are struggling because of the prolonged economic crisis and the pressure on state budgets. It will say a great deal about what kind of nation we’ve become if we let these most valuable assets slip into a period of decline.

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Themed by: Hunson