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Monday, January 31, 2011

SNOWPOCOLYPS OF 2011

this was one of the hardest snows wed ever seen, for south carolinians anyway. i gre up in snow that was waist high and STILL had to go to school..regardless.

but for the ret of my small family, this was quite the event, and really something i hadnt seen, since i was maybe 9..so thats almost 30+ years for me. says allot to whats happened in my life to make something in my childhood stand out to be so signifigant in my adulthood as it crossed paths with me again.

the last time we had a snow storm to this magnituse was a few years before, and it left us with NO electric for 12 days..what do you think my mind recalls more? the walsk to school in waist high snow? and freezing cold toes? or the fact my entire body felt like my frozen toes for 12 consecutive days? its most certainly the latter of the 2/

so, there was some slight trepidation, and worry that wed walk down that same cold and frozen path again...well, I would. because i was the one suffering in it. craig was at work for 10 hours very day. daniel hung at his best friends home, just  amile up the street, and never suffered a second with the cold...

the stuff you scarifice for your family! lol

heres some pics! ENJOY MICHELLE

at the mid point of snow fall.

snow shelf collection from our roof. pretty cool looking.

the snow came all the way in to the overhang/alcove where our front door is.

the only one of our dogs brave enough to weather the snow. Pumpkin.

it didnt last long..lol

and the world as we knew it once it was complete. in MUCH MUCH MUCH snow!


THE JANITOR - A MountainWIngs Moment By: Unknown

The Janitor
============

An unemployed man goes to apply for a job with Microsoft as a janitor.

The manager there arranges for him to take an aptitude test (Section: Floors, sweeping and cleaning).

After the test, the manager says, "You will be employed at minimum wage, $5.15 an hour. Let me have your e-mail address, so that I can send you a form to complete and tell you where to report for work on your first day."

Taken aback, the man protests that he has neither a computer nor an e-mail address. To this the MS manager replies, "Well, then, that means that you virtually don't exist and can therefore hardly expect to be employed."

Stunned, the man leaves.

Not knowing where to turn and having only $10 in his wallet, he decides to buy a 25 lb flat of tomatoes at the supermarket. Within less than 2 hours, he sells all the tomatoes individually at 100% profit. Repeating the process several times more that day, he ends up with almost $100 before going to sleep that
night. And thus it dawns on him that he could quite easily make a living selling tomatoes.

Getting up early every day and going to bed late, he multiplies his profits quickly. After a short time he acquires a cart to transport several dozen boxes of tomatoes, only to have to trade
it in again so that he can buy a pick-up truck to support his expanding business.

By the end of the second year, he is the owner of a fleet of pick-up trucks and manages a staff of a hundred former unemployed people, all selling tomatoes.

Planning for the future of his wife and children, he decides to buy some life insurance. Consulting with an insurance adviser, he picks an insurance plan to fit his new circumstances. At the end of the telephone conversation, the adviser asks him for his e-mail address in order to send the final documents electronically.

When the man replies that he has no e-mail, the adviser is stunned. "What, you don't have e-mail? How on earth have you managed to amass such wealth without the Internet, e-mail and e-commerce?

Just imagine where you would be now, if you had been connected to the internet from the very start!"

After a moment of thought, the tomato millionaire replied,

"Why, of course!  I would be a floor cleaner at Microsoft!"

~Author Unknown~
The MountainWings moral of the story:

1. The Internet, e-mail, and e-commerce do not need to rule or determine your life.

2. If you don't have e-mail, but work hard, you can still become a millionaire.

3. There are much greater connections than the Internet.

4. E-mail addresses are free, and companies are begging you to take one. What does that tell you?

5. Seeing that you got this story via e-mail, are you closer to becoming a janitor than you are to becoming a millionaire?

   If the answer is janitor, then e-mail is obviously not the key to money.

6. If you take what you have, and multiply it each day, not only will you become a millionaire, you will also become a billionaire. That equation works for all things in life.

7. It is far better to be a happy janitor than an unhappy millionaire, but all other things being equal, it is better to
   be a happy millionaire than a happy janitor. You can help more people.

8. Closed doors are often blocks to the wrong path.

9. Unbeknown to most, the janitor in many corporations, is actually happier and sleeps better than the CEO.

10. It's really not the job that's the bottom line to your happiness.

   REALLY!

~A MountainWings Original Moral~

Saturday, January 22, 2011

1-22-2011 FORTUNE COOKIE

fortunes for: CRAIG (my husband), Myself, and Daniel (my son)

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craigs reads: There is a prospect for a thrilling time ahead.

mine reads: You have an ability to sense and know higher truth (thats not a fortune, thats a fact, lol)

daniels reads: The only way to have a friend is to be one.

Friday, January 21, 2011

NEWS - 27 CHARGED IN MAFIA CRACKDOWN

27 charged in Northeast Mafia crackdown

NEW YORK – For nearly 30 years, federal authorities say, reputed gangster Bartolomeo Vernace got away with murder.
They say the bloodshed — a double slaying at the Shamrock Bar in Queens — was all over a spilled drink.
Vernace's luck ran out Thursday when he was charged in the killings in one of the largest Mafia takedowns in FBI history. He was among 127 defendants named in 16 indictments stemming from separate underworld investigations in New York, New Jersey and Rhode Island.
Past investigations have resulted in strategic strikes aimed at crippling individual crime families. This time, authorities used a shotgun approach, with some 800 federal agents and police officers making scores of simultaneous arrests.
They also used fanfare: Attorney General Eric Holder made a trip to New York to announce the operation at a news conference with the city's top law enforcement officials.
Holder called the arrests "an important and encouraging step forward in disrupting La Cosa Nostra's operations." But he and others also cautioned that the mob, while having lost some of the swagger of the "Dapper Don" John Gotti era, is known for adapting to adversity and finding new ways of making money that still harm the economy and spread fear.
"Members and associates of La Cosa Nostra are among the most dangerous criminals in our country," Holder said.
In the past, the FBI has aggressively pursued and imprisoned the leadership of the city's five Italian mob families, only to see ambitious underlings fill the vacancies, said Janice Fedarcyk, head of the FBI's New York office.
However, the FBI has gained a recent advantage by cultivating a crop of mob figures willing to wear wires and testify against gangsters in exchange for leniency in their own cases.
"The vow of silence that is part of the oath of omerta is more myth than reality today," she said.
In the latest cases, authorities say turncoats recorded thousands of conversations of suspected mobsters. Investigators also tapped their phones.
Among those arrested Thursday were union officials, two former police officers and a suspect in Italy. High-ranking members of the Gambino and Colombo crime families and the reputed former boss of organized crime in New England also were named in the indictment.
The indictments listed colorful nicknames — Bobby Glasses, Vinny Carwash, Jack the Whack, Johnny Cash, Junior Lollipops — and catalogued murders, extortion, arson, drug dealing and other crimes dating back three decades.
Other charges include corruption among dockworkers in New York and New Jersey who were forced to kick back a portion of their holiday bonuses to the crime families. Members of the Colombo family also were charged with extortion and fraud in connection with their control of a cement and concrete workers union.
The case against the 61-year-old Vernace stood out not for his nickname — Bobby — but in part because of his old-school pedigree. The alleged Gambino captain was a regular at the Ravenite, John Gotti's social club in Little Italy, in the 1980s, prosecutors said in court papers.
Over the years, he's "been observed with other members and associates of the Gambino crime family at 20 weddings and wakes," the papers said. One of the wakes was for Gotti, who died behind bars in 2002.
More recently, Vernace controlled cafes in Queens where mobsters met and federal authorities made secret recordings, the papers said. In raids three days before his arrest, agents seized illegal gambling machines at one of the spots.
The most serious charge goes back to the night of April 11, 1981, when "a dispute arose between a Gambino associate close to Vernace and others in the bar over a spilled drink," court papers say.
The associate left the bar and went to pick up Vernace and a third man; they returned and killed the two owners, shooting one in the face and the other point-blank in the chest, the papers say.
Prosecutors say they have an eye witness who identified Vernace as one of the shooters. They also claim to have incriminating recordings and forensic evidence.
Vernace pleaded not guilty in federal court in Brooklyn on Thursday and was ordered held without bail.
Outside court, Vernace's attorney, Gerald Shargel, said his client was facing charges similar to those he already beat in a state case about 10 years ago. He also questioned the splashy way the charges were brought.
"It seems there was a public relations aspect to it," he said.

NEWS - STOP FACEBOOK FOOLISHNESS IN 2011

 this is just funny..lol

Jan. 06, 2011

Stop Facebook foolishness in 2011

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- Chicago Tribune
 
It’s the New Year’s resolution.

Though maligned by some, I embrace the midnight oath as a way of saying:

“Hey, this year, I’ve got a shot at being a better person.”

Some of us should take that shot a little more seriously, particularly when it comes to social networking. Mounting evidence suggests that people are turning into Twitter, Facebook and MySpace megalomaniacs.

So if any of this advice applies to your online activities, don’t feel even a little bit bad about adopting one of these resolutions as your own. Heck, you can say it was your own idea to stop:

POSTING BUTT-FIRST PROFILE PHOTOS
Unless you were born with your rump in the front, there is no reason your derriere should be displayed in your Facebook photo. Even if you’re more blessed than Nicki Minaj, Kim Kardashian and Trina combined, why not save that pose for your big break in Playboy or King magazine? Oh, you didn’t get such a break? Well OK then, moving on:

POSTING SHIRTLESS PROFILE PHOTOS
Fellas, the only way to justify your too-sexy-for-my-shirt photo gallery is if it is from Halloween night and you were Bruce Lee, the Incredible Hulk or Black Dynamite. Otherwise, I should not see bare pecs, abs and biceps in your profile photo. Firstly, all the world is not match.com, and secondly, some of you might want to “like” a membership to Bally Total Fitness before you sell the world tickets to your gun show.

COMPLIMENTING YOURSELF
It’s great that your supportive friends favorite and/or “like” your statements about how gorgeous/handsome/intelligent/sought-after/wealthy you are. But don’t let a handful of random affirmations fool you into thinking that being arrogant online is in any way acceptable. If you truly possess any of the above attributes, you shouldn’t need to announce it.

ATTACKING ADVERSARIES
Have you heard of this device called a phone? You can use it to contact people and tell them how you feel. In the ancient days, you could even (gasp) walk up to people and speak directly to them. Remember both options before you post about punching, wrestling, slapping or otherwise attacking fellow social media patrons. I’d hate to see you in Cook County Jail on the strength of a status message.

NEWS - WHAT HAPPENS WHEN MOM 'UNPLUGS' TEENS FOR 6 MONTHS?

 i find the timing of this article amusizing..lol, just last night i posted on my FaceBook status, that my son had deleated me, and blocked me from his connections. took me off! changed the email and the password, so i couldnt go back in and reset it so id have any ability to do anything within it.

he had forgotten i OWN him, for the time being, anyway. until hes 18, and/or on his own. 

so, naturally several moms, chimed in (appreciated every comment) about how they would handle the situation themselves, and what do ya know? i find an articale the very next morning saying almost the same stuff they did. 

amazing! 

oh, dont worry, last night i was back IN the sons account, i even swapped the alternate email to my alternate email, so ill be notified when he does anything to his account again, AND i added myself, then made sure everything id say would be hidden...lol

i havnt checked this am, to see if i can gain access to his account since hes adjusted everything...i just checked, and so far so good, sorry mr hacker-wanna be, yo momz aint so dumb afterall...LOL

looks like your passsowrds exactly the same, as well as your email..all you did was disconnect from me, and i secretly went back in and reconnected myself, without your knowledge, because..lets not forget? IM YOUR MOTHER! and I DESERVE to know WHO, and WHAT, and WHERE you do things...PC *ISNT* YOURS, the house you live in your living in for..FREE! the food you eat? BOUGHT WITH YOUR DADS MONEY, yeah, thats right you HAVNT paid for very much yourself!

cut off? yup..sounds good to me!

Jan. 18, 2011

What happens when mom unplugs teens for 6 months?

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- Associated Press
 
NEW YORK — Susan Maushart lived out every parent's fantasy: She unplugged her teenagers.
For six months, she took away the Internet, TV, iPods, cell phones and video games. The eerie glow of screens stopped lighting up the family room. Electronic devices no longer chirped through the night like "evil crickets." And she stopped carrying her iPhone into the bathroom.


The result of what she grandly calls "The Experiment" was more OMG than LOL - and nothing less than an immersion in RL (real life).

As Maushart explains in a book released in the U.S. this week called "The Winter of Our Disconnect" (Penguin, $16.95), she and her kids rediscovered small pleasures - like board games, books, lazy Sundays, old photos, family meals and listening to music together instead of everyone plugging into their own iPods.
Her son Bill, a videogame and TV addict, filled his newfound spare time playing saxophone. "He swapped Grand Theft Auto for the Charlie Parker songbook," Maushart wrote. Bill says The Experiment was merely a "trigger" and he would have found his way back to music eventually. Either way, he got so serious playing sax that when the gadget ban ended, he sold his game console and is now studying music in college.


Maushart's eldest, Anni, was less wired and more bookish than the others, so her transition in and out of The Experiment was the least dramatic. Her friends thought the ban was "cool." If she needed computers for schoolwork, she went to the library. Even now, she swears off Facebook from time to time, just for the heck of it.


Maushart's youngest daughter, Sussy, had the hardest time going off the grid. Maushart had decided to allow use of the Internet, TV and other electronics outside the home, and Sussy immediately took that option, taking her laptop and moving in with her dad - Maushart's ex-husband - for six weeks. Even after she returned to Maushart's home, she spent hours on a landline phone as a substitute for texts and Facebook.


But the electronic deprivation had an impact anyway: Sussy's grades improved substantially. Maushart wrote that her kids "awoke slowly from the state of cognitus interruptus that had characterized many of their waking hours to become more focused logical thinkers."


Maushart decided to unplug the family because the kids - ages 14, 15 and 18 when she started The Experiment - didn't just "use media," as she put it. They "inhabited" media. "They don't remember a time before e-mail, or instant messaging, or Google," she wrote.


Like so many teens, they couldn't do their homework without simultaneously listening to music, updating Facebook and trading instant messages. If they were amused, instead of laughing, they actually said "LOL" aloud. Her girls had become mere "accessories of their own social-networking profile, as if real life were simply a dress rehearsal (or more accurately, a photo op) for the next status update."


Maushart admits to being as addicted as the kids. A native New Yorker, she was living in Perth, Australia, near her ex-husband, while medicating her homesickness with podcasts from National Public Radio and The New York Times online. Her biggest challenge during The Experiment was "relinquishing the ostrichlike delusion that burying my head in information and entertainment from home was just as good as actually being there."


Maushart began The Experiment with a drastic measure: She turned off the electricity completely for a few weeks - candles instead of electric lights, no hot showers, food stored in a cooler of ice. When blackout boot camp ended, Maushart hoped the "electricity is awesome!" reaction would soften the kids' transition to life without Google and cell phones.


It was a strategy that would have made Maushart's muse, Henry David Thoreau, proud. She is a lifelong devotee of Thoreau's classic book "Walden," which chronicled Thoreau's sojourn in solitude and self-sufficiency in a small cabin on a pond in the mid-1800s. "Simplify, simplify!" Thoreau admonished himself and his readers, a sentiment Maushart echoes throughout the book.


As a result of The Experiment, Maushart made a major change in her own life. In December, she moved from Australia to Long Island in New York, with Sussy. Of course, the move merely perpetuated Maushart's need to live in two places at once: She kept her job as a columnist for an Australian newspaper and is "living on Skype" because her older children stayed Down Under to attend university. Ironically, the Internet eased the transition to America for Sussy, who used Facebook to befriend kids in her new high school before arriving.
Another change for Maushart: She's no longer reluctant to impose blackouts on Sussy's screentime. "Instead of angsting, 'Don't you think you're spending too much time on the computer? Don't you think you should do something else like reading?' I now just take the computer away when I think she's had enough," Maushart said in a phone interview. "And now that she's been on the other side and remembers what it's like, it's less of an issue."


Maushart realizes that living off the grid for six months is unrealistic for most people. (She also admits getting her kids to go along with it partly by bribing them with a cut of proceeds from the book, which she planned to write all along.)


But she encourages families to unplug periodically. "One way to do it is just to have that one screen-free day a week. Not as a punishment - not by saying, 'I've had enough!' - but by instituting it as a special thing," she said. "There isn't a kid on the planet who wouldn't really rather be playing a board game than sitting at the computer."

Thursday, January 20, 2011

CHINESE FORTUNE COOKIES


CRAIG- Time is the wisest counselor
MICHELLE- you will conquer obstacles to achieve success
DANIEL - You will be awarded some great honor.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

NEWS - SCHOOL BUS CRASHES INTO POWER POLE

School Bus Crashes Into Power Pole

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Police: Truck Ran Red Light, Crashes Into Bus

 January 19, 2011

Midwest City police are investigating a crash involving a school bus at Northeast 23rd and Douglas Boulevard.There were no students on the bus, said police.Police said a truck carrying mail ran a red light in the eastbound lanes of Northeast 23rd. It crashed into the school bus that was driving southbound on Douglas Boulevard. The bus crashed into a power pole, causing the pole to lean. OG&E crews are on the scene to fix the pole. No power lines were snapped.No one was transported to the hospital, said police.The truck driver was ticketed for running the red light.Southbound lanes of Douglas Boulevard at Northeast 23rd are back open. Northbound lanes remain closed.

Monday, January 17, 2011

NEWS - TWEENS GAME TOPS ITUNES LIST , UNSEATS ANGRY BIRDS

 Daniel, this is like what i tell you! find YOUR niche, and go for it! whats stopping you? you have the sky as your limit! you can do ANYTHING!  Mamma

Tween's Game Tops iTunes List, Unseats Angry Birds
Robert Nay, 14, Creates Hottest Free Game in App Store

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Watch out, Mark Zuckerberg. A new programming prodigy is hot on your heels. 
But he isn't based in Silicon Valley or any of the country's other high-tech corridors. He lives in Spanish Fork, Utah. Oh, and one more thing: he's just 14 years old. 

Robert Nay is only in the 8th grade, but over the past couple of weeks, an iPhone application created by the young computer whiz has become one of the hottest smartphone applications around.

During the past two weeks, his free game "Bubble Ball" has been downloaded more than 2 million times. Last week, it nabbed the #1 spot on the list of free games in Apple's iTunes store, knocking the ever-popular "Angry Birds" game to #2. 

"I was pretty astonished," Nay said about the game's success. "When I released it, I didn't think it would do so well." 

Nay's mother, Kari Nay, said that like most young teenagers, Robert and his friends enjoy playing games on their iPods. But Robert started building a game of his own after a few friends suggested he give it a try.



"Since they know Robert's good with computers, they suggested he make one," she said. 
 
Robert, who built his first website in the 3rd grade, said, "why not?" 

He did some research in the public library and found a program, Ansca Mobile's Corona SDK (software developer's kit), that would help simplify the task. 

For more than a month, Robert spent a couple of hours each day on the game, ultimately writing more than 4,000 lines of computer code, his mother said. 

Kari Nay said she helped him design some of the puzzles in the game, but he came up with the concept and did everything else on his own. 

According to its App store description "Bubble Ball" is a "fun, new physics puzzle game, where you will test your ingenuity and thinking skills to get the bubble to the goal." 

Robert said he enjoyed creating the game, which was somewhat inspired by features of his own favorite iPod games, but it wasn't always smooth sailing. 

"There were some times when I felt like, 'can people seriously do this?' It seemed impossible," he said. "But then there were times when things just worked and I'd be like 'maybe I can actually do this.'"

Saturday, January 15, 2011

NEWS- 3.4 MAGNITUDE QUAKE RATTLES CHOCTAW, OKLAHOMA

3.4 Magnitude Quake Rattles Choctaw

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An earthquake registered a 3.4 magnitude on the Richter Scale early Saturday morning, geologists said.The quake rattled homes near Choctaw, Okla. just before 5 a.m.No damage was reported.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

NEWS - HOW TO MAKE A BLOCKBUSTER GAME FREE: ARS EXPLORES *FIREFALL*

 craig sent me this in an email, thinking daniel would like this, im not so sure, hes not really that much into online gaming, even if its 1st person shoort, his social life, right now is all over xbox360.  so, i dont know how hell feel about this game. well see.

 How to make a blockbuster free: Ars explores Firefall

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By Andrew Webster

What do you do when you have a team that features some of the top creative minds behind games like World of Warcraft and Tribes? If you're Red 5 Studios, you create Firefall. The upcoming sci-fi epic is a multiplayer, team-based shooter that looks gorgeous, but won't require a cutting edge gaming rig to play. And it'll be free.
Ars spoke with James Macauley, executive producer on the game, to learn more about why the high-end online shooter won't cost a cent.
One of the biggest concerns with a free-to-play game is how important the premium items are. If spending real-world money on virtual guns and armor gives you a significant advantage, it takes a lot of the fun out the experience. This type of system rewards those who are willing to spend money, instead of those who actually spend time playing the game and improving their skills. Money becomes a substitute for skill. But Macauley says this won't be the case with Firefall.
"We're still in the process of setting up the details of our micro-transaction system, but one of our primary goals with Firefall is to make sure that players can't just buy their way to the best equipment," he told Ars. "We don't want gamers purchasing experience points or levels, though we do think buying perks that improve your efficiency at certain tasks makes sense. Marketplace transactions are situated for creating a more enjoyable play experience. Firefall fans will be able to buy things like paint for their battleframes, bumps to their resource collection, and items of time convenience.
"Above all else, Firefall is skill-based game focused on player progression, and we won't allow a marketplace to change that."
Like most online games, Firefall features a great deal of character customization. But it doesn't have classes in the traditional sense. Instead, you can equip battleframes, which are essentially your character's armor. But each one has its own attributes and gives your character different skills. Each can also be swapped depending on the situation. It's almost like being able to change classes whenever you like.
"Rather than forcing players to pick a specific class at the start of the game, and then play it through the duration of that character, each character has access to different battleframes that can be quickly customized to fit the given needs of any situation," explained Macauley. "If your team is being hit particularly hard by a group of enemies, you can equip your Medic battleframe and become a healer. If you need to dish out more damage, a quick switch to your Assault battleframe will accomplish that. Our goal with battleframes is to give players a unique experience that's flexible to their needs. Of course, you'll need the right equipment for the right job."

 

Firefall is gorgeous to look at, despite being a free release—just watch the trailer above. The semi cel-shaded art style is reminiscent of Team Fortress 2, while the vast alien world evokes memories of StarCraft and Starship Troopers. There are massive, large-scale battles and bug-like alien creatures. But this isn't a game that will force you to go out and buy a new computer just to play it. Red 5 removed the price tag on Firefall in order to attract as wide an audience as possible, and the studio is hoping to make it as accessible as possible from a technical standpoint, as well.
"Another potential barrier to people playing and enjoying Firefall is with our system requirements," Macauley said. "This is a topic we've worked on since the beginning of development on this project. We're still optimizing the game, and haven't announced our final system requirements yet. However, Firefall is an online game, and when we release the game in late 2011, we want to make sure it's equally as playable for people with a high-end PC as it is for someone with a bargain gaming rig."
Given the names behind the project, it's natural that expectations are high. But that doesn't seem to phase the developers.
"Something that sets us apart from our past work is the unique approach we’re taking to the game," Macauley said. "Not only is our team focused on making a top-notch title with a high production value and an eye for detail, we’re also making it free to play and free to download. That’s a rare combination."

NEWS - TODAYS *IT* JOBS: ACCOUNTING & IT

i have tried to steer daniel in the direction of some of his passions, art, gaming, graffiti, etc. so, hed be in a career, hed like, enjoy, and feel he was fulfilled within. it will be interesting to see what direction he ends up taking. MICHELLE

Today's 'it' Jobs: Accounting and IT

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By Ali Velshi, CNN chief business correspondent

(MONEY Magazine) -- Anxious parents of teenagers often ask me what the best course of study is for their kids. As a liberal arts graduate (religious studies, for the record), I may not be the best person to consult about which majors will pay off, but I do study job growth patterns. My answer: accounting.
Accounting jobs are expected to grow 22% between 2008 and 2018, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That's much higher than the average of all professional occupations (17%) and translates to almost 280,000 new jobs. 

Why? In an increasingly complex financial world, more people are needed to keep track of more money. And when money isn't where it's supposed to be, accountants are employed trying to find it or uncover who took it. Accountants, however, don't just keep the books; they also advise companies on the best ways to deploy their cash.
Accountants also play a big role in my favorite economic trend, globalization. A flatter, more financially intertwined world means greater demand for expertise in international trade and mergers-and-acquisitions rules. That's one reason the large public accounting firms are hiring, and expect to be for years to come. (See "Best Jobs in America" on cnnmoney.com.)
But the beauty of accounting as a profession is its flexibility. Accountants can work for multinational corporations or small bookkeeping operations. About 8% are self-employed. Your child will have to study hard: Lucrative, globally attractive jobs such as public accounting require four-year degrees, then an advanced degree or CPA designation, which takes years.
When it's time to switch
While those demands are fine for twentysomethings, accounting isn't a field for mid- or late-career changers. You won't recoup your investment. A better bet for those in transition: information technology.
Growth prospects to 2018, at 30%, are even better than in accounting. And while IT encompasses highly trained network and systems engineers, you can enter the IT world through different doors -- from the help desk to project management and analyst jobs, all with real career tracks -- and with different types of education. 

Online training or a two-year course of college study is often sufficient to make a move, says Brad Karsh, president of JobBound Outplacement in Chicago.
Just as important, this is a field where the experienced worker has a leg up on a kid. "Companies value the 'application knowledge' you bring to the table," says Jack Cullen, president of Modis, a leading IT recruiter. "If you've worked in telecom and have experience with billing systems, companies value that when they staff a project that deals with billing."
And the fact that you've worked to gain a new competency tells an employer you're "easily adaptable to a new environment," Cullen adds. These days, that's the most important skill of all.

HUMOR- STUDENT DRIVER

As an instructor in driver education at Unionville-Sebewaing Area High School in Michigan, I've learned that even the brightest students can become flustered behind the wheel.


One day I had three beginners in the car, each scheduled to drive for 30 minutes. When the first student had completed his time, I asked him to change places with one of the others. Gripping the wheel tightly and staring straight ahead, he asked in a shaky voice, "Should I stop the car?"

Sunday, January 9, 2011

1-9-2011 FIRST SNOW OF 2011

it never fails, sometime in january (usually closer to my birthday of the 26th) we have snow.
and just like when we lived in South Carolina, this entire place shuts almost all the way down.

these images are of the dusting...the start of what wed live though for the next month...looking out or going out in a bed of white surrounding us...
ENJOY
MICHELLE


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Friday, January 7, 2011

1-7-2011 CHICK-FIL-A SPICY CHICKEN BISCUIT FREE SAMPLE

im subscribed to CHICK-FIL-A website, and get notifications in my email for anything upcoming as far as free food is concerned.
we used to attend the CHICK-FIL-A 1ST 100 GRAND OPENING Events, until it just became so much to do and no guarentees anymore that wed even get a slot. weve been super fortunate that we did each time (6 events total, to date) but as each event passes, the crowds become bigger, and the chance to be one of the 1st 100, become slimmer and slimmer.
plus, with the addition of a new job in craigs life, we decided it would be better for him to work, than to schedule time off for these events.
and...it just so happened, as we are weaning ourselves away from those coveted 52 free tickets for a free chick-fil-a meal (52 of them free!) they decided to start letting the public sample new food they want to introduce on thier menu.
and so, if your signed up on th web page, youll get a ntice for something they think theyd like to push out on the market.
and...its FREE! (heck, thats the only reason we even went to those event, and id be on camera, was to promote the fact that they gave away 100 sets of 52 FREE meals (in ticket form) to those lucky 1st 100!)


so, it happens they have gotten all social, and now you can get a free meal (several if you work the timing out right) simply by scheduling when your going to go in, printed copy of your reservation, in hand, for your free sample of the next great meal from chick-fil-a!


so, i scheduled this last one...a FREE SPICY CHICKEN BISCUIT. we each would get one, and wed pay for the extra that comes with the meal. hasj browns and a drink.


yes, saturday mornings can be quite fun, if your getting free food. just ask my family...lol


Craig, taking his 1st bite. :)
(sorry about the glare, we picked a seat that just happened to have the sun beaming in on MY side of the table)
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DANIEL, trying to avoid my taking a pic of him...lol


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Me..taking my 1st bite.


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and the meal


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my impression of the spicy chicken biscuit:


it was just like every other fast food spicy chicken meal.
nothing extraordinary.
except, its was FREE! lol


MICHELLE



Saturday, January 1, 2011

JANUARY 1 2011 NEW YEARS DAY PIC

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took this pic as we were driving around, looking for someplace to celebrate with the first meal out for the year 2011. beautiful colors.
MICHELLE