Wednesday, June 10, 2015

WHERE GRACE FLOWS IN HAITI





In Haiti, the hottest season is festival season, and one of the most renowned of the fêtes takes place in a tiny town north of the capital, Port-au-Prince: The Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. Haitians call it the “Fête de Saut d’Eau,” which translates literally to “Feast of Jumping Water.” The godly attractions are varied — Vodou ceremonies, Catholic Masses, the feeding of mendicants who hold out calabash bowls for alms — but the highlight of the pilgrimage is bathing in the steep waterfall nearby. Men and women of all ages strip down to their underwear and walk carefully on rocks, some of which are sharp on the soles and others of which are scarily slippery, and when they reach the cascades, they lather up with medicinal herbs and leaves.

I did not bathe when I visited the Fête de Saut d’Eau in 2008; I just watched. I came with a couple of photographer friends who were keen to shoot the textures of spray and splash on skin, the light filtered through trees and refracted through droplets, the forms of bodies yearning for heaven. Much has changed in Haiti since then, of course, but these photographs taken by Lexey Swall at the Fête, captured five months after the country’s devastating 2010 earthquake, remind me that our longing for transcendence will always remain.







courtesy: ozy

WHERE GRACE FLOWS IN HAITI





In Haiti, the hottest season is festival season, and one of the most renowned of the fêtes takes place in a tiny town north of the capital, Port-au-Prince: The Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. Haitians call it the “Fête de Saut d’Eau,” which translates literally to “Feast of Jumping Water.” The godly attractions are varied — Vodou ceremonies, Catholic Masses, the feeding of mendicants who hold out calabash bowls for alms — but the highlight of the pilgrimage is bathing in the steep waterfall nearby. Men and women of all ages strip down to their underwear and walk carefully on rocks, some of which are sharp on the soles and others of which are scarily slippery, and when they reach the cascades, they lather up with medicinal herbs and leaves.

I did not bathe when I visited the Fête de Saut d’Eau in 2008; I just watched. I came with a couple of photographer friends who were keen to shoot the textures of spray and splash on skin, the light filtered through trees and refracted through droplets, the forms of bodies yearning for heaven. Much has changed in Haiti since then, of course, but these photographs taken by Lexey Swall at the Fête, captured five months after the country’s devastating 2010 earthquake, remind me that our longing for transcendence will always remain.







courtesy: ozy

Birth Certificate Translation




A birth certificate is an 
important record that 
documents the birth 
of a child. Legally, 
it is a certified 
copy of an entry 
from the official 
register of births. 

In almost every country, a person’s birth certificate is a crucial proof of his or her identity that is required in applications for citizenship, driver’s license, social welfare benefits, bank accounts, etc. Therefore, it is recommended that only certified translators are appointed to translate birth certificates.

A birth certificate typically contains the child’s full name, date of birth, sex, place of birth, the full name(s) of his or her parent(s), and their address and occupations at the time of registration. Other relevant official details may include the name of the hospital where the child was born, the name and signature of the attending doctor, and the name and address of the official register of births. In many countries, birth certificates are issued in “full” and “abstract” styles. The former is an exact copy of the original birth record, while the latter contains limited information about the child’s birth. For most legal purposes, “full” certificates are required. However, both styles of birth certificate should be translated clearly, precisely and free of error.

Birth Certificate Translation




A birth certificate is an 
important record that 
documents the birth 
of a child. Legally, 
it is a certified 
copy of an entry 
from the official 
register of births. 

In almost every country, a person’s birth certificate is a crucial proof of his or her identity that is required in applications for citizenship, driver’s license, social welfare benefits, bank accounts, etc. Therefore, it is recommended that only certified translators are appointed to translate birth certificates.

A birth certificate typically contains the child’s full name, date of birth, sex, place of birth, the full name(s) of his or her parent(s), and their address and occupations at the time of registration. Other relevant official details may include the name of the hospital where the child was born, the name and signature of the attending doctor, and the name and address of the official register of births. In many countries, birth certificates are issued in “full” and “abstract” styles. The former is an exact copy of the original birth record, while the latter contains limited information about the child’s birth. For most legal purposes, “full” certificates are required. However, both styles of birth certificate should be translated clearly, precisely and free of error.

Legal translation service – what you need to know

Legal translation service – what you need to know

Legal translation service – what you need to know

Legal translation service – what you need to know

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

blogorrhea: Friday Water Cooler

blogorrhea: Friday Water Cooler: What's behind the Wall Street suicide problem? (neweconomicperspectives.org). And: Why Are Rates of Suicide Soaring Across the Planet...

blogorrhea: Friday Water Cooler

blogorrhea: Friday Water Cooler: What's behind the Wall Street suicide problem? (neweconomicperspectives.org). And: Why Are Rates of Suicide Soaring Across the Planet...

Monday, June 8, 2015

TTMEM.com: Glossary of aged care terms

TTMEM.com: Glossary of aged care terms: New English to Italian and English to Polish translation memory ready for downloading ( Glossary of aged care terms ). To download i...

TTMEM.com: Glossary of aged care terms

TTMEM.com: Glossary of aged care terms: New English to Italian and English to Polish translation memory ready for downloading ( Glossary of aged care terms ). To download i...

A Free Couch to Crash On in Iran

At a party with loud music booming, young girls — in heavy makeup, carefully styled hair and too-short miniskirts — mingle with young men. I witness homemade alcohol (a strong aniseed liqueur) and some risqué images on the wall that would fall foul of the morality police. A reasonable scene most anywhere in the West, but far less so in Tehran, the heart of the Islamic Republic of Iran, where all of the above is forbidden, demonized and criminalized.

It’s no secret that there’s a subculture in Iran and in much of the Middle East. Modern, young people are living life increasingly on their own terms — if only in private. What’s new here? The place is packed with tourists.

Getting into Iran for a casual vacation jaunt is difficult, to say the least. But there’s one way in for bold backpackers — Couchsurfing, a popular social network that allows people around the globe free places to sleep in strangers’ homes, like a poor man’s Airbnb. It can be a casual arrangement, but often, hosts and guests bond, hang out and go out together. Despite Iran’s difficult tourist laws, Iranians are allowed to have guests visit from other countries. The government is none too pleased, but the practice continues relatively unabated. It’s difficult to say how many Iranians participate in Couchsurfing, but the company estimates 50,000 Iranians are signed up.

All of this might be a sign of the times under the more moderate — compared with his predecessor — President Hassan Rouhani. Though Facebook is banned in the country, apps are aplenty, and Rouhani is on Twitter. Sure, there’s a risk for companies like Couchsurfing, which sends travelers into traditionally closed countries like Iran or China, but there’s also a chance for “high reward,” says Arvind Malhotra, professor of strategy and entrepreneurship at the University of North Carolina.




A common Iranian meal: kebab with flatbread.

Source: Matyas Rehak/Shutterstock

Of course, the fun could stop soon. If it pisses off the moral police too much, “it’ll be shut down faster than you can say couch surfing,” Malhotra says. Or, Couchsurfing itself might back out because of liability issues — what of a potential kidnapping?! — says Matthew Mitchell, senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. (The company wouldn’t comment on liability issues.) Others still tell travelers to just stay away: “I would capital N-O-T push the laws there,” says Malia Everette, CEO of Altruvistas, a travel agency that leads trips to Iran. Not to mention the worries that come with being female or gay, says Dave Ways, a travel writer atThe Longest Way Home, who’s couch surfed in Iran. Some hosts may have “other expectations” for female guests, he advises — which, sure, can happen anywhere. It’s no secret that Couchsurfing’s site has previously been used for dating and, ahem, more.

Soon after meeting my host’s two female friends, Yara and Leyan, we were at the party, which was taking place at their home (names of partying Iranians have been changed to protect them). Both women wear the mandatory headscarf, which on them is more like a fashion accessory than a police-approved uniform; it’s draped loosely over their heads, hair flowing out. Omid, my actual host, makes it to the party later. The slim student says he’s happy to meet other German visitors like myself. He’s never been to Germany himself, but he is a big fan of the soccer team Bayern Munich since he can catch Bundesliga games in Iran.






One of the many markets in Tehran.

Source: Thomas Koch/Shutterstock

For the Iranians themselves, traveling is far from straightforward. The men have to complete military service before getting a passport. Women are only allowed to leave the country with the consent of husbands or fathers. Which means Couchsurfing, for many, is as close to travel as they get. Omid dreams of traveling to Europe, but he can’t afford it. Spending time with Europeans gives him “a slight feel for Europe.” You can see the sensibilities imbued by the travelers everywhere: At the party, the décor is European rather than traditional. There are no “Oriental” trinkets, not even a Persian carpet.

Couchsurfing has even penetrated past the capital, to Shiraz, in the south. This city with 1.5 million inhabitants, which is famous for its green spaces, is also known as the Garden of Iran. It’s where Marjaan likes to have female couch surfers to stay. She spends much of her days hunched over her desk … drawing nudes. The 23-year-old aspiring artist enjoys reading banned literature, listens to prohibited music, and enjoys slightly revealing clothes. She also still lives with her parents, who adhere to Islamic traditions. That makes male couch surfers taboo, but from time to time she’s allowed to have female travelers to stay. Her room lacks both a bed and a couch because she needs room for her art. Marjaan hides money in her room, along with her secret passport and her dreams of going to Europe.

A Free Couch to Crash On in Iran

At a party with loud music booming, young girls — in heavy makeup, carefully styled hair and too-short miniskirts — mingle with young men. I witness homemade alcohol (a strong aniseed liqueur) and some risqué images on the wall that would fall foul of the morality police. A reasonable scene most anywhere in the West, but far less so in Tehran, the heart of the Islamic Republic of Iran, where all of the above is forbidden, demonized and criminalized.

It’s no secret that there’s a subculture in Iran and in much of the Middle East. Modern, young people are living life increasingly on their own terms — if only in private. What’s new here? The place is packed with tourists.

Getting into Iran for a casual vacation jaunt is difficult, to say the least. But there’s one way in for bold backpackers — Couchsurfing, a popular social network that allows people around the globe free places to sleep in strangers’ homes, like a poor man’s Airbnb. It can be a casual arrangement, but often, hosts and guests bond, hang out and go out together. Despite Iran’s difficult tourist laws, Iranians are allowed to have guests visit from other countries. The government is none too pleased, but the practice continues relatively unabated. It’s difficult to say how many Iranians participate in Couchsurfing, but the company estimates 50,000 Iranians are signed up.

All of this might be a sign of the times under the more moderate — compared with his predecessor — President Hassan Rouhani. Though Facebook is banned in the country, apps are aplenty, and Rouhani is on Twitter. Sure, there’s a risk for companies like Couchsurfing, which sends travelers into traditionally closed countries like Iran or China, but there’s also a chance for “high reward,” says Arvind Malhotra, professor of strategy and entrepreneurship at the University of North Carolina.




A common Iranian meal: kebab with flatbread.

Source: Matyas Rehak/Shutterstock

Of course, the fun could stop soon. If it pisses off the moral police too much, “it’ll be shut down faster than you can say couch surfing,” Malhotra says. Or, Couchsurfing itself might back out because of liability issues — what of a potential kidnapping?! — says Matthew Mitchell, senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. (The company wouldn’t comment on liability issues.) Others still tell travelers to just stay away: “I would capital N-O-T push the laws there,” says Malia Everette, CEO of Altruvistas, a travel agency that leads trips to Iran. Not to mention the worries that come with being female or gay, says Dave Ways, a travel writer atThe Longest Way Home, who’s couch surfed in Iran. Some hosts may have “other expectations” for female guests, he advises — which, sure, can happen anywhere. It’s no secret that Couchsurfing’s site has previously been used for dating and, ahem, more.

Soon after meeting my host’s two female friends, Yara and Leyan, we were at the party, which was taking place at their home (names of partying Iranians have been changed to protect them). Both women wear the mandatory headscarf, which on them is more like a fashion accessory than a police-approved uniform; it’s draped loosely over their heads, hair flowing out. Omid, my actual host, makes it to the party later. The slim student says he’s happy to meet other German visitors like myself. He’s never been to Germany himself, but he is a big fan of the soccer team Bayern Munich since he can catch Bundesliga games in Iran.






One of the many markets in Tehran.

Source: Thomas Koch/Shutterstock

For the Iranians themselves, traveling is far from straightforward. The men have to complete military service before getting a passport. Women are only allowed to leave the country with the consent of husbands or fathers. Which means Couchsurfing, for many, is as close to travel as they get. Omid dreams of traveling to Europe, but he can’t afford it. Spending time with Europeans gives him “a slight feel for Europe.” You can see the sensibilities imbued by the travelers everywhere: At the party, the décor is European rather than traditional. There are no “Oriental” trinkets, not even a Persian carpet.

Couchsurfing has even penetrated past the capital, to Shiraz, in the south. This city with 1.5 million inhabitants, which is famous for its green spaces, is also known as the Garden of Iran. It’s where Marjaan likes to have female couch surfers to stay. She spends much of her days hunched over her desk … drawing nudes. The 23-year-old aspiring artist enjoys reading banned literature, listens to prohibited music, and enjoys slightly revealing clothes. She also still lives with her parents, who adhere to Islamic traditions. That makes male couch surfers taboo, but from time to time she’s allowed to have female travelers to stay. Her room lacks both a bed and a couch because she needs room for her art. Marjaan hides money in her room, along with her secret passport and her dreams of going to Europe.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Yangtze ferry disaster: Death toll exceeds 430 as recovery workers remember the dead


Only 14 survivors, one of them the captain, have been found after the ship carrying 456 overturned in a freak tornado on Monday night in Jianli, Hubei province.

Most of the passengers were elderly tourists.

Government spokesman Hu Kaihong told reporters that DNA tests were being carried out to identify the bodies. The four-storey ship was righted and raised on Friday, allowing rescuers onto it to clear away debris, break down cabin doors and look for the remaining missing. Officials have also extended their search area for victims that may have been swept far beyond the accident site.

The search scope was extended to 1,300 kilometres of the Yangtze, Asia's longest river, in the hope of finding those still unaccounted for, Xinhua reported.A government spokesman said on Thursday that no further survivors were expected to be found.Sunday marks seven days since the Eastern Star went down, and according to Chinese tradition it is a key date on which to mourn the dead.

State television showed rescue workers and government officials standing on the deck of a barge facing the Eastern Star, removing their hats and bowing their heads, as surrounding boats sounded their horns. Families members are also expected to gather on the river banks for ceremonies.

The heavy toll makes the sinking China's worst shipping disaster since 1948, when up to 4,000 on board the SS Kiangya were killed when it sank near Shanghai.
PHOTO: Rescue workers discovered the bodies after using massive cranes to lift the vessel from the riverbed. (Reuters/China Daily)
Company apologises as investigation continues

The company which operated the ship has already apologised for the disaster.

Jiang Zhao, general manager of the company which operated the Eastern Star, bowed in apology for the disaster during an interview with state television broadcast on Saturday, saying they would "fully" cooperate with the investigation.

Police have detained the captain and chief engineer for questioning after an initial probe found the ship was not overloaded and had enough life vests on board.

More than 1,400 family members have come to Jianli, with many expressing frustration at the lack of information from the government.

Beijing has pledged there would be "no cover-up" in its probe.

The government says that it is doing everything possible to help the relatives, including providing free accommodation and medical services.

Reuters/AFP



Rescuers work on righting the capsized cruise ship in Jianli, Hubei province, on June 5, 2015. (Reuters: China Out)Image1 of 11


Rescuers stand beside the Eastern Star cruise ship after authorities righted the vessel. (Reuters: Aly Song)Image2 of 11


Heavy machinery is deployed to right sunked ferry in Jianli. (AFP: China Out)Image3 of 11


Rescue personnel move the remains of victims who were travelling on the capsized passenger ship Dongfangzhixing or Eastern Star on June 3, 2015. (China Out: AFP)Image4 of 11


Rescue workers are seen around a sunken ship in the Jianli section of Yangtze River. (Reuters: Kim Kyung Hoon)Image5 of 11


A survivor is pulled out of the Yangtze River by rescuers. (Reuters: China Daily)Image6 of 11


An aerial view shows rescue workers searching the sunken ship. (Reuters)Image7 of 11


Chinese rescue boats are seen alongside a capsized passenger ship carrying more than 450 people which sunk in the Yangtze river. (AFP/ STR)Image8 of 11


More than 1,000 armed police have been sent to assist rescue workers in the search effort. (Reuters: Chen Zhuo/Yangzi River Daily)Image9 of 11


Rescue workers have been told to spare no effort in the search for survivors of the sunken ferry.(Reuters: Chen Zhuo/ Yangzi River Daily)Image10 of 11


A relative of missing passengers reacts after hearing news of the sinking, sitting outside the Shanghai Xiehe travel agency.Image11 of 11

Yangtze ferry disaster: Death toll exceeds 430 as recovery workers remember the dead


Only 14 survivors, one of them the captain, have been found after the ship carrying 456 overturned in a freak tornado on Monday night in Jianli, Hubei province.

Most of the passengers were elderly tourists.

Government spokesman Hu Kaihong told reporters that DNA tests were being carried out to identify the bodies. The four-storey ship was righted and raised on Friday, allowing rescuers onto it to clear away debris, break down cabin doors and look for the remaining missing. Officials have also extended their search area for victims that may have been swept far beyond the accident site.

The search scope was extended to 1,300 kilometres of the Yangtze, Asia's longest river, in the hope of finding those still unaccounted for, Xinhua reported.A government spokesman said on Thursday that no further survivors were expected to be found.Sunday marks seven days since the Eastern Star went down, and according to Chinese tradition it is a key date on which to mourn the dead.

State television showed rescue workers and government officials standing on the deck of a barge facing the Eastern Star, removing their hats and bowing their heads, as surrounding boats sounded their horns. Families members are also expected to gather on the river banks for ceremonies.

The heavy toll makes the sinking China's worst shipping disaster since 1948, when up to 4,000 on board the SS Kiangya were killed when it sank near Shanghai.
PHOTO: Rescue workers discovered the bodies after using massive cranes to lift the vessel from the riverbed. (Reuters/China Daily)
Company apologises as investigation continues

The company which operated the ship has already apologised for the disaster.

Jiang Zhao, general manager of the company which operated the Eastern Star, bowed in apology for the disaster during an interview with state television broadcast on Saturday, saying they would "fully" cooperate with the investigation.

Police have detained the captain and chief engineer for questioning after an initial probe found the ship was not overloaded and had enough life vests on board.

More than 1,400 family members have come to Jianli, with many expressing frustration at the lack of information from the government.

Beijing has pledged there would be "no cover-up" in its probe.

The government says that it is doing everything possible to help the relatives, including providing free accommodation and medical services.

Reuters/AFP



Rescuers work on righting the capsized cruise ship in Jianli, Hubei province, on June 5, 2015. (Reuters: China Out)Image1 of 11


Rescuers stand beside the Eastern Star cruise ship after authorities righted the vessel. (Reuters: Aly Song)Image2 of 11


Heavy machinery is deployed to right sunked ferry in Jianli. (AFP: China Out)Image3 of 11


Rescue personnel move the remains of victims who were travelling on the capsized passenger ship Dongfangzhixing or Eastern Star on June 3, 2015. (China Out: AFP)Image4 of 11


Rescue workers are seen around a sunken ship in the Jianli section of Yangtze River. (Reuters: Kim Kyung Hoon)Image5 of 11


A survivor is pulled out of the Yangtze River by rescuers. (Reuters: China Daily)Image6 of 11


An aerial view shows rescue workers searching the sunken ship. (Reuters)Image7 of 11


Chinese rescue boats are seen alongside a capsized passenger ship carrying more than 450 people which sunk in the Yangtze river. (AFP/ STR)Image8 of 11


More than 1,000 armed police have been sent to assist rescue workers in the search effort. (Reuters: Chen Zhuo/Yangzi River Daily)Image9 of 11


Rescue workers have been told to spare no effort in the search for survivors of the sunken ferry.(Reuters: Chen Zhuo/ Yangzi River Daily)Image10 of 11


A relative of missing passengers reacts after hearing news of the sinking, sitting outside the Shanghai Xiehe travel agency.Image11 of 11

6 Common Entrepreneur’s Mistakes



Lots of enterprising people, young and old alike, despite the best of intentions, make critical mistakes when starting their own business. Regardless of all the blood, sweat & tears, 80% of businesses fail within the first year. While this is far from an all-inclusive guide, here are a few tips to avoid common mistakes that entrepreneurs make:


1. Don’t plan, do!

Many aspiring business owners spend way too much time planning and over-thinking, instead of hitting the ground, making the connections and getting the valuable experience they need. Whatever you learn in a business class or textbook is hardly as valuable as what you’ll learn in the real world.

2. Greatest thing since sliced bread

Lots of people hold off starting their own business because they spend way too long waiting to come up with the “perfect” idea. This is a sure-fire way to never even get started. Many successful businesses are new branches of existing franchises, and don’t even require much innovation or original thinking. So don’t obsess over coming up with the world’s most novel business idea. Instead, do thorough research about what your area needs and come up with a logical – rather than shockingly innovative – idea for a business.

3. Work smart

Lots of entrepreneurs sacrifice sleep and personal lives when they start a new business, devoting all hours of the day and their last drop of energy to its success. However, aside from hard work, a new business requires SMART work. The entrepreneur who focuses his or her energies and delegates certain tasks will thrive more than someone who is trying to single-handedly juggle sales, administration, web design, marketing and communications all at once.

4. Overspend

For a new business good budgeting is critical. So, why do business owners cut corners on many expenses but waste tons of money on marketing? These days, with tools like the Internet and social media, business owners should realize that great marketing and PR can be free, if not very cheap, and stop operating under the misconception that they need to their budget on marketing. Most entrepreneurs would be wise to curtail marketing expenses as well as try free methods for a period and test the results.

5. Don’t “do you”

Our culture celebrates the “self” and teaches people that they should simply “follow their passion,” no matter what the consequence, claiming that it is the only path to happiness. The sad truth is that people who follow their passion, to the exclusion of all strategy or business savvy, often don’t make any money, and must eventually change direction. On the other hand, business owners who provide a needed, valuable service or product to a market, usually find success. If you’re lucky, a successful market might just be something you’re interested in. Passions are great, but not always what will bring you a solid income.

Christine is a career adviser and personal business coach who has helped thousands of people maximize their full potential. Christine assists individual clients in defining their skills, values, interests, etc. so they can identify a career interest that will provide personal fulfillment and job satisfaction. While her focus is on senior management positions and CEO coaching, Christine's vast experience in many employment fields have made her something of an "HR Guru". Her contributed articles will help you become one of those people who look forward to Mondays.

6 Common Entrepreneur’s Mistakes



Lots of enterprising people, young and old alike, despite the best of intentions, make critical mistakes when starting their own business. Regardless of all the blood, sweat & tears, 80% of businesses fail within the first year. While this is far from an all-inclusive guide, here are a few tips to avoid common mistakes that entrepreneurs make:


1. Don’t plan, do!

Many aspiring business owners spend way too much time planning and over-thinking, instead of hitting the ground, making the connections and getting the valuable experience they need. Whatever you learn in a business class or textbook is hardly as valuable as what you’ll learn in the real world.

2. Greatest thing since sliced bread

Lots of people hold off starting their own business because they spend way too long waiting to come up with the “perfect” idea. This is a sure-fire way to never even get started. Many successful businesses are new branches of existing franchises, and don’t even require much innovation or original thinking. So don’t obsess over coming up with the world’s most novel business idea. Instead, do thorough research about what your area needs and come up with a logical – rather than shockingly innovative – idea for a business.

3. Work smart

Lots of entrepreneurs sacrifice sleep and personal lives when they start a new business, devoting all hours of the day and their last drop of energy to its success. However, aside from hard work, a new business requires SMART work. The entrepreneur who focuses his or her energies and delegates certain tasks will thrive more than someone who is trying to single-handedly juggle sales, administration, web design, marketing and communications all at once.

4. Overspend

For a new business good budgeting is critical. So, why do business owners cut corners on many expenses but waste tons of money on marketing? These days, with tools like the Internet and social media, business owners should realize that great marketing and PR can be free, if not very cheap, and stop operating under the misconception that they need to their budget on marketing. Most entrepreneurs would be wise to curtail marketing expenses as well as try free methods for a period and test the results.

5. Don’t “do you”

Our culture celebrates the “self” and teaches people that they should simply “follow their passion,” no matter what the consequence, claiming that it is the only path to happiness. The sad truth is that people who follow their passion, to the exclusion of all strategy or business savvy, often don’t make any money, and must eventually change direction. On the other hand, business owners who provide a needed, valuable service or product to a market, usually find success. If you’re lucky, a successful market might just be something you’re interested in. Passions are great, but not always what will bring you a solid income.

Christine is a career adviser and personal business coach who has helped thousands of people maximize their full potential. Christine assists individual clients in defining their skills, values, interests, etc. so they can identify a career interest that will provide personal fulfillment and job satisfaction. While her focus is on senior management positions and CEO coaching, Christine's vast experience in many employment fields have made her something of an "HR Guru". Her contributed articles will help you become one of those people who look forward to Mondays.

Mr.Brian See: What’s your inspiration? What’s your dream?


Mr.Brian See: What’s your inspiration? What’s your dream?: It’s always cool to have a dream, to have a passion, and to pursue in something that we want to achieve in life. But how many of us actua...



Mr.Brian See: What’s your inspiration? What’s your dream?


Mr.Brian See: What’s your inspiration? What’s your dream?: It’s always cool to have a dream, to have a passion, and to pursue in something that we want to achieve in life. But how many of us actua...



Tuesday, June 2, 2015

A salute to Shivnarine Chanderpaul




SHIV, THE LAST MAN STANDING


Twenty-one years now, since Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s first Test. England, at the Bourda in Georgetown, 17 March 1994. West Indies were then still the No1 team in the world, and to stay so for another 12 months, till their watershed loss to Australia the following spring. Opening the batting, Desmond Haynes, playing in his 113th Test, and Richie Richardson, in his 74th. Opening the bowling, Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh. Alongside the young Chanderpaul in the middle order, Brian Lara – soon to break Garry Sobers’ record Test score – and Jimmy Adams, early in the purple patch of form that saw him average 70 in his first 20 Tests. Another era altogether then, one when the West Indies, while waning, still played with some of the fire and brilliance that had made them one of the greatest teams in history.

Brian Lara has berated the West Indies selectors and the WICB for seeking to denyShivnarine Chanderpaul the chance of a final Test series against Australia, demanding that his former teammate be reinstated for a farewell along the lines of that given to Sachin Tendulkar by the BCCI.

Chanderpaul was 19, and so slim that both his shirt and pads seemed several sizes too big for him. He was called in as a replacement for Phil Simmons, now West Indies’ head coach. Some said he was only there to please the Guyanese. “A politically shrewd selection,” wrote Derek Pringle in The Independent. Wisden, in one of those odd and endearing miscalculations it occasionally makes, reported that he was included “as much for his leg-breaks as his left-handed batting”. And he did bowl 16 overs, all wicketless, in the first innings. Things became clearer when, in at No6, he hit his first four, a glorious cut behind point off Alan Igglesden. That afternoon Chanderpaul battered England’s attack, and scored the first of his 66 Test 50s. There was a pitch invasion when he got there, and Adams had to drag away a couple of fans who wanted to grab the boy’s bat.

After his last Test century – 101 against Bangladesh in St Lucia last September – Chanderpaul needed to score 228 runs to overtake Lara as the West Indies’ leading run-scorer in Test cricket. Now, he still needs another 71 to do it. His progress towards the record has been slow and faltering, 91 runs in six innings against South Africa, 67 in four so far against England. At his age, even a short run of low scores is enough to make people wonder whether his time is finally up. His next Test will be his 164th, and put him fifth on the all-time list alongside Rahul Dravid. Sachin Tendulkar is the only man who has made it beyond the 160s. For West Indies, Australia are next up. It seems like these could be some the final few scenes of Chanderpaul’s career.
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Chanderpaul is 40 now, and has spent the last two years playing alongside his own son, Tagenarine, for Guyana. At the end of 2012 they put on 256 runs together – 143 for the father, 112 for the son – in a club match against the Transport Sports Club. Delightfully amateur, that. Tagenarine is another left-hander and, like his old man, he often uses his bat to knock a bail into the ground to mark his guard. He too grew up playing on the hard earth of Unity Village, he too was coached by Khemraj Chanderpaul, Shiv’s father, Tagenarine’s grandfather. He did have the advantage, however, of being able to play on a relaid pitch, by a rebuilt pavilion. His father paid for the upgrades, a gift to his village. When Shiv was a boy, he played on a strip on the side of the village pitch so that he could practice without disturbing the senior players. Then, at night, he would bat against a ball tucked into a sock, hanging from a rope tied to the roof.

With Shiv, the story has always been that he was shaped by those early years in Unity. A small kid with scrappy kit, playing on rough wickets against tough men. He evolved that home-spun style all of his own; the open, awkward stance, chest half-turned to the bowler, playing late often as not, looking to slide the ball behind square. The first time he did it in a Test, to take a four off Angus Fraser, Geoff Boycott was commentating. “That’s exactly why England should be bowling as much as possible at the youngster, Chanderpaul … he never really got forward, he fell into the shot.”

Chanderpaul was shaped, too, by the circumstances of his career, which has exactly overlapped with the decline and fall of the team. Lara’s did too, of course, but he was so richly blessed that he always seemed almost to rise above his team-mates, a man apart. Whereas Shiv seems to have spent his talent propping them up. Lara went in 2006. Walsh in 2001, Ambrose in 2000, Richardson in 1995, Haynes in 1994. Shiv has played with almost 100 others since he made his debut. And even the best of them – Chris Gayle and Ramnaresh Sarwan – have now come and gone. Others were hardly there at all. A full 42 of them played in only five Tests or fewer.

Back in 2003, in another home Test at the Bourda, against Australia this time, Chanderpaul played one of the great counterattacking innings. West Indies had won the toss, and chosen to bat. An hour before lunch, they were 53 for five. An hour after it, 184 for six. In between, Chanderpaul cut, pulled, and drove a hundred off 69 balls, then third-fastest century Test ever scored. A little glimpse of his latent attacking talent, a hint of the batsman he might have been if he had been playing in a different era, or for another team. His last hundred, the one against Bangladesh at the Beausejour, took 138 balls, and was the fastest he has scored since. In between the two, he turned himself into one of the most cussed batsmen ever to play the game, a man who measured his innings out in hours and days, rather than runs and balls.

Chanderpaul turned himself into the great rearguard batsman, a man who never quits and never surrenders. Unsurprisingly, he has been not out more often than any other batsman in history. Some have said he is dull, others that he is selfish. But he has only been doing what he has to. He has, for instance, been involved in more run-outs than anyone in Test cricket, 25 altogether. And on 21 of those occasions, it’s been his partner who has had to walk off. No wonder. Chanderpaul has had to play that way, fuelled by the Boycott-like certainty that West Indies’ best chance is if he is at the wicket. He has scored more runs in lost matches than any other batsman.

The final years of Chanderpaul’s career have too often been characterised by what Wisden called the “yawning gap between his skill, commitment and experience” and that of his team-mates. After Lara quit, Chanderpaul took on the load. He’s been carrying it ever since, always unbowed, often undefeated. If – or rather when – he gets those final few runs and overtakes his old team-mate, it will be odd to see him there, top of the record lists, above the likes of Lara, Viv Richards, and Garry Sobers. But after all he has done, no one would begrudge him his place.

A salute to Shivnarine Chanderpaul




SHIV, THE LAST MAN STANDING


Twenty-one years now, since Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s first Test. England, at the Bourda in Georgetown, 17 March 1994. West Indies were then still the No1 team in the world, and to stay so for another 12 months, till their watershed loss to Australia the following spring. Opening the batting, Desmond Haynes, playing in his 113th Test, and Richie Richardson, in his 74th. Opening the bowling, Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh. Alongside the young Chanderpaul in the middle order, Brian Lara – soon to break Garry Sobers’ record Test score – and Jimmy Adams, early in the purple patch of form that saw him average 70 in his first 20 Tests. Another era altogether then, one when the West Indies, while waning, still played with some of the fire and brilliance that had made them one of the greatest teams in history.

Brian Lara has berated the West Indies selectors and the WICB for seeking to denyShivnarine Chanderpaul the chance of a final Test series against Australia, demanding that his former teammate be reinstated for a farewell along the lines of that given to Sachin Tendulkar by the BCCI.

Chanderpaul was 19, and so slim that both his shirt and pads seemed several sizes too big for him. He was called in as a replacement for Phil Simmons, now West Indies’ head coach. Some said he was only there to please the Guyanese. “A politically shrewd selection,” wrote Derek Pringle in The Independent. Wisden, in one of those odd and endearing miscalculations it occasionally makes, reported that he was included “as much for his leg-breaks as his left-handed batting”. And he did bowl 16 overs, all wicketless, in the first innings. Things became clearer when, in at No6, he hit his first four, a glorious cut behind point off Alan Igglesden. That afternoon Chanderpaul battered England’s attack, and scored the first of his 66 Test 50s. There was a pitch invasion when he got there, and Adams had to drag away a couple of fans who wanted to grab the boy’s bat.

After his last Test century – 101 against Bangladesh in St Lucia last September – Chanderpaul needed to score 228 runs to overtake Lara as the West Indies’ leading run-scorer in Test cricket. Now, he still needs another 71 to do it. His progress towards the record has been slow and faltering, 91 runs in six innings against South Africa, 67 in four so far against England. At his age, even a short run of low scores is enough to make people wonder whether his time is finally up. His next Test will be his 164th, and put him fifth on the all-time list alongside Rahul Dravid. Sachin Tendulkar is the only man who has made it beyond the 160s. For West Indies, Australia are next up. It seems like these could be some the final few scenes of Chanderpaul’s career.
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Chanderpaul is 40 now, and has spent the last two years playing alongside his own son, Tagenarine, for Guyana. At the end of 2012 they put on 256 runs together – 143 for the father, 112 for the son – in a club match against the Transport Sports Club. Delightfully amateur, that. Tagenarine is another left-hander and, like his old man, he often uses his bat to knock a bail into the ground to mark his guard. He too grew up playing on the hard earth of Unity Village, he too was coached by Khemraj Chanderpaul, Shiv’s father, Tagenarine’s grandfather. He did have the advantage, however, of being able to play on a relaid pitch, by a rebuilt pavilion. His father paid for the upgrades, a gift to his village. When Shiv was a boy, he played on a strip on the side of the village pitch so that he could practice without disturbing the senior players. Then, at night, he would bat against a ball tucked into a sock, hanging from a rope tied to the roof.

With Shiv, the story has always been that he was shaped by those early years in Unity. A small kid with scrappy kit, playing on rough wickets against tough men. He evolved that home-spun style all of his own; the open, awkward stance, chest half-turned to the bowler, playing late often as not, looking to slide the ball behind square. The first time he did it in a Test, to take a four off Angus Fraser, Geoff Boycott was commentating. “That’s exactly why England should be bowling as much as possible at the youngster, Chanderpaul … he never really got forward, he fell into the shot.”

Chanderpaul was shaped, too, by the circumstances of his career, which has exactly overlapped with the decline and fall of the team. Lara’s did too, of course, but he was so richly blessed that he always seemed almost to rise above his team-mates, a man apart. Whereas Shiv seems to have spent his talent propping them up. Lara went in 2006. Walsh in 2001, Ambrose in 2000, Richardson in 1995, Haynes in 1994. Shiv has played with almost 100 others since he made his debut. And even the best of them – Chris Gayle and Ramnaresh Sarwan – have now come and gone. Others were hardly there at all. A full 42 of them played in only five Tests or fewer.

Back in 2003, in another home Test at the Bourda, against Australia this time, Chanderpaul played one of the great counterattacking innings. West Indies had won the toss, and chosen to bat. An hour before lunch, they were 53 for five. An hour after it, 184 for six. In between, Chanderpaul cut, pulled, and drove a hundred off 69 balls, then third-fastest century Test ever scored. A little glimpse of his latent attacking talent, a hint of the batsman he might have been if he had been playing in a different era, or for another team. His last hundred, the one against Bangladesh at the Beausejour, took 138 balls, and was the fastest he has scored since. In between the two, he turned himself into one of the most cussed batsmen ever to play the game, a man who measured his innings out in hours and days, rather than runs and balls.

Chanderpaul turned himself into the great rearguard batsman, a man who never quits and never surrenders. Unsurprisingly, he has been not out more often than any other batsman in history. Some have said he is dull, others that he is selfish. But he has only been doing what he has to. He has, for instance, been involved in more run-outs than anyone in Test cricket, 25 altogether. And on 21 of those occasions, it’s been his partner who has had to walk off. No wonder. Chanderpaul has had to play that way, fuelled by the Boycott-like certainty that West Indies’ best chance is if he is at the wicket. He has scored more runs in lost matches than any other batsman.

The final years of Chanderpaul’s career have too often been characterised by what Wisden called the “yawning gap between his skill, commitment and experience” and that of his team-mates. After Lara quit, Chanderpaul took on the load. He’s been carrying it ever since, always unbowed, often undefeated. If – or rather when – he gets those final few runs and overtakes his old team-mate, it will be odd to see him there, top of the record lists, above the likes of Lara, Viv Richards, and Garry Sobers. But after all he has done, no one would begrudge him his place.

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Lenovo and Microsoft Make Devices Even More Personal with Cortana and REACHit




Lenovo and Microsoft Make Devices Even More Personal with Cortana and REACHit

Lenovo and Microsoft Make Devices Even More Personal with Cortana and REACHit




Lenovo and Microsoft Make Devices Even More Personal with Cortana and REACHit

Lenovo Announces New High-Performance Storage



Lenovo Announces New High-Performance Storage for Small and Midsized Businesses




Lenovo Announces New High-Performance Storage



Lenovo Announces New High-Performance Storage for Small and Midsized Businesses




Mitsubishi Electric to Announce About Introduction of Performance-based Stock Compensation Plan for the Executive Officers




Mitsubishi Electric to Announce About Introduction of Performance-based Stock Compensation Plan for the Executive Officers



Mitsubishi Electric to Announce About Introduction of Performance-based Stock Compensation Plan for the Executive Officers




Mitsubishi Electric to Announce About Introduction of Performance-based Stock Compensation Plan for the Executive Officers



Saturday, May 23, 2015

Tips to learn Spanish (and any other language)

https://youtu.be/en6DBKaKjg

Spanish is the most studied second language in the United States. Many Americans start learning it in middle school or high school, but most of us never reach a level where we can really communicate in Spanish. I studied Spanish for all four years of high school and have almost nothing to show for it besides, “Me llamo John-Erik. Yo nací en Los Angeles. Chicle in la basura, por favor.” As is painfully obvious from this thimbleful of Spanish I retained after high school, my relationship with the language never left the classroom and thus never really came to life. Where did I go wrong?

I needed expert advice so I consulted two guys with a lot to say about the Spanish language: Luca Lampariello, who hails from Italy and started teaching himself Spanish as a kid (he also speaks English, Russian, Mandarin and Japanese), and Babbel’s polyglot-in-residence Matthew Youlden. Here are their tips forLEARNING SPANISH (or any language for that matter).
1. Connect it to your life

Don’t isolate your study of the language from the rest of your life. You’re not learning Spanish in order to talk about learning Spanish. This kind of recursive loop gets boring very quickly – and can be severely demotivating. Instead, think of Spanish as a new way to experience your everyday life: change the display language on your computer to Spanish; find Spanish-language movies and TV shows to watch (with Spanish subtitles); get your news or celebrity gossip fix from Spanish-language magazines, newspapers and websites; check out Spanish-language podcasts and youtube videos on topics that already interest you. If you use Spanish to do things that you’d be doing anyway, studying daily will become an automatic reflex instead of a dreaded chore. Just remember that languages are a means to an end, not goals in themselves.
2. Connect to native speakers

The best way to connect Spanish to your daily life is to spend time around native speakers. If any of your friends speak Spanish, convince them to speak it with you for at least half of each time you hang out together. If you eat at a Mexican restaurant, try to order in Spanish. If you travel to Latin America or Spain, don’t just fall back on “habla ingles?” Any time an opportunity to speak Spanish presents itself GRAB IT! You need to practice what you learn and talking is always the best way to do that. Once you can hold a basic conversation, find a Spanish-speaking meetup group or club so that you can pursue one of your hobbies in Spanish. This could be anything from a dance class to a choir to an astronomy club.

This is also the secret to retaining what you have learned. As Luca puts it, “My parents had some good Spanish friends who came to eat at our place once a week, so I was able to practice with them. If you have the opportunity to speak many languages on a daily basis, then you won’t forget them.” This applies if you are juggling 10+ languages or if you are simply trying to keep a second language locked in your memory. The more you use it the less likely you are to forget it.
3. All roads lead to Rome

Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese and Romanian can barely consider each other “foreign languages” since they all evolved from Latin. These “Romance” languages have such similar vocabulary, syntax and grammar that they are more like siblings. This overlap with his native Italian made it easy for Luca to startLEARNING SPANISH, but he still had to focus and make Spanish learning a daily practice.

By comparison, an English speaker appears to have a huge disadvantage when learning Spanish. After all, English evolved from Anglo-Saxon, a Germanic language. What could English and Spanish possibly have in common? Quite a lot, actually. English draws roughly half of its vocabulary from French and Latin, so although they may not be siblings English and Spanish are certainly cousins. Consider Matthew’s example, “la proclamación de la democracia”. That phrase barely needs to be translated into English! And as Luca elaborates, “democratisation, democratización, démocratisation, democratizzazione … you can learn four languages at the same time.”
4. The imitation game

An authentic accent: the final frontier. To master a Spanish accent you need to listen closely to native speakers and imitate what you hear. Think of yourself as a method actor: you aren’t just learning the lines, you are attempting to inhabit your character. However you expose yourself to Spanish (hanging out with Spanish-speaking friends, talking with tandem partners over Skype, watching Spanish-language movies and TV shows) imitate the voices you hear as accurately as you can. Over time this will familiarize you with sounds that you aren’t used to making. At first it may feel silly, like you are doing a bad impression, but once the correct pronunciation sinks in you will be “in character” when you speak Spanish.

Since Spanish has so many different regional accents, the people you choose to imitate can give your Spanish a particular regional flair. Because he studied in Barcelona, Matthew speaks Spanish like a barcelonés, while Luca developed his madrileño accent after dating a girl from Madrid. My Spanish may be light years behind theirs, but I’m trying to emulate my Mexican friends in hopes that, one day, I’ll be able to interject güey into almost every sentence like one of the dudes.
5. Daisy chain

Point #5 is a pro tip for those ready to take on their third or later language. Once you know a second language well enough to read, write and speak it, use it to learn the next one. This provides a kind of double training: you learn language #3 while continuing to practice and perfect language #2. Let’s say that after Spanish you want to learn Portuguese. Your goal is not “to learn Portuguese”, but “aprender portugués”. When you learn this way, your knowledge doesn’t pivot from one privileged point (your native tongue), but extends along a chain, with each new link reinforcing the last.

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