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Thursday, February 15, 2007

Boss Toss: Next Best Thing to Killing, Maiming

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Of all the workplaces in the world, we certainly don't need the Boss Toss. But many of you, dear readers, must have a slavemaster patrolling the cubicles whose command you'd like to eliminate with extreme prejudice. Load up the appropriate mini-effigy of your boss or nemesis and flip it out into the ether where it belongs with the Boss Toss. Send it to the cornfields! Say buh-bye with this $4.99 spring-loaded catapult.

So you don't have anyone you'd like to flip off? Maybe someone from your past? Those little miniature executives, the official ammo of the boss toss, are available for $29.99 and can be modified to suit the occasion.

MLB considers making Coors Field cooler mandatory...

MLB believes it has found the 'wave of the future' for fixing odd ball behavior.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Intel, Motion prescribing Tablet PC-like devices for doctors

Intel's health care efforts are finally translating into products, as the company gears up for a technology demonstration next week.

Intel and Motion Computing plan to demonstrate the Mobile Clinical Assistant, first shown during last year's Intel Developer Forum, during an event at the University of California at San Francisco Medical Center on Tuesday. Intel CEO Paul Otellini will be on hand along with Motion CEO Scott Eckert and Mark Laret, head of the San Francisco hospital.

The Mobile Clinical Assistant is designed to help drag the health care industry into the 21st century. Doctors and nurses can take notes on the Tablet PC-like device and download patient information from the hospital's server. The product is designed for a hospital, with rugged features such as spill protection and a sturdy chassis to guard against falls.

Intel announced the formation of the Digital Health Group, headed by vice president Louis Burns, in January 2005 amid a broader reorganization. Burns has spent time at Intel conferences and medical-industry gatherings urging the health care industry to modernize its record-keeping practices with information technology.

Who Came Up With Valentine’s Day?

It’s known worldwide as a day of hearts, Cupids, and flowers—and big business. Each year, 875 million Valentine’s Day cards are bought in the United States, generating more than $925 million in sales. You could almost think the holiday was created to boost sales. But in fact its roots extend back at least to medieval times and perhaps earlier.

Early Christianity supplied the stories that led to the holiday as we now know it. There were a number of Christian martyrs named St. Valentine, but the day most likely gets its name from an obscure Roman priest named Valentinus, who was active in the second half of the third century. According to the legend that spread during the Middle Ages, Valentinus was imprisoned by the Roman emperor Claudius II for giving aid and comfort to persecuted Christians. After renouncing the Roman gods and even attempting to convert the emperor to Christianity, Valentinus was condemned to death—a gruesome death involving beating, stoning, and beheading.

While awaiting his execution—so the story goes—Valentinus struck up a close friendship with the blind daughter of the Emperor’s jailer. As befits a future saint, he miraculously restored the girl’s sight. And on the night before his execution he is said to have written the girl a farewell message “from your Valentine.” He was killed the next day, February 14 by our modern calendar.

As it happened, that was the day of the Roman feast of Lupercalia, a celebration involving the ancient god Faunus. During the feast’s fertility ritual, a priest would daub young men’s foreheads with goat’s blood and milk, after which the men would run off and choose mates in a nearby village. Over the centuries, after Christianity swept Europe, this pagan rite was apparently conflated with the St. Valentine legend, creating a celebration of romantic love.

By the Middle Ages the tradition of exchanging affectionate notes on February 14 had already become common. Geoffrey Chaucer even mentions the holiday in his mid-fourteenth-century poem “The Parlement of Fowles,” as the day when female birds choose their mates. Its popularity continued through the 1600s, despite its celebration being briefly banned by Puritans in England. It was brought to America by English settlers, with the first known observances in the late 1600s. By the middle of the 1700s, handmade cards were becoming more and more elaborate, with decorative heart, angel, and flower motifs and even puzzles and rebuses. By 1850 complex lace-edged valentines were the rage, with several printing companies competing in the ever-more-lucrative cardmaking business. One trailblazing entrepreneur, a Massachusetts woman named Esther Howland, created exquisite valentines that were so popular she was able to build up a business that brought in about $100,000 a year—a huge sum at the time.

The tradition grew again in the United States after World War I, when soldiers returned home to their sweethearts and, equally important, a wartime paper shortage ended. From then until now it has only become stronger. Today it’s one of the busiest times of year for greeting card companies (second only behind Christmas), florists, and chocolatiers. Love does conquer all—at least on February 14.

Reds believe they have depth in reserves

Bench strength is very important in the National League and fortunately for the Reds, they have several options off the bench in the late innings, which pleases general manager Wayne Krivsky and manager Jerry Narron.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Manure: You May Be Walking on It Soon

The Ag Department says it's no cow-pie in the sky dream -- a fiberboard flooring material made from sterilized cow manure could replace sawdust composite boards for building.

Cosby's dog charms judges, wins tough terrier group

Bill Cosby's terrier bounced into the show ring, wagging his tail a mile a minute. Harry walked onto the green carpet at Madison Square Garden as if he had no competition -- in fact, he didn't.