Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Pfizer beats profit forecast, helped by cost cuts

[ [ [['A picture is worth a thousand words', 5]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/why-facebook-bought-instagram-4-theories-160400376.html', '[Related: Why Facebook bought Instagram: 4 theories]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 9]], 'http://contributor.yahoo.com/join/yahoonews_virginiabeach', '[Did you witness the jet crash? Share your story with Yahoo! News]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['A JetBlue flight from New York to Las Vegas', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GV9zpj', '[Related: View photos of the JetBlue plane in Amarillo]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Dick Clark', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/dick-clark-dies-at-82-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/c/21/c217c61aa2d5872244c08caa13c16ec5.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'Reuters', ], [ [['the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 15]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/white-house-stays-out-of-teen-s-killing-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120411/martinzimmermen.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['Titanic', 7]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/titanic-anniversary/', ' ', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/b/4e/b4e5ad9f00b5dfeeec2226d53e173569.jpeg', '550', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 6]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/navy-jet-crashes-in-virginia-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120406/jet_ap.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/russian-grannies-win-bid-to-sing-at-eurovision-1331223625-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/1/56/156d92f2760dcd3e75bcd649a8b85fcf.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP', ] ]

[ [ [[' the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 4]], '28924649', '0' ], [ [['because I know God protects me', 14], ['Brian Snow was at a nearby credit union', 5]], '28811216', '0' ], [ [['The state news agency RIA-Novosti quoted Rosaviatsiya', 6]], '28805461', '0' ], [ [['measure all but certain to fail in the face of bipartisan', 4]], '28771014', '0' ], [ [['matter what you do in this case', 5]], '28759848', '0' ], [ [['presume laws are constitutional', 7]], '28747556', '0' ], [ [['has destroyed 15 to 25 houses', 7]], '28744868', '0' ], [ [['short answer is yes', 7]], '28746030', '0' ], [ [['opportunity to tell the real story', 7]], '28731764', '0' ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 7]], '28723797', '0' ], [ [['point of my campaign is that big ideas matter', 9]], '28712293', '0' ], [ [['As the standoff dragged into a second day', 7]], '28687424', '0' ], [ [['French police stepped up the search', 17]], '28667224', '0' ], [ [['Seeking to elevate his candidacy back to a general', 8]], '28660934', '0' ], [ [['The tragic story of Trayvon Martin', 4]], '28647343', '0' ], [ [['Karzai will get a chance soon to express', 8]], '28630306', '0' ], [ [['powerful storms stretching', 8]], '28493546', '0' ], [ [['basic norm that death is private', 6]], '28413590', '0' ], [ [['songwriter also saw a surge in sales for her debut album', 6]], '28413590', '1', 'Watch music videos from Whitney Houston ', 'on Yahoo! Music', 'http://music.yahoo.com' ], [ [['keyword', 99999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]

dodgers sale tami roman jetblue captain los angeles dodgers christie brinkley seattle mariners geraldo rivera

Paul Krugman on How to Fix the Economy - and Why It's Easier Than You Think (Rolling Stone)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

quick silver where have you been rihanna dark knight rises world trade center mothers day kirk cousins ovechkin

The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills: Hating on Lisa Vanderpump!


Lisa Vanderpump has been granted her own spin-off, some nonsense title "Sur" that will focus on a new restaurant she owns in Los Angeles.

And, as a result, the reality star totally sucks now, her co-stars reportedly claim.

"There are a lot of bad feelings because Lisa got her own show and Taylor for one thinks that Lisa has been acting like a diva during filming [of season three]," a Real Housewives of Beverly Hills source tells Radar Online. "Taylor and Lisa had gotten close after Russell's suicide last year, but Taylor now feels like that was all done for the cameras."

Which would mark the first time in Real Housewives history that cameras played a role in a series relationship.

Lisa Vanderpump Red Carpet Pic

This same insider reports that all cast members are "jealous" of the attention being paid these days to Lisa, with the exception of Brandi Glanville, likely because she just wants to appear on Sur.

In even more traumatic Real Housewives of Beverly Hills news, did you hear who will be making appearances on season three after all?

Oh, yes, we have not seen the last of Camille Grammer!

[Photo: WENN.com]

kashi neil diamond orange crush harden nor easter nor easter ted nugent

Ten Ways to Make Money Online and Earn Good Income | Zerona ...

There are many methods to generate income today, and lots of people are generating a considerable income in the convenience of their very own homes. How are they earning money? With a successful Internet business, obviously!

Maybe you want to earn a part-time income at home or start a full-time Online business. Maybe youre a mom who wants to stay at home while earning a living. Or, maybe youre fed up with the ?rat race? and wish to subside with your personal home business. In any case, you are able to choose one from the sure-fire methods of generating income online below to get going.

1. Offer Services That Other Business online Owners Will Need

Many people make money online and will be offering services that other Web business owners need on a continual basis. These types of services include Website hosting, domain name registration, web design, and content writing. Every new website should have an internet host, website name, web design service and content. Useful available everywhere online, but fortunately, almost always there is room for some more! Internet surfers are starting new Online marketers every single day. So, the opportunity of generating income online with one of these services is tremendous.

You can begin from scratch with one of these businesses or find a company that allows you to resell its services and products. For example, instead of establishing your personal servers to become Web host, you are able to be a reseller of hosting companies and share an element of the profits. With this setup, your primary job would be to promote the service. The parent Web host company does the rest.

2. Expand Your current Business

Should you already own a business, you are able to expand it using a website. In case your company has its own website, your visitors can go online to learn more about you, buy your products or ask questions. Its a great way to advertise and make customer trust. Also, you are able to mention your site address in all your print, television and radio advertising to maximize results.

3. Begin a ?Niche? Internet Business

Lots of people start small Online marketers that reflect who they are or what they enjoy. The term ?niche? took on the totally new meaning when the Internet came into existence. A niche business can be anything you want so that it is ? a web-based online florist, online classic car club, online magazine, online clothing store, online shopping mall, online photo stock agency, online old fashion candy store, online quilt outlet, or perhaps an online shoe store. Choose something you enjoy doing and find a way to develop a small Internet business around that theme. And, dont let the term ?small? fool you. Owning a small business is a superb way to make money on the Internet!

4. Earn Money Online Through Auctions

Dont have time to manage a website? Try sale. Marketing just about anything at eBay along with other Internet sites, but be sure you select a market that has a strong demand. Some items sell well through auctions, some dont. Also, make sure to select a product with a high profit margin so you dont lose money each time you list your items.

5. Provide Internet Marketing Services

Online company owners will always be looking for great ways to promote their websites. A high level savvy Online marketer, e-commerce provides a tremendous money opportunity for you. You can generate money online while helping others improve their profits. Online marketing today involves search engine promotion and SEO, Content and optimization for article pages, pay-per-click campaigns, market and keyword research, press announcements, banner and pop-up advertising, e-zine and mailing lists, and link exchanges. You are able to focus on one of these simple areas or offer marketing strategies for all categories.

These are five proven ways to make money online. Each of these opportunities can provide a steady stream of income should you work diligently to promote your online business and services and always provide excellent customer service. Use these ideas to begin making money today!

For More Information Regarding make money online And get started with affiliate marketing, Please Check my Site

duke university platypus platypus overboard east of eden weather radio indiana

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Nothing to Say & Saying It: Marjorie Perloff on Dominance

Interesting article by Marjorie Perloff riffing off of Jed Rasula in The Boston Review:

http://www.bostonreview.net/BR37.3/marjorie_perloff_poetry_lyric_reinvention.php

It?s another of those ?It was not always thus? articles by someone fairly late in their career (it even says at one point ?It was not always thus?), which always makes me wary that it?s going to be infected by a false nostalgia of their own youth. So, with that in mind, I find she (and Rasula as well) misses the point as often as she hits it, but even so, it?s an interesting read.

First, the number of people involved in teaching creative writing at all levels in academia, they say, is 20,000. Then they say that research is the most important aspect of the continued employment of these 20,000. Then they say that this is causing a narrowing the aesthetic diversity of poets, which is this:

1) irregular lines of free verse, with little or no emphasis on the construction of the line itself or on what the Russian Formalists called 'the word as such';

2) prose syntax with lots of prepositional and parenthetical phrases, laced with graphic imagery or even extravagant metaphor (the sign of 'poeticity');

3) the expression of a profound thought or small epiphany, usually based on a particular memory, designating the lyric speaker as a particularly sensitive person who really feels the pain, whether of our imperialist wars in the Middle East or of late capitalism or of some personal tragedy such as the death of a loved one.

There is a point to this, but it?s not the point Perloff is making. The point I see is that there is a tendency, or a gravity, around aesthetic positions. It?s a contextual thing that gets reinforced by journals and universities and awards. It?s not the poet?s fault, though. It?s the journals and awards and universities. There are other poets doing other things, they?re just not valued by those journals, etc.

If Tony Hoagland is wrong in saying, using a very similar argument about journals and awards and universities, the dominant poetry of our time is skittery, this does not mean that Perloff is right, that it?s a homogenous totality of neo-autobiographical-light epiphany poetry. If either of them has a point, then both of them are wrong.

These are simplistic arguments that tend to fall apart, as Perloff?s does. First, I agree that it is true that most people who write poetry are involved in academia, but they are involved in various ways, and with various expectations of them. There are many, many poets who have won no awards, nor ever expect that they might. They also have never published in any of the journals Perloff and Rasula mention as the goal of contemporary American poets. Even with these two major strikes against them, they?re getting by just fine. Of course, many of them have academic positions that are at little-known universities off Perloff?s radar, but the fact remains that these poets don?t have to publish in the kinds of places she?s thinking of, and they don?t have to win the kinds of awards she?s thinking of. They can write absolutely however they feel like writing. And they do. I, for one, feel zero pressure from the small regional university I teach at to conform to the career she describes.

My guess, as with most writers, Rasula and Perloff and Hoagland see only what is around them. They see the winners of the big prizes and the people who teach at the most prestigious schools, and they extrapolate from there (though selectively so, as I?ll get to in a minute). The rest of us can see it quite differently.

True, there is a much more narrow aesthetic represented in the major awards than in the whole of contemporary American poetry. I do wish it were different, but awards are political things, not aesthetic things. It?s important to keep that in mind. (And sometimes those political economies end up choosing a poet I admire, as it has with Rae Armantrout, Mary Jo Bang, John Ashbery, among others). It will always be so.


Here?s a bit that struck me as especially disconnected:

?It was not always thus. The poetry wars of the 1960s?raw versus cooked, open versus closed, Donald Allen?s New American Poetry (1960) versus Donald Hall and Robert Pack?s anthology New Poets of England and America (1962)?produced lively and engaging debates about the nature of poetry and poetics. What made a lineated text a poem? Did poems require some sort of closure, a circular structure with beginning, middle, and end? Should the poet speak in his or her own person, divulging intimate autobiographical details? And so on.?

One must be pretty distant from the ground not to think that sort of thing is no longer going on. It doesn?t take much research to find that there are a lot of debates going on about the form, content, and function of poetry, a lot of it in places such as The Boston Review, in which her essay appears.

She has a point when she starts talking about the ageism of art:

??poets are always being displaced by younger poets. Whenever I sort out the hundreds of poetry books that come across my desk and rearrange my bookcases, I notice a curious phenomenon. Poet X has produced two or three successful books and keeps on writing in the same vein, but somehow the fourth book, no better or worse than the previous ones, gets much less attention for the simple reason that, in the interim, so many new poets have come on the scene. The newcomers are not necessarily better than their elders, nor do they write in an appreciably different mode, but the spotlight is now on them. Ezra Pound?s ?Make it New? has come to refer not to a set of poems, but to the poet who is known to have written them.?

This is a major problem in contemporary poetry. The young are not reading the older living poets as much as they should, but it?s also obvious to me that the older poets are also not reading the young.

After this, Perloff leaves her point almost entirely as she gets bogged down in a discussion of?American Hybrid and Rita Dove?s Penguin Anthology of 20th Century American Poetry. Even though, she does have a point when she writes that ?In the current climate, with thousands of poets jostling for their place in the sun, a tepid tolerance rules.? There are a lot, a powerful lot, of bad poems out there, and there is a large majority of poets who?ve decided to play nice about it. In fact, if I were to accuse academia and prizes for something it would be for this, much more than the work itself that poets produce. So we by and large nod our heads and smile at each other while jabbing ourselves in the leg with a pen to keep from screaming. Call it the Poetry Party Game.

And then, after these universals and generalizations, Perloff takes an unexpected (or maybe an expected) turn:

?So far I have been talking about the dominant poetry culture of our time?the culture of prizes, professorships, and political correctness. To dislodge the dominant paradigm is never easy, but in recent years we have witnessed a lively reaction from a growing group of poets who are rejecting the status quo.?

What bothers me in such a turn, is that she first says contemporary American poetry is this unified beast of boring, lazy, unmusical, etc, poetry that doesn?t have any productive tension, then she says there?s this rising reaction from a growing group. She wants to have it both ways. To say it?s monolithic and then to say it?s crumbling. And who becomes her model for the possible? John Cage. I like John Cage a lot, but he?s been dead for 25 years. She then introduces another example, Susan Howe, who again, has been around a very long time. If the general poem of our time is under siege from Susan Howe she?s very patient. Perloff does a bit better by bringing in Srikanth Reddy, but bringing him in poses another problem for her. He is a product of, and now teaches at, just the sort of prestigious institution she says ruins innovation in poetry. So, what is she saying the problem is again?

Bah. I give up. It?s a useless argument. We?ve all been here before. The lines are memorized. It?s this little dance we do because we think dancing is what art?s all about.

Fill it in with whatever you want:

Q:____________

A:____________

hall of fame occupy dc ufc 143 fight card my fair lady conversion disorder the chronicle spinal stenosis

Screens, Networks and Our Imagination

JODI, "LED Puzzled"

JODI, "LED Puzzled" (all photos by Cary Peppermint unless otherwise noted)

When I visited JODI?s current exhibition,?Street Digital, at the Museum of the Moving Image, I wondered how the notorious duo would take their earlier net art practices into the ?street? (or gallery). Joan Heemskerk and Dirk Paesmans of JODI became well-known in the 1990s for upending traditional internet experiences with their online artworks. From wwwwwwwww.jodi.org to http://404.jodi.org/, they presented abstract code and programming glitches as art, bringing the background source of digital works into the foreground. Their work looked more like a crash of your web-browsing program rather than a coherent, readable text.

?Untitled Game? is the work in Street Digital that best represents JODI?s 1990s aesthetic. It captures code dysfunctions in the video game Quake and recombines them to create a visual and sonic field of explosions, mechanical gasps and falling patterns. Within four scrims, the player is presented with joysticks to interact with the nonsensical bursts of sound and light. The experience is uncanny: You are literally immersed in the ?game.? You are part and parcel of an attractive glitch.

JODI, still from "GEO GOO"

JODI, still from "GEO GOO" (click to enlarge)

?GEO GOO,? a 2008 net art work exhibited on three screens, scrambles Google Maps so that the familiar images we?re used to seeing become abstract, rendering any sense of direction useless. As with ?Untitled Game,? ?GEO GOO? disassembles, dissects and rearranges individual parts of a new media experience. I was struck by how well the work illustrated what I try to teach my undergraduate students every semester: that we navigate space surrounded by the arbitrary colors, animations and shapes designed by a single corporate entity, that our grasp of the world is anchored by someone else?s construction.

JODI?s disruption of mapping and video games reminded me of Situationist artist Guy Debord?s calls for a ?renovated cartography.? For Debord, when we blindly follow the same directions over and over, using the easiest paths, we get stuck relating to the world in ?functional? ways and imagination withers. Debord wanted people to use the wrong map in the wrong place ? to get lost in order that we might see our surroundings anew. Similarly, JODI strips away the usual instrumental goals of our engagements with digital media ? to win a game, to communicate information, to navigate quickly. What we are left with is a bare awareness of the random components of our digital lives and a glimpse at the other possibilities for technology.

JODI, still from "YTCY (Folksomy)"

JODI, still from "YTCY (Folksomy)"

In ?YTCT (Folksomy),? JODI edits and manipulates a series of YouTube videos of people violating technology, exhibiting them in a quadrant display. Kids and adults stab glowing desktop screens, throw laptops against houses, ax them into pieces and set once-valuable software and hardware on fire. Males are responsible for most of the destruction, sometimes even beating each other with keyboards. It?s interesting to note that when females do appear, they tend to violate their machines by dominating them in sexually suggestive ways. One woman lifts her skirt and sits on top of her computer. Another steps on her cell phone gently with gold high-heeled sandals and polished toenails, another does so assertively with sparkling silver stripper heels. Yet another does serious damage with the spike heels of her thigh-high boots.

The world of digital art is rife with artists reappropriating found materials, as JODI does here with user-generated YouTube videos. But this practice can conceptually short-circuit. Artists are often smitten with wonder at emerging tools and technologies, and they cut and paste without a vision. In contrast, JODI shows how this strategy can be used to study a transnational historical moment. Treating YouTube as an archive of cultural data, ?YTCT? documents computers? shift from scarce, precious technologies to obsolete, ubiquitous objects, too worthless to be respected. When my family got its first computer in the 1980s, we bought a special desk for it. My siblings and I weren?t allowed to eat or drink near it, and we fought with each other for sacred ?computer time.? ?YTCT? shows that our twentieth-century veneration of powerful machines has turned into a mass of e-waste. With JODI?s intervention, we see how YouTube users can act out this transformation for us dramatically.

JODI, ?SK8MONKEYS ON TWITTER?

JODI, ?SK8MONKEYS ON TWITTER? (click to enlarge)

Street Digital includes ?ZYX,? an iPhone app that directs users to perform a series of movements, and ?SK8MONKEYS ON TWITTER,? through which participants stand on a keyboard-skateboard to type with their feet. I never got a chance to engage either of these decidedly more simple works: a group of kids was so excited to be playing with them that they wouldn?t share. But both projects read as minimalist jabs at the ?feature bloat? of mobile operating systems and software: one pairs down apps to primitive body gestures, the other tweets gibberish.

Lastly, ?LED Puzzled,? JODI?s newest work: Curator Michael Connor describes this piece as akin to ?the giant screens in Times Square run amok,? though ?LED Puzzled? lacks the language of advertising. There is no product, no discernable image, no lifestyle being sold. We are presented with only an accumulating trash heap of cheap and ubiquitous consumer technologies. ?LED Puzzled? displaces the disorientation performed cognitively by ?GEO GOO? onto the senses. Its blue and white lights blink so brightly and chaotically that you must, at once, somehow both stare and look away, looking for meaning ? much in the same way that one is drawn to play ?Untitled Game? even though it leads nowhere.

JODI, "LED Puzzled"

JODI, "LED Puzzled"

In the two decades since JODI arrived on the digital art scene, a lot has changed, technologically and culturally. Street Digital continues JODI?s signature practice of exposing the behind-the-scenes workings of our daily interactions with computers while performing updates that respond to Web 2.0 and mobile computing. However, JODI does not only shift technologies, moving from yesterday?s desktops to today?s handheld devices and social media; the duo also examines the hidden assumptions and psychic transformations that the ubiquitous screens and networks in our lives have imprinted on our imagination. JODI plays with new media but not without awareness about the way it plays us.

Street Digital runs through May 20 at the Museum of the Moving Image (36-01 35th Avenue, Astoria, Queens).

extreme couponing taylor lautner sinead o connor dan marino passing record ipad 2 cases movie times serene branson

Katie Price Engaged To Model Leandro Penna

Katie Price Engaged To Model Leandro Penna

Former model Katie Price is gearing up to walk down the aisle a third time. The British reality star is engaged to Argentinian model Leandro [...]

Katie Price Engaged To Model Leandro Penna Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News


baltimore county current tv megamillions ncaa basketball tournament 2012 megamillions winning numbers lotto winner michael oher