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27 Unspoken Suit Rules Every Man Should Know. All Consuming. Songs That Make Me Want A Cigarette. 25 Productivity Secrets from History's Greatest Thinkers. 7 Ways to Look at Money Differently. Think about the fact that the currency we exchange is nothing more than printed paper. It doesn’t really have any value at all except the value that’s been assigned to it. Why would we want to measure our personal worth against printed paper that has no value? And yet, this is the fallacy that millions of people have bought into.

Look at the effect money has on the way we view ourselves. Let’s adjust the picture a little Imagine if the whole value exchange system had been built on something like strips of red ribbon. A long time ago, currency was intended to represent a commodity like gold or silver, but is that still the case? Obviously, we need some financial security in our lives. How we are conditioned to think about money From early childhood we are told that money makes the world go around. As we get older we start to link our worth with our hourly wage.

Money is emotionally supercharged We all need money so we can pay the rent and put food on the table. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 7 Of History's Weirdest, Most Awesome Productivity Tips. If genius is close to madness, then works of genius require working like a mad man, woman, or muppet. As Amanda Green writes on Mental Floss--drawing from Mason Curry's Daily Rituals: How Artists Work--some of history's most creative people had the most peculiar workflows. Like how: 1) Franklin got naked If you make enough money, people call you eccentric rather than crazy. Productivity godfather Benjamin Franklin provides a bespectacled case study: As Green notes, the Founding Father enjoyed an air bath every morning, wherein he spent an hour of reading and writing whilst totally nude. An interesting take on radical transparency, is it not? 2) Beethoven lived for caffeine The New Yorker has reported on how caffeine cramps your creativity--though Beethoven never heard such a thing. 3) Christie worked everywhere 4) Angelou is a hotel monastic 5) Wright worked in his head 6) Stephen King does it every damn day Productivity requires discipline. 7) Franzen finds focus Hat tip: Mental Floss.

7 Ways to Look at Money Differently. Books Extremely Successful People Read. What is it about successful people that makes them so successful? Sure, they're smart, they're confident, maybe they've got a little je ne sais quoi to boot. We think it also has a lot to do with who and what they've been influenced by. We've rounded up some of the most successful people's favorite books. While there is some overlap (Toni Morrison, Shakespeare), we still think there's plenty to keep you busy for a while. After polishing off this list, you just might start your own Fortune 500 company. President Barack Obama: President Obama's favorite books are listed on his Facebook page and are as follows: "Song of Solomon" by Toni Morrison, "Moby-Dick" by Herman Melville, "Parting the Waters: America in the King Years" by Taylor Branch, "Gilead" by Marilynne Robinson, and "Self-Reliance" by Ralph Waldo Emerson.

Oprah: "To Kill a Mockingbird" is her "favorite book of all time. " Stephen King: King contributed his top 10 favorite books to J. Marissa Mayer: In an interview, the Yahoo! 3 Advanced Literary Techniques. I’ve written about improving the big picture of students’ writing with themes, archetypes, types of conflict, and plot structure. But what about the details? Students’ elementary education about literary devices seems to max out with personification, similes, and other types of figurative language. Let’s introduce three more complex tools: in media resjuxtapositionsymbolism In Media Res In media res is latin for “in the middle of things,” and is a commonly used literary device for hooking the reader. Law and Order episodes always begin with unknown characters and an exciting crime. Raiders of the Lost Ark is famous for its in media res beginning, in which Indy avoids rolling rocks and dangerous traps. And any James Bond film opens “in the middle of things,” as Bond finishes a mission with a spectacular stunt (here’s all of Bond’s opening scenes, in case you need to kill an hour).

Juxtaposition When we place two opposites right next to each other, we create juxtaposition. Symbolism. The Most Dangerous Prescription Drugs - Likes. The Web Development & Programming Bundle. Web Programmers make on average $80,000 a year and are in constant demand. Whether you’re looking for a new career or a new skill, this video course will introduce you to a whole new world that could change your life forever. With over 14 hours of actionable instruction you’ll learn how to use HTML, HTML5, CSS, CSS3, C++, C#, JavaScript, jQuery, GameSalad, and Stencyl.

If you’re looking to get into app development, Stencyl and GameSalad are the visual programming languages you’ll use to upload your creations right to the App Store, Android Marketplace and more. Even if you’re not in school anymore, getting ahead in life and in your career can only happen if you never stop learning.

Web programming is one of today’s most in-demand skill sets, and regardless of your job title, is something that will put you a step above your peers. Did we mention it’s perfect for people with no coding experience? Plus, you get a verifiable Certificate of Completion upon finishing the course. 20 Things to Totally Do Before You Graduate From College. 1. Get an unpaid internship: Ah, the joys of unpaid peon labor. This is more of an exercise in character building than career advancement.

As you sit beneath the harsh florescent bulbs of adulthood, take a moment to reconsider your career path. Yes, relevant and cool internships do exist and can be helpful, but in all likelihood you’ll gain nothing from this experience other than the ability to drink copious amounts of bad coffee and stare blindly at Microsoft Excel until it is burned into your retinas, which leads us to…. 2. As you’ll soon realize, college is more of an exercise in redundancy than critical learning. 3. I’ve personally never missed a final exam, but I’ve heard the rush of adrenaline and grief that one experiences, as one slowly begin to realize the absolute nature of failure is something not to be missed. 4.

Never will you have such easy access to the intellectual leaders of our modern era. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Focus on your glam muscles, ignore the core. 11. 12. 13. 14. More than 100 Keyboard Shortcuts must read | Around The World. Learning The Fretboard. Objectives Learn how strings are numbered. Learn standard tuning. Learn how frets are numbered. Learn how to move around the fretboard (horizontally and vertically). Learn the notes on each string. String Numbering and Standard Tuning Strings are numbered from the thinnest string (1st string) to the thickest (6th string).

Notes are named using the first seven letters of the alphabet, however there are more than seven pitches, or notes, produced on the guitar. Fret Numbering Frets are numbered from the headstock toward the body starting with 1. Fretting a note is executed by pressing the string down behind a fret (on the headstock side of the fret). Fretboard Movement Guitarists can move horizontally up or down the fretboard, or vertically across the fretboard. Fretboard Movement Fretboard Note Locations This section will show you where each note on the guitar can be played. 1st String Notes (High E String) 2nd String Notes (B String) 3rd String Notes (G String) 4th String Notes (D String)

Renaissance. The Renaissance (UK /rɨˈneɪsəns/, US /ˈrɛnɨsɑːns/, French pronunciation: ​[ʁənɛsɑ̃s], from French: Renaissance "re-birth", Italian: Rinascimento, from rinascere "to be reborn")[1] was a cultural movement that spanned the period roughly from the 14th to the 17th century, beginning in Italy in the Late Middle Ages and later spreading to the rest of Europe. Though availability of paper and the invention of metal movable type sped the dissemination of ideas from the later 15th century, the changes of the Renaissance were not uniformly experienced across Europe.

In politics, the Renaissance contributed the development of the conventions of diplomacy, and in science an increased reliance on observation. Historians often argue this intellectual transformation was a bridge between the Middle Ages and Modern history. Overview[edit] The Renaissance was a cultural movement that profoundly affected European intellectual life in the early modern period. Origins[edit] Black Death/Plague[edit] Emotion and memory. Emotion can have a powerful impact on memory. Numerous studies have shown that the most vivid autobiographical memories tend to be of emotional events, which are likely to be recalled more often and with more clarity and detail than neutral events. The activity of emotionally enhanced memory retention can be linked to human evolution; during early development, responsive behavior to environmental events would have progressed as a process of trial and error.

Survival depended on behavioral patterns that were repeated or reinforced through life and death situations. Through evolution, this process of learning became genetically embedded in humans and all animal species in what is known as flight or fight instinct. Arousal and valence in memory[edit] Even though the majority of studies have focused on the arousal dimension,[10] a growing body of research is dedicated to the emotional valence dimension and its effects on memory.

Emotion and encoding[edit] Selectivity of attention[edit] 20 life-changing albums list. Most Life-Changing Albums. Most Life-Changing Albums. Life-changing albums downgraded to day-changing. Www.textfiles.com/drugs/lsdnfo.txt. 10 Rules For Never Being Broke In Your 20s. 1. Appreciate what you have already. There is always that moment — usually when you are moving, and having to put all of your earthly belongings into just a few manageable boxes — where you realize just how much crap you have managed to accumulate. We’re all little Pig-Pens, walking around with our cloud of dust, except for instead of little black lines, we’re surrounded by a bunch of clothes we never wear. So instead of running to the store to pick up another beige blazer to add a new, robust dynamic to your already-solid beige blazer collection, why not do something more constructive, like shopping your closet? Forcing yourself to reimagine the things you already own allows you to realize just how unnecessary many of your purchases actually are. 2.

If you don’t put away a little bit of your money off the top, before you start doing the rest of your budgeting and spending, you’re never going to actually save it. 3. If you need to move back with your parents for a while, do it. 4. 5. 6. The 10 Most Talked About Books of 2013... So Far | Jeff O'Neal. First published on Book Riot A few weeks ago, we rounded up our favorite books of 2013 so far, but these aren't necessarily the books that have been the most discussed. So here's a quick rundown of the ten new books that, from my vantage point, have gotten the most buzz as we head toward the back half of 2013. This isn't a scientific effort; there's really no data to be had. Well, maybe there is, but Amazon/Google keep it in an underground locker with the Kindle sales data and the secret SEO tricks.

In alphabetical order: 1. The first new novel in thirty years from a living literary legend? 2. If All That Is represents the twilight of Salter's literary era, Americanah represents the literary world we live in today. 3. A new J.K. 4. It's a new Dan Brown novel. 5. The mid-year award for the book that started the most online flame wars goes to Lean In. 6.

The end of the epic fantasy Wheel of Time series left legions of fans with a lump in their throat. 7. 8. 9. 10. 4.20 : Ganja Mix by Selecta YT « LRG | {Education Through Imagination} The 10 Greatest Songs About Recovery. The Google Boys. Google has been estimated to run over one million servers in data centers around the world, and process over one billion search requests and about twenty-four petabytes of user-generated data every day. Google's meteoric rise to Internet stardom is one of the great business sagas of our time. The sons of college professors, Larry Page and Sergey Brin - two brainy Stanford University grad students who founded the company - say their goal was to make the entire world's information searchable and instantly accessible. Google was co-founded by Larry Page and Sergey Brin while they were students at Stanford University and the company was first incorporated as a privately held company on September 7, 1998.

Google’s first public offering took place on August 19, 2004, raising $1.67 billion, making it worth $23 billion. More on Google: Inside The Mind of Google, Google: Behind the Screen and Google Me. Watch the full documentary now. Inside Search. Google is the most popular search engine on the web. Most of us rely on Google search for finding information. Sometimes it can be difficult to find just the right information we are actually looking for out of the hundreds or thousands of results returned in Google’s search. Despite using Google every day, we still use it in its simplest form. But Google has a plenty of tricks up its sleeves that can help us perform more quick, efficient and effective searches on Google.

Towards this end, in July 2012 Google created an online course called Power Searching with Google. The Google Power Searching course is available online on edX as an Xseries program. Go to Power Searching with Google Course The course is structured as a series of 6 modules, each of which comprises of 5-6 short video lessons. The instructor of the course is Daniel M. Power Searching with GoogleAdvanced Power Searching with Google XSeries Program in Power Searching with Google. 10 Reasons Nonreaders Don't Read — and How to Change Their Minds. Children are not born with a natural aversion to reading.

We know that. We see what happens when we introduce toddlers to books. They fall in love. They carry their favorites around and admire the pictures over and over again. Why, then, is reading such a problem for so many elementary and secondary students? One day, at the start of my English class, I asked, “How many of you like reading?” I worked hard to convince those students that reading was a skill, not a natural-born talent, and that they were capable of learning. “You can’t sink a free throw if you never get on the court,” I told them. Because we had developed a solid rapport based on mutual respect and trust, those students agreed to give reading one more try. With each new high school class, I kept the discussion about reading as one of our introductory activities.

Reason 1: Reading Gives Them a Headache or Makes Their Eyes Hurt Reason 2: They Can’t Read as Fast as Their Peers (and Get Left Behind) 10 Reasons Nonreaders Don't Read — and How to Change Their Minds.