Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Friday, October 02, 2009

Halloween : Costumes, Candy , Party Supplies and More

Amazon.com > Clothing > Specialty Apparel > Costumes and Accessories

It's Halloween! Time to haul out the yard displays, crank up the Nox Arcana, don your scariest mask, put the cobwebs and spiders around the door, and prepare to give the costumed children in the neighborhood a little show with their buckets of candy, and their safety glowsticks! HA ha ha aha!

Seriously, Amazon has everything you'd want for Halloween from mild to wild. Fog machines, zombies, sound effects, vampire gear -- you name it, Amazon probably has it. It's time to find all those Elvira DVDs you need. There's so much, in fact I'm planning another Halloween post soon.

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Halloween Books


You can find books on just about any subject, which makes them a wonderful tie-in for a mixed department page like this one. While there used to be a specific "Nonfiction Halloween" category, I see than Amazon has just one Holiday Nonfiction category, apparently allowing seasonal sales to bring the appropriate books to the top. It might work.

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Friday, September 18, 2009

The Social Media Bible: Tactics, Tools, and Strategies for Business Success

"Different isn't always better, but better is always different."

I'm not one to seek validation in the approval of others, so I've been slow to grasp the significance of "social networking" sites. The fact is, you could ignore them at one time, but the ever-changing secret machinations of the major search engines more or less compel you to get involved in them now. That is if you want anybody to see what you publish online.

I'm not going to go into great detail about social networking here. This isn't that sort of site. My focus is to highlight products that are useful and hopefully sell a few. I'm just scratching the surface of The Social Media Bible, but I can already see that it's going to be worth many times the twenty bucks I spent on it. According to the authors, this book will help you:

  • Increase your company and brand value by engaging people in new forms of communication, collaboration, education, and entertainment
  • Determine which social media tactics you should be using with your customers and employees
  • Evaluate and categorize the tools and applications that constitute the rapidly evolving social media ecosystem
  • Make social media tools like Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, Twitter, blogging, podcasting, and hundreds of others a part of your business strategy
  • Do a social media analysis inside your company to improve internal operations and outside your company to create and monetize relationships with customers and prospects
  • Implement social media micro- and macrostrategies to give your business the competitive edge it needs to survive and thrive

I've already learned that it's more important to post to a blog frequently than to necessarily have a lot to say -- at least from a site traffic point of view. So that's it! Watch for my upcoming Halloween feature.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

O'Reilly Media Computer Books

Amazon.com >Books >Publisher >O'Reilly >

O'Reilly & Associates began publishing computer-related books in 1978 (before the PC revolution) with a small series of highly regarded UNIX® manuals.

Their books were frequently better than the "official" documentation, if any such documentation existed at all, and several of their animal cover books like The Camel Book and The Rhino Book became classics.



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The Hacks Series is a fairly new addition to the O'Reilly family. Each book in the series highlights about 100 simple, elegant hacks for the featured technology in simple, straightforward cookbook form. There are too many volumes in this growing series to feature them all here, but here are a few representative titles:

There are times when a hard copy book is more convenient than reading online, but computer books are often used for reference, and a searchable CD version can actually be preferable -- and CHEAP!! O'Reilly's CD Bookshelf Series is an under-appreciated programmmer's goldmine. And since you don't always need the latest bleeding edge technology, older editions can be an absolute steal. Here are some favorites:

Lest you get the impression that O'Reilly caters exclusively to the terminally geeky, they also publish beginner's books including their excellent Head First Series, which assumes no prior knowledge and generally figures prominently in O'Reilly Bestsellers. Here are some samples:

Friday, July 03, 2009

Textbooks for Back-to-School

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I was recently asked to write a page on textbooks, and although it may seem to be a little early to be thinking about back-to-school, given the lead time required for search engines to find and index pages it is if anything a little late -- at least from my point of view.

I suppose this is as good a time as any to mention to all my friends, fans, and family who actually go out of their way to purchase Amazon.com items through my links, that "all links are created equal." Amazon used to pay a premium to associates for items purchased directly from a product link, but that has been discontinued. Now any time you visit Amazon.com by clicking on one of my links, a "cookie" is set containing the appropriate Amazon Associate I.D. and any purchases made during the next 24 hours are credited to me, as long as the cookie is not reset by clicking on someone else's link.

The reason I mention that at this time is that Amazon has some more advanced seach functions for specific textbooks on their texbook homepage. It is often important to get the exact textbook assigned including the correct edition, since minor variations will cause a problem if for instance "pages 90 - 135" are assigned.

In the interest of full disclosure, I should mention that textbooks are a very specialized market. In the "publish or perish" world of academia, many professors will be teaching from their own books, which are sometimes very low-volume items. While Amazon.com is usually an extremely economical source for books in particular, there are cases where the local campus bookstore will save you a few dollars, particularly if you are looking for used textbooks. If finances are an issue (and they usually are) you should check all available sources before making your purchase.

If you are selling a used textbook, you will often be able to get more by selling it through Amazon, although the process is more like selling an item on eBay than simply taking a book to the campus bookstore and taking whatever they are currently paying for that title.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

The Martha Stewart Collection

If you like the Martha Stewart Collection, you may have been disappointed when it became a Macy's exclusive. I know I was, since the line was a very popular with my Amazon customers. Well, now in a separate deal, Macy's has contracted with Amazon to handle their online sales.

If you are new to Amazon, you will find that these "third party" sales are essentially the same as direct Amazon sales. The main difference you will notice is that the Amazon search function may include extraneous items, and it may be harder to browse through categories to see what is available.

Of course Amazon still carries Martha Stewart Books, and even has a Martha Stewart Bibliography page, in addition to the popular Martha Stewart Magazines and Martha Stewart DVDs. What has changed is that the Martha Stewart Collection products have moved into the Macy's Store, which makes them harder to search for. Furthermore, it is virtually impossible to find the Martha Stewart Bed & Bath Sale Items, the Martha Stewart Dining & Entertaining Sale Items, or the Martha Stewart Kitchen Sale Items without considerable drilling down. This is also true for the Martha Stewart Clearance Items.

The Links below are a site map for Macy's Martha Stewart pages, which require considerable drilling down to reach (except from here!) If you like Macy's but don't have a store near you, you might want to subscribe to this blog, since I am planning similar articles for other popular Macy's departments and brands.

Gifts

For the Home Bed & Bath Rugs Clearance

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Amazon Kindle : The Perfect Graduation Gift?

Amazon.com's proprietary Kindle Wireless Reading Device is one of the best kept secrets in electronics. In contrast with Apple's iPhone media blitz, Amazon generates sales that often outpace their Kindle production capacity with little more than their own web-based promotion. While the First-Generation Kindle is now fairly well-known, the same cannot be said for the updated Kindle 2, or the upcoming Kindle DX, currently available for delivery this summer.

Kindle readers include a subscription to Amazon's Whispernet 3G Wireless service, subject to certain limitations. Although the terms of the contract could be clearer, it seems that normal web browsing is permitted. The service explicitly includes free downloads of first chapter previews, and discounted electronic "kindle" versions of 275,000+ books to date. Amazon is currently negotiating with several major textbook publishers, which potentially will dramatically increase the value of the Kindle to collegians.

Amazon acquired Mobipocket in April 2005, so Windows users can download the free Mobipocket Creator 4.2 Home Edition software, allowing them to convert a wide variety of files into the kindle-supported .PRC format. Understandably, Amazon doesn't aggressively publicize the fact that thousands of public-domain titles are freely available in this form from Amazon, Mobipocket, Project Gutenberg, and others.

For Apple enthusiasts, there is a Kindle App for iPhone and iTouch, although these devices obviously suffer from their small screen size. You will find useful information on Amazon's "Shopping the Kindle Store on Amazon.com" page, but it would be well worth the nominal fee to download The Kindle 2 Cookbook: How To Do Everything the Manual Doesn't Tell You

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Real World Economics

Few Americans would profess much understanding of economics. In fact, they understand economics perfectly. It is the arcane mumbo-jumbo of econometrics and finance that confounds them. As former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan testified, he doesn't really understand those disciplines either.

The traditional definition of economics is: the study of the allocation of scarce resources. These are the everyday "kitchen table" issues we all deal with on a daily basis. I think people understand well enough that if you spend money on one thing, it's no longer available to spend on something else. If you endlessly pour $10 billion a month into an ill-advised and tragically mismanaged war, you don't have it for other projects that just might possibly be more beneficial.

Moreover, most people understand something the Wall Street "geniuses" have missed -- that all the money in the world won't do you much good if the planet becomes uninhabitable. When the above definintion was posited, certain resources seemed limitless, and therefore were not considered economic commodities. How could anyone charge for clean air and water? They were freely available to all. I think it's high time that definition was ammended to read the study of the allocation of finite resources.

Just as current government economic models failed to forsee the entirely predictable housing bubble, they completely ignore The Tragedy of Commons, as described in the influential 1968 Science article by that name. The problem is that economic models are only attempts to describe the aggregate behavior of real people. When they work, they're valid. When they don't work they're B.S. Thinking that The Laffer Curve, or other complicated equations can replace common sense is the most profound lack of understanding of economics of all.

Rescinding the plutocratic Bush tax cuts isn't "class warfare," or "socialism" -- its the same progressive income tax we've had since the beginning. The notion that increasing rampant income inequality is somehow "good for the economy" is another big lie designed to scare the disenfranchised into accepting exploitation by the investor class.

Unless you reject capitalism altogether, the idea of investment is reasonable. You entrust your savings to a business in exchange for a proportional share of their profit (or loss). Some of the most successful investors, like Warren Buffet approach investing just that way. But when trading becomes an end in itself, it's no longer investment -- it's gambling. I have no moral objections to gambling, but I know this: when you lose you pay up. You don't whine to the Department of the Treasury that the mortgages you've been hawking are worthless, and therefore it's up to the taxpayers to bail you out.

Here again, the beltway brain trust has a lot of complicated explanations why this unprecedented greed and incompetence should be rewarded, while the man on the street understands perfectly -- he's being robbed blind. Never forget this lesson: The Republican Party as it exists today is the party of privelege and irresponsibility. There may be a few honorable men in that group (Chuck Hagel comes to mind), but in general they are beneath contempt and should be thrown out of office wholesale. The Democrats aren't perfect, but you can say this about them: They're not Republicans.

The proposed economic stimulus plan isn't out of committee yet, but we know two things about it. It includes investment in roads, utilities, schools, and other economic goods that people can use -- and the Republicans have suddenly come to Jesus about deficit spending. "Why invest in America? Look at all the wonderful things deregulation and sloth have produced." Don't buy it. You can tell they are lying because their mouths move.

We'll come out of this recession or depression or whatever it is just as we always do: people will tighten their belts and concentrate on necessities. People need food, but they don't need delicacies. They need clothing, but they don't need fashion. Shelter is a necessity, but ostentatious mansions are not.

In hard times, people spend less on entertainment, and more on do-it yourself activities, whether that means auto repairs, starting a nice vegetable garden, or just doing some chores for a neighbor, perhaps in exchange for a home-cooked meal.

One way or another, people find a way to be productive whether they have a job or not. Despite of the fact that most of this activity is "off the books," (or maybe because of it) eventually things begin to turn around. If Hollywood or professional sports suffer, do you really think they will suffer very much?

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Hydraulic Valve Lifters

Hydraulic valve lifters are a wonderful invention introduced by Pierce-Arrow in 1933. Briefly, this is what they do:

Four-cycle engines have a camshaft which opens and closes the intake and exhaust valves through connecting parts that comprise the rest of the valvetrain. Because the optimum valve opening is relatively precise, and because the valvetrain parts are subject to thermal expansion and contraction, a specific amount of space known as valve lash must be provided on a cold engine.

Hydraulic valve lifters or tappets are also known as hydraulic lash adjusters, because that is what they do. When a valve is closed oil can enter the lifter pushing a cylinder within it until the rocker arm (in the case of overhead valve engines) contacts the valve stem, producing zero valve lash. When the camshaft pushes on the tappet its fill port is blocked, so it functions as a solid lifter would. This process is automatic, and does away with the need for periodic valve adjustment.

This makes for a very quiet valvetrain. Except in rare conditions where the tappet "pumps up," it also prevents serious damage to valves and even pistons that can occur when the valve lash is set too tight. Other things being equal engines equipped with hydraulic lifters tend to be durable, since the pitfalls of improper valve adjustment are avoided.

Of course, hydraulic lifters do wear out. How long they will last depends on engine design, maintainence, and conditions of use. As a general rule of thumb auto engines with 75-100 K miles are candidates for valve lifter replacement. When you begin to hear valve noises, you should inspect the entire valvetrain, replacing parts as needed. There is no reason most engines won't go 400 K miles if this is done.

This is a surprisingly easy process with inline engines, although it's a bit more complicated than changing spark plugs or oil filters. With a V-6 or V-8 engine, you may have to remove the intake manifold, in which case you should be familiar with the operation of a torque wrench. Depending upon your specific engine, you may have to remove a number of parts to gain access to the valve cover and pushrod cover. Consult your repair manual for details.

On a typical OHV engine, removing the valve cover will reveal the rocker arms, the pushrods, and the valvestems with their associated springs and keepers. These will be filthy, so it's a great benefit to clean them now using aerosol carburetor cleaner for starters. Since carb cleaner tends to be corrosive, I like to follow that with a thin coating of Marvel Mystery Oil.

Much is made of the importance of keeping the pushrods in their original positions and alignments. This is because small differences in wear patterns will only work against you if you mix them up. It's probably a good idea to just replace the lot of them. Pushrods are pretty cheap compared to the labor involved in getting to them, and they are likely to be filthy inside and out. You want your valvetrain to wind up at the tight end of the specified valve lash range -- wear will tend to make it looser over time.

Once you've removed and either catalogued or discarded your pushrods, you can access the tappets by reaching down through the cylinder head, preferably with a tappet remover, but you can't get them out. To do that, you have to remove the pushrod cover. This will also be filthy, and needs a thorough cleaning. Oil lubricates the entire valvetrain, as well as acting as the hydraulic fluid in the tappets, so cleanliness is essential to a lasting repair.

Pull the old tappets, and replace them with new ones. Coat the new tappet with engine assembly lube or regular oil. You may want to coat the bottom where the tappet contacts the cam with a bit of axle grease. You don't want any excessive friction or galling from a dry start, so apply lube generously wherever new parts contact anything. Reassemble the engine in the opposite order you dismantled it.

This is only intended as a general guide, but you can see that depending on your specific engine, there are relatively few steps to this whole procedure, and you should be able to manage it if you take your time and address any unforseen "bumps in the road" as they occur. Given that your beloved car or truck might last longer than you do it's a pretty worthy project.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

FreeBSD 7.0

BSD is the best kept secret in the world of desktop operating systems. And by "secret," I mean not the least bit secret, completely out in the open, freely available to all, and entirely open source. Talk about hiding in plain sight! So what is it?

Let's begin with a little history: UNIX is a multi-user multitasking operating system developed in 1969 by AT&T employees at Bell Labs. The name is reference to an even earlier OS Multics, so it's ironic that the copyrighted name UNIX® has been so jealously guarded for all these years. Almost as soon as UNIX appeared, various organizations began to create their own software around the same general framework, most notably UC Berkeley with their Berkeley Standard Distribution -- BSD for short.

With so many versions of *nix floating around, it was inevitable that the POSIX (Portable Operating System Interface) API would be formulated to ensure interoperability. So all the flavors of BSD, Linux, SunOS, Irix, HP/UX, etc. can now be called simply "POSIX-compliant UNIX-like Operating Systems" (or just *NIX). All this development occurred in the realm of big iron, since Intel's first multi-tasking CPU (80386) didn't arrive until 1986, followed by POSIX in 1988.

The Regents of the University of California released the BSD code into the public domain in 1990, and the first x86 architecture port of BSD -- 386BSD followed in 1992. So, if there's been a perfectly serviceable network-ready clone PC operating system freely available since well before Windows 95, why are so few people using (or even aware) of it?

One reason is that it's free. A lot of people automatically distrust freeware. There is also no particular incentive to promote or advertise FreeBSD and its variants, although some enthusiasts (like me) do what they can in terms of advocacy. Then there is the question of suitability for a given task. *NIX is much better adapted to network server applications than to stand-alone desktop use. Finally, Windows and *NIX are very different in their general philosophy.

Windows requires relatively little expertise to successfully install and operate. Everything is done automagically by wizards. BSD is vastly more configurable, but that versatility comes at a price: You need answers where you didn't even know there were questions. That isn't an insurmountable problem -- BSD has some of the most extensive and complete documentation available for any software. Unfortunately, accessing that information can be a bit overwhelming -- like taking a drink from a fire hose.

Here's what to do: the next time you replace a computer (or see one being discarded), use it for your BSD project box. There's no substitute for diving right in and getting your feet wet. If you've already tried this in the past, try again. The 7.0 Release is a big improvement over previous releases in terms of ease of installation and configuration. Don't worry if you can't get everything you could possibly want up and running in an afternoon, that would be an unrealistic expectation. Just fiddle with it when you can and before long you'll be amazed at what that old "piece of junk" computer can do unencumbered by an operating system so "advanced" that you need a new computer for every new OS version.

Now I'm not even going to attempt to tell you how to use BSD in you particular circumstances, or even which flavor is best for you, but I will point you to some significant resources:

  • The FreeBSD Handbook (volume I) This users manual will take you step by step through the process of installing FreeBSD on a PC-clone and setting up a graphic user interface, which should be a more comfortable environment if you are accustomed to Windows.
  • The FreeBSD Handbook (volume II) This administrators guide focusses on network server tasks.

Like the OS itself, these resources are available online, but sometimes a hard-copy edition is much handier. Even if you are installing a version of BSD other than FreeBSD, this documentation will be helpful.

You may want to get installation CDs, but if you have broadband internet, I recommend that you try installing from an FTP server first. It's surprisingly easy and (sort of) fast. All you need to do is follow directions to prepare 5 floppy disks, then the rest of the distribution will be downloaded as needed during the installation process. (Try that with Microsoft!)

After you have installed BSD you will have access to the manual pages accessed by the command "man <command>". Start with "man man" to learn more about the man command itself, and since you probably can't read fast enough to absorb the whole page as it flashes by use the pipe (|) character to redirect output to "more," a simple utility that displays one page at a time. So you'll type "man man | more" (without the quotes) then press enter.

Like Perl, *NIX make easy things easy and hard thing possible. Enjoy.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Obama Cabinet Members

President-elect Obama announced the last of this cabinet-level nominations Friday. Having run on a platform that promised to unite America, the list is notable for its ethnic, gender, and ideological diversity. It is said that compromise is a solution that pleases noone, and while these cabinet picks have already been widely criticized by both the left and the right, their expertise has been little disputed.

After eight years of Karl Rove's divisive politics of the perpetual campaign, it is refreshing to see glimmerings of a return to efficacy in public life. Obama has never been the left-wing extremist that Republican spin-doctors have portrayed him as, and it appears that he intends to make good his promise to be a president for all America -- if the "loyal opposition" gives him half a chance.

Obama says he wants to have the benefit of diverse opinions and vigorous debate before setting policy and Doris Kearns Goodwin's quotable Lincoln biography -- Team of Rivals has often been referred to in this context. Reportedly, John McCain responded: "Senator, I served with Abe Lincoln. I knew Abe Lincoln. Abe Lincoln was a friend of mine. Senator, you're no Abe Lincoln." -- but I think that's just a joke.

Herewith are brief descriptions of the prospective new cabinet members, subject to Senate confirmation:

Secretary of StateHillary Clinton
Secretary of the TreasuryTimothy Geithner
Secretary of DefenseRobert Gates
Attorney GeneralEric Holder
Secretary of the InteriorKen Salazar
Secretary of AgricultureTom Vilsack
Secretary of CommerceBill Richardson
Secretary of LaborHilda Solis
Secretary of Health and Human ServicesTom Daschle
Secretary of Housing and Urban DevelopmentShaun Donovan
Secretary of TransportationRay LaHood
Secretary of EnergySteven Chu
Secretary of EducationArne Duncan
Secretary of Veterans AffairsEric Shinseki
Secretary of Homeland SecurityJanet Napolitano

Steven Chu (Energy)

      Chu is a Nobel Laureate in physics and the director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory where he has emphasized technology to reduce greenhouse emissions. He helped to establish Stanford's Bio-X program, which encourages a multi-disciplinary team approach to problems frequently lacking in scientific research. He has also fostered cooperation between academia and industry, brokering a deal between the Berkeley Labs, the University of Illionois, and BP. Although controversial, this consortium is advancing scientific research in an environment where alternative energy funding has been conspicuously lacking.
 

Hillary Clinton (State)

     Former first lady and Democratic primary contender, Hillary Clinton is on of the most recognizable names in American politics. During her college years, she supported Barry Goldwater in 1964, but by 1972 had become transformed into a supporter of Eugene McCarthy. It is therefore ironic that her refusal to characterize her vote on the Iraq War Resolution as a mistake arguably lost her the Democratic nomination. During her distinguished career as a lawyer, first lady, bestselling author, and senator, she has established herself as a strong advocate for human rights -- a reputation that should serve her well as Secretary of State. Her books include: It Takes a Village, An Invitation to the White House: At Home with History, and Living History.
Read more about Hillary Clinton 

Tom Daschle (Health and Human Services)

     Since his demonization by the Bush administration despite his decidely moderate voting record and his narrow defeat in the 2006 senate race, respected and popular Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle has focussed on health care. His book Critical: What We Can Do About the Health-Care Crisis is a mixture of sound public policy and political pragmatism that should be required reading for the American voting public. Skyrocketing health-care costs are as great a threat to the economy as the Iraq War and the lack of a coherent energy policy, and we can only wish Daschle well as Secretary of HHS and director of the coming White House Office of Health Reform
Read more about Tom Daschle 

Shaun Donovan (Housing and Urban Development)

     At 41, Shaun Donovan is the youngest of the Obama nominees, but he has still assembled an impressive resumé. After completing his degree in public administration at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government and an advanced degree in architecture at the Graduate School of Design, Donovan served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Multifamily Housing at HUD, and as an acting FHA Commisioner. In 2004 he became the head of the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development.
 

Arne Duncan (Education)

     Another youthful Obama cabinet designee, Duncan played basketball at Harvard, where he graduated magna cum laude in sociology. He became director of the Ariel Education Initiative, enhancing children's educational opportunities on Chicago's South Side in 1992. In 1998 he joined the Chicago Public Schools, where he became Deputy Chief of Staff for the Schools CEO in 1999, whom he succeded in 2001.
Read more about Arne Duncan 

Robert Gates (Defense)

     

Gates is probably the best Secretary of Defense one could expect from the ideologically-skewed Bush administration. Even as the impending redefinition of our middle east policy argues against an immediate shake-up of the top-level military command structure, those ranks have simultaneously been purged of those unwilling to endorse the nonsensical Bush Doctrine.

Gates was nominated Director of the CIA in 1987, but withdrew when it became clear that the Senate confirmation would be hampered by his role in the Iran-Contra debacle. Daddy Bush nominated him again in 1991 and he was confirmed. He retired from the CIA in 1993 and during the Clinton years occupied several positions in academia, including president of Texas A&M University.

Gates declined the junior Bush's nomination as Secretary of Homeland Security in 2001 and as Director of National Intelligence in 2005. He was appointed to the Iraq Study Group in 2006, but resigned upon his nomination as Secretary of Defense. Gates recently wrote a summary of his vision for DoD in Foreign Affairs

Gates has written three books: Iran: Time For A New Approach (with Zbigniew Brzezinski and Suzanne Maloney), From the Shadows: The Ultimate Insider's Story of Five Presidents and How They Won the Cold War ,and Understanding the New US Defense Policy Through the Speeches of Robert M. Gates

Read more About Robert M. Gates 

Timothy Geithner (Treasury)

     

As president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Geithner has been in the eye of the recent financial storm, but who is he? To be fair, Federal Reserve bankers usually keep a low public profile, so Geithener's relative anonymity isn't surprising. Washington and Wall Street insiders seem to think he is an excellent choice, which doesn't exactly fill me with confidence. On the other hand, it's hard to imagine anyone being confirmed that couldn't pass muster with those groups.

On the plus side, Geithner is said to be extremely intelligent, which can't hurt in the effort to correct the mess he's inheriting. He is also said to be very internationally-minded, and to view income-inequality as a serious problem -- two significant breaks from the current administration. Geithner was Undersecretary of the Treasury for Foreign Affairs under Secretaries Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers -- two "moderate" Clinton appointees that aren't exactly blameless in the current SNAFU. Geithner is also a member of the Group of 30.

Geithner has been enthusiastically endorsed by a couple of economists who do have significant public profiles: Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich and recent Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman, so I guess we'll all have to give him the benefit of the doubt for now.

 

Eric Holder (Justice)

     

Despite Holder's extensive resumé, the press has generally focussed on two things: If confirmed, he would be the first African-American Attorney General (actually he has already been acting Attorney General pending Ashcroft's confirmation), and he has publicly acknowledged that he gave former president Bill Clinton questionable advice concerning the Marc Rich pardon.

I think the public should know more than that. Holder will be succeeding, in my opinion, the three worst Attorneys General in American history, and his task will be nothing less than to restore respect for the rule of law in America. He is said to be extraordinarily even-handed both as a prosecutor and as a jurist. If that means he will apply the law without prejudice to the rich and powerful as well as to the disenfranchised, great! If it means he will do the politically expedient thing to avoid rocking the boat, I fear for the Republic. Congress has already chosen that path. There is no doubt that any number of high-profile public crimes have been perpetrated on George W. Bush's watch. The question is: will the lesson be "no one is above the law", or "you can't fight city hall?"

 

Ray LaHood (Transportation)

     

Bipartisanship was a theme of the Obama campaign, but many were suprised by his nomination of outgoing Republican Congressman Ray LaHood for Secretary of Transportation, not so much because of his party affiliation as because of this relative lack of transportation credentials. LaHood is one of those populist Midwestern Republicans, said to be a decent man and a good manager. He has voted with the Democrats on a number of transportation-related issues.

One clue is that in Washington-speak "transportation" boils down to the ongoing feud between roads and rail. (Can't we have both?) In that regard, LaHood and his associations in the House of Representatives might be helpful in implementing a long-overdue overhaul of the nation's rail system. Beyond that, this one's a puzzle to me.

 

Janet Napolitano (Homeland Security)

     Janet Napolitano received her Juris Doctor degree from the University of Virginia Law School, which certainly signals a new direction for the heretofore mostly useless Department of Homeland Security. She has been an outstanding two-term Governnor of Arizona and a rising star in the Democratic party. Since her appointment will cede the Arizona governor's mansion to Republican Secretary of State Jan Brewer, one can only assume tha Obama intends to make Homeland Security a real department.
 

Bill Richardson (Commerce)

     

Democratic presidential contender and Governor of New Mexico Bill Richardson is no lightweight, and many considered him a more logical choice for Secretary of State than Hillary Clinton. Speculation is rampant that his selection for the Secretary of Commerce spot signals an increased role for Commerce in the coming administration.

Commerce touches upon several key areas of the Obama agenda, including foreign trade, technology, and environment. Richardson's skill as a negotiator will certainly be useful in reshaping the American landscape as we move away from an oil economy toward something new and more sustainable.

Richardson is the author of two books: Between Worlds: The Making of an American Life, and Leading by Example: How We Can Inspire an Energy and Security Revolution

Read more about Bill Richardson 
 

Ken Salazar (Interior)

     

Environmentalists are less than pleased with the appointment of Ken Salazar, whose record on green issues is described as "mixed." The mainstream position on environmental issues as regards the Department of the Interior has long been that we should have a "balanced" approach combining environmental protections with "constructive" use of public lands.

While this sounds reasonable, this approach has led us to the brink of gloabl catastrophe, with the best available science indicating that if we could magically reduce our carbon emissions to zero today considerable damage would already have been done which would play out over the next several decades. Salazar will not be operating in a vacuum, though, and depending upon the policies he is asked to implement, he could be a tolerable choice.

At least there is no indication a Salazar Department of Interior would exist solely to trade cocaine and hookers with representatives of the most egregious despoilers of the land.

Read more about Ken Salazar 

Eric Shinseki (Veterans Affairs)

     Former Army Chief of Staff General Shinseki is the first of many high-ranking officers demonized for telling the Bush administration the truth -- in this case that it would take hundreds of thousands of troops to stabilize post-war Iraq. He is a capable and dedicated officer who will doubtless do what he can with the antiquated mess that is the current Veteran's Administration.

I'd like to see the VA buy up the Afghani opium harvest, but that would upset the pharmaceutical companies, wouldn't it? Whatever else happens, look for Shinseki to develop innovative approaches to old problems and to rock the boat if necessary to get the job done.

Read more about Eric Shinseki 

Hilda Solis (Labor)

     

Hilda Solis is arguably the only genuine liberal in a cabinet notable for its centrist politics. As a representative for the 31st and 32nd California Congressional districts from 2000 to the present, she has had an excellent record on labor and civil rights issues. After decades of vigorous Republican Union-busting and luke-warm Democratic support, Solis just may be what the Democrats (and the country) need right now.

Read more about Hilda Solis 

Tom Vilsack (Agriculture)

     Tom Vilsack is the first Democratic Governor elected in Iowa for 30 years. He is another centrist, pick and some would say on matters of Agriculture leaning to the right. In the past he has come down on the side of large corporate farming operations on a number of issues. Note that the "free-market" zealots are strangely silent on the huge farm-subsidy budget, which although touted as friendly to the family farm actually favors agri-business. There doesn't seem to be much change in the offing here.
Read more about Tom Vilsack 

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Reiki Resources @ Amazon.com

Introduction

Reiki (pronounced ray-kee) is a Japanese system of energy healing originated by Mikao Usui in 1922, as well as the "Universal Life Force" used in these techniques. The word is derived from rei (spirit) and ki (life force). The term ki (also transliterated chi and qi) will be familiar to those versed in traditional chinese medicine, particulary acupuncture and acupressure, and is in fact borrowed from the Chinese.

Usui lived only four years after founding the Usui Reiki Ryoho Gakkai (Usui Reiki Healing Society) in Tokyo in 1922. His work was then carried on by his student, Chujiro Hayashi, who simplified and codified the teachings while focussing more on physical healing.

Hayashi's student Hawayo Takata is credited with introducing Reiki to the West. Travelling extensively in the U.S., Takata stressed the importance of charging money for Reiki treatments and teachings. Given the common inversion of the law of supply and demand in the U.S. (the more something costs, the more it's worth) this may have been useful. Almost all Reiki taught outside Japan can be attributed to her work.

John Harvey Gray was the third Reiki master trained by Takata to carry on that tradition, and is the longest-practicing Reiki Master Instructor in the West. Today there are many Reiki practitioners and instructors, each with their own empahses. Each has their adherents, and this brief discussion of the history of the tradition is not meant to imply the superiority of "pure" Reiki as handed down from Usui, but merely to outline the foundations of the practice.

Foundational Works on Reiki

Background

There is clearly a difference between living organisms and those which have expired, although the exact nature of the change defies scientific elucidation. There might well be a "Universal Life Energy," like Reiki just beyond the reach of our current technology. In the horror classic Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, this mysterious life-force was the then new and fascinating phenomenon of electricity. As mentioned earlier, the Chinese call it chi. It has also been referred to as ether, "the force," holy spirit, kundalini, mana, pneuma, prana, qudra, orgone, ruach, and silla as well as other names. ( For further information on these phenomena, you might want to consult Stefan Stenudd's Life Energy Encyclopedia)

Like Reiki, many of the systems that posit these life energies maintain that they reside in nodes -- most often referred to by the Hindu term chakras. They also maintain that this energy can be strengthened and balanced by various means. In the case of Reiki, the practitioner uses certain hand placements and positions on or just above the subject's body. The Reiki energy is said to flow from the practitioner's hands into the subject, stimulating the natural healing process. Subjects generally report feelings of tingling or warmth in the affected area, along with a sense of deep relaxation and well-being.

Training

Reiki training is divided into three levels or degrees. The first degree training, which typically takes only about two days, teaches the basic theory and hand placements used in Reiki. Students are given four "attunements" by a third degree (or master level) trainer. After recieving this basic reiki training, the student can treat herself or others.

The second degree Reiki training intoduces the use of symbols to enhance the strength of the Reiki energy and the distance over which it can be exerted. A fourth attunement is given, empowering students to use these symbols and enhancing their capacity for the flow of Reiki through them.

The third, or Master, degree of Reiki training involves one or more additional attunements, and a master-level symbol. Upon completeing the master training, one can teach the three levels of Reiki training and give the necessary attunements.

Since its introduction, many variations of the Reiki training have arisen, and there is considerable disagreement over what constitutes Reiki. Basically, the practice is what it is, and experience should dictate whether one chooses to incorporate a particular variation or not. There are, of course those who maintain that only one particular style or another should be called Reiki. Since there is no accreditation body for Reiki, this difference of opinion is unlikely to be resolved.

Reiki Listmania

A good way to approach an unfamiliar subject using Amazon.com as a source is to look over the Listmania® lists users have contributed. There may be disagreements within the Amazon community, as in society at large, but there is usually enough additional information to help you decide whose opinion you would value most.

Below are some of the many Reiki Listmanias chosen primarily for the quantity of additional information they present:

Reiki Forum

Amazon supports little-known (and under-utilized) forums where customers can exchange ideas on topics that interest them. Given the level of interest in Reiki demonstrated by reviewers, there really should be more going on at theReiki Forum, but that is subject to change!

People

Another neglected part of the Amazon site is their social networking pages. Even if you've never bought anything from Amazon.com, you can create an Amazon account and you will get a profile page where you can include as much (or as little) information about yourself as you wish. Here are some interesting people who have created Amazon content about Reiki:

Books

If you've looked at the Listmania pages above, you've discovered that there are a number of books that are "standards" mentioned in almost every case. (If you haven't checked out these lists, you should -- their authors are much more knowledgable about Reiki than I am.) I'm listing some of those here, as well as some that are a little more specialized, although they are not necessarily for advanced students only:

Please note that this is just a sampling of all the Reiki Books at Amazon. There are always new ones being published, and older titles may be reprinted or rediscovered by new audiences, so it's a good idea to do a little searching on your own. If you're really interested in the topic, you might invest in The Reiki Sourcebook or the Reiki News Magazine to aid you in furher research.

Selected DVDs by Steve Murray

Most Reiki practioners would agree that live training is preferable to books or DVDs. Nonetheless, many have recommended these DVDs. They can certainly at least serve as an easy and inexpensive introduction to Reiki. If you find they fully meet your needs, so much the better.

Caveats

Western science tends to have a blind spot with respect to many techniques of alternative medicine. Since science, by definition, deals with measurable and reproduceable experimental data, it is limited by the current state of the art in instrumentation. Phenomena that are not currently measurable can neither be proven nor disproven scientifically -- they simply lie outside the domain of current scientific discipline.

This has unfortunately contributed to the bias of Western medicine toward becoming a "disease care system" relying heavily on highly invasive, but scientifically verifiable therapies, primarily pharmaceticals and surgery. Disease prevention and the positive promotion of health, even through such acknowledged methods as proper diet and exercise has been neglected almost to the point of complete exclusion. The message seems to be that one can engage in all manner of stressful and self-destructive lifestyle choices, then take the appropriate pill to continue on one's reckless course.

There is a great deal of merit to many "alternative" techniques such as Reiki, but let the buyer beware, because the lack of scientific verification also permits considerable latitude and even downright fraud. For a reasonably balanced view of the merits of various holistic therapies, you might refer to Andrew Weil, M.D., a respected practitioner of western medicine as well as numerous alternative techniques who calls his approach integrative medicine.