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Leave a Comment | Posted by JB Hager on December 31, 2009

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Leave a Comment | Posted by JB Hager on




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Leave a Comment | Posted by Heather's Thingies on

*It’s been GREAT spending time w/ Family
& Friends in Omaha, NE for the Holidays..
If you have been looking for ‘BIG ORNAMENT
BALLS’ …FOUND THOSE TOO…

Villlage Tree in Omaha NE
..Didn’t have to ‘Dream of a White Christmas’ the 13 plus
inches w/ the Huge Drifts and ’BBBRRR COLD TEMPS’
 were more than  enough…
WhiteXmas
(Mailbox outside my Daddy’s House)
…Other Holiday ‘Rock’n Highlights’..
-Daughter /Daddy
(Maurice) Day Rocked seeing
Avatar 3-D
-Shopping Day w/ ‘The Girls’ 
-The Cornhuskers Blowing out Arizona (33-0)!
…Yep I got ‘Snuggie-tized’ 2…
Snuggietized

&Ted & I hope you had a HAPPY CHRISTMAS…
TedMeXmas2009
HueyBow
(Huey even has the ‘Holiday Glow’)

*MAY YOUR NEW YEAR’S BE MERRY & SAFE!!
How about a ‘XMAS FLASHBACK’…
*Something Daddy could live ‘WITHOUT’
in 2010!!
 

 


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Leave a Comment | Posted by Unknown Blogger on December 30, 2009

All In The FamilyI love the holidays.  When else can you, guilt-free, gorge yourself on a variety of tasty, high-calorie, holiday recipes, drink yourself into blindness, and strangle your annoying uncle Fester during the traditional family get-together?

Ah, yes – the holiday family get-together.  A time when your beloved family and relatives gather to remind you why you live alone.

Is it just me or do holiday family get-togethers suck?  Here’s a glimpse of how mine usually turn out.

The police have taken my belligerent grandfather into custody for indecent exposure for peeing on the lighted plastic Santa in the front lawn.

The fire department has gone as the smoldering remains of my parent’s patio reminds us all of why Uncle Bob should never be allowed to prepare the Christmas turkey in the propane-powered deep fryer he got at Cabela’s.

Somebody vomited on the Christmas tree but no one is sober enough to know who did it.  The only suspects are my 16 year old cousin Amanda, passed out under the tree and my parent’s 15 year old, half blind, three-legged Cocker Spaniel named Lucky – also passed out under the tree.

My Aunt Betsy is constantly farting and always blaming it on Lucky.

Sooner or later several arguments erupt simultaneously between my aunt’s and their pregnant daughters as to why contraceptives don’t work.

Somebody gets caught cheating in the high stakes poker game taking place in my parent’s basement and a brawl breaks out.

Nobody knows who invited the guy dressed in drag.

Etc., etc., etc.

I can’t wait for the family New Year’s Eve party.

Happy New Year!!!

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Leave a Comment | Posted by Nikki Nite on

This Christmas, I actually baked.  It’s been years since I had time (or took the time) to do it.  And our 19 month old daughter got to enjoy her first chocolate chip cookie.  Here’s how it went!

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Leave a Comment | Posted by Cassiday Proctor on

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Leave a Comment | Posted by Nikki Nite on December 29, 2009

I don’t personally like the whole concept of New Year’s Resolutions.  I would rather make small goals all throughout the year.  Then at least I can get something done.  For instance, I might set a goal to eat one more piece of fruit each day this week…that kind of thing.  Anyway, if you like to go full in and are into new year’s resolutions, this is a pretty good site for keeping track of your progress.  It’s always easier to stick to a resolution when you hold yourself accountable.  CLICK HERE to check out the Disciplanner.

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Leave a Comment | Posted by Nikki Nite on

From open Yale classes (yes, get the class for nothing online) to a computer program that can help you make better decisions, to a website that will give you step by step instructions on how to do practically anything (for free), you’ve got to check out this list of 25 ways to get smarter in 2010.   Now if I can find time to do just three or four of them……

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Comments (1) | Posted by Sandy McIlree on

Christmas 2009: Our daughter first Christmas.  Alot of  it is lost on a 7 month old.   Im not sure she knew it was different than any other day.  It was a techie Christmas at our house.  I got the lastest iPhone, Tricia got a Mac Book Pro and a Kindle.  I’m excited about the new iPhone.  Lots of video coming your way. 

I always watch alot more TV when I’m on vacation.  I will stay up past midnight watching TV.  I never do that when I am not on vacation, the 4am alarm clock comes early.  Nat Geo has been doing a series called “Everest, Beyond the Limit” and I am obsessed.  Climbing Mt Everest is the most macho thing I have ever seen.  I won’t bore you with all the dangers that are involved, I am sure you are well aware.  Anyway, I can’t stop thinking about it.  Do I want to do it?  Hell yes!  Will I ever do it?  Nope!  Its a rich guy thing.  A trip to the top is $50K and that does not guarnatee you will summit.  The Sherpa’s are amazing.  Generations of living at altitude has made them the most amazing climbers ever.  The record time to summit Everest is just over 16 hours.  Did you know your blood actually gets thicker at altitude, making the risk for heart attack even greater?  Holy crap, you gotta have brass you know whats to go for Everest.  I just ordered “In Thin Air” from Amazon.  This book won’t end up in the stack of books I want to read, this one will get read.

Back to work on Monday, Jan 4

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Leave a Comment | Posted by JB Hager on

People have often thought I was nuts because I still like to buy cd’s. I always hated how itunes controls your music. If the only way to back it up is to burn it to disk, why not buy the disk in the first place. It’s not like you can buy music at half price when it’s digital only, which is a rip off to the consumer.br /The main reason I have kept ALL my cd’s and continue to buy cd’s is because I predicted that the day would come when we wouldn’t want to settle for the compromise in quality that the mp3 offers. Even though I have ripped all of my music to mp3 (over a terabyte of it), I foresaw a day when we would want to rip it to a better quality. Mp3’s remove a lot of the high and low range tones and squash the sound. Looks like my prediction might be true and those of you with tons of mp3, without the original cd quality, will be compromised and look like suckers.br /br /A Microsoft analyst, Matt Rosoff, wrote an recent article predicting how we would consume music in the future. One section backs up my claim. He said:br /br /* Fidelity rather than file sizebr /”Eventually bandwidth will increase to the point where streaming lossless digital files makes sense. Listeners will rediscover detail in the midrange, and tons of information at the low and high ends of the spectrum — and the MP3 will be looked back as the dark ages of audio quality. “br /br /Rosoff also predicts:br /br /* Songs instead of albumsbr /”Fewer musicians will release suites of songs organized around a common theme or sound,” he wrote. “With digital files already taking the place of physical recordings, there’s almost no economic reason for the album to persist. By 2020, the concept of the album will be an anachronism with a few vocal adherents — like vinyl records are today.”br /br /* Streams instead of downloadsbr /”If you had access to every song ever recorded, on any device, from any location with an Internet connection, wouldn’t you rather pay for that service than buy a new CD or two every month? People say they want to own music, but when it’s just a digital file, what do they want to own … why bother? … By 2020, most professionally recorded music will be consumed as on-demand streams and people won’t pay by the track”br /br /* Clouds instated of hard drivesbr /”As users become accustomed to listening to more professionally recorded music on demand, they’ll expect their personal collections to be available in the cloud as well.”br /br /*Extras become standardbr /”What’s to prevent artists from packaging their music with artwork, lyric sheets, video outtakes, and even interactive applications? “br /br /* Production rather than consumptionbr /”Digital technology, [which] has already democratized the recording process, and the Internet have also made promotion and distribution far easier than they were a decade ago. By 2020, music fans will spend almost as much time creating and sharing recordings with their friends as they do listening to professionally recorded music.”br /br /* Suggestions rather than searchesbr /”In a world of on-demand music in the cloud, search will become vitally important. Users will want to be able to find songs not only by title, album, or artist, but also by a few snippets of lyrics, or even by humming or playing part of a melody. By 2020, personalized recommendation services, like those provided by Pandora, Slacker, and MOG, will become even more important than search, and will have to be integrated into any on-demand music service that hopes to survive.”br /br /* Festivals rather than big concertsbr /”With the exception of old, established acts and the very occasional pop sensation, very few bands can fill large arenas or football stadiums. This trend will accelerate as the last bands from the golden age of radio retire. In 2020, no single act will be able to sell 50,000 tickets at Qwest Field like U2 hopes to do this summer. Instead, the only shows that will pack large arenas will be festivals, where listeners can pick and choose among dozens of acts and classes of entertainment.”br /br /* Spectacle rather than personalitybr /”The common wisdom today dictates that musicians need a personal connection with their fans. They must blog, tweet, maintain their MYSPACE and FACEBOOK profiles, and generally act like your next door neighbor who’s always pestering you to see his band. There’s a word for [this] –it’s called “spam.” Eventually, this cloud of self-promotional noise will dissipate, and will be replaced by old-fashioned word-of-mouth.br /br /* Retro takes on a new meaningbr /”In 2020, the original iPod will be almost 20 years old … overtaken by a nearly infinite selection of high-fidelity music, streamed over super-fast wireless connections to increasingly inexpensive portable devices.” First-generation iPODS will become the SONY WALKMAN of the Aughts.

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