28 January 2006

Rivalry


The least important are the more fun...

Entreprise/Corporate:
Boeing - Airbus
Coca-cola - Pepsi
Microsoft - Macintosh (Apple)
Hewlett Packard - Texas Instruments
NASA - Russian Space Agency (RKA)
Nokia - Motorola
Yahoo - Google
Nike - Reebok
ATI - nVidia

Geographical & Political:
Pakistan - India
Israel - Palestine
Argentina - Brazil
Ireland - United Kingdom
China - Japan
Iraq - Iran
Iraq - USA
USA - Canada
England - France
Germany - England
Roman Empire - Egyptian Empire
Portugal - Spain (XI ~ XVI centuries)

Sports:
Mohammed Ali - Joe Frazier
Bjorn Borg - John McEnroe
River Plate - Boca Juniors
Boston Celtics - LA Lakers (80s)
Mike Tyson - Evander Hollyfield
Liverpool - Manchester Utd
AC Milan - Internazionale
Fenerbahçe - Galatasaray
Real Madrid - Barcelona
Flamengo - Fluminense
AS Roma - Lazio
Sporting - Benfica
Carl Lewis - Ben Johnson
Pete Sampras - Andre Agassi
NY Yankees - Boston Red Sox
Detroit Pistons - Chicago Bulls
Australia - New Zealand (rugby)
Chicago Bulls - NY Knicks (90s)
Nacional Montevideo - Peñarol
Steffi Graf - Monica Seles
Glasgow Rangers - Celtic
Benfica - Porto
The Rock - Hulk Hogan
Argentina - Brazil (football)
Tonya Harding - Nancy Kerrigan
Pakistan - India (cricket)
England - Australia (ckicket)
Dallas Cowboys - Washington Redskins

Other:
Tom & Jerry
Elmer Fudd - Bugs Bunny
Wyle E. Coyote - Roadrunner
Austin Powers - Dr. Evil
Batman - Joker, Penguin, ...
Superman - Lex Luthor
Cats and dogs

I like all type of rivalries and always cheer for one side, even if it's Turkmenistan vs Kazakhistan, men vs women, north vs south, socialists vs liberals or anything else. But the main choices are... Benfica, Chicago Bulls, Argentina.

27 January 2006

Bottleneck


Bottleneck: the narrow part of a bottle near the top.

Bottleneck: the delay in transmission of data through the circuits of a computer's microprocessor or over a TCP/IP network. The delay typically occurs when a system's bandwidth cannot support the amount of information being relayed at the speed it is being processed. There are, however, many factors that can create a bottleneck in a system.

Bottleneck: process in any part of the enterprise (office, production, sales, etc.) that limits the throughput of the whole process.

Bottleneck: both a style and a technique; mostly associated with blues guitar, it involves sliding a smooth metal, glass, or plastic bar or tube along the strings to create a "slurred" or "glissando" effect; the term originates from the days when blues musicians would use the broken neck of a bottle for the same purpose.

Bottleneck: A form of genetic drift that occurs when a population is drastically reduced in size. Some genes may be lost from the gene pool as a result of chance.

26 January 2006

Spin the bottle


The reason "Spin the Bottle" and other kissing games are so popular is that they let you kiss someone without having to admit that you like the person you're kissing. You're kissing because you have to.

Kissing games are also a good way to try different ways of kissing. In "Spin the Bottle," a group of guys and girls sit in a circle, and take turns spinning a bottle. When the bottle stops spinning you kiss the person it's pointing to.

25 January 2006

The shaped bottle


This is the bottle... I mean, this is the bottle. Yes, I know this bottle. I've seen different types of this bottle. I've held different bottles shaped like this. I really know this bottle. I've looked inside the bottle. I've spilled some of the contents of a bottle like this. I've tried different flavours from these bottles. I know the taste difference between a bottled and canned drink.

The (original) drink inside the (original standard shaped) bottle was (originally) invented by a Dr. John Stith Pemberton in 1886. It was the doctors second drink with coca leaves and the kola nut as a basis. The doctors first coca leaf drink, Pemberton's French Wine Coca, was actually an immitation of Vin Mariani, a coca-wine drink invented by Angelo Mariani in 1883. Although there were several immitators of the French Coca-Wine, Pemberton's formula was superior. the bottle, throughout the times... He was actually quoted saying "I believe that I am now producing a better preparation than that of Mariani."

Pemberton was not very good health, not to mention he was a morphine adict. So in 1887 he begain to sell parts of the company off. On July 8th he sold a third of the company to Willis Venable and another third to George Lowndes. Neither man had the time to market, make or sell Coke so they sold their portion of the company to Woolfolk Walker and his younger sister Margaret Dozier. Dozier owned two-ninths and Walker four-ninths of the formula rights. Now here is where it gets interesting. Venable somehow disposed of his portion of Coca-cola twice. During some time in 1887, he gave his share of Coca-cola to Joseph Jacobs, owner of Jacobs' Pharmacy. In early October, 1887 Pemberton ran a blind ad looking for additional investors.

He was able to get three investors with this ad. He took $2,000 from each of them. the inventor Their names were J.C. Mayfield, A.O. Murphey and E.H. Bloodworth. In late December the three new partners moved to Atlanta, ready to produce all of Pemberton's wonderful medicines.

At this point the formula of Coca-cola was officially owned by Pemberton, Walker and Dozier, but several others had interest in it. Enter Asa Candler, an ambitious Atlanta druggist. Candler some how acquired control of the company later in the month of December although he probably didn't own any part of the company until 1888. He acquired the drink in return for debts owed hime by certain "gentlemen." Things got a little sticky for a while with Charley Pemberton (John's son) claiming his right to the drink. This kicked off two coke clones by the names of: Yum Yum and Koke.

Pemberton grew even more ill, but continued with his work. He was developing a new drink, a modified cola with celery extract. The drink was never finished. Pemberton died on August 16, 1888. Candler serveda as a pallbearer at Pemberton's funeral and spoke very highly of him. In later years he was quoted saying "Why, I suppose Dr. Pemberton felt I was one of his best friends in town."

views of the bottle evolution...


Exactly two weeks after Pemberton died Candler bought the remaining interest of Walker and Dozier for $1,000. With the exeception of the Walker, Candler & Company ownership, Asa Candler had legal rights to Coca-Cola. He was calling himself the drink's sole proprietor by May 1, 1889. By the turn of the century Candler would become one of the wealthiest men in Atlanta and Coca-Cola would become the most popular soft drink in America.

And the Coca-Cola beverage, whose unit sales totaled a mere 3,200 servings in 1886 ("nine drinks per day" based on the twenty-five gallons of syrup sold to drugstores by Pemberton Chemical Co.), is today called the world's most popular soft drink--accounting for billions of servings at restaurants in 195 countries.

Such is the commercial legacy of a onetime Confederate lieutenant colonel who earned his medical degree at the age of nineteen, who served on the first Georgia pharmacy licensing board, who set up a top-rated laboratory for chemical analysis and manufacturing, and who, in his dozen-and-a-half years in Atlanta, established eighteen business ventures - the bottle evolution... in a box! including one, the Coca-Cola Co., which now can boast 1995 sales in excess of $15 billion.

Notwithstanding Pemberton's numerous professional and entrepreneurial accomplishments, however, Coca-Cola historians characterize him as "a local pharmacist" who concocted the world's most craved soft-drink syrup in a three-legged brass pot in his backyard.

"Coca-Cola was not the creation of an inept, small-time corner druggist," said archivist Monroe Martin King, who has spent twenty-one years researching the life of John Pemberton--from his childhood in Rome, Ga., to his college days in Macon to his enterprising years in Atlanta. "He's occasionally portrayed as a wandering medicine man," King added. "But Dr. Pemberton worked in a fully outfitted laboratory and claimed to manufacture every chemical and pharmaceutical preparation used in the arts and sciences."

According to King, Pemberton's analytical laboratory became the first state-run facility to conduct tests of soil and crop chemicals. It continues to be operated by the Georgia Department of Agriculture. King further noted that Pemberton, who practiced medicine and surgery as a young man and later became a trustee of the former Emory University School of Medicine, earned a solid reputation for his skill in chemistry and his work in medical reform.

24 January 2006

Not the shape


"He deals the cards as a meditation
And those he plays never suspect
He doesn’t play for the money he wins
He doesn’t play for the respect

He deals the cards to find the answer
The sacred geometry of chance
The hidden law of probable outcome
The numbers lead a dance

I know that the spades are the swords of a soldier
I know that the clubs are weapons of war
I know that diamonds mean money for this art
But that’s not the shape of my heart

He may play the jack of diamonds
He may lay the queen of spades
He may conceal a king in his hand
While the memory of it fades

I know that the spades are the swords of a soldier
I know that the clubs are weapons of war
I know that diamonds mean money for this art
But that’s not the shape of my heart
That’s not the shape, the shape of my heart

And if I told you that I loved you
You’d maybe think there’s something wrong
I’m not a man of too many faces
The mask I wear is one

Those who speak know nothing
And find out to their cost
Like those who curse their luck in too many places
And those who smile are lost

I know that the spades are the swords of a soldier
I know that the clubs are weapons of war
I know that diamonds mean money for this art
But that’s not the shape of my heart
That’s not the shape of my heart
"

          - Sting, in "Shape Of My Heart"

It's a dear friend of mine's birthdate.
One who's dear to so many.
One who's loved.

These lyrics by Gordon Matthew Sumner (curiously from "Ten Summoner's Tales") have little to do with the person I'm referring to. But we share the passion for music and, undoubtlessly, this in a beautiful one.

23 January 2006

Django dixit


"Jazz attracted me because in it I found a formal perfection and instrumental precision that I admire in classical music, but which popular music doesn't have".

          - Django Reinhardt (born on January 23rd, 1910)

22 January 2006

What about the 98.6 degree angle?


"The vast majority of people who support abortion
take that position with the firm conviction
that life does not begin at conception
That being said...

If one personally felt "terminating pregnancy is not an easy thing"
but was the right of the individual to make that "decision"

Is the life within the mother's womb a human person?

If the answer is no, it is not a human person
Why would one feel it "is not an easy thing" to do?

If the answer is yes, it is a human person
Why would one advocate "terminating" it?

If the answer is I don't know, if it is, or isn't a human person
How many more "decision(s)"
would one make in an uncertain "situation"?

If the unborn is not a human person
No justification for abortion is necessary
However...
If the unborn is a human person
No justification for abortion is adequate.

Nearly all arguments for abortion
are based on the faulty premise
that the unborn are not fully human
".

          - by Gary Cherone on January 22nd, 2001
          in "What about the 98.6 degree angle?,
          another letter to Eddie Vedder
"