Sunday, August 26, 2012

75 Questions to ask yourself


An old proverb says, “He that cannot ask cannot live”. If you want answers you have to ask questions. These are 75 questions you should ask yourself and try to answer. You can ask yourself these questions right now and over the course of your life.

 
  1. Why not me?
  2. Am I nice?
  3. Am I doing what I really want to do?
  4. What am I grateful for?
  5. What’s missing in my life?
  6. Am I honest?
  7. Do I listen to others?
  8. Do I work hard?
  9. Do I help others?
  10. What do I need to change about myself?
  11. Have I hurt others?
  12. Do I complain?
  13. What’s next for me?
  14. Do I have fun?
  15. Have I seized opportunities?
  16. Do I care about others?
  17. Do I spend enough time with my family?
  18. Am I open-minded?
  19. Have I seen enough of the world?
  20. Do I judge others?
  21. Do I take risks?
  22. What is my purpose?
  23. What is my biggest fear?
  24. How can I conquer that fear?
  25. Do I thank people enough?
  26. Am I successful?
  27. What am I ashamed of?
  28. Do I annoy others?
  29. What are my dreams?
  30.  Am I positive?
  31. Am I negative?
  32. Is there an afterlife?
  33. Does everything happen for a reason?
  34. What can I do to change the world?
  35. What is the most foolish thing I’ve ever done?
  36. Am I cheap?
  37. Am I greedy?
  38. Who do I love?
  39. Who do I want to meet?
  40. Where do I want to go?
  41. What am I most proud of?
  42. Do I care what others think about me?
  43. What are my talents?
  44. Do I utilize those talents?
  45. What makes me happy?
  46. What makes me sad?
  47. What makes me angry?
  48. Am I satisfied with my appearance?
  49. Am I healthy?
  50. What was the toughest time in my life?
  51.  What was the easiest time in my life?
  52. Am I selfish?
  53. What was the craziest thing I did?
  54. What is the craziest thing I want to do?
  55. Do I procrastinate?
  56. What is my greatest regret?
  57. What has had the greatest impact on my life?
  58. Who has had the greatest impact on my life?
  59. Do I stand up for myself?
  60.  Have I settled for mediocrity?
  61. Do I hold grudges?
  62. Do I read enough?
  63. Do I listen to my heart?
  64. Do I donate enough to the less fortunate?
  65. Do I pray only when I want something?
  66. Do I constantly dwell on the past?
  67. Do I let other people’s negativity affect me?
  68. Do I forgive myself?
  69. When I help someone do I think “What’s in it for me”?
  70. Am I aware that someone always has it worse than me?
  71. Do I smile more than I frown?
  72. Do I surround myself with good people?
  73. Do I take time out for myself?
  74. Do I ask enough questions?
  75. What other questions do I have?


Collected from various posts.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

World (Patent) War


Apple v. Samsung
 may be the most prominent, but battles over smartphone and tablet IP are raging around the globe. A glimpse of some of the key cases to go before the International Trade Commission.





Source: Bloomberg Business Week

The 10 Best Lines From the Apple-Samsung Trial

After three weeks of testimony, the federal trial in San Jose pitting Apple (AAPL) and its iPhones and iPads against Samsung (SSNLF) and its Android phones and tablets has resulted in a big win for Apple. It may prove to be just another battle in the endless war over mobile technology property rights, but the trial did churn out some memorable quotes. In no particular order:
“Since it is too similar to Apple, make it noticeably different starting with the front side.”
Internal e-mail citing notes from Samsung’s senior designer out of a meeting with Google officials, who requested changes in Samsung’s devices.
“In addition to my formal analysis, I had the experience of being confused.”
—Apple witness Susan Kare, who designed the “happy Mac” icon, testifying that she confused a Samsung phone for an iPhone at a pretrial meeting.
“Wouldn’t you agree that by the time the consumer turns on the phone, and goes through the steps we looked at, seeing the Samsung sign prominently for several seconds, that the consumer knows it’s a Samsung phone?”
—Samsung attorney cross-examining Kare.
“Yet when our UX is compared to the unexpected competitor Apple’s iPhone, the difference is truly that of Heaven and Earth.”
—The “crisis of design” memo written in February 2010 by Samsung executive J.K. Shin, cited by Apple as proof the iPhone helped shape Samsung’s design. Samsung said it was intended for motivational purposes.
“My recollection was that the breast feeding had to come to a stop.”
—Samsung designer Jeeyuen Wang, describing how she slept two to three hours a night while working on the Galaxy S phone, and the effect of spending so much time away from her newborn child.
“I mean, come on: 75 pages! 75 pages! You want me to do an order on 75 pages, [and] unless you’re smoking crack, you know these witnesses aren’t going to be called when you have less than four hours.”
—Judge Lucy Koh responding to an Apple lawyer’s request for a late crush of witnesses.
“It is inconceivable that Mr. Jobs, CEO of Apple during a portion of the relevant time period and inventor of the ’949, ’678, D’087, D’677, D’270, D’889, D’757, and D’678 patents, actually had so few e-mails on issues in this case and none between August 2010 and April 2011.”
—Samsung, arguing to the judge that Apple was withholding e-mail evidence it requested.
“The kids refer to it as the bellybutton. It’s an innie.”
—A Samsung lawyer’s suggested name for the iPhone home button. Apple Senior Vice President Phil Schiller testified he had not heard that before.
“The content is jittering spasmodically.”
—Apple expert witness Karan Singh, describing on-screen tablet behavior that Singh claimed shows patent infringement.
“I need everyone to stay conscious during the reading of the jury instructions, including myself. … We’re going to periodically stand up, just to make sure we’re all alive.”
—Judge Koh before reading 109 pages of legal instructions to the jury.
Source: Beucke is the News Director at BusinessWeek.com