I'm back with a post, nothing like posting every 3 years...
Sponge Homer
Homer H. Hillis, Jr. sponges all kinds of information, business, political and trends. I've been seen on the Sally Jesse Rafeal show with noted trend spotter Faith Popcorn. My Blog will give you an over view of what I'm seeing and reflections on the same.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Wednesday, August 23, 2006
If the world were merely seductive, that would be easy. It it were
merely challenging, that would be no problem. But I arise in the morning torn
between a desire to improve the world and a desire to enjoy the world.
This makes it hard to plan the day. -E.B. White, writer (1899-1985)
Monday, July 24, 2006
Hey, its been a while, I hope my 3 readers didn't forget me? I read that the world average usage of electricity is about 2900kwh per year, last month I used over 2900kwh in one month. I feel bad and then I feel good--comforts! Its like novacaine I guess, I like it and have probably used more than my world supply average.
Is it hot where you are? Its so hot in texas the Jack Rabbits are carrying Cantine's!
Saturday, May 20, 2006
USA today had a front page article Starbuck Nation, its everywhere.
ACU Library Starbucks:
One of the students was telling me in class this week that the coffee on campus @ the acu starbucks is not really Starbucks---its Arrowmark(?) controlled---they have the name only--so its a virtual Starbucks--products are controlled by Arrowmark---so its fake, faux, Why would Starbucks do this? Get it, NOT the Real Thing! Silicon implant or something like that-the Students are thinking and telling EVERYONE: We have a Starbucks in our Library!
Branding, if your Nepoleon trying to take over the world and your French, you try to make French the official language of diplomacy, you create a upper culture elitist attitude for French----you do things to promote France the brand!
Its a branding,Buzz ploy---Starbucks gets all students thinking Starbucks is it--and what do they do all their lives--Starbucks---- Robotic programming---
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"Not all Starbucks is of Starbucks"
Thursday, May 04, 2006
Zig Ziglar says, one foot in ice water and one foot in nearly boiling water means that on average, you're just fine.
Wednesday, May 03, 2006
"Work without joy is drudgery. Drudgery does not produce champions, nor does it produce great organizations. You will not reach the top---success----if you and those you lead are wearily trudging along, waiting for the workday to end so you can move on to something you'd rather do."
Coach John Wooden
Wooden on Leadership
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
We never know what we'll find unless we keep digging!
I like that quote.
Tomb of royal Mayan found in Guatemala
SMU team discovered queen's site in same ruins two years ago
11:13 PM CDT on Monday, May 1, 2006
By BRENDAN CASE and JAMES M. O'NEILL / The Dallas Morning News
Building on a find by a Southern Methodist University specialist on Mayan ruins, a Guatemalan archaeologist has uncovered the remains of what could be an ancient Mayan king's tomb deep in the rain forest of Guatemala's largest national park.
Dr. Héctor Escobedo, co-director of the Waká Archaeological Project with SMU's Dr. David Freidel, has unearthed a royal tomb beneath the principal pyramid in the western center of Waká.
Waká was a Mayan city in Laguna del Tigre, the national park in northern Guatemala. The discovery was made by Dr. Escobedo, an archaeologist at the Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, and his student Juan Carlos Meléndez.
This marks the second royal tomb discovered at Waká. Two years ago, Dr. Freidel and his SMU students discovered a queen's tomb that was more than 1,200 years old and dated to the late classic period of Mayan civilization.
The new tomb was discovered in a different pyramid and dates to the early classic period between the second and fourth centuries A.D., according to SMU officials.
"We are trying to identify the remains, which appear to be in good condition despite the collapse of the tomb's roof," said Dr. Freidel in an e-mail exchange with the university. "This may be the resting place of either the dynasty founder, a man we do not have a history for, or K'inich B'alam the First, the Maya king who allied with Siyaj K'ak', conqueror of Tikal in A.D. 378."
The site, discovered by oil prospectors in the 1960s, contains 672 monumental structures and countless smaller houses. Harvard researcher Ian Graham recorded the site's monuments in the early 1970s, but the SMU project is the first to undertake scientific excavations.
The national park is under duress from vandals and cattle ranchers who burn the forest for grazing. The Guatemalan government has collaborated with Dr. Freidel and a team of 20 archaeologists, along with conservationists and residents, to protect the park. It is home to the endangered scarlet macaw.
Known as Waká in Mayan inscriptions but called El Perú today, the site was possibly a city of tens of thousands that sat on a crucial river route west of the famous Mayan site of Tikal. Over the course of 700 years, 22 kings ruled at Waká.
Lilián Garrido, director of Dr. Escobedo's lab in Guatemala City, told The Dallas Morning News in a phone interview Monday that the new tomb was discovered April 28. Though she didn't know details, she said they "suppose it was the tomb of someone important."
She said both Dr. Escobedo and Dr. Freidel will remain at the site for several weeks.
She can't yet say how this will help researchers understand Mayan history. "We can't be sure until we finish digging," Ms. Garrido said.
For more information, visit www.smu.edu/waka.