The True Legacy Of George W. Bush

“. . . as Bush basks in the glow of his own fantasy, the suffering in Gaza, one of the world’s worst humanitarian disasters, along with the savage occupation of Iraq, continues to fuel widespread anger and rage.. . . he has, with Israeli encouragement, isolated governments, even friendly governments, in the Middle East that raised feeble protests. But his day is past. There is open revolt. Opinion polls show that two-thirds of Palestinians, and three-fourths of Israelis, do not believe Bush can affect events in the Palestinian territories.

. . . The agenda of the Bush White House is exposed as irrelevant, myopic and counterproductive. Most Arab countries are in open defiance of Washington and are actively reaching out to Iran.

. . . It is the end of the road for George Bush. The world takes less and less notice of him. He strutted and swaggered across the stage. He bellowed and raged. He plundered and murdered. And now he wants to be anointed as a peacemaker. His presidency, like his life, has been a tragic waste. But he at least he has a life. There are tens of thousands of mute graves in Gaza, Lebanon, and Iraq that stand as stark testaments to his true legacy.”

Chris HedgesThe End of the Road for George W. Bush

 

[Via: A comment left by The Vigil on AquaCool]

 

Apple’s MacBook Air, The World’s Thinnest Laptop

Apple just introduced the world’s thinnest laptop in this year’s MacWorld.

The MacBook Air turned out to be a reality, and what a beautiful, amazing reality it is.

MacBook Air

Features

– .16 to .76-inch thickness on top
– Weighs only 3 pounds
– 5 hours of battery life with everything running
– Intel Core 2 Duo Processor at 1.6 or 1.8GHz
– Motherboard the length of a pencil
– 13.3-inch screen, LED backlit
– 2GB RAM standard
– 1.8-inch 80GB HD or 64GB Solid State Drive
– Multitouch trackpad with gestures. Pans, zooms, rotates, etc.
– 802.11n and Bluetooth 2.1
– Optional external HD for $99, USB-bus powered
– Built-in iSight
– Full backlit keyboard
– It’s “Green”: Mercury and Arsenic free LCD and glass, Aluminum frame can be recycled. PVC free on circuitry, and less packing.

Price: $1799

WOW…
I’m speechless, now that’s one great laptop.

[More: Apple MacBook AirGizmodoTechCrunch]

Trading Places, Changing Perspectives

I just came across a really interesting post in which the writer puts himself in the others shoes, looking at the situation from another perspective, imagining how it would be if it happened to him and his country…

Some highlights:

It’s been eight years now. Eight long years. Sure, initially I was glad when China toppled the Bush regime and executed the “retarded tyrant” as I love to call him. It wasn’t that bad at the start, but as time wore on and I realized they weren’t leaving, it started to gnaw at me.[…]

Initially, people seemed to accept the fact that we needed help getting rid of Bush’s dictatorship. Lately, I think people have come to understand that the Chinese are really here for our natural resources.

[…]

Yes, I know they call me a terrorist and an insurgent. I like to think of myself as a freedom fighter. If someone invaded your country and killed your people, I’d like to think you’d fight too. I don’t expect to win but if I don’t fight, if we don’t fight, then all Americans lose.

 

Very worth the read, check it out here: We fight for freedom – or “What if someone else did it to us?”.

 

Middle East Indebted To Bush??!!

While checking out the news today, I came across what has to be one of the dumbest articles in the history of news and media; it’s so stupid I thought the guy who wrote it was actually just being sarcastic, but no it turns out he’s seriously deranged as he believes what he wrote.

The article’s title is: “Middle East indebted to Bush“; I couldn’t believe my eyes when I read it; Do I even need to go any further to show how crazy this person is?

In the article he talks of the malignancy of the Middle East, how Arabs’ independence was won for them by Britain & France but they were still incapable of lifting themselves up from the broken ruins of their tribal culture, which he says is the root of Arab failure for which they blame the Jews and Israel instead of of embracing the modern world.
Interesting sickly twisted view of history and Middle Eastern affairs, don’t you think?

But it gets even weirder when he writes the following:

George Bush could have remained indifferent to the Arab-Muslim world’s malignancy, mouthing pieties as members of the ever fashionable lib-left political class in the West endlessly does, while watching the Arabs sink deeper into the political squalor of their making.

Instead, Bush struck directly at the most rotten core of the Middle East — Iraq, the land of two rivers, choked to death by the vilest of Arab tyrants in recent memory, Saddam Hussein — to give the Arabs an opportunity one more time to make a better future.

[…]

A democratic Iraq is George Bush’s formidable legacy, and the Arabs will be talking about him long after his contemporary critics bite the dust and are forgotten.

Unbelievable…
There is a person on Earth who actually thinks George Bush will leave a legacy behind him, and not any legacy, a formidable one too, in the form of a war that further tore apart a country that was already in ruins, installed a sectarian divide in the country, took thousands of lives from both sides, and did nothing but widen the gaps between people, ruin the image of America in the region, and fuel more hatred.

The only thing George Bush will be remembered for, his only “legacy”, is the fact that he is the worst President of the United States of America to date, something both Arabs and Americans agree on.

Hire People That Are Better Than You

In my daily readings I recently came across this entry, that I thought I’d share here, about how you should always try to hire people that are better than you, something I totally agree with, and breaks down the reasons into the following points (I’m resuming in my own words):

1. Trust: You’re more likely to trust someone with something if you know they’ll be doing it ever better than you could.

2. Quality: You’re sure there won’t be a drop in quality whether you’r ethere or not.

3. Fresh Perspectives: These people will bring different experiences, skills, viewpoints and ideas to the table that can only benefit your business.

4. Greater Options: These people’s different experience will open up new doors for you and your business to expand in.

5. Efficiency: If they’re better than you, you won’t need to spend as much time coaching them and explaining things, which means more working time for you.

6. Cost Savings: People doing quality work save you the effort of having to redo things, which translates into more time and more profits for your business.

Read the full detailed entry here Hire People that are Better than You (NHG Consulting).

Redline’s RedMAX For WiMax Network Deployment In Tunisia

Canadian Redline Communications Group Inc., a leading provider of standards-based WiMAX and broadband wireless infrastructure products, announced that Divona Telecom, the one and only satellite and WiMAX telecom operator in Tunisia, has chosen Redline’s WiMAX Forum Certified RedMAX products for its five-city WiMAX network.

The US$1 million network buildout will take place in several phases over the next two years, and will connect five major cities in Tunisia, including Tunis, Nabeul, Souse, Monastir and Sfax.

Divona Telecom is serving corporate clients in Tunisia, with several hundred corporations on its WiMAX network and plans to double their subscriber base every quarter for the next four years.

Divona Telecom was created following the concession of a telecommunications license by the Tunisian government in 2003. It belongs to Planet Tunisie, the first ISP in Tunisia, and Monaco Telecom.

[Source: SYS-CON Media]
[Links: Divona Telecom, Redline]

Questler, Where Minds Connect

QuestlerQuestler is a new online service that was launched into public beta a couple of months ago and which has an interesting social networking approach to learning online, finding answers to questions, and acquiring/sharing knowledge.

The idea of the website stems from the belief that everyone is a learner, seeking more knowledge on certain topics, and that learning best occurs when individuals interact with each other in free spaces, informally, to share knowledge and collaboratively create ideas.

So in other words, the goal is to try to tap into the collective knowledge of the crowd to acquire and share knowledge.

Questler users can put together a learning network by inviting and constructing a list of their contacts, as well as finding other individuals who share their same interests on the site.

Together they can use the service to start conversations about those topics and engage in knowledge sharing through posting their quests and discoveries on different subjects.

The interface is really simple and clear; well designed; well organized and straight to the point. I really like their simple logo and visual identity too.
It’s in English only for the time being; and I’m not sure if they’ll be adding Arabic soon.

I personally think it’s a really interesting approach and service, worth checking out and using. If you do join, you can add me as a contact, here’s my profile page.

Finally, my best wishes of success, growth and prosperity to the Questler team. It’s great to have such good projects coming out of the Arab world; from Jordan in this case.

NewsGator Releases New Free Versions Of Its RSS Readers

Interesting news from NewsGator…

NewsGator announced today the general availability of NetNewsWire 3.1, FeedDemon 2.6, and NewsGator Go! for Windows Mobile 2.0. The public beta of NewsGator Inbox 3.0 also began today.[…]

NewsGator also announced that all of its client RSS reader products are now available free of charge and include free synchronization along with other services. Users can now enjoy the great features and performance of all of NewsGator’s Web, desktop and mobile readers for iPhone, Windows Mobile, and BlackBerry (powered by FreeRange), all synchronized to provide the same view of their RSS content no matter when or where they read it.

[Source: NewsGator]

 

Of all the NewsGator products, I personally tried FeedDemon, even before they bought it from Nick Bradbury, and it rocked, certainly the best desktop feed reader I’ve ever used, and believe me I’ve played around with my good share of them.

NetNewsWire was always the feed reader of preference for most Mac users I know.

Add to those two great products NewsGator’s online feed reader, mobile feed readers and the possibility to synchronize between them all, I think this is a really interesting and great offer.

I’m not really sure if it will tempt me enough to switch to it, after all I am pretty happy using Google Reader now, but if there is one thing that might lure me in it’s the synchronization between all the different devices.