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Archive for the ‘general’ Category
  1. http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24216087-5006787,00.html

    • Pastor told congregation he had cancer
    • Recorded hit song Healer to inspire people
    • He’s a fraud - but he’s getting help
    • “We encourage all of our churches to pray for all those affected.”

    Pastor

    Not quite terminal … Michael Guglielmucci, who preached about his battle against deadly cancer, is getting professional help after being exposed as a fraud.

    HE preached to thousands about his terminal illness and tugged at hearts with a hit song.

    The problem is the pastor wasn’t dying at all

    Michael Guglielmucci, who inspired hundreds of thousands of young Christians with his terminal cancer “battle”, has been exposed as a fraud.

    Guglielmucci, whose parents established Edge Church International, an Assemblies of God church at O’Halloran Hill in Adelaide’s southern suburbs, now is seeking professional help.

    Earlier this year, Mr Guglielmucci released a hit song, Healer , which was featured on Sydney church Hillsong’s latest album.

    The song debuted at No. 2 on the ARIA charts.

    It since has become an anthem of faith for believers, many of whom are suffering their own illness and were praying for a miracle for Mr Guglielmucci, who has claimed for two years to be terminally ill.

    In one church performance that has attracted 300,000 hits on YouTube, he performs his hit song with an oxygen tube in his nose.

    It appears Mr Guglielmucci, who was a pastor with one of Australia’s biggest youth churches, Planetshakers, may even have deceived his own family.

    “This news has come as a great shock to everyone including, it seems, his own wife and family,” Hillsong general manager George Aghajanian said in an email to his congregation yesterday.

    “Michael has confirmed that he is not suffering with a terminal illness and is seeking professional help in Adelaide with the support of his family. We are asking our church to pray for the Guglielmucci family during this difficult time.”

    The Advertiser was told last night Mr Guglielmucci may release a statement on the situation.

    The Australian Christian Church said Mr Guglielmucci’s credentials immediately were suspended once he told the national executive that his cancer claims were “untrue”.

    “The national executive is taking this matter very seriously and is awaiting the results of medical tests before determining the full extent of the discipline that will be imposed upon him,” vice president Alun Davies said.

    “We are very concerned for the many people who have been or will be hurt by Michael’s actions.

  2. A pastor who claimed terminal cancer inspired him to write a hit evangelical pop song has been exposed as a fraud.

    Michael Guglielmucci told worshippers, friends and his own family that he was likely to die from the disease.

    He claimed his hit song “Healer”, which was included on mega-church Hillsong’s latest album, came to him as a “gift from God” on the day the diagnosis was revealed.

    It propelled Mr Guglielmucci, formerly a pastor with Melbourne-based church Planetshakers, to the forefront of Australia’s Christian youth movement.

    But the story was completely made up.

    More…

  3. Yes, I am. Public transport is pretty good here in Melbourne. You often sit next to loud people, though.

  4. Again, I come back to understanding a bit why Jobs was very reluctant to have 3rd party apps to begin with. I love the added functionality, but the reduction in stability sounds like a somewhat inevitable partner. The glitches definitely make the iPhone in some ways feel a bit less magical.

    DHH on iPhone 2.0’s Glitches | 43 Folders.

    Oh, please. “Less magical”? It’s a phone, you donkey. A phone.

    Less magical. Good grief.

    Tags:
  5. Opinion: Why expensive cell phones are worth it

    by Mike Elgan, computerworld.com
    Jul 26, 2008 4:50 am
    27 Comments
    19

    The price of the new iPhone 3G dropped by $200. Although the AT&T bills necessary to take advantage of the phone’s faster data speeds rose beyond handset savings, many hailed the lower price as an important development. Finally, the price is within the range of what people are willing to pay.

    I’ve seen many people, including friends and family, agonize over whether to buy a phone they prefer, or one that’s $200, $100 or even $50 cheaper. And with the economy in the doldrums, the impulse to economize is stronger than ever.

    I believe this price sensitivity over handset prices is misplaced. My advice to everyone is to buy the phone you want, regardless of price, within reason.

    Let’s say you really want a smart phone that costs $400 but are tempted to save money by buying a $200 phone you don’t like as much. Wow! Half the price! How could you possibly justify paying double for a phone you like only a little bit more?

    Here’s how to justify it.

    Phones are worth more than you pay. Far more.

    The low price and small size of handsets has fooled us into thinking that phones aren’t as valuable to us as they really are. In fact, surveys show that cell phones are among the most valuable possessions we own.

    A survey conducted earlier this year by the Pew Internet and American Life Project found that most Americans would rather give up the Internet itself than their cell phones. Assuming a two-year life for your cell phone, and for purposes of comparison, how much do you pay for two years of Internet access? (By definition, the amount you pay is what you believe it’s worth.) So if you pay, say, $50 per month for your Internet connection, then you’re paying $1,200 for two years. So to the average American, his or her cell phone is worth more than that.

    Another survey conducted in the U.K. about a year ago called the Mobile Life 2007 report found that one in three people in Britain say they wouldn’t give up their cell phones for a million pounds (that’s about 2 million dollars).

    Of course, nobody was waving cash, so the proposition was hypothetical. But the fact is that people really do love, need and highly value their cell phones.

    A researcher in human behavior, Jan Chipcase, expressed this eloquently in a Ted Conference talk. Chipcase studies the behavior of cell phone users worldwide, of which there are now some 3 billion.

    He makes the point that people own many things and choose to carry a variety of objects with them whenever they leave their homes. Of these, just three objects are universally claimed to be most important to people when they’re out and about: keys, money and cell phones. And among these, the one object people are most likely to use is the cell phone. (A study published in May found that one third of Americans said that if they had to leave the house for 24 hours and could take only one object, they would choose their cell phones over keys, wallet and all other possessions.)

    Chipcase makes the point that, “the conscience and subconscious decision process implies that the stuff that you do take with you and end up using has some kind of spiritual, emotional or functional value.”

    All three of these objects, he said, enhance survival: Keys provide access to shelter, money buys food and other needs, and cell phones can be used in an emergency.

    If you look at Abraham Maslow’s psychological theory of human motivation, better known as ” Maslow’s hierarchy of needs,” cell phones, as well as keys and money, help people satisfy the lower two levels of human needs. These levels, starting from the bottom, are: “Physiological” (the survival and maintenance of the physical body) and “Safety” (security of body, of employment, of resources, of morality, of the family, of health and of property).

    The idea of this model of motivation is that people concern themselves with any given level only when the levels below are taken care of. In other words, you’re not going to worry about “self esteem” if you don’t have food or shelter.

    One of the reasons that all kinds of people — from teens to bankers, and from celebrities to construction workers, and in all countries, rich and poor — value cell phones is that they make a massive contribution to every level of Maslow’s hierarchy. So in addition to the lower rungs mentioned above, they also enhance (continuing up the hierarchy): “Love/Belonging” (friendship, family, sexual intimacy), “Esteem” (self-esteem, confidence, achievement, respect of others, respect by others) and, the highest level, “Self actualization” (morality, creativity, spontaneity, problem solving).

    In other words, cell phones represent a kind of “perfect storm” of value to humans. They enhance survival, connect us with loved ones, educate us, enhance our careers and entertain us. Phones with GPS guide us. Camera phones capture our memories. No other possession does all this.

    No matter how much you pay for a cell phone, its value to us is very high.

    Money saved elsewhere has lower impact

    Meanwhile, we pay far more for things that are less important to us. For example, how much did you pay for your laptop or desktop PC? Your TV? Your car and house? How much do you pay over a two-year period for gas, movie theater junk food, over-priced restaurant food, alcohol and other relatively unimportant things?

    The average American spends well over $8,000 per year to own a car. Any number of decisions related to the car, such as driving slower, not driving it once in a while, choosing a less expensive car, and others, would save far more than the difference in price between the cheapest cell phone available from your carrier and the most expensive. Yet these changes wouldn’t significantly degrade our lifestyle or happiness, but the better cell phone will.

    And the house? Forget it. A quarter of 1% reduction in the interest rate of a mortgage alone would save us enough money to buy hundreds of iPhones, and would have zero-effect on our lifestyles.

    OK, If I still haven’t convinced you, then let my try once more with a little thought experiment.

    Automobiles are very expensive products because they require a lot of costly materials, design, regulatory processing and other things to produce. But let’s say some genius from MIT figured out how to manufacture cars incredibly cheaply. Let’s say you could suddenly buy a Ferrari 612 Scaglietti for $400, a Toyota Corolla for $200 or you could get a used 1974 Ford Pinto for free.

    Would you agonize over this decision? Would you be temped by the cost savings you’d get by choosing the Corolla or the Pinto? Of course not! You’d buy the Ferrari. You would do it because the Ferrari would be a lot more fun, save you time and let you show off a bit.

    Yet people don’t make this decision when buying a cell phone, even though a better handset will give you the exact same benefits.

    Of course, it’s always good to economize. And sometimes a less expensive phone is better than a pricier one. But when you consider the value of a cell phone — the actual value to you, personally — compared with the low additional cost of a superior one, the choice is clear: Always go for the Ferrari.

    Mike Elgan writes about technology and global tech culture. He blogs about the technology needs, desires and successes of mobile warriors in his Computerworld blog, The World Is My Office. Contact Mike at mike.elgan@elgan.com or his blog, The Raw Feed.

    Macworld | iPhone Central | Opinion: Why expensive cell phones are worth it.

  6. Bought a couple of sleeping bags, which is good, because I slept in one at the office a couple of weeks ago, and Cha and I slept in them for the first couple of nights here.

    Really impressed – for $60 delivered, this is a terrific couple of bags.


     This Beyond Vault Sleeping Bag provides comfort and quality.  It features a rectangular design with a detachable hood, and has a soft hollow fibre filling. It also has a draw cord on the top of the bag and around the hood as well as a wind baffle to keep heat in and cold breezes out.

    Sleeping-bag-vault-large

     
    Features:

        * Rectangular sleeping bag with detachable hood
        * Good quality zipper with velcro fastener at top
        * Unzips from the top and bottom
        * Wind baffle along inside zip
        * Red stuff bag with draw cord closure
        * Red top with grey bottom and lining
        * Draw cords on hood and top of sleeping bag
        * Carry cord on stuff bag

     
    Specifications:

        * Size: 70cm W x 162cm L (not including hood), 195cm L (including hood)
        * Shell: polyester 70D/190T W/R CIRE
        * Lining: T/C - 70% polyester and 30% cotton
        * Filling: 350G/SM Hollow Fibre
        * Weight: 1.80kgs
        * Temperature: 0°c
        * Stuff bag dimensions: 40cm x 23cm
    http://www.torpedo7.com.au/products/BYSLSW7VA
    http://snipurl.com/300r7

  7. Well, I’ve got a place to live in Melbourne. After a couple of months of serviced apartments and bumming around with friends both here and Geelong (which is where I’m on the way back to now, on the train) we’ve got a place.

    It’s only temporary, though – it’s a furnished studio apartment in Brunswick West which we’ve got a four month (extendible) lease on. Gives us some breathing room to find a place to buy. It’s very basic – one room with a kitchen, bed, couch, tv in it and a bathroom as well – that’s it.

    Cha gets here on Saturday night, and I’m moving in on Thursday. SO I’ll be in the sleeping bag for a few days (we have to get some new linen for the place, as ours is in storage…) Pretty much everything else is there, so that’s why we got it :-)

    Really glad I bought the sleeping bags the other week, though – I didn’t realise they’d be useful so soon, given we need them this weekend, and I used one last weekend to sleep at work.

    Still, as terrific as it’s been to have a place to live in Geelong, and with terrific people, it’s going to be very nice living less than 80km from work!!!

  8. Well, we’ve spent our last night in this place. Moving van is here this arvo – then we’re off to ADYJ & Nelly’s and on Monday I’m off to Melbourne. Packing is nearly done.

    Hard to believe. I’m sure I’ll be excited once I’m not so exhausted :-)

    Really going to miss this place – fantastic house, but the symbolism of a three-car crash outside yesterday afternoon (that soaked up a valuable hour) wasn’t missed :-)

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