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via The Daily Swarm on Jun 06, 2007

In a recent industry report on music and mobile phones, a study suggests what we long expected: most people just don't care about listening to music on their cells.

The NPD report says that while the number of MP3-playing phones is going up fast, that's mostly because they're more of them out there. Two points pop out: 7% of people actually use their phone for listening to music (up from less than 4% a year ago), and less than half the people who have one even bother to use it (about the same as last year).

So, does anyone really want to be a music hunter?

Read at thedailyswarm.com.

 
 

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Why being yourself matters - lifehack.org

There will never be anyone else like you in the future of the universe. There has never been anyone exactly like you since human life began. That’s why being yourself is more important than anything else; certainly more than the fear that traps people into conforming.

Non-conformists have always had a rough time. Society seems to need and fear them in roughly equal measure. As a person who was a teenager in the “swinging 60s,” I’ve seen a gray tide of conservatism flow back steadily to reclaim nearly all the ground it lost during that decade. Is this an advantage? If it is, I can’t see it. But that’s how life works: two steps forward, followed by one-and-a-half back as those who lost their power try to reverse the process.

The forces of the status quo—of conformity—have been strong again in recent years. Maybe that’s behind an upsurge in interest in self-development. When the outside world is intent on forcing you into a bland, acceptable mold, people naturally turn elsewhere to find an outlet for what matters most: their own uniqueness.

Adding some spice to life

Even the Bible says it. Jesus urged his followers to be like salt; to spice up the world with new ideas. He didn’t tell them to keep their heads down and do whatever their “betters” amongst the Romans and the Pharisees told them. You don’t start a new religion by fitting in. Today’s religious leaders are nearly all arch-conservatives, so we forget what radical non-conformists people like the Buddha, Jesus, and Mohammed were during their lives. Jesus wasn’t put to death for doing what the leaders of the society of his day approved of, was he?

Those who benefit most from the status quo are naturally the least interested in change, and they find allies in the fearful and the authoritarian. In the quotation at the head of this article, Rollo May suggests conformity is due to lack of courage. He certainly had a point. Many people suppress their ideas, hopes, and dreams because they’re afraid to stand out and draw attention to themselves. Conformity always includes a threat of punishment if you fail to fit in, whether it comes from ridicule, being shunned by others, or direct attack. Those who seek conformity have never been afraid to back up their wishes with force.

Conformity implies a fundamental mistrust of others

I believe there’s a more fundamental power behind the urgency with which authoritarian conservatives seek to suppress individuality. That power is lack of trust. Wise leaders and outstanding thinkers are alike in two things: they’re usually non-conformists on an epic scale—and they display a deep trust in the basic goodness, intelligence, and capacity for development of their fellow human beings.

In stark contrast, the most determined proponents of conformity have always been dictatorships. Under a dictatorship, any kind of variation from prescribed ways of thinking or acting is punished. Eccentrics of all kinds are weeded out. Nothing is permissible save blind adherence to the dictator’s edicts.

Conservative thinkers often suggest too much freedom will lead to anarchy and the collapse of all standards. Since they cannot trust others to behave reasonably, they always want more rules. Yet a dictatorship is exactly what you get when the ideas and standards of one group are enforced everywhere by the rule of law. Whether it’s a nation or a business, a dictatorship suppresses creativity, individuality, and freedom in the cause of “preventing license.”

If you can’t trust yourself, why should others trust you?

Being who and what you are is the most natural thing there is. To suppress it, whether through fear, yielding to social pressure, or lack of confidence always leads to trouble. That’s why millions of people today lead lives of frustration and desperation. They denied who they are in the hope that the powers that be would reward them. Their reward was mediocrity, depression and a nagging sense that life like that is scarcely worth living.

There may be a cost. Some people, even some friends, will disapprove of you as you truly are and will let you know it. There will be setbacks along the way. Yet the price for being yourself can never be as great as the price you will pay for stepping aside from your basic nature: a price paid in frustration, dissatisfaction, and the hopeless realization of all that you might have been, but now can never attain. The English poet A.E. Housman, a closet homosexual who lived a life of outward conformity and lonely respectability, expressed something of the idea like this:

The Twenty Best Stevie Wonder Songs

 
 

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via Rolling Stone : Rock and Roll Daily by Rolling Stone on Aug 27, 2007


Last week Stevie Wonder kicked off his first tour in more than a decade. We celebrated by devoting this past weekend's rock list to his greatest tunes. As usual, we combined your best submissions with ours and came up with twenty essential tracks:

1. "Superstition"
2. "I Wish"
3. "Living for the City"
4. "Sir Duke"
5. "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours"
6. "Higher Ground"
7. "Boogie On Reggae Woman"
8. "You Are the Sunshine of My Life"
9. "Do I Do"
10. "That Girl"
11. "Don't You Worry About a Thing"
12. "Master Blaster (Jammin')"
13. "I Was Made to Love Her"
14. "Fingertips Pt. 2
15. "You Haven't Done Nothin'"
16. "Uptight (Everything's Alright)"
17. "My Cherie Amour"
18. "Isn't She Lovely"
19. "For Once In My Life"
20. "Pastime Paradise"


 
 

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20 Ugliest Celebrities

Being ugly can be a strength!

 
 

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via Oddee - on Aug 27, 2007

By nature or personal choice, they are rich and famous and yet... ugly as hell!

 
 

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Out-of-body experience recreated

"One theory is that it is down to how people perceive their own body - those unhappy or less in touch with their body are more likely to have an OBE.

Their work suggests a disconnection between the brain circuits that process visual and touch sensory information may thus be responsible for some OBEs"

Ultimate Slip And Slide

Yeah, I'd do it.

/\

 
 

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[Interesting] Like most people, Mother Teresa was an atheist but was too afraid to admit it

 
 

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SmashingGoulet

Red Hot Chili Peppers - Higher Ground (1989)

The Latino 300

 
 

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via Digg / Videos on Aug 22, 2007

Here's a Latino 300 parody by the Latino Comedy Project, where instead of Spartans, there are Mexicans invading San Diego! Definitely bound to generate some controversy.

 
 

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via digg on Aug 23, 2007

Despite the simplicity of this concept there is a perpetual shortage of people who excel at getting results. The action habit - the habit of putting ideas into action now - is essential to getting things done. Here are 7 ways you can grow the action habit

 
 

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p

 
 

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via AstroNation by AstroNation on Aug 23, 2007




AS POSTED ON DIME HERE: http://www.dimeadozen.org/torrents-details.php?id=159428&viewcomm=1986215

Saul Williams
Museum Of Contemporary Art, Nightvision Event
Los Angeles CA USA
August 11, 2007

AUD MD (Right Next To Speaker, Inches Away) > Aiff (Mastering, Tracking) > FLAC

1 Intro
2 Every Morning I Rise And Face The Firing Squad
3 Downloading Jesus
4 And Out Of The Sun's Gates
5 1987 (With Miriam Blackshire)
6 The Seventh Octave
7 Coded Language (Excerpt)
8 Commentary
9 Penny For A Thought
10 Telegram
11 Frida And Josephine (With Miriam Blackshire)
12 Children Of Night
13 Sermon On The Mount Of Inevitable Progression From Saul To Saul
14 Commentary
15 Black Stacey

 
 

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