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Apple is renowned for not announcing new products until their release is imminent. This is frustrating if you buy a new iMac the week before the new model is announced.

So, this is a dangerous week to buy new stuff. The rumour sites have been aflood with suggestions that new iPads, MacBook Pros and possibly the iPhone 5 is due to be announced ‘real soon’ now.

These rumours would appear to be confirmed by invitations released today by Apple to an ‘event’ on March 2nd. The corner of an iPad is visible behind the date.

Appleinvitewide

Stay tuned.

Thanks to Megan for the charming cartoon.

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Feb 22 2011

Confucius say…


Confucius say, 
“If you are in a book store and cannot find 
The book for which you search, you are obviously 
in the……

Confucius

Thanks to Al Kennedy for the holiday snap!

What I Learnt On 22nd February in other years

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Old-fashioned-phone2

Comparing phone plans is about as much fun as working out your tax return. (Sorry Mul)

Do you find that no matter what phone plan you choose, it ends up costing more?

Flagfall, rate per 30 secs, increments, text charges to and from others in the same company, data charges, expiry dates, rollovers, caps.

Oliver is on pre-paid and we found that we were having to ‘recharge’ way too frequently, even though he is quite a light user.

Earlier this month, we switched to a new company called ‘amaysim‘.

http://www.amaysim.com.au/

This has been a positive experience. The plan is simple to understand, recharges last 90 days rather than 30, data is not overcharged and additional packs are available. When I spoke to them to arrange the ‘porting’ of our old number to the new service, they were prompt and helpful, and when I rang back I got the same person “Anthony” again. Perhaps only one person works there.

The website was exceptionally easy to use, recharging is very easy through the site, and the options are clear.

Amaysim works on the Optus network, which is a disadvantage as Telstra reception is better around here. However, this is not much 

of an issue in Sydney where the phone will be used. If you have a phone ‘locked-in’ to the Telstra network you will have to unlock it. Instructions are available here

Boost and Virgin work on the Optus network, so if you have a phone currently on those networks it won’t need to be unlocked if you switch.

So far, so good, for us.

For post paid, Alex has been on a virgin Cap plan at $29 month. This was the best deal we could find at the time, and has been a good option for her, as her phone calls are considerably longer. She can call Cathy’s phone, also on Virgin, at no charge.
http://www.virginmobile.com.au/mobile-plans-pricing/monthly-plans/

The problem with plans is that they change all the time. 

If you want to do more research, Lifehacker Australia provides a comparison of some deals in its planhacker column.
http://www.lifehacker.com.au/tags/planhacker/

The Sydney Morning Herald also provide a plan comparison service at 
http://mobile-phones.smh.com.au/MobilePhones

What I Learnt On 21st February in other years

21st February 2012 Giving up Coffee for Lent?Giving up Coffee for Lent?
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The Lost Art of Sleep – by Michael McGirr

Sleep

Having recently had twins, Michael McGirr has become an expert in sleep – or the lack thereof.

Across the course of one long night, he explores with us a range of sleep-related topics.

Thomas Edison never went to bed, but Florence Nightingale spent most of her life in one.

Why do we dream?

What is sleep apnea?

How do you make a good coffee?

Why do both of his new babies never sleep at the same time?

A personal touch combined with excellent research make this a most charming read.

Kindle Verison

Booko Search

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Bobby_fischer

Bobby Fischer  was aged six in 1949 when he and his sister Joan bought  a chess set from the candy store beneath their Brooklyn apartment. They taught themselves to play from the instructions on the box. From that day the game defined his life.

Soon after learning the game, he found a book of old chess games and studied it intensely. His sister must have become sick of being beaten, as the following year his mother asked the local paper to find other boys of his age (7!) who might be interested in playing. Instead, the paper referred him to a visiting chess master who was playing an exhibition of simultaneous games. Bobby, still 7, played him and lost – but his play brought him to the attention of the president of the local chess club, and he subsequently was mentored by a number of Manhattans finest masters.

He was a prodigy. At the age of 13 he played a ‘brilliancy’ against DonaldcByrne which is still referred to as ‘the game of the century’. 

He won the first of eight consecutive US championships the following year – aged 14. He became a grandmaster at age 15, and in 1963 won the US championships 11-0, which remains the only perfect score in the history of the championships.

Fischer dropped out  of Erasmus Hall High School as soon as he legally could at age 16. His classmates had included Barbra Streisand and Neil Diamond. That same year his mother moved out of their apartment to pursue a career in medicine, leaving him to his own devices. Still aged 16, he published his first book ‘Bobby Fischer’s Games of Chess.’

Fischer had not competed or had withdrawn from the World Championships in the 1960’s, but became determined to win the 1970 – 1972 round  (World Championships being held over a three year period.)  It was the height of the Cold War, and chess was dominated by Russian grandmasters.  Fischer systematically began to beat them all, and gained the world number one ranking in 1971. However,  he had not yet beaten the reigning champion, Russia’s Boris Spassky. His chance came in the finals of the World Championships in 1972.

Appropriately an exotic venue was chosen for this cold war battle. The most anticipated chess match of all time took place in Reykjavík, in Iceland, from July to September 1972. Fischer had a lifelong stubbornness about playing conditions for tournaments – and he refused to play at all until the prize money was fixed at an unprecedented $250,000.

The championship match was decided over 21 games. Fisher lost the first when he tried a surprising pawn sacrifice in the end game – and he forfeited the second as he was annoyed by the cameras. Spassky agreed to play the third game in a private back room, and the subsequent games returned to the main stage.

Of the final 19 games, Fischer won nine, drew ten, and lost only 1. Therefore, he won the championship 12 and half to 8 and a half. He was an instant celebrity, and at age 29 returned home to a hero’s welcome. He appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated.

He never defended his title, and in fact never played a proper chess tournament again. It was 20 years before he played in public for one last time.

Fischer was an eccentric even by the standards of the eccentric world of chess. His life became increasingly shambolic. In 1992 he played in an unofficial rematch against Spassky in Yugoslavia against UN sanctions.(he won this rematch), He was unable to return to the USA. He lived in Hungary, Germany, the Philipines, and spent some years in jail in detention in Japan before being taken in by Iceland, who made him a citizen to obtain his release. He died there in January 2008. He had been undefeated in a Chess match from the age of 23.

The brilliant 23 year old Anatoly Karpov placed Fischer as World Chess Champion when he refused to defend his title in 1975, and Garry Kasparov eventually replaced Karpov as World Chess Champion in 1985. Kasparov had been brought up on Fishers ’60 Memorable Games’. Although he never played him, the question of ‘How would you have gone against Bobby Fischer’ was the dominant question he faced throughout his career.  Kasparov wrote that Fischer “became the detonator of an avalanche of new chess ideas, a revolutionary whose revolution is still in progress.” Experts say that Kasparov is the only person who might rival Fischer as the greatest chess player ever.

In the latest NY times Review of Books, Kasparov tells the Shakesperean story of Bobby Fischer’s life in a fascinating personal review of a new biography of the American grandmaster.

Thanks to Mike for the tip about the article.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What I Learnt On 19th February in other years

19th February 2014 Now, that’s a hotel
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