Archive for June, 2010

Vital Personal computer Improvements

Monday, June 28th, 2010

The buying of a brand-new Computer is an important decision in this hugely wired, electronic time of ours. Even before you’ve even taken it home and out of the box, something better and swifter has come to the market. It makes sense to do a bit of fore thought and get a computer that can continue to be useful and able with respect to your personal requirements for at the very least a few years to come. Along with the correct treatment and upkeep, there are a few essential PC updates that every computer operator should contemplate to maximise the functionality and longevity of a personal computer to stave off obsolescence and extend the useful life of the machine. All these upgrades can help with your external hardware like your netgear wireless adapter.

The first and most crucial upgrade for any PC is Random Access Memory. Nothing increases performance like putting in all the RAM that the system can handle. Just be conscious that 32-bit operating systems can just address 4 GB of memory, so if you want to go further than that you’ll need to change to a 64-bit platform. Another easy upgrade is the Graphics Card. They’re a breeze to set up as they simply plug into any PCI Express slot on the motherboard and can drastically enhance media and graphics rendering.

In addition, switching the initial hard drive to something faster with much more space is a usually a great idea as hard drives or HDDs are rather low-cost nowadays. Installation kits with all the necessary apparatus to upgrade are offered through a range of sellers such as Seagate, Western Digital and OCZ. Though currently more expensive than traditional disk drives, solid state drives have the benefits of working with less power, being quieter and swifter, as well as being more shock resilient. While you’re playing with the hard drive, you may think about finding a Blu-ray player for media. They’re not that costly and can be had for £100 or so.

If you have determined to up grade to a new, more potent graphics card, a second monitor is the ideal way to capitalise on the extra rendering ability. Two screens enable more effective multitasking and productiveness and give you a lot more room to work. Like nearly every other component, monitors are becoming more of a bargain every day and a fair quality screen shouldn’t run more than £150.

Last but not least, the best upgrade of any personal computer is the motherboard and the CPU. This is often the ideal course of action for outdated hardware that’s definitely beginning to show it’s age. Today’s CPUs from AMD and Intel are amazingly straightforward to exchange out and the speed enhancements are absolutely worth it.

A Letter to Noah

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

January 1, 2005

Dear Noah,

I am writing to know about your life and times, and to tell you about the startling things that are happening in this world today. But I know that I have already jolted you by the date on this letter. You might be wondering what it means.

You see, many things have changed since your birth in 2970 B.C.E.almost 5,000 years ago. While you counted 30 days for a month, our one month today is 28 days. Now, we count up but in your time, you counted down. Because ours is the Common Era while your time was Before Our Common Era. This is one of the new things you do not know. So since it is strange to you, do not bother to date your letter when you write back.

I have read about you -how you built that gigantic ark and condemned the world by your faith. I thought that it would be nice for you to tell your story. I think that your father, Lamech, must have told you much about Adam since their lives overlapped. More so, he was with you 5 years before the flood, so he must have used most of the 777 years of his life to tell you ancient stories.

Did he say that Adam and Eve were actually deceived by a snake to eat the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden? Because some say that they were guilty of sexual sin. They say that the tree of the knowledge of good and bad in the middle of the garden was a figurative language. Was that really so? Is Hebrew, the language of God, full of double entendre?

Some even say that Adam was a fictional character because the name Adam means man. Did Lamech, your old man, tell you so? I am sure you must know the facts about these things.

I also know that you knew your grandfather Methuselah so well since he died in the year of the flood in 2370 B.C.E. I know that he did not perish in the deluge, that he died his own death. But how come he lived that long969 years! In fact, he would be in a better position to tell you what really happened in Eden and about Enoch, that other righteous man like you, who lived for just 365 years.

I say ‘just’ because you people in those days lived long, like you who lived for 864 years. Some say, however, that you people did not really live that long; that the years were actually months. Is that true? Did you live for only 864 months or 72 years? Today the fortunate ones among us live 70 or 80 yearsas brief as the life of the small sparrow. That may also surprise you.

But why did God take Enoch so that his corpse was not seen? He also did that to the dead body of Moses. Sorry, you do not know this man who made a copper serpent that was later worshipped. But he was best known as the meekest man that ever lived on earth, who died for playing God and was buried in a concealed grave. Now wait a moment: Did God fear that wicked people would dig up the bones of these godly men and do things to them, or was it a mark of honor in days of yore to bury righteous servants of God in unmarked graves?

You must have been happy to have been born close to creationtenth in the line of Adam and born 126 years after his death. Since your dad, Lamech, had other sons and daughters, I would like to know how you lived together. Did you squabble and kill one another like Cain and Abel? Or did one sell the other? Or was there a rapist in the house? There were families where such things were practiced long after your time. But I must tell you that we do all of these today. I will tell you about these things before I conclude my letter.

But how were you raised that you came to have so much faith? And what occupation did your parents teach you? Did you farm, herd, or hunt animals? If so, how was farming, animal rearing, or hunting in those days? Did you enjoy it? There are all kinds of work these days. Some people are paid for spying, for example. But the best paid workers are those who make dangerous weapons to kill their brothers. Were there such jobs in your time?

Now, when your father named you Noah, meaning Rest or Consolation, did he know of the impending flood? Because he had said that you were going to bring comfort to their work and the pain of their hands arising from the ground which God had cursed.

But tell me: How did you fare in those days when those giants called Nephilims or Fellers wreaked havoc on the earth? Did they hurt you or your children, Japhet, Shem, and Ham? I wonder how you were able to remain righteous and faultless amidst the violent, idolatrous, and immoral world of those days. Even your family members were separated from the sinners, too. You must have been specially blessed, Noah!
…………………………………………..
I am sorry for the long letter. Please take time to explain to me the many things that happened in your time of both the questions I asked in this mail and of others that I did not remember. I know that I may have written many new things that you do not know. One thing I must tell you is that this world is moving so fast that I do not even understand it. But if I were to write all I know, your ark would not contain the story of this world!

I look forward to your reply.

Yours sincerely,
Disenchanted Son.

(EXCERPTED FROM THE BOOK, “A LETTER TO NOAH,” TO BE PUBLISHED SOON. IF YOU ENJOYED READING THE STORY AND WOULD LIKE TO MAKE A VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION TOWARD ITS PUBLICATION, PLEASE CONTACT THE AUTHOR.)

ARTHUR ZULU is an editor, book reviewer, and author of Chasing Shadows! and How to Write a Best-seller.
For his works and free helps for writers, goto:
http://controversialwriter.tripod.com
mailto: controversialwriter@yahoo.com
Web search: Arthur Zulu

About the Author

Arthur Zulu is an editor, bookreviewer, and published writer.

A DOUBLE RAINBOW AND SNOW ON THE GROUND

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

This poem is based on a true event that happened May 11 and May 12, 2005

God’s promises are yes and amen
He said wondrous signs he would send
Yesterday evening I was hoeing my garden
A gentle refreshing sweet rain was falling

I stopped a moment to take a rest
A light wind was blowing from the west
I looked at the sky and saw a wondrous sight
A double rainbow with colors so bright

Verse 11 of Psalm 62 came to my mind
Power belongs unto God, he’s good and kind
He placed the rainbow as a token
Of his promise to Noah, it won’t be broken

This morning I was standing by my pecan tree
The thing that I saw was amazing to me
Snow on the ground during the month of May
Reminded me of the manna he sent each day

Hast thou entered into the treasures of snow
God asked this question to Job, you know
The ground was warm yet the snow was cold
God owns everything, the silver and the gold

The beauty displayed by God in the bow
Encouraged my heart as my faith in him did grow
The snow on the ground was pure and white
Like Jesus his son, he is the truth and the light

Irvin L. Rozier

About the Author

Author of My Walk with the Lord, www.selahbooks.com, preacher, retired military