Tag Archive for 'Improve'

Texas State Library and Archives Commission Launches Statewide Effort to Improve Internet Access in Texas Public Libraries

San Antonio, TX (Vocus) October 9, 2009

The Texas State Library and Archives Commission assembled nearly 200 public library leaders, community supporters, broadband providers, and local and state leaders for the Texas Opportunity Online Broadband Summit, on Thursday, October 8, 2009, in San Antonio, to discuss how to improve and sustain high quality Internet access in the Texas public libraries. The Texas Opportunity Online Broadband Summit provides an opportunity to understand the value of community partnerships and the possibilities of technology as well as in-depth discussion about possible connectivity solutions and next steps necessary to reach improved connectivity speed.

Currently, more than 200 Texas public library systems lack Internet connections fast enough to meet the most basic needs of patrons, and many more report speeds that are inadequate to meet the true demand of their community. Ironically, some of these public libraries offer the only technology lifeline to their communities.

This is the first of two Texas summits that is sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as part of its pilot Opportunity Online broadband grant program. Texas, along with six other states, has been invited to participate. The grant program supports public libraries as they seek to improve their broadband connectivity and calls for a broadband sustainability strategy, to be developed by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission, to ensure that public libraries continue to improve and maintain adequate connectivity for patrons.

The summit included a comprehensive analysis of Texas current broadband climate and the future of technology access in Texas public libraries. Stephen Abram, a library futurist, spoke about future library services and applications driven by technology that will influence how Americans use computers and the Internet, and why reliable, sustainable broadband connections in libraries will be essential to ensure library patrons can use these programs to improve their lives.

Keynote speaker Graham Richard, former mayor of Fort Wayne, Indiana and partner of public libraries, highlighted the importance of public and private partnerships on the local and state level to prioritize funding for improved connectivity in public libraries.

Peggy Rudd, Texas State Library and Archives Commissions director and librarian, led the summit and represented the agency.

Every day we are reminded of the value of Texas public libraries, Rudd said. Todays public libraries provide traditional services, but a growing number of patrons depend on library Internet access to apply for jobs, further their education, run businesses or stay connected with families and friends. This summit and grant program will help better meet these increasing personal and community needs by improving library connection speeds.

Building on dialogue and ideas generated at the summit, the Texas State Library and Archives Commission is currently working with an advisory groupincluding Commissioner Todd Staples of the Texas Department of Agriculture, former Governor Mark White, Texas State Library and Archives Commission Chairman Sandra J. Pickett – to develop a strategy to increase and sustain broadband connections in all Texas public libraries. Texas State Library and Archives Commission will now work with libraries across the state to support their Internet connectivity upgrade and create a long-term state sustainability strategy.

The summit highlights the vital role libraries play in connecting communities to information and knowledge through technology, said Jill Nishi, deputy director of U.S. Libraries at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. What is needed now is long-term collaboration among government, business, communities, and library leaders to ensure that public libraries can continue to provide the high-speed Internet access their patrons need to improve their lives and thrive.

Connected Nation worked closely with the Texas State Library and Archives Commission to support the event development and execution. For more information about the Texas Opportunity Online Summit, please visit http://www.opportunityonline.org/snapshots/texas/ or contact us at 1-866-882-3081 or tx1summit (at) opportunityonline.org.

About the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation:

Guided by the belief that every life has equal value, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation works to help all people lead healthy, productive lives. In developing countries, it focuses on improving people’s health and giving them the chance to lift themselves out of hunger and extreme poverty. In the United States, it seeks to ensure that all peopleespecially those with the fewest resourceshave access to the opportunities they need to succeed in school and life. Based in Seattle, the foundation is led by CEO Jeff Raikes and co-chair William H. Gates Sr., under the direction of Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett. More information is available at http://www.gatesfoundation.org.

About the Texas State Library and Archives Commission:

The mission of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission is to preserve the record of government for public scrutiny, to secure and make accessible historically significant records and other valuable resources, to meet the reading needs of Texans with disabilities, to build and sustain statewide partnerships to improve library programs and services, and to enhance the capacity for achievement of individuals and institutions with whom we work. Since 1909, TSLAC has carried out a commitment of making information work for all Texans by providing history and genealogical services, federal and state government documents, electronic research, and library services. TSLAC is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year. For more information, go to http://www.tsl.state.tx.us or email pio (at) tsl.state.tx.us.

About Connected Nation:

Connected Nation is a national nonprofit 501(c)3 organization that expands access to and use of broadband Internet and the related technologies that are enabled when individuals and communities have the opportunity and desire to connect. Connected Nation effectively raises the awareness of the value of broadband and related technologies by developing coalitions of influencers and enablers for improving technology availability and use. Connected Nation works with consumers, community leaders, states, technology providers, and foundations, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, to develop and implement technology expansion programs with core competencies centered around a mission to improve digital inclusion for people and places previously underserved or overlooked. Connected Nation is also working with technology leaders to implement Every Citizen OnlineSM, a public-private partnership program to enable computer ownership and broadband use in low-income and unconnected homes. For more information about Connected Nation, visit http://www.connectednation.org.

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Texas State Library and Archives Commission Hosts Second Summit to Improve Internet Access in Texas Public Libraries


San Antonio, TX (Vocus) November 20, 2009

The Texas State Library and Archives Commission assembled more than 270 public library leaders, community supporters, broadband providers, and local and state leaders for Texas second Opportunity Online Broadband Summit on November 18 -19, 2009, in San Antonio, to discuss how to improve and sustain high speed Internet access in the Texas public libraries.

Summit participants had the opportunity to build upon the work from the previous summit to further ensure that all Texas public libraries have a meaningful broadband connection. The Texas Opportunity Online Broadband Summit provides an opportunity to understand the value of community partnerships and the possibilities of technology as well as in-depth discussion about possible connectivity solutions and next steps necessary to reach improved connectivity speed.

Currently, more than 200 Texas public library systems lack Internet connections fast enough to meet the most basic needs of patrons, and many more report speeds that are inadequate to meet the true demand of their community. Ironically, some of these public libraries offer the only technology lifeline to their communities.

Both Texas summits were sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as part of its pilot Opportunity Online broadband grant program. Texas, along with six other states, was invited to participate. The grant program supports public libraries as they seek to improve their broadband connectivity and calls for a broadband sustainability strategy, to be developed by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission, to ensure that public libraries continue to improve and maintain adequate connectivity for patrons

The summit included a comprehensive analysis of Texas current broadband climate and the future of technology access in Texas public libraries. Stephen Abram, a library futurist, spoke about future library services and applications driven by technology that will influence how Americans use computers and the Internet, and why reliable, sustainable broadband connections in libraries will be essential to ensure library patrons can use these programs to improve their lives.

Keynote speaker Graham Richard, former mayor of Fort Wayne, Indiana and partner of public libraries, highlighted the importance of public and private partnerships on the local and state level to prioritize funding for improved connectivity in public libraries.

Peggy Rudd, Texas State Library and Archives Commissions director and state librarian, led the summit and represented the agency.

Every day we are reminded of the value of Texas public libraries, Rudd said. Todays public libraries continue to provide traditional services, but a growing number of patrons depend on library Internet access to apply for jobs, further their education, run businesses or stay connected with families and friends. This summit and grant program will help meet these increasing personal and community needs better by improving library connection speeds.

Building on dialogue and ideas generated at the summit, the Texas State Library and Archives Commission is currently working with an advisory group including Commissioner Todd Staples of the Texas Department of Agriculture, former Governor Mark White, and Texas State Library and Archives Commission Chairman Sandra J. Pickett to develop a strategy to increase and sustain broadband connections in all Texas public libraries. The Texas State Library and Archives Commission will now work with libraries across the state to support their Internet connectivity upgrade and create a long-term state sustainability strategy.

The summit highlights the vital role libraries play in connecting communities to information and knowledge through technology, said Jill Nishi, deputy director of U.S. Libraries at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. What is needed now is long-term collaboration among government, business, communities, and library leaders to ensure that public libraries can continue to provide the high-speed Internet access their patrons need to improve their lives and thrive.

Connected Nation worked closely with the Texas State Library and Archives Commission to support the event development and execution. For more information about the Texas Opportunity Online Summit, please contact 1-866-882-3081 or tx2summit@opportunityonline.org.

Photo Information:

OO1: Margarita Dominguez of the Hill County Telephone Coop leads a table discussion on sustainable broadband and the role of emerging technology. She is joined by (L to R) Merla Watson, Library Director, Dickens County Spur Public Library; and Joyce Howze, Spur Main Street Program.

OO2: Peggy Rudd, Director and Librarian of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission opens a panel discussion moderated by Jim Nelson former Kentucky State Librarian and Commissioner of the Department for Libraries and Archives, KDLA. Panelists (L to R) include Jim Nelson; Dr. Phil Turner; Anne Barker, Director of Nacogdoches Public Library; and Karen Vargas, MLS, National Network of Librarians of Medicine, South Central Region.

OO3: Former Texas Governor Mark White speaks with Peggy Rudd, Director and Librarian of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission and other Opportunity Online summit attendees.

About the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Guided by the belief that every life has equal value, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation works to help all people lead healthy, productive lives. In developing countries, it focuses on improving people’s health and giving them the chance to lift themselves out of hunger and extreme poverty. In the United States, it seeks to ensure that all people especially those with the fewest resources have access to the opportunities they need to succeed in school and life. Based in Seattle, the foundation is led by CEO Jeff Raikes and co-chair William H. Gates Sr., under the direction of Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett. More information is available at http://www.gatesfoundation.org.

About the Texas State Library and Archives Commission

The mission of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission is to preserve the record of government for public scrutiny, to secure and make accessible historically significant records and other valuable resources, to meet the reading needs of Texans with disabilities, to build and sustain statewide partnerships to improve library programs and services, and to enhance the capacity for achievement of individuals and institutions with whom we work. Since 1909, TSLAC has carried out a commitment of making information work for all Texans by providing history and genealogical services, federal and state government documents, electronic research, and library services. TSLAC is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year. For more information, go to http://www.tsl.state.tx.us or e-mail pio@tsl.state.tx.us.

About Connected Nation

Connected Nation is a national nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization that expands access to and use of broadband Internet and the related technologies that are enabled when individuals and communities have the opportunity and desire to connect. Connected Nation effectively raises the awareness of the value of broadband and related technologies by developing coalitions of influencers and enablers for improving technology availability and use. Connected Nation works with consumers, community leaders, states, technology providers, and foundations, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, to develop and implement technology expansion programs with core competencies centered around a mission to improve digital inclusion for people and places previously underserved or overlooked. Connected Nation is also working with technology leaders to implement Every Citizen OnlineSM, a public-private partnership program to enable computer own

Can Tickling Dramatically Improve Your Health?

Can Tickling Dramatically Improve Your Health?

Is Nature wasteful or thrifty? Evolution uses the same structures by Adaptation for human survival over the millennia. You read that fish gills evolved into the human face and neck, while dinosaurs with tiny feathers evolved into present day birds.

Is laughter just a waste of time? How about tickling?

Fact: six (6) year-olds laugh on an average of 300 times daily

Fact: fourteen (14) year olds laugh an average of 160 times daily.

Fact: adults – twenty-five (25) year olds to senior citizens – laugh on an average of

only 17 times daily.

So What

Maybe human adults have less to smile and laugh about with 10% unemployment,

the highest rate of foreclosures and bankruptcies since the 1930s? Nyet, nada, negative: smiling and laughing is part of our human nature and instinctual.

Humans, chimps and other mammals are hardwired (preloaded) for smiling and laughter. It is part of our grooming process that creates emotional communication between men and women, mothers and offspring, and empathy for others.

How come kids smile and laugh up to seventeen (17) times more than adults?

Answer: conditioning. We are programmed by our culture, media and career experience to believe those who smile and laugh are lazy, inattentive and indifferent.

We suppress smiling and laughter until it becomes inhibited and weak because it is

not often triggered. The neural network containing experiences that made us giggle, chuckle and guffaw in the past is just not firing their synapses as we age.

Disuse (abstinence) extinguishes neural networks, while rewards (other people joining in) induce a greater number of daily smiles and bouts of laughter.

But So What

Two things for Inquiring Minds: one: when we were kids and went to the beach, we always found a seashell by the seashore. We put it against our ear, right? Sure we did, and were told the shell scientifically retained the sounds of the ocean, right? We never questioned that explanation then or since.

Fact: the sound is the noise of blood surging through the veins in our ears when we

clamp the shell to it. Saying so does not make it so, right? Another myth destroyed.

Fact: Warren Buffett said: “Never ask a barber if you need a haircut!” He was talking about lawyers having a vested interest (conflict of interest) in a Merger or Acquisition culminating successfully because they get a percentage instead of just an hourly fee.

Is the lawyer (or barber) going to say No! Don’t do the deal or get the haircut? Will your counselor warn you this deal is a clone of the Time-Warner merging disaster with AOL? Only Saints and Angels don’t look after Number One first, right?

Twelve (12) Benefits of Smiling & Laughter

Caution: you must read this list at least twice (2x) to get the guts of it.

1. Blood Circulation produces up to 12% more oxygen and glucose (energy) for body and mind when you smile or laugh often.
2. Speed of brain functions: up to 15% higher for optimal cognition.
3. Stress: reduced from mind and body (up to 18% by MRI reading).
4. Abdominal muscles and digestion strengthened by laughing.
5. Left and right brain: synchronized and integrated to work together.
6. Blood pressure lowered up to 10% based on how many smiles & duration of our daily laughing.
7. Diaphragmatic (deeper) breathing for up to six hours afterward.
8. Immune System produces a supply of Dopamine -(neurotransmitter) the pleasure hormone.
9. Attentiveness, heartbeat regularity and pulse rate are improved.

10. Long-term memory and learning skills enhanced up to 2x (double).

11. University of Maryland research: protection from stroke and heart

attack.

12. Pain (physical and mental) is reduced up to 50% and your healing rate increases by a surge of Endorphins.

Read the dozen rewards of smiling and laughter one more once. Now smile because

you have added to your health and longevity core knowledge.

You Cannot Tickle Yourself

Recent research at the University of Gothenburg (Sweden) and published in Nature

Neuroscience. Google: 4.15.09, Professor H. Olausson. Touching the skin can relieve

pain. Your skin being stoked has an express line directly to the brain.

Pain signals cannot block skin impulses of someone stroking our skin. Tickling overcomes pain – it deadens the pain stimuli. Inquiring minds should know that

being slowly tickled (stroked) activates specialized nerve fibers in our skin.

Pleasurable feelings are produced by our brain by these nerve fibers called CT nerves (C-Tactile). The longer and greater frequency of stroking (tickling) – the

greater the pleasure. But you cannot self-tickle, the sensation (emotion) must be

created by another.

Cerebellum Monitors Our Bodily Movements

Our little brain (cerebellum) prevents us from tickling ourselves. Why?

It can distinguish between Expected and Unexpected sensations. Tickling

is 90% triggered by unexpected sensation. Your brain knows (somatosensory

cortex) who is doing the tickling – you or a stranger?

An example of an expected bodily sensation is the feeling (pressure) of your fingertips while typing on the computer keyboard. Unexpected is a stranger

tickling your neck with a feather.

Endwords

Tickling causes involuntary twitching movements or laughter. The brain releases

endorphins (brain morphine) that cause euphoria and pleasure. It is called an

Opioid compound (opium-like) produced by your Pituitary gland and

hypothalamus. The affect, according to Alan Hirsch, M.D. lasts up to 12 hours.

Exercise

You remember the 12 benefits of smiling and laughing, right? How can you create

them on demand and improve your health and longevity?

a) Inner Child: if you see yourself making ridiculous faces in a

mirror, your instinctive reaction is to smile and even laugh.

b) We teach corporate executive and law students to fake (make-

believe) smiling. Google: orbicularis oculi (face muscles)

risorius muscles and zygomatic major. These three muscles

cause your eyes to squint and face to raise sides into a smile.

c) Mentally visualize (with strong emotion) a scene that you saw

on TV that tickled your funny-bone. Set a mood of relaxing

with a positive attitude of humor. Google: Funniest Videos.

d) Get your significant other to tickle your feet (bottoms).

Remember – two-minutes of tickling triggers up to 12 hours

of endorphins and dopamine – the pleasure hormone.

Would reading and remembering three (3) books, articles and reports, while your

peers can hardly finish one, be a powerful competitive advantage – in your career?

Contact us for a free detailed speed reading report. Now is the time.

See ya,

copyright © 2010 H. Bernard Wechsler www.speedlearning.org

hbw@speedlearning.org

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Author of Speed Reading For Professionals, published by Barron’s.

Business partner of Evelyn Wood, creator of speed reading, graduating

2 million, including the White House staffs of four U.S. Presidents:

Kennedy-Johnson-Nixon-Carter.