Steve Jobs Stanford Commencement Speech 2005

September 20th, 2007

I spent some time as a public speaker; traveling America and speaking almost every day to a group of very high income, educated, professional people; all of whom had far more formal education than I.  Most were Doctors, Specialists at that.

My job was to teach these people who were more educated than I.  I had to teach them what their several degrees had left them wanting; that is how to do what they wanted to do — to like it and to do it well.  I was to teach them that it is in all ways better to give than take.  I was to show them that it is always — in all ways — better to be interested in others than to try and create interest in yourself.  These things I believed then and I believe now.

I enjoyed capturing and holding the attention of hundreds of people, all of whom thought they were smarter than me when I started and all of whom claimed they learned greatly when I was done.  I spoke for two days and took up twenty hours of their time.  I spoke upon what had taken me decades to learn.  I delivered verbally what decades of intense and dedicated experience and education had given me; I condensed into those twenty hours.  

I am immensely impressed with good speaking that has value.  In my opinion there is great value in this speech by Steve Jobs. 

I hope you find value here as well and that if you do; that you may want to invite folks to come here, to my Blog and check it out.

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1R-jKKp3NA  Jody Hudson

www.JodyHudson.com
www.Kate-Jody.com

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Bluewater Wind contract due today

September 18th, 2007

Delmarva Power, Bluewater Wind contract details due today
By Aaron Nathans
The News Journal

REHOBOTH BEACH — Bluewater Wind proposes building 150 wind-power turbines off the coast of Rehoboth Beach by about 2014, under terms of an agreement the company released Thursday.But Delmarva Power said it has not agreed to those terms and plans to release its own statement today, the deadline for the two companies to submit details that could go into a long-term power supply contract.The deal is headed for a make-or-break review before the Public Service Commission and four state agencies.

Bluewater officials acknowledged that Delmarva could fight the proposal after it delivers its own summary of details today. Read the rest…

Jody Hudson
www.Kate-Jody.com
www.JodyHudson.com
www.RuralRehoboth.com
www.TheRuralSpecialist.com
www.DelawareBeachBoard.com
http://www.kate-jody.com/aboutjody.html  

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The Age of Rembrandt:

September 18th, 2007

The Age of Rembrandt: Dutch Paintings in The

Metropolitan

Museum of Art

My Favorite Art and Artists (other than Abraxas) are now in NYC at The MET, on display!The new and current exhibition presents the Museum’s entire collection of Dutch paintings (ca. 1600–1800) in approximate order of acquisition, from the founding purchase of 1871, to the major gifts and bequests of the 1880s through the 1940s, and finally to the strategic accessions of the 1950s onward. Reflecting how the Museum’s great collection of Dutch paintings is closely linked with the institution’s history, the installation outlines how the collection was formed, following the taste for Dutch art in America and among

New York’s great collectors.
Many of the 174 paintings acquired in the “1871 Purchase” made by the Museum were from the Dutch school, including masterworks such as Jan van Goyen’s View of Haarlem and the Haarlemmer Meer and Salomon van Ruysdael’s Drawing the Eel (shown above). These paintings were coveted on both sides of the Atlantic and secured the young Museum an “enviably solid foundation for future acquisition and development,” as Henry James wrote in a well-known essay published in the Atlantic Monthly in the summer of 1872.Despite the Museum’s ambitious beginnings, not many paintings were acquired for another decade, due to one of the worst depressions in American history, which took place in 1873. Over the next ten years, however, industry boomed in

America, trade flourished, and the rise of private income gave way to the new millionaires of the Gilded Age (ca. 1875–1900).

The most important collectors of this period for the Museum—such as Henry Marquand, J. P. Morgan, and Louisine and H. O. Havemeyer—sought out masterpieces by Rembrandt, Hals, Vermeer, and Ruisdael, among other Dutch artists. Dutch pictures had been favored by collectors in England, France, and Germany throughout the nineteenth century, but their appeal in the United States was intensified by the notion that American values—democracy, closeness to nature, family life, and the “Protestant ethic” of hard work—were anticipated by the middle-class society of the Dutch Republic. During this period, Rembrandt’s Self-portrait, Vermeer’s Young Woman with a Water Pitcher and A Maid Asleep, Hals’s Merrymakers at Shrovetide, Portrait of a Man, Young Man and Woman in an Inn (”Yonker Ramp and his Sweetheart”), Van Ruisdael’s Wheatfields, and Aelbert Cuyp’s Young Herdsman with Cows all entered the Museum’s collection.The contributions of later collectors and contributors—such as Benjamin Altman (whose Rembrandts, Halses, and early Vermeer are grouped together), Arabella Huntington, William K. Vanderbilt, Jules Bache, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wrightsman, and Jack and Belle Linsky—and of curators and directors, are acknowledged frequently throughout the exhibition. The last gallery features works acquired since about 1960, including Aristotle with a Bust of Homer, the only Rembrandt painting ever purchased by the Metropolitan Museum, Vermeer’s Study of a Young Woman, Steen’s The Dissolute Household, and De Witte’s Interior of the Old Church in Delft. See article: http://www.nypost.com/seven/09172007/entertainment/met_goes_dutch.htm See Slide Show: http://www.nypost.com/seven/09172007/entertainment/09172007_rembrandt/photo02.htm and click next photo under the right corner of each painting. 

The MET is Metropolitan Museum Rembrandt Exhibition.  Here is more about The Exhibition with lots of pictures and data! 

The MET; 1000 5th Ave, New York, NY

10028  (212) 879-5500
 Related ExhibitionIn conjunction with this exhibition, a related installation of prints and drawings “Drawings and Prints from Holland’s Golden Age: Highlights from the Collection” presents a selection of drawings and prints by artists active in

Holland during the seventeenth century. Works include drawings and etchings by Rembrandt, Adriaen van Ostade, willem Buytewech, Jacques de Gheyn, Albert Cuyp, and Jacob van Ruisdael. Learn more about this installation.Related Programs

A variety of programs are scheduled in conjunction with this exhibition, including gallery talks, lectures, family programs, films and concerts. Jody Hudson
www.Kate-Jody.com
www.JodyHudson.com
www.RuralRehoboth.com
www.TheRuralSpecialist.com
www.DelawareBeachBoard.com
http://www.kate-jody.com/aboutjody.html  

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Possibilities endless !

September 16th, 2007

I have suggested on this blog a number of things to do, places to go, teams to root for, etc.  Keep in mind I am only an occasional visitor to the Delmarva Peninsula, and in the 7 years I have gone there, I have only done so much.

 Having said that, may I suggest a few portals for you to visit for activities and events…

http://www.visitsoutherndelaware.com

http://www.rehomain.com

http://www.beach-fun.com

And to find thing sin the paper…

http://www.capegaztte.com

http://www.delawareonline.com

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Delaware BEACH LIFE Magazine

September 14th, 2007

We are Fortunate to have as one of our Community Members: Terry Plowman! 

Terry is active in so many ways in our community and his magazine is one of the best ways to track his contributions of time, energy and enthusiastic creativitiy to those things he promotes and assists!

Terry Plowman: Editor and Publisher of

Delaware

BEACH LIFE Magazine.
 

Terry Plowman, Writer, Publisher, Photographer, Editor and Creator of

Delaware

Beach Life Magazine.


Terry Plowman; Resume

Terry Plowman; Portfolio

Delaware Beach Life – The Magazine of Coastal Sussex County Delaware!

One of the Major Energizers of Writers At The Beach – Pure Sea Glass  

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