World Bugs: Issue Tracking

Bugs are made.

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Scientology Today: Sydney Youth Decide to Make Human Rights a Fact

Scientology Today: Sydney Youth Decide to Make Human Rights a Fact: "But the students were not just an audience at this event. Rather, they were active participants, discussing controversial human rights issues and drawing up action plans of what they will do now to increase awareness and implementation of human rights in their areas.

Finally, Ms. Ceberano presented the Hon. David Clarke with a petition containing 16,500 signatures of Australian youth, asking for human rights education to be mandated throughout New South Wales, and for the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to be implemented in full in the state."

My glib response to this was, "what violations of human rights exist in Australia?" The answer I got here is primarily involuntary and purportedly unnecessary detention of immigrants. There are others internally I am sure that are not being pushed in this site, with psychiatric treatment and drugging a considerable epidemic in schools and youth.

Australia, much like the rest of the world is lacking in many instances the basics of human rights being supported as many do not know what human rights are and that they two have a right to them.

The best communication of these rights I've seen, the only ones that communicated to me personally, were covered in the Youth for Human Rights International's public service announcements on the the 30 articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. You can see all of them online at the Youth for Human Rights International website. Check them out and pass them along, those rights can balance this world for everyone.

Monday, January 29, 2007

With Vista, seeing is believing, says Gates - page 2 | Newsmakers | CNET News.com

With Vista, seeing is believing, says Gates - page 2 | Newsmakers | CNET News.com: "Q: One of the things that Microsoft tried to introduce with Vista is the idea that megahertz isn't necessarily the best way to measure a PC. The Windows Experience Index was an attempt to give you an overall sense of how powerful a PC is. We've seen it go from something that was really prominent in the early test versions to something that is maybe not as prominent. Is it still something that's important?
Gates: Our team has done a great job on this, where you can look at the score in each individual area, like the graphics or CPU. You can also have an overall rating. It had gotten so confusing for people to try and understand these things, that we decided just having a linear scale in a few of the key areas and a way of bringing that together, it would help you in terms of picking games out or knowing what the right hardware is. (We've done) a lot of work with the industry to try and take what has been very complex and bring it down to a numeric scale."

With this kind of thing you can start moving in to huge markets. Even if they were a wiz with the word processor, do they know what kind of video card will support that? No. Do they know what or where their video card is? No.

Through the simplification of complexities, the distribution of materials at greater speeds by less trained personnel to less trained customers.