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21:23 03/06/02
i would like to put my ie bookmarks here.

i wish i knew how to properly leverage radio into doing that for me.

 

Links of the _then day No Simpler than this LinkLog:

Tuesday, February 05, 2002

# 20:57  LinkLog 
  
 Asc Mo
Oooh. I bet John Howard is just itching to use the word recalcitrant right now. [Deadly Bloody Serious Radio]
# 20:07  LinkLog 
  
 Asc Mo
The Dowell Domain -- Favorite Quotes: ""Science is like sex: sometimes something useful comes out, but that is not the reason we are doing it." - Richard Feynman "
# 19:57  LinkLog 
  
 Asc Mo
The Register: "privacy hole in Windows/MSN Messenger" with link to tester app
# 18:28  LinkLog 
  
 Asc Mo
Who'll Pay, Pal, for This IPO? touches on the history
# 01:27  LinkLog 
  
 Asc Mo
What the hell happened? Top Ten Things You Need to Know About Enron: "What follows is an imaginary conversation, intended as a kind of primer -- not only ten things you might want to know about Enron, but ten things that bear repeating about Enron. Enron's collapse is symptomatic of a deep-seated disease. All of our retirements are at stake." AlterNet [Follow Me Here]
# 01:21  LinkLog 
  
 Asc Mo
The Trouble With Self-Esteem. Slater hints at a broader theme -- that impaired self-esteem may in fact be in general healthier and more 'normal', that inflation of self-esteem may in fact be a root of behavioral and emotional problems. Readers will recall I've written before on the notion that depression may be a more realistic way of seeing things, closely akin to this notion. It is not a novel idea; the inventor of modern psychology a century ago knew it too. Witness Freud's oft-quoted pronouncement that the aim of psychoanalysis was not to turn unhappy people into happy ones, but rather to turn neurotic unhappiness into plain old ordinary unhappiness. In psychotherapetutic work, we get into trouble when we try to preserve our clients' self-esteem as an end in itself. People are good enough without our help at defending against the painful-self-examination that is necessary for successful change, and I am fond of saying that, in therapy, one must expect to "feel worse in order to do better."  [Follow Me Here]

@ 14:46 03/15/02
© Michael Ax, 2002