stargeek
PHP news website logo.
home    PHP scripts    articles    seo tools    links    search    contact    shop    realtors


Labour stresses importance of web for campaigning







Labour stresses importance of web for
campaigning

Labour stresses importance of web for
campaigning
09/27/2004 03:09 AM

PublicTechnology.net Sep 27 2004 7:12AM GMT




This is a GrokNews Entry: (what is grok?)





Similar Items

Labour stresses importance of web for campaigning

Grok Headline matches for Labour stresses importance of web for campaigning

Defence White paper stresses importance
of technology for MOD


Defence White paper stresses importance
of technology for MOD
12/12/2003 04:35 AM
PublicTechnology.net Dec 12 2003 3:14AM ET

Recalling World War II, Bush Stresses
Importance of Iraq


Recalling World War II, Bush Stresses
Importance of Iraq
06/02/2004 04:47 PM
President Bush told new Air Force officers today that the campaign in Iraq is worthy of America's mission in history and is central to defeating terrorism worldwide.

"Labour: I See Red (Labour Needs
Leadership Change)"


"Labour: I See Red (Labour Needs
Leadership Change)"
04/28/2004 03:02 AM

Labour: I See Red (Labour Needs
Leadership Change)


Labour: I See Red (Labour Needs
Leadership Change)
04/28/2004 04:36 AM
Labour: I See Red (Labour Needs Leadership Change)

bloggerheads.com/labour
track this site | 5 links


UK stresses concerns over HK


UK stresses concerns over HK 07/20/2004 11:32 AM
The UK government says it is still worried about China's intervention in the constitutional affairs of its former territory.

Howard stresses 'right to choose'


Howard stresses 'right to choose' 06/15/2004 06:39 AM
The Tory leader says his plans to give patients and parents "the right to choose" will break the political mould.

Campaigning in Oz


Campaigning in Oz 09/14/2004 01:54 AM
Su nday Night's Election Debate  —  National security issues loom large, voters are admonished not to decide to “cut and run”. Medicare and the economy were also points of contention. The greens are being attacked as “commies”. John Quiggin has some observations.

Interactive centrifuge simulates
g-stresses in flight sim


Interactive centrifuge simulates
g-stresses in flight sim
01/05/2004 04:13 PM
Dynamic Flight Simulator is an interactive centrifuge controlled by a traditional PC_based flight-sim: as fighter pilots bank and roll in their simulated jets, the centrifuge spins to simuulate the g-stresses they'd actually feel in the air. Link

Internet pact stresses orderly
development


Internet pact stresses orderly
development
06/19/2004 06:10 AM
Content.sina.com - Sat Jun 19, 08:32 am GMT

US web campaigning pays off


US web campaigning pays off 07/08/2004 12:28 AM
News.bbc.co.uk - Wed Jul 7, 06:31 pm GMT

Borland stresses easing software project
burdens


Borland stresses easing software project
burdens
09/13/2004 02:53 PM
SAN JOSE, CALIF. -- Borland with its Software Delivery Optimization (SDO) plan is looking to enable users to manage software projects like a business, Borland?s Boz Elloy, senior vice president of software products, told attendees at the BorCon conference here on Monday.

Bush Stresses Anti-Terror Drive in
Address (AP)


Bush Stresses Anti-Terror Drive in
Address (AP)
08/07/2004 10:18 AM
AP - The heightened state of alert in New York, Newark, N.J. and Washington is "a grim reminder" of terrorist threats that still face the United States, President Bush said Saturday.

Microsoft CEO stresses need to avoid
"'big company' ills"


Microsoft CEO stresses need to avoid
"'big company' ills"
07/07/2004 01:17 AM
Microsoft Corp. needs to avoid the "'big company' ills" if it wants to beat competitors and boost its long-stagnant stock price, Chief Executive Steve Ballmer told employees in an annual memo Tuesday. In the memo, which traditionally lays out the company's goals for its fiscal year that began July 1, Ballmer wrote that avoiding the pitfalls of corporate size involves more than just building new, innovative products. The software titan also must make sure it isn't losing touch with - or the faith of - its current customers.

Microsoft CEO stresses need to avoid
''big company' ills'


Microsoft CEO stresses need to avoid
''big company' ills'
07/06/2004 11:18 PM
thestar.com.my Jul 7 2004 3:42AM GMT

Allawi Thanks U.S., Stresses Iraqi
Resolve (Los Angeles Times)


Allawi Thanks U.S., Stresses Iraqi
Resolve (Los Angeles Times)
09/24/2004 05:19 AM
Los Angeles Times - WASHINGTON — Hoping to ease American doubts about a costly and protracted war, interim Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi thanked the United States on Thursday for helping free his country and insisted that his government would defeat a virulent insurgency.

Kerry Suspends Campaigning (AP)


Kerry Suspends Campaigning (AP) 06/06/2004 10:03 AM
AP - Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry said Sunday that he was suspending "overtly political" campaigning in the coming days in observance of former President Reagan's death.

In Florida, the Campaigning Just Has to
Wait


In Florida, the Campaigning Just Has to
Wait
09/24/2004 10:03 PM
Hurricanes have crippled the campaign season in Florida, and candidates are only now starting to make up for lost time.

Bush campaigning by bus? In the Internet
age? (AFP)


Bush campaigning by bus? In the Internet
age? (AFP)
05/07/2004 04:30 PM
AFP - US President George W. Bush courted voters in two heartland states Friday on a bus -- a state-of-the-art, specially equipped, run-a-war-from-the-road bus, but a bus nevertheless.

Kerry suspends campaigning


Kerry suspends campaigning 06/06/2004 11:12 AM

Astroturf Campaigning From the Left


Astroturf Campaigning From the Left 09/04/2004 03:17 PM
if I were an editorial page editor I'd be watching out for -- and would not print -- letters using the wording from this page. Astroturfing should be no more acceptable from the left than the right.

Poll campaigning kept on hold


Poll campaigning kept on hold 04/04/2005 02:17 AM
General election campaigning by all parties remains suspended out of respect for Pope John Paul II.

Election campaigning kept on hold


Election campaigning kept on hold 04/04/2005 10:40 AM
Election campaigning remains suspended out of respect for the Pope - after Tony Blair delays naming election day.

UK election campaigning resumes


UK election campaigning resumes 04/09/2005 03:26 AM
Election campaigning resumes but is expected to stay low-key, with party leaders at royal wedding celebrations.

Microsoft VP stresses support for Asia's
gaming ecosystem more Infotech


Microsoft VP stresses support for Asia's
gaming ecosystem more Infotech
03/28/2005 12:56 PM
INQ7.net Mar 28 2005 4:54PM GMT

Campaigning ends for Cyprus plan


Campaigning ends for Cyprus plan 04/23/2004 05:31 AM
Campaigning ends in Cyprus ahead of Saturday's referendum on a UN plan to reunify the island.

Judge: Cookie Gesture Wasn't Campaigning
(AP)


Judge: Cookie Gesture Wasn't Campaigning
(AP)
01/22/2004 02:10 AM
AP - Carson's cookie case crumbled.

MPs start campaigning website for
anti-CAP protests


MPs start campaigning website for
anti-CAP protests
06/01/2004 01:05 AM
PublicTechnology.net Jun 1 2004 5:27AM GMT

Drug abuse campaigning actor dies


Drug abuse campaigning actor dies 03/24/2005 05:20 AM
Actor David Kossoff, best known for his role in TV series The Larkins, dies aged 85 after a battle with liver cancer.

LibDem MP praises campaigning website
justice4daniel.co.uk


LibDem MP praises campaigning website
justice4daniel.co.uk
09/20/2004 04:34 AM
PublicTechnology.net Sep 20 2004 7:50AM GMT

Kerry, Campaigning in Virginia, Urges
Extension of 9/11 Panel


Kerry, Campaigning in Virginia, Urges
Extension of 9/11 Panel
07/27/2004 02:37 PM
John Kerry seemed intent on not letting President Bush gain any momentum on issues raised by the report of the bipartisan 9/11 panel.

Bush to Step Up Campaigning on Economy,
Iraq (Reuters)


Bush to Step Up Campaigning on Economy,
Iraq (Reuters)
06/13/2004 09:23 PM
Reuters - President Bush's reelection campaign, in a tacit acknowledgment it is having trouble getting its message through, said on Sunday it would step up efforts to convince voters the economy and handover plans for Iraq are on track.

Bush Revels in Jobs Report in Midwestern
Campaigning


Bush Revels in Jobs Report in Midwestern
Campaigning
05/07/2004 05:43 PM
President Bush traveled the heartland today and seized upon the economic good news about job growth that he received.

FEC Signals Light Hand On Internet
Campaigning (washingtonpost.com)


FEC Signals Light Hand On Internet
Campaigning (washingtonpost.com)
03/25/2005 06:36 AM
FEC Signals Light Hand On Internet Campaigning .. So far, so good

washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A61433-2005Mar23.html
track this site | 3 links


"The Importance of RSS"


"The Importance of RSS" 06/22/2005 02:21 AM

The Importance of Place


The Importance of Place 06/17/2005 03:28 PM
Place, the place we call home, the place we belong to, defines us. When we have lost our sense of place, we have lost our soul.
geese
Last Christmas I wrote a piece about homelessness, and suggested that the homeless and the addicted are a perfect metaphor for all of us living in modern civilization. I wrote:

Civilization is our Pusher. It's The Man who keeps us hooked on consumption and debt, The Man who holds the key to our prison and gives us our illusory rush of elation when we buy and use His addictive product. The Man who seduces us back even when we have decided that life in His prison is insane, self-abusive, worse than death. The monkey is our addiction, without which we cannot live. And we wander the streets of civilization's artificial world in a daze, never really home, wondering what is missing, why we feel so lost. Civilization is our ghetto, a whole world of six billion homeless people, setting fires on every corner for warmth, ganging up and stealing everything we can get our hands on to pawn for our fixes, breeding babies already drug-addicted at birth.

So the next time you see a homeless person, or an addict, don't be frightened, angry, or filled with pathos. You are looking in the mirror. It is we who are homeless, and addicted. What will it take before we break the habit, walk away from The Man, and find our way home?

On another occasion I wrote:

Know your place. We are all part of a web, a mosaic, and we all travel, but ultimately we have our own place, our 'home'. If you're not totally connected with everything and every creature that is part of your place, then it isn't your place. If you don't have a place, then you don't yet really exist. A house is not a place, though if it's open it can be part of one. A mind is not a place.

greenturtle

The wonderful books of biologist Bernd Heinrich are about birds and animals, but most of all they are about the places that the creatures he studies call home, and about the importance of those places. In his latest book The Geese of Beaver Bog he talks about another biologist, David Ehrenfeld, who writes about animals and the importance of place to them. I've ordered Ehrenfeld's 1994 book Beginning Again, but I've already read the amazing first chapter from Amazon's 'search inside' page for the book. The chapter is called 'Places' and here is an extract that shook me to the core of my being:

Because the turtles [I was studying in Costa Rica] come out to nest after dark, much of my work was done at night. There was a great deal of waiting between turtles, plenty of time to sit on a driftwood log and think. In the first years of my research I was often the only one on the beach for miles. After ten or twenty minutes of sitting without using my flashlight, my eyes adapted to the dark and I could make out forms against the brown-black sand: the beach plum and coconut palm silhouettes in back, the flicker of the surf in front, sometimes even the shadowy outline of a trailing railroad vine or the scurry of a ghost crab at my feet. The air was heavy and damp with a distinctive primal smell that I can remember but not describe. The rhythmic roar of the surf a few feet away never ceased -- my favourite sound. I hear it as I write in my landlocked office in New Jersey. And then, with ponderous, dramatic slowness, a giant turtle would emerge from the sea.

Usually I would see the track first, a vivid black line standing out against the lesser blackness, like the swath of a bulldozer. If I was closer, I could hear the animal's deep hiss of breath and the sounds of her undershell scraping over logs. If there was a moon, I might see the light glistening off the parabolic curve of the still wet shell. Size at night is hard to determine: even the sprightly 180-pounders, probably nesting for the first time, looked big when nearby, but the 400-pound ancients, with shells nearly four feet long, were colossal in the darkness. Then when the excavations of the body pit and egg cavity were done, if I slowly parted the hind flippers of the now-oblivious turtle, I could watch the perfect white spheres falling and falling into the flask-shaped pit scooped into the soft sand.

Falling as they have fallen for a hundred million years, with the same slow cadence, always shielded from the rain or stars by the same massive bulk with the beaked head and the same large, myopic eyes rimmed with crusts of sand washed out by tears. Minutes and hours, days and months dissolve into eons. I am on an Oligocene beach, an Eocene beach, a Cretaceous beach -- the scene is the same. It is night. The turtles are coming back, always back; I hear a deep hiss of breath and catch a glint of wet shell as the continents slide and crash, the oceans form and grow. The turtles were coming here before here was here. At Tortuguero I learned the meaning of place, and began to understand how it is bound up with time.

Ehrenfeld goes on to describe the cruel and careless treatment of the turtles by local fishermen, and how the witnessing of such atrocities by the President of Costa Rica so enraged him that he took steps to protect the green turtle's Tortuguero breeding ground in perpetuity.

Often, at night, I sit out on the back hill behind our house, overlooking the 1100-acre Albion Hills Conservation Area, with Chelsea the dog, just paying attention to the sounds and the smells and the shadowy sights in the moonlight. I soon forget there is a house behind me, and behind it a community of 34 houses interspersed with wilderness wetlands, and beyond it a city of 6 million that is forecast to grow to as many as 40 million by the end of this century. To us for a few moments there is only the wilderness, the sounds of owls and wood frogs and wind through the trees that have been here for a hundred thousand millennia -- the dogwood and the balsam poplar and the maple and the trembling aspen and the white birch and white cedar and bur oak and ironwood and pussywillow, and the smells of rain and muskrat and decaying leaves. And I long to see and feel how this, my adopted home, this place that has welcomed me and allowed me to be a part of it and to share in its wonders, looked before man arrived to change it quickly and utterly. For even here, where nature is respected and where the actions of conservation authorities and lack (for now) of development stress has allowed some of this land to remain unaltered, and some more to start the slow path back to something like what it was like before we arrived, it still bears little resemblance, to the trained eye, to what it must have been, in the eons of silence and darkness before man arrived with his noise and artificial light and carelessness and altered it beyond recognition.

If I am to believe the biologists, the area I call home once probably looked like these photos:

localforest

I can imagine living in a place like this, but only because I do live in a place vaguely like this. If I were to have spent my whole life living in a city, or even on a farm, I don't think I could imagine it. And even if I could, I don't think I could conceive of it as my place, the place to which I belonged. While this is my adopted home, it is only, naturally, the place of a rare and scattered minority of humans, the First Nations, who learned, in ways that we never have and which I cannot hope to comprehend, to live with the bears and wildcats and mosquitos and black flies and bitterly cold winters and lack of year-round food supplies. Without my protection from these dangers and discomforts, I could never call this place home.

So in order to make places like this habitable to us, as we destroyed the places in the cradles of human civilization that were habitable to us naturally, we had to reform them with our cities and farms, until they became unrecognizable, nothing like the pictures above -- terraformed, civilized, converted to a dreadful sameness all over the planet. These cities and farms were as alien to us as they were to the creatures that retreated in their wake. When we try to imagine how bizarre it would be to live on a space station, or on the moon, we should consider that we have already made a much more profound and barren adaptation here on our suffering planet.

But these cities and farms are not natural places for humans. They are not where we lived and thrived for three million years before their invention. Then we lived in the warm climates of Africa, of South Asia and of the Southern edge of Europe, when all those lands were heavily forested. We were and are, like all primates, creatures of the forest, and specifically of the tropical forest. And while three million years is but an instant compared to the hundred million years that the giant green turtles of Tortuguero have called that place home, that tropical forest is still the place our DNA tells us is our home, our place.

Most of that tropical forest is now destroyed, cleared for cities and farms, and we have been gone from there so long that the thought of returning there even if there was room for us, which there is not, is too terrifying to countenance. So we moved from there to less hospitable and more dangerous lands and remade them into cities and farms as well: Since we could not live in these hostile environments we destroyed them and built ourselves artificial landscapes, vast alien prisons which protected us from the terrors of nature and weather but detached us completely from any sense of place.

So now we are all homeless, six billion of us living in an artificial world of our own making. We have destroyed our own three-million year home and most of the homes and places of every other species on Earth, making them mostly homeless, too, those that we haven't yet made extinct.

I bow my head to the turtles of Tortuguero. They are so much wiser, so much more alive than we shallow newcomers to this planet can ever hope to be. They know the importance of place. They know how to live as part of a world to which all life on this planet once belonged. They show respect for the grand design of our fragile, troubled world, and know their part in it.

While we are merely astonishingly fierce, wondrously adaptable, utterly homeless, arrogant beyond reason, hopelessly lost and addicted to the perpetuation of our own folly.

Importance of Brand


Importance of Brand 02/10/2004 02:45 AM
As has been reported everywhere this morning, Mozilla has renamed Firebird. The new Firefox trademark is the result of a naming conflict with another open source project, and the process has been written up by those involved: Ben Goodger,...

Importance of a PPC Bid Manager


Importance of a PPC Bid Manager 11/25/2002 10:07 PM
Stickysauce Nov 25 2002 9:20PM ET

TPM on the importance of words


TPM on the importance of words 04/15/2004 10:30 AM
This is precisely the sort of inane mumbojumbo that will -- perhaps literally -- get us all killed. ...The importance of words is a conceit of wordsmiths, certainly. But they are important -- especially when they bleed through into thought and action, which happens more often than you'd think.,

TPM is becoming almost too widely-read to be postworthy, but Josh really puts things into perspective with this post. For an example of what all this jingoistic gibberish can result in, see the post below it.

The importance of being stateful


The importance of being stateful 04/22/2004 11:52 AM

Grok Description matches for Labour stresses importance of web for campaigning
GrokA matches for Labour stresses importance of web for campaigning

Labour stresses importance of web for campaigning

The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry:

















Also check out:


Grok

Ipod Porn on the
Rise

Brief Abstract of
Wikipedia's
Mesothelioma Cancer
page

Get first aid
instructions in your
cell phone

IE is crap
JSPWiki gains
podcasting support

HSE has had 2
million enquiries
since July 96. Good
ROI?

SEC focusing on drug
makers

Battle of the
portable consoles

Gates remains atop
list of richest

Telstra kicks off
'witch hunt' over
leak: Union

ASIC warns of US
'wrong number' phone
scam

Car Bomb in Mosul,
Mortar Attack in
Baghdad (Reuters)

Tropical Storm
Jeanne Weakens Over
North Florida
(Reuters)

Bush, Kerry Rev Up
for Campaign
Face-Off (AP)

Jeanne Leaves Swath
of Destruction in
Fla. (AP)

Sims 2 plays with
life addicts

Lib Dems say police
have worse mobile
technology than AA

Fertilize Like the
Pros!

Guide to Venture
Capital in European
Biopharma

Baxa to Feature
Exacta-Med® and
PhaSeal® Systems For
Safe Handling and
Administration of
Fluid Drugs at the
Pharmaceutical
Marketing Congress
in Philadelphia

Miami’s Real Life
Apprentice Begins
Search for a Mentor
and New Career!

Dilbert for 27 Sep
2004

Wow.
excursus:
Dictionary.com Word
of the Day

LynuxWorks
Introduces Advanced
Eclipse Tool
Platform for Next
Generation Embedded
Designs

State-of-the Art
Heart Auscultation
Diagnosis Tools are
Highlighted on World
Heart Day

InterUnity Group
announces new
research on
Uninterruptible
Power Supply (UPS),
Power Conditioning,
and Computer Related
Air Conditioning
decisions.

U.S. Graphic Design
Businesses Bill $5.8
Billion in 2004; New
Study Profiles
Industry’s 16,000+
Businesses, and
80,000 Freelancers,
and $400+ Million in
Annual Capital
Purchases

Northern
Constabulary and
Scottish Mountain
Rescue to Save Lives
with Bulk SMS
Software

Celtic Inns saves
80% of its Direct
Marketing Costs with
New Initiative

Crude Dick
Big Honkin' Mushroom
Lawn Chair
RIP, Nest interior
design magazine

Filesharing-savvy CD
promo strategy for
Green Day

GPs resign from
hospital cover

Post offices take on
police role

Football: Moyes
salutes players

Golf: Singh sets
earnings record

Tennis: Henman slams
schedule

China leaders warn
of corruption

Aslef set for
sackings showdown

Pakistan al-Qaeda
suspect killed

Bomb threat jet
given all-clear

Combat In High C:
Microsoft Vs. Apple

riot 1ds-20040924
Copland 0.8.0
PlayStation 2 Gets
Stunning New Look

WIN: Burnout 3:
Takedown For Xbox

PlayStation Portable
price questions

HP Deals to Aid RFID
Push Into Retail,
Manufacturing

Preview: Ubuntu
Linux 4.10

ColorWare offers 4G
iPods in 20
different colors

South Americans make
offer to EU on trade

Hurricane Jeanne
Damages Shuttle
Building

what is grok?