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Good Intentions don't always equal good results







Good Intentions don't always equal good
results

Good Intentions don't always equal good
results
04/18/2004 05:43 PM

It would seem that in my life when I intend to do something that is when everything will surely do...




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Good Intentions don't always equal good results

Grok Headline matches for Good Intentions don't always equal good results

Interoperability Summit: Good
intentions, little action (XML.com)


Interoperability Summit: Good
intentions, little action (XML.com)
07/15/2002 03:36 PM

Interoperability Summit: Good
Intentions, Little Action


Interoperability Summit: Good
Intentions, Little Action
07/10/2002 06:53 PM
Alan Kotok reports from the second interoperability summit organized by e-business standards groups. He finds that it's still early days for e-business interoperability, and many more players need to come to the table.

""I'd just like to get together with a
guy from time to time just to -- just to
play. I'd like him to be, uh, in very
good shape, flat stomach, good chest,
good arms, well-hung, cut, uh, just get
naked, play, see what happens, nothing
real heavy ..."


""I'd just like to get together with a
guy from time to time just to -- just to
play. I'd like him to be, uh, in very
good shape, flat stomach, good chest,
good arms, well-hung, cut, uh, just get
naked, play, see what happens, nothing
real heavy ..."
08/31/2004 08:45 PM

In Search of Good Results


In Search of Good Results 07/05/2004 07:46 AM
In Search of Good Results
http://www.emarketer.com/Article.aspx?1002877

A recent survey by FIND/SVP found that 84% of business executives queried thought Web searches using commercial search engines took longer than they should because they tended to deliver too many irrelevant results, resulting in an estimated loss of $31 billion in lost productivity. In addition, 74% expressed doubts that the results were reliable and 39% felt that information found online is outdated. Despite their reservations, 67% indicated it would be difficult or impossible to do their jobs without Web-based search tools, with 28% reporting they spend between 6 and 10 hours a week researching online. The most sought after information was financial information and reports, followed by information on competitors. "The commercial search market is dominated by search engines that must target the broadest consumer audience possible, with the broadest scope of content, in order to sell advertisements for any and every product and service possible," says a META Group VP. "The commercial search market has barely begun to address the untapped demand for highly specialized and screened content and we believe this market is poised for growth in the next three to five years."

Nevada E-Voting With Paper Backup
Primary Gets Good Results


Nevada E-Voting With Paper Backup
Primary Gets Good Results
09/08/2004 12:32 PM
Back in May we noted that election officials who didn't want to use e-voting machines with a paper trail were hoping Nevada's use of the machines would fail. Nevada was the first state to require that e-voting machines have a paper trail, and yesterday the primary in Nevada used those machines and very few problems were reported. There were, as always, some technical problems here or there, but unlike the other e-voting machines, at least people could check to see if their vote was actually recorded. Looks like those election officials hoping the Nevada experiment would fail should start shopping for new e-voting machines. If they're in California, they might want to avoid Diebold, which doesn't have the greatest reputation in the state these days.

Good idea and a good service. Can anyone
say how can I register to gmail, and if
attchment size is large then


Good idea and a good service. Can anyone
say how can I register to gmail, and if
attchment size is large then
07/13/2004 01:33 AM
TechTree Jul 13 2004 5:44AM GMT

KILLER, COWARD, CON-MAN GOOD RIDDANCE,
GIPPER ...MORE PROOF ONLY THE GOOD DIE
YOUNG


KILLER, COWARD, CON-MAN GOOD RIDDANCE,
GIPPER ...MORE PROOF ONLY THE GOOD DIE
YOUNG
06/08/2004 05:47 AM
KILLER, COWARD, CON-MAN GOOD RIDDANCE, GIPPER ... MORE PROOF ONLY THE GOOD DIE YOUNG .. How People View The Dead Is Shaped By Personal Experiences .. Greg Palast on the Reagan "Legacy" 6/7 .. And another

gregpalast.com/detail.cfm?artid=336&row=0
track this site | 9 links


Calling Nurse Google Patients are taking
advantage of health Web sites - some
good, some not so good


Calling Nurse Google Patients are taking
advantage of health Web sites - some
good, some not so good
06/05/2005 11:44 PM
Gadsdentimes.com - Sun Jun 5, 12:53 pm GMT

Does A Good Game Make A Good Movie Idea?


Does A Good Game Make A Good Movie Idea? 04/24/2004 04:00 PM

Strengthen The Good: Strengthening The
Good: The Gulf Coast Community
Foundation Of Venice Hurricane Charley
Disaster Relief Fund


Strengthen The Good: Strengthening The
Good: The Gulf Coast Community
Foundation Of Venice Hurricane Charley
Disaster Relief Fund
08/23/2004 06:46 AM
Strengthen The Good: The Gulf Coast Community Foundation Of Venice Hurricane Charley Disaster Relief Fund

strengthenthegood.com/archives/2004/08/strengthening_t.html
track this site | 3 links


Good enough for the White House, but not
good enough for the bedroom.


Good enough for the White House, but not
good enough for the bedroom.
05/17/2004 11:55 PM
"The sacred institution of marriage should not be redefined by a few activist judges," said the President who was appointed by five activist Supreme Court Justices.

The man who, between the two major candidates in 2000, got the fewer amount of votes went on to affirm that "all Americans have a right to be heard in this debate."

Unitarianism: good enough for two
presidents, not good enough for Texas


Unitarianism: good enough for two
presidents, not good enough for Texas
05/19/2004 02:47 AM
The state of Texas has denied Unitarians tax-exempt religious status because the church "does not have one system of belief." As Julia notes, Presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams were sufficiently convinced of the Unitarians' religiosity that they actually were Unitarians.
Never before -- not in this state or any other -- has a government agency denied Unitarians tax-exempt status because of the group's religious philosophy, church officials say. Strayhorn's ruling clearly infringes upon religious liberties, said Dan Althoff, board president for the Denison congregation that was rejected for tax exemption by the comptroller's office.
Link (via Electrolite)

What's good for General Motors is good
for America


What's good for General Motors is good
for America
03/23/2005 10:53 PM
GM in trouble: "If you erased the company name from the balance sheet and showed it to a forensic accountant, the recommended treatment would probably be to seek protection from creditors by filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. " GM's troubles are as much a result of the exploding costs of health care as they are due to the company's dropping market share. In Canada increasing health care costs (PDF with many charts) are taking a greater and greater share of government expenditures. In the US it's hurting big employers and regular people. But either way the problem doesn't seem likely to get better any time soon.

Site Maps : Is Good Enough for
Google.com, Good Enough For Me?


Site Maps : Is Good Enough for
Google.com, Good Enough For Me?
10/30/2003 10:22 AM

When it comes to wireless security, good
enough is simply not good


When it comes to wireless security, good
enough is simply not good
09/17/2004 10:38 AM

Likely Bedfellows - If it's good enough
for 60 Minutes, it's good enough for the
DNC


Likely Bedfellows - If it's good enough
for 60 Minutes, it's good enough for the
DNC
09/15/2004 03:40 PM
NBC Asks DNC to Cease and Desist 'Fortunate Son' Ad .. asking them to pull .. this current flap .. NBC's lawyers

weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/624qu rho.asp
track this site | 5 links


Good Teeth, Good Health


Good Teeth, Good Health 05/24/2004 08:17 PM
These two books deal with teeth from different angles.

Shark Tank: What good is a good name if
you can't use it?


Shark Tank: What good is a good name if
you can't use it?
06/05/2005 10:55 PM
It's the late 1970s, and this pilot fish works as a teller for a big regional bank. That means he's all too familiar with a recurring problem generated by the techs at headquarters.

Top Ten Ideas of '04: "What Once Was
Good--or Good Enough--No Longer Is."


Top Ten Ideas of '04: "What Once Was
Good--or Good Enough--No Longer Is."
01/04/2005 04:46 AM
"Decline in quality caused by staying the same: In the commentary and opinion category, standards have gone up because of competition from the blogs and other venues, especially the political mags. Compare 10 minutes of scrolling with Atrios to 10 minutes with a Richard Cohen column."

Good data needs good plans


Good data needs good plans 07/30/2004 08:31 AM
Express Computer India Jul 30 2004 12:31PM GMT

Picture quality is not very much good.
LCD is also not good


Picture quality is not very much good.
LCD is also not good
09/16/2004 05:48 AM
TechTree Sep 16 2004 9:03AM GMT

Good for you, good for Microsoft - here
comes WinXP SP2


Good for you, good for Microsoft - here
comes WinXP SP2
05/13/2004 12:14 PM
You know it makes sense...

Good Not Good Enough at Dell


Good Not Good Enough at Dell 05/14/2004 09:10 AM
TheStreet.com May 14 2004 1:43PM GMT

Is THe iBook Too Good For Its Own Good?


Is THe iBook Too Good For Its Own Good? 01/10/2004 02:13 PM
The iBook is now so close to the more expensive, high-end PowerBook, it's going to be harder to persuade buyers to spring for a machine that can cost nearly twice as much. By Chris Cobbs (Orlando Sentinel via MyAppleMenu)

"If it's good once, it's good three
times!"


"If it's good once, it's good three
times!"
01/05/2005 02:01 PM
Same song, different lyrics. Mikey Smith put out an MP3 of two Nickelback hits, one in each channel, showing them to be basically the same song (original thread). This All Things Considered story shows he's been on the project since then, and the problem is more widespread than it seems.

This will be a good comic... good
enough?


This will be a good comic... good
enough?
01/05/2005 06:52 PM
ComicsFilter (but bear with me): Frank Miller & Jim Lee will be the writer and artist, respectively, of All-Star Batman and Robin, a new miniseries intended to make the characters simple, interesting, and easy to follow after decades of backstory. Grant Morrison & Frank Quitely were announced to be doing the same thing on All-Star Superman, and any comics fan will tell you that these four guys are some of the best in the entire field. Between these two projects, DC Comics most likely has the top-selling books in the tiny comics industry sewn up for most of 2005, which is reason enough to publish them.

But there's also a question for non-comics readers here at MeFi: DC are really doing this for you. They want new readers (best-selling comics are lucky to top 150,000 copies these days), and they think publishing accessible comic books linked to the release of large movies (The Christopher Nolan film Batman Begins, based in part on Frank Miller's Batman: Year One, will be released roughly alongside All-Star Batman & Robin) is the way to do it. But is there a snowball's chance in hell you'd read something like this? Would your kids, if you have them, be interested, do you think? (Frank Miller, it bears noting, is also the creator and co-director of Sin City, a film you might've seen a preview for recently -- truly insane cast.)

Enigma Software Group's SoftVote Polling
Update - SoftVote Says Good-Bye to Ralph
Nader in the Polling Results


Enigma Software Group's SoftVote Polling
Update - SoftVote Says Good-Bye to Ralph
Nader in the Polling Results
08/16/2004 02:28 AM
This is a weekly update on Enigma Softwares' SoftVote application for online polling. This week features the removal of Ralph Nader from the candidate selections per the American voters. [PRWEB Aug 16, 2004]

Strengthen The Good: Strengthen The Good
In Florida


Strengthen The Good: Strengthen The Good
In Florida
08/16/2004 08:37 AM
initial call for help .. Strengthen the Good .. has already posted

strengthenthegood.com/archives/2004/08/strengthen_the.html
track this site | 3 links


Do good on the web


Do good on the web 09/06/2004 09:47 PM
Downing Street Says. 'Every day the British Prime Minister's official spokesman briefs a small coterie of political journalists'. This site feeds you summaries and lets you comment. (It's amazing what you can do with a quarter of a £mill chuc ked at you by John Prescott)

Other related worthy web projects: liftshare.com, timebank.org.uk, publicwhip.org.uk. And they want to 'identify, support and develop internet based projects that have real world impacts at very low cost per person helped'.

The "Good War"


The "Good War" 12/19/2004 03:40 PM
In the years after World War I, the United States fell into the Red Scare of 1919-1920. Following upon the Russian Revolution, a series of terrorist bombings in the United States set off a national panic against "radical" elements who were seen as threatening to overthrow the government. Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer established the General Intelligence within the Bureau of Investigation and appointed a young J. Edgar Hoover to lead the charge. Hoover unleashed a horde of undercover informants and he and Palmer then launched a series of raids in which thousands of aliens were indiscriminately rounded up and arrested for suspected radical activities. More than a thousand of these individuals were quickly deported. By 1921, the nation began to come to its senses and increasingly realized that it had grossly overreacted both during World War I and the Red Scare. In 1922, Attorney General Harlan Fiske Stone reined in Hoover and warned of the dangers of "secret police." By 1923, all persons who had been convicted under the Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918 had been released from prison. Thereafter, they were all granted amnesty on the premise that the nation had violated their rights under the First Amendment. From the mid-1920s to the early 1930s, free speech was increasingly celebrated in the United States by the press, educators, civil libertarians, and political leaders as a fundamental American value. Pressure on this new consensus soon began to build, however, as new radical voices began to be heard during the Depression from both the left (the Communist Party of the United States) and the right (the German-American Bund). By the late 1930s, government investigating committees had begun to look into these new "subversive" organizations. Then, on December 7, 1941, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Unlike World War I, the enemy had directly attacked the United States. The public rallied to the nation's its defense. Prior calls for isolationism disappeared after Pearl Harbor, and there was almost no dissent during the "Good War." (If you're interested in the dissent that did exist during World War II, and especially the government's prosecution of "Nazi sympathizers," see pages 252-280 in Perilous Times.) The major civil liberties issue in World War II arose out of the internment of 120,000 individuals of Japanese descent, two-thirds of whom were American citizens, representing 90% of all American citizens of Japanese ancestry. It is useful to compare how the United States dealt with individuals of German and Italian ancestry. All German and Italian citizens who were in the United States during World War II (that is, citizens of those nations) were reviewed by the FBI and military authorities. If they were determined to be dangerous to the national security, they were detained. If they were found not to be dangerous (as was the case for the vast majority), they were allowed to remain in the U.S. under relatively modest restrictions. Of course, no effort was made to round up American citizens of German or Italian origin. In the weeks after Pearl Harbor, there was no call for the internment of persons of Japanese ancestry. But gradually (false) rumors spread along the West Coast about planned espionage and sabotage, and against a background of long-standing hostility to persons of Asian descent, many citizens became increasingly alarmed and angry about having to live near people who looked like the enemy and might share their aims. When asked why Japanese-Americans should be treated differently from German and Italian Americans, California Attorney General Earl Warren explained that it's possible to tell a loyal German or Italian from a disloyal one, but that such a determination was simply not possible with those of the Japanese race. As the clamor for internment grew, it was fed by opportunistic politicians and hysterical newspaper accounts. General DeWitt, who was in charge of the United States's Western Command, finally recommended that all persons of Japanese ancestry, including American citizens, should leave their homes and be relocated to concentration camps. Although J. Edgard Hoover vehemently opposed this recommendation on the ground that it was unnecessary, excessive, and entirely the product of public hysteria, and Attorney General Francis Biddle opposed it as unconstitutional and immoral, FDR nonetheless issued Executive Order 9066 in February 1942. Under this order, all persons of Japanese ancestry in California, Arizona, Washington and Oregon, men, women, and children, regardless of age, were ordered to abandon their possessions (except those they could carry) and were transported to "internment" camps, where they remained behind barbed wire for almost three years. Why did FDR do this? Certainly, it was not because there was a military necessity. Rather, it was a political decision. FDR did not want to lose the support of the western states in the 1942 congressional elections. So, here's a question for you: Suppose the United States is hit with six terrorist attacks on the scale of 9/11 in the next three weeks. Suppose some of the terrorists are foreigners and some are American citizens who are Muslim. Suppose the Bush administration orders the detention of all non-citizen Muslims in the United States and the temporary detention of all Muslims who are citizens of the United States, at least to determine which may pose a threat to the security of the nation. Would you support this? Can you distinguish it from the World War II internment?

Good and bad


Good and bad 04/28/2004 06:09 AM
CNET Asia Apr 28 2004 10:25AM GMT

Still good to go


Still good to go 09/23/2004 12:38 AM
Usatoday.com - Wed Sep 22, 08:18 pm GMT

When it's bad, it's good


When it's bad, it's good 08/27/2004 01:22 PM
Today's post about Opening Hooks reminded me to search the net for this year's winner of the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest. Like a late night horror movie, it's so bad it's good: She resolved to end the love affair with Ramon tonight . . . summarily, like Martha Stewart ripping the sand vein out of a shrimp's tail . . . though the term "love affair" now struck her as a ridiculous euphemism . . . not unlike "sand vein," which is after all an intestine, not a vein . . . and that tarry substance inside certainly isn't sand . . . and that brought her back to Ramon. -- Dave Zobel The other winners are in the same vein and worth reading as well....

Good Nap


Good Nap 04/07/2005 12:06 AM

I had a good nap today...
because I needed an excuse to post this picture


it is very good


it is very good 09/11/2004 04:04 AM
TechTree Sep 11 2004 6:59AM GMT

Isn't it good?


Isn't it good? 03/13/2003 10:24 AM
Thanks Joelle *mwah* Pretty much says it all Off to my bath now.........

We're doing this for your own good


We're doing this for your own good 08/27/2004 05:14 PM

I love it when iChat blocks you from talking. You might have two coworkers going in separate windows, conducting actual work conversations, then you get blocked with this:

The AIM service could not send the message: You have sent too much data too quickly. Please wait a little while before sending more.

I call it the "Shut the fuck up for a second" feature. I know that real AIM clients used to have limits to keep you from crapflooding users, but iChat seems to invoke it under normal circumstances every few days for me (it helps if you're a fast typist).

I hate when software knows what is best for me, and I have no say in the matter.


Doing Well By Doing Good


Doing Well By Doing Good 08/15/2004 01:49 PM
The Chronicle has a nice in-depth interview with Craig Newmark, done prior to eBay investment. In it, he talks about doing well by doing good: Q: Your site is one of the few that remains true to some of the...

A good fit


A good fit 08/15/2004 01:28 PM
kyinthebox-08 BB pal Vann Hall points us to this brilliant KY Jelly advertisement that, unfortunately, is not officially sanctioned by Johnson & Johnson. It should be though! Link (via Adrants)
Grok Description matches for Good Intentions don't always equal good results
GrokA matches for Good Intentions don't always equal good results

Good Intentions don't always equal good results

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