Add a Bible search to Firefox

I was looking up a Bible passage for my last post and found this great list of plug-ins for Firefox.
As you may know, Firefox has a pull down menu for searching right from the tool bar. A number of search engines have already been installed.
But now you can also add searches from Biblegateway.com. You can do a generic search with your default Bible translation, or you can choose from nine other versions including the NIV, The Message, King Jimmy, New King Jimmy and others.
Super easy and very handy.
install your preferred Bible search

Help Wanted: Man seeking adventure in life. Tired of ho-hum working conditions.

I thought this was a very interesting Meta thread: How do I get over my laziness, procrastination, and foot-dragging in my office job?

I have fallen into an embarrassingly lazy state. I turn things in at the last minute or late. I have come to regard almost all deadlines as fuzzy. I still make the major deadlines, and I’m still doing my job, but I tend not to complete non-essential job duties unless someone chases me.
I’ve always been an over achiever in the past I am horrified to realize that I’ve become mediocre in my job rather than excellent. It’s making me feel awful about myself, and I really don’t want to be the slacker everybody hates working with.

There are lots of interesting ideas in the responses — from setting a 15-20 minute timer to keeping a personal journal.
One of the challenges we discussed Wednesday morning at our men’s breakfast was “overcoming the mundane or the routine.”
John Eldredge writes a lot about that in wild at heart and suggests that men really need adventure in their life. Men need a battle to fight, a beauty to rescue and an adventure to love.
I wish I had underlined more points that stood out to me in the book. For some reason the only one I did underline really doesn’t have much to do with this topic. But the more I think about the book after reading it the more the truths seem to resonate within me.
“The tragedy of life is what dies inside a man while he lives.” – Albert Schweitzer
Eldredge talks a lot about our “inner man” that we all strive to be as young boys and how somewhere along the way we lose that. We end up working an 8 to 5 job in a cubicle dreaming of the world outside.
I think about Wilson and how he’s 150% boy at almost the age of 3. He’s got his trucks, tractors, Star Wars toys and he’s always out seeking adventure.
He’s constantly flipping over the couch, running through the house, jumping on the trampoline, or maybe even climbing ladders on to the roof of his second story home.
I think most boys are like that. Maybe not to that extreme but we all dream of being John Wayne, Wyatt Earp, the Lone Ranger or Buzz Lightyear. We want to be the hero.

Yet somewhere along the line we lose that.
Somewhere we lose our desire to be William Wallace and take the “safe alternative.”
Eldredge suggests we’re wired to take on a fight and be a hero because we’re made in the image of God.

Now — is Jesus more like Mother Teresa or William Wallace? The answer is… it depends. If you’re a leper, an outcast, a pariah of society whom no one has ever touched because you are “unclean,” if all you ever longed for was just one kind word, then Christ is the incarnation of tender mercy. He reaches out and touches you. On the other hand, if you’re a Pharisee, one of those self-appointed doctrine police… watch out. On more than one occasion Jesus “picks a fight” with those notorious hypocrites.

Look at Luke 13. The Pharisees try to accuse Jesus of being sinful because he healed a leper on the Sabbath.
Does Jesus simply turn the other cheek? No — Jesus doesn’t walk away.

But Jesus shot back, “You frauds! Each Sabbath every one of you regularly unties your cow or donkey from its stall, leads it out for water, and thinks nothing of it. So why isn’t it all right for me to untie this daughter of Abraham and lead her from the stall where Satan has had her tied these eighteen years?”
When he put it that way, his critics were left looking quite silly and redfaced. The congregation was delighted and cheered him on. (Luke 13:15-17)

Jesus draws the enemy out, exposes him and then shames him. He puts up a fight.
Eldredge also suggests that if you doubt God loves wildness, spend a night in the wilderness… alone.

Take a walk out in a thunderstorm. Go for a swim with a pod of killer whales. Get a bull moose mad at you. Whose idea was this, anyway? Most of the earth is not safe, but it’s good.

God made all of this and pronounced it good. Eldredge says it’s His way of letting us know He prefers adventure, danger, risk, the element of surprise.
I think I’ve written long enough — for now.
But here’s to adventure and here’s to finding your passion groove in life.
What are you doing to find your passion groove?

Firefox shortcuts

Get Firefox
Ureeka! I’ve found three new shortcuts for Firefox. Yeah. I know. You probably already new about them… but I didn’t. So now the angels are singing from above like they did when you discovered them.

CTRL+T opens a new tab in Firefox. (Cmd+T on Macs)
CTRL+Shift+T opens the last closed tab!
And CTRL+L moves your cursor to the address bar.

Amazing!
Ok you can stop singing now. No seriously. You can stop.

Via: Lifehacker


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Burnam files House Bill 1000 to create sales tax holiday for energy efficient products

(Austin, TX) – Representative Lon Burnam, D – Fort Worth, has filed HB 1000 that will establish sales tax exemptions on certain energy efficient appliances for three weekends each year. These exemptions would apply to those products designated as “Energy Star qualified” as defined by the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the US Department of Energy.
“These products use less energy which protects the environment and saves consumers money,” said Burnam. “Our state should recognize the benefit of these products to our communities and should reward consumers who invest in Energy Star appliances with a chance to purchase the products tax-free.”
The bill will grant tax exemptions on clothes washers, ceiling fans, dehumidifiers, dishwashers, incandescent or fluorescent light bulbs, and programmable thermostats, as well as refrigerators priced at less than $2,000 and air conditioners costing less than $6,000.
The sales tax holidays would correspond with three high-energy consumption weekends in the summer months. Memorial Day, Fourth of July, and the sales tax holiday on clothing and footwear will be Energy Star tax-free weekends under this bill.
“We no longer have room for the ignorant assumption that there is energy to waste,” said Burnam. “Part of being a responsible citizen is realizing that each of us must do what we can to conserve the energy we have. This legislation will provide an incentive to do the right thing.”

Windows Vista over hyped?

I did a “review” of Windows Vista this week for my tech column in the WDL.
I use the term “review” lightly because I haven’t actually sat down and played with the new OS like I do with other products I review.
But from all I’ve read and seen other than a cool new GUI I don’t see any strong reason to upgrade from Windows XP SP2 to the new OS – especially when there’s not a single computer in our office (including my laptop) that the OS will run on.
I need a new video card to run the OS and that’s gonna be a little hard to do with a laptop.
So hope that XP support sticks around for another 10 years or so.

Here’s a run down of the system requirements:

Basic edition requirements:
1 GHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor
512 MB of system memory
20 GB hard drive with at least 15 GB of available space
Support for DirectX 9 graphics and 32 MB of graphics memory
DVD-ROM drive
Audio Output
Internet access

Home Premium / Business / Ultimate requirements:
1 GHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor
1 GB of system memory
40 GB hard drive with at least 15 GB of available space
Support for DirectX 9 graphics with:
– WDDM Driver
– 128 MB of graphics memory (minimum)
– Pixel Shader 2.0 in hardware
– 32 bits per pixel
DVD-ROM drive
Audio Output
Internet access

As a side note we ran an ad of a local office supplier selling brand new laptops with Windows Vista installed. None of them would run Vista Ultimate. There’s something amusing about that.