Its my choice BlueAnt V1 Bluetooth Headset (Silver) (Wireless Phone Accessory)




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I purchased this headset for my husband to use while driving a convertible with the top down - all previous headsets were useless in that environment. The BlueAnt performed better than all the others: my husband's voice came through loud and clear, though I could still hear the wind, also pretty loudly. Perhaps it is unreasonable to expect more from any headset. With the top up or in a regular car the sound quality is very good, both for the person wearing the BlueAnt and the person on the other end of the phone line... I recommend this product.

Get This Product BlueAnt V1 Bluetooth Headset (Silver) (Wireless Phone Accessory)

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Great Product AT&T CLP99383 DECT 6.0 3-Handset Connect to Cell Answering System with Dual Caller ID (Office Product)




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Customer review from the Amazon Vine Program (What's this?) I was truly amazed at the quality of these phones. There are so many features that I haven't quite tested all of them yet. The call quality is absolutely amazing so the HD audio is legit. I have a really big back yard and was able to still get quality out back by making a phone call at least 25-30 feet away from the base so the long-range coverage and clarity that the product description talks about is accurate. Overall, I'm really happy with the way that the handsets are made. They don't feel cheap and I love the fact that there are so many features to choose from. I was actually able to test the built-in USB feature with my cell phone and it works flawlessly.

There are a couple of reasons why I didn't give this product five stars. The first reason is because the second and third handsets don't sit well in their bases. You have to literally work with them to get them to sit upright. My secondary handsets tilt to the side in their bases. You have to actually sit them at an angle in order for them to charge. The red light will not come on unless they're tilted at an angle. I don't know if this is a manufacture defect with my set but they look a little crazy tilted in the base. The main handset doesn't have this problem. Another reason why these phones got four stars is because, I didn't do much as far as setup right out of the box so it didn't dawn on me to check the volume settings. The following morning, I got a phone call and the caller announce feature scared the living day lights out of me! It was so loud. All I heard was this lady say, "You have a call from a cellular caller from XXX-XXX-XXXX," such number and I literally jumped out of my sleep LOL! I definitely didn't have to scramble for the handset to see who was calling, but I fell out of my bed trying to get the lady to shut up LOL! The feature works as described but you might want to check the volume settings! I sure wish I did. Overall I'm happy with the phones and think they're wonderful.

Get This Product AT&T CLP99383 DECT 6.0 3-Handset Connect to Cell Answering System with Dual Caller ID (Office Product)

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Reviews About Applied Cryptography: Protocols, Algorithms, and Source Code in C (Paperback)




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Depending on what level of rigor one wishes, this is either an excellent book or an adequate book.First, the negatives -- this book is several years old, and the cryptography community moves as rapidly as most other computer industries. So, it feels dated, and completely misses out on the AES candidates and the AES winner, Rijndael.The positives -- this book is comprehensive. It covers practically all topics of modern cryptography in some detail, and -- the real gem of the book -- contains a bibliography with over 1500 entries. This book also provides for a wonderfully gentle introduction to cryptography; it doesn't assume the reader already knows the subject.Where this book is likely to falter is in the rigorousness category -- this book was not intended for a mathematical or theoretical work. This book was intended to convey the ideas of cryptography to people who would be asked to implement cryptographic protocols or schemes designed by others. As such, I feel it does a good job.Those that are more experienced may find the book useful for its comprehensive bibliography: check the table of contents for subjects, read the passages, and track down the references. Very easy, and very fast. (... has links to many of the references, though without the topical index afforded by the text.)

Get This One Applied Cryptography: Protocols, Algorithms, and Source Code in C (Paperback)

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strangely absorbing




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I'm surprised at several of the amazon reviews that seem to have taken reading this book as if it were a chore. Yes, it's long, but I, for one, found it strangely absorbing.Do not be afraid of long books. Wolfe engages in an impressive cast of characters and takes time to develop many of them. His narrative flow is superb. I enjoyed not only the plot and the characters, but the writing style as well. The author has a certain way with the English language that is captivating, and concepts like "boys with breasts" (aka today's skin-n-bones models), "saddlebags" and "hubba ho" can be both though-provoking and laugh-out-loud funny. Wolfe has a unique sense of humor, considering he routinely does things off-beat like naming a black maid "Auntie Bella" (antebellum?).Wolfe seems to love his characters (even the unsympathetic ones) and takes readers along for a wild ride with characters like Roger Too White (a "beige brother" lawyer and Morehouse grad), Serena Crocker (a money-chasing second wife), Martha Crocker (a bitter first wife), Raymond Peepgrass (a money-chasing bank geek after the first wife), and Conrad Hensley (a bitter blue-collar worker reborn in prison). The antihero main character, however, will blow you away. Charlie Crocker is as much tall tale as real man. A real-estate giant in Atlanta, as well as an ex-football great, Charlie teeters on the brink of bankruptcy and personal ruin. At times like watching a train wreck, one never knows exactly what to think of Charlie -- he can be both sympathetic and unsympathetic to the extreme. Wolfe seems to have a "take it or leave it" quirkiness that will engage some readers to the fullest and turn off others completely. Yes, you might have to sift through some of the author's annoying habits, like describing IN GREAT DETAIL every item of clothing every character is wearing at any given moment, but the experience of reading this book on the whole was very satisfying. I was left frustrated at the end, in fact, because I had no one to discuss the book with afterward. It really leaves a residue on the reader and begs to be thought of long after the last page has been turned.

Get This Product A Man in Full (Mass Market Paperback)

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Reviews About The Fall, Series 1 (DVD)




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Customer review from the Amazon Vine Program (What's this?) This British/Irish crime series drama--five episodes around an hour each in length--by Allan Cubitt will chill the viewer with its stunningly eerie portrayal of serial killer Paul Spector (no spoiler here, the identity of the killer from the viewer's perspective is known from the start) as he shuffles his penchant for murder, his life as a loving husband/father and his role as a draw-outside-the-lines grief counselor. Played by Jamie Dornan in a departure from his role as the "Huntsman"in ABC's Once Upon A Time, Spector relentlessly scopes out his potential kills with the methodical relish of an art connoisseur acquiring just the right work of art to further complete his collection. With his choir boy looks foiling his Herculean strength, he manages to trigger a fresh sense of lurid fascination for viewers despite the fact that they have cut their eye teeth on the character of Hannibal Lector and have subsequently become immune to the horrific details of the unconventional mind. Spector intrigues; in spite of being inundated with Dexter, Dr. Joe Carroll of "The Following" and a raft of other killer crazies, we want to know what his backstory is. Why does he kill? Why only brunettes? And why the poses?

In a parallel narrative format, Gillian Anderson of X-Files fame enters as the cool, calm and collected British detective Stella Gibson in the still troubled arena of Northern Ireland who eventually delineates some pattern to what others see as random crimes. The viewer does not know much about Gibson other than the fact that she is driven, intellectually and educationally challenging and has a penchant for one night stands that she calls "sweet nights." Her seemingly emotionless focus is anything but--her underlying sensitivity seems comparatively cold when viewed alongside her male colleagues. Nonetheless, in these five episodes, she is bent on the successful discovery and arrest of this killer who seems hard-pressed to ramp up his lurid activities in a crescendo of action whose speed precipitates some mistakes that are devoid of his former and complete anonymity. As she tightens the noose around Spector's neck, we find out a scant more about her personal life with full awareness that more of this will be revealed as the series continues onward into further seasons.

The turbulent city of Belfast acts as a frenetic backdrop to the crimes; the killings are viewed by its investigators as affiliated with some long shadow cast by the city's historic troubles. Add to this state of perpetual unrest side stories that include a seductive fifteen year old babysitter, the execution of a police officer, a sleazy escort service, die-hard underground groups with long memories and the police prejudice amped by long-term religious sides. The result? A chaotic blend of fact and fiction that breathes with a gritty reality.

Bottom line? The BBC series "The Fall" is being renewed for a second season where more will be revealed about Detective Superintendent Gibson and serial killer Paul Spector. Lovers of this type of drama will not be disappointed, least of all by Jamie Dornan's chilling portrayal of a serial killer. This DVD set includes all five episodes and a 12 minute behind-the-scenes feature. Recommended as a good gift for the police procedural aficionado.
Diana Faillace Von Behren
"reneofc"

Take It Now ! The Fall, Series 1 (DVD)

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Fresh perspective




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Its a review about this product

I love the way Glenn Packiam's books challenge me with fresh perspective. He often puts in words thoughts I've recognized but not nailed down. I was challenged afresh to focus my worship leading, to take another look at songs we sing, to be more intentional, to explore the mystery rather than seeking to have all the answers. Glenn's writing style is easy to read, realistic about where we live, and founded in Scripture. I was also pleased that he said what needed to be said and was done. A book doesn't have to be eternal to speak eternal truth. :-) Thanks, Glenn!

Take It Now ! shift 3 Bluetooth Hands-Free Auto Speaker Black Series (Wireless Phone Accessory)

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Reviews About The Second Coming of Steve Jobs (Hardcover)




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The Second Coming of Steve Jobs (Paperback) I bought this book because it focused on the fascinating "lost weekend" of Steve Jobs, starting from his ejection from Apple in 1985 to his return 11 years later. While I devoured the book quickly, the entire work has a stench about it - it reeks of a rushed, vindictive flame job. The book falls apart completely at the end, the author rushes so badly. Almost all sources are individuals thrown out of the Kingdom of Steve (people who have failed him in some way or another) with hardly any input from current Apple directors and executives who have worked successfully with Jobs for decades. By the end I found myself questioning every conclusion the author reaches (which was easy considering he predicted defeat and disgrace that never happened) and wondering to myself, "What's the point?" The general tone is that the author doesn't like Jobs but he also doesn't "get" the man either, and neither do many of the author's sources. One former executive of Applecare described Jobs complaining about tech support at Apple as being a bunch of clueless idiots (at which point the executive is removed from the company) and I thought to myself, tech support at most companies are the rudest people I've ever talked to, yet Apple has ranked #1 in that area for 10 years? Maybe Jobs understands something this author doesn't.

Get This One The Second Coming of Steve Jobs (Hardcover)

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STINK STANK STUNK !




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This is the worst piece of crap I have ever heard. It goes right up there with William Hung "She Bangs" and Oh, I don't know nails on a chalk board. Mountain Man is a great character on Duck Dynasty and seems like a wonderful fella, but he couldn't carry a tune in a bull frog bucket. I have three words that describes this effort, and I quote "Stink , Stank , Stunk"... If you want to waste $10.00 go ahead, but you have been warned and with hope Mountain Man saves his $ from this cause I don't think anyone will ever offer him another record contract.

Take It Now ! Slower Than Christmas (Audio CD)

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Great Product God of the Possible: A Biblical Introduction to the Open View of God (Paperback)




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I've always had a problem with God predetermining or foreknowing all the future. In this book, Gregory Boyd presents a very plausible explanation of how God interacts with our future. Now as I read my Bible (especially the Old Testament), I have a deeper appreciation of how an all-intelligent God can allow us free will and still be in control.
The author states that this is not a doctrine that Christians should ever divide over. But.......... I've found that few people even want to hear about the open view of God. Hopefully, readers of this book will want to learn the truth about God even if it coflicts with long held beliefs.

Get This Product God of the Possible: A Biblical Introduction to the Open View of God (Paperback)

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Reviews About The Rise of the Islamic Empire and the Threat to the West (Paperback)




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Dennis provides an excellent analysis of the growing threat from expansionist Islam. Alarmingly, this is a threat that will soon affect all of us in the West, thanks to misguided foreign policy decisions and uncontrolled third world immigration from Muslim countries. But this threat is nothing new -- Islam has slaughtered, conquered, and subjugated Christians and other non-Muslims for centuries, as any reading of the histories of Spain, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and the Balkans will demonstrate (not to mention the histories of Turkey, India, North Africa, and Central Asia, which were all savagely conquered by Islamic armies in the past). Islam is too often portrayed by our ignorant media as a harmless faith -- but the truth is that Islam is a pagan doctrine which demands, among other things, that Muslims kill all non-believers! Most Americans don't realise the truth about Islam, so this book will do much to eliminate such ignorance. To some extent I agree with Muslim critiques of arrogant American imperialism, but American power is nothing compared to the horrors unleashed by a resurgent Islam. I suggest that this book be read in conjunction with similar works by Bat Ye'or and Paul Fregosi (both available at Amazon.com). Dennis writes in a scholarly, lucid manner, and I found his arguments compelling and most welcome. Well done!

Get This One The Rise of the Islamic Empire and the Threat to the West (Paperback)

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Unique Resources for Creative Preaching




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Its a review about this product

In his first book on Creative Styles of Preaching, Mark Barger Elliott grabs my attention with his varied, unique resources for inspired preaching. As an experienced Pastoral Care Chaplain my main responsibility does not lie in the area of preaching. I am always on the look-out for new approaches and resources for writing new sermons on the Lectionary Texts. When I opened this book my eyes fell on his middle chapter, it is entitled The Four Pages of the Sermon. There I saw the names of pivotally well-anchored men as, John Broadus, Fred Craddock, Halford Luccock, Thomas Long, David Buttrick, and "more recently Paul Scott Wilson." Not knowing the name of Wilson, I read this chapter first of all... The homiletic process touches on the length of sermon connected with the days of writing. The writing for getting started on Monday peaked my interest! His checklist did catch-hold of my own underlying motives for writing sermons. I liked Thursday's tough themes where we tend to misplace the good news of God's action in the biblical text. The two model sermons of "When God Is Absent" - the only one written by Pastor Elliot and "Calling Off Christmas" by Paul Scott Wilson are both personal, interesting and well-written. After being introduced into the heart of Mark Elliott's text, I began reading in-earnest to see how many of his resources I had already read and how they were related to his themes of Creative Styles of Preaching. The first chapter on Narrative Peaching, I was already deeply exposed to Fred Craddock and greatly love his fascinating example of "When the Roll is Called Down Here." I have long admired his creative sermons and his inspired teaching.When I saw Dr. Craddock quoted as "Everyone lives inductively... I was transported back to his numberless conferences on Styles of Preaching. Then Mark Elliott follows Fred Craddock with his successor at EMORY UNIVERSITY, Thomas Long. He appeals to those stories of Edmund Steimle, who "was in the middle of, and to some degree was the cause of, a major shift in American preaching." Then he proceeds to give us the five steps for any preacher to weave his narrative sermons. He notes that Steimle and Craddock agreeed that a sermon should be "low keyed..."For my lengthy interest of listening, reading and presently the writing of sermons, I was most impressed by the scholarly list of Elliott's resources. He reached back into my early days of being introduced to John Broadus' 1944 Textbook, "On the Preparation and Delivery of Sermons." From there he ventures into the great influence of Henry Sloan Coffin, Richard Niebuhr, Harry Emerson Fosdick, right up to Tony Campolo and William Willimon. Two samples of Tony Campolo's Evangelistic preaching and Samuel Proctor's Afro-American became highlights for my lack of knowing their inspired styles of delivery. I found it terribly interesting to peruse the six sermons of these outstanding women preachers. From the first African American sermon of Valerie Brown-Trout, to Leonora Tubbs Tisdale - to Barbara Brown Taylor's final sermon - they were imaginative and inspired greatly from Old Testament texts. That possibly stems from the great influence of Walter Brueggemann's teaching and emphasis of the older inspired texts. Barbara Brown Taylor is my favorite with her compelling, dramatic, shortest example! But the longest sermon by Dr. Tisdale comes-across as profoundly thought provoking! They were all quite consuming for this crusty old connoisseur of great preaching. I recommend this little handbook of Creative Styles of Preaching wholeheartedly and with promises for some surprises to the other lovers of good preaching.

Take It Now ! Creative Styles of Preaching (Paperback)

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Fresh perspective




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Its a review about this product

I love the way Glenn Packiam's books challenge me with fresh perspective. He often puts in words thoughts I've recognized but not nailed down. I was challenged afresh to focus my worship leading, to take another look at songs we sing, to be more intentional, to explore the mystery rather than seeking to have all the answers. Glenn's writing style is easy to read, realistic about where we live, and founded in Scripture. I was also pleased that he said what needed to be said and was done. A book doesn't have to be eternal to speak eternal truth. :-) Thanks, Glenn!

Get This One Discover the Mystery of Faith: How Worship Shapes Believing (Kindle Edition)

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Reviews About Unlawful Killing (DVD)




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Oddly enough I only became aware of the whole Diana conspiracy theories by listening to Howard Stern the day he interviewed the father of Dodi, years after the interview. I have to say it's fascinating and probably true that Diana's death was not simply an auto accident. I've read that "car crashes" are pretty standard MO for deaths of well known and controversial figures around the world for what it's worth.

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Pros about the movie:
-There was an actual letter where Diana stated that she feared that she would be killed in a car "accident" and that it would be at the behest of the the Royal Family. Amazing!
-Lots of good Diana footage where she states her views of the royal family and what she thought they thought of her.
-Lots of very suspicious FACTS that surrounded both the crash and the aftermath are compelling and would make any reasonable person suspicious of the version of the verdict that was broadcast by the British and world media.
-The French government has refused any access to the Dr's that treated Diana at the crash site and the ambulance ride stating that it was in the interest of national security to forbid it.
-Diana was under surveillance by British, American and French intelligence. Not really a surprise but none of the information on that surveillance has ever been released.
-The Queen actually DID strip Diana of her titles! Incredible!
-I could actually see how the Royal Family didn't want Diana possibly marrying a Muslim as Prince Phillip does seem and look like a real Nazi sympathizing scumbag. I read his mother was schizophrenic. And no one who looks at Charles could think he's an OK guy, yuk.
-The mysterious death of a photo journalist who said he was there, in the white Fiat, and took pictures. Although he was shown in footage smoking a cigar in his white Fiat, so this would perhaps explain why his body was burned in his car. If he killed himself with two bullets to the head, and yes that's possible, it would be possible he had a lit cigar in the car with him at the time. Of course the keys were never found and the doors were locked, so it's too fishy for me to be a suicide.
-The sneaky and typically British subtle, dry wording of the verdict, i.e. "it was unlawful killing by the following cars", NOT necessarily the reporters who were following her just following cars! The film states that Diana's car left the paparazzi well behind by the time they were even close to the tunnel and that motorcycles as well as the white Fiat were seen entering the tunnel at the same time.
-NONE of the street CCTV cameras captured ANY of the cars movement anywhere near the tunnel, that's crazy!
-MANY other details and facts that are compelling and puzzling.
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The Bad
-The "undercover" journalist part is a bit silly and overwrought, we get it the British press is both actively and passively in the Royals pocket. I think the various BBC scandals over the last few years have shown that.
-I didn't really like the snarky music video sections overlayed with various images, not all are even of Diana.
-I think the Howard Stern thing was really kind of a joke on Dodi's father. Someone must have told him that Stern is taken seriously as far as in depth news about things like this. He's not, his show is FUNNY, that's it. I think it was pretty silly to put that edited on-air interview in there.
-A lot of the people interviewed look a little off to me and some, notably the actual filmmaker, look positively disheveled and scrappy.
-Too much needless innuendo, sinister voice type of stuff as well as silly stuff like pointing out that the jurors rolling court aka bus got a flat while in Paris etc.
-The silly parts about Dodi included because his father bankrolled this whole film don't help its goal of being taken as serious fare. I'm not diminishing his death but they could have toned down that stuff, this is all about Diana's death really not so much about a playboys.
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-I'm undecided about the whole land mine thing. Yes Diana was campaigning against outlawing them just before a crucial international meeting to ban them took place. And President Clinton did support her before BUT did vote AGAINST the ban in the end and was the only western leader to do so although then that means the British leader did then right? I'm not so sure that's really much of a driving force for her murder though.
-This film really makes you think differently about modern England and the REAL power the Royals have over a LOT of the political and legal establishment and thus over England as a whole. I no longer think the Royals are simply figureheads but they do actually run the vast majority of the country as real rulers. I feel it's a convenient myth presented to the world by the British elite that it is a real democracy. The British are just so well trained, it comes natural to them to obey everything they are told by the British elite, reminds me of how terrified and harried the servants are in Downton Abbey but no one seems to notice that.
-The fact that this film can't even get distribution in AMERICA and certainly not in England is a really VERY damning thing.

In short, yes I do believe she was murdered at the behest of the British Royals and it has been covered up successfully. I think this was done so Charles could marry a "proper" subject as well as to extinguish the possibility of Diana marrying and maybe even having a child with a Muslim or some other undesirable in the eyes of the Royals. Also that she was too much of a loose cannon free spirit, totally unlike the Windsors: she endangered their image. Do you know how sweet the Royals have it? They carefully craft this image worldwide as figureheads only, with no real power so no real controversy ever has come up involving them in regards the actions of the British government as controlled by them using patronage(lordships etc) informally to ALL of Britains on-the-record decision makers! Brilliant! In the USA politicians, military officials and presidents are constantly in trouble over their decisions but I've NEVER heard anything of the sort across the pond. I'd argue that the British Royals are more powerful than any President has ever and could ever be. Thank God for 1776.

Take It Now ! Unlawful Killing (DVD)

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Its my choice Plantronics Savi W720 Multi-Device Wireless Headset System - US Warranty - Black (Wireless Phone Accessory)




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I've used Plantronics headsets for over a decade at this point and longer for Bluetooth headsets for cellphones.

I purchased the Savi W720 for my current job as a Director of IT Managed Infrastructure Services because my position requires me to be on many phone calls, conference calls and conduct a lot of Skype/Google Hangout/Facetime calls as well.

This particular model allows you to use Cisco compatible phones, (among other models), connect to Bluetooth devices and Windows/Mac PCs for internet and VOIP calls.

-Headset has excellent battery life. If I'm fully charged there's never a workday I haven't made it fully through.
-Headset is compatible with the HL-10 handset lifter, for remote call pickup/hangup.
-Headset has integrated volume and mute buttons, excellent for muting away from desk and raising/lowering call volume.
-Sound quality is excellent. Stereo headset allows for music to be played or streamed as well from devices. I've used iTunes/VLC/YouTube/Pandora/Spotify audio as well as cellphone/smartphone streaming.

Highly recommend.

Get This One Plantronics Savi W720 Multi-Device Wireless Headset System - US Warranty - Black (Wireless Phone Accessory)

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Great Product Rape Warfare: The Hidden Genocide in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia (Hardcover)




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This is a dreadful book. Didn't the writer do ANY research on Bosnia? When I got to the part where she said that describing the Bogomil philosophy was critical to understanding the mass rapes in 1992 and 1993, I nearly tossed the book in the trash. The Bogomils were a medieval religious sect that died out in the 1500s. Recent scholarship has questioned not only their influence, but also whether the Bosnian nobles were even Bogomils in the first place. The writer relies on a single interview with a seemingly distraught woman, she quotes extensively from the interview and decides that understanding this obscure theology is a useful tool for her readers. Maybe if she'd done the research instead of quoting someone she felt sorry for, the book would be better.

Get This One Rape Warfare: The Hidden Genocide in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia (Hardcover)

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A Call to Arms




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Peter Hedström and Richard Swedberg are prominent sociologists who have put together an edited volume including several other prominent sociologists. The papers derive from a symposium held in Stockholm in 1996, and is dedicated to James Coleman and Robert Merton. The former is a representative of "grand theorizing" and the latter "middle-level theorizing," thus revealing a central ambiguity in the volume.

Hedström and Swedberg's introductory essay fall squarely in the middle-level theorizing camp, and describes a "social mechanism" as a process of beginning with a macro phenomenon with micro implications, followed by a causal process on the micro level that leads to a new micro level, followed finally by a macrosocial change that reflects the microsocial situation. The "enemy" in this endeavor are sociological models that simply work out statistical associations, such as the famous path analysis of O. D. Duncan that inspired generations of labor market and social stratification researchers.

Following Hedström and Swedberg, Thomas Schelling and Jon Elster make eloquent cases for using social mechanisms. This is not difficult for them, as they have been major contributors, including Schelling's model of neighborhood racial segregation and Elster's model of "sour grapes." Timur Kuran, another major contributor to the social mechanisms approach, also supplies a nice chapter.

But, is this really "an analytical approach to social theory?" These researchers have given us some great models with deep and surprising insights, but is there no general sociological theory?

My own take on this is that Talcott Parsons made an immensely insightful but flawed attempt at providing a general model for sociological theory, but this was rejected by the profession, and nothing was substituted for it. This is a tragedy that I struggle to understand. Why did Parsons not do a better job (he was very smart and accurately appraised the intellectual situation at the time), and why did other sociologists (such as his eight coauthors in Towards and General Theory of Action) not take up the baton rather than being either sycophants or enemies of the whole project?

For whatever reason, sociologists have not come forth with an alternative. Middle-level social theory is great as far as it goes, but middle-level is inherently ambiguous and shakey unless grounded in higher-level social theory. The less than exalted position of Sociology among the behavioral sciences, and especially its weakness when compared to economic or biological theory, is due precisely to its lack of a powerful general framework within which "middle-level" models operation synergistically to build up a general picture of society.

One quite marvelous essay in this volume directly addresses what passes for Grand Theory in contemporary sociology. Axel van den Berg analyzes Habermas, Bourdieu, Giddens, and Alexander, whom he considers the leading grand theorists of our age. Habermas, like many Continental philosophers/social theorists, seeks an interpretive model of society rather than an explanatory/predictive model. This is completely unacceptable from a scientific standpoint. I love Habermas, but he is about as much a scientist as a good cook is a chemist; i.e., not at all. That sociologists take Habermas as a social theorist is symptomatic of the weakness of sociological theory as a scientific discipline.

Van den Berg's treatment of Bourdieu is iconoclastic and devastating. Bourdieu figured out early in his career that the French public likes smoke and mirrors rather than real science, but also respected the power of science. So Bourdieu combined massive statistical data analysis with smoke and mirrors social theory. Everything Bourdieu says is either common sense, impenetrable nonsense, or common sense framed as impenetrable nonsense. Many intellectuals believe that if a theorist is comprehensible, he cannot be very insightful, and this sentiment is prevalent in France and Germany to a degree that theoretical hopefuls in other countries could only dream about. Academic success in these countries often takes the form of wrapping triviality in obtuse verbosity---Lacan and Latour are only the most egregious examples of this. Why American sociology could possibly place credence in Bourdieu vaporware is beyond me.

Van de Berg's treatment of Giddens is also quite cogent. Giddens is a lucid writer with fine sociological insights. But, despite his promotion of "structuration," he has nothing to offer as a Grand Theorist.

I think the most constructive and insightful paper in this book is Raymond Boudon's "Social Mechanisms without Black Boxes." Boudon is handicapped, as are virtually all sociologists, by the notion that the rational actor model implies that actors have self-regarding preferences. For instance, Boudon claims that the rational actor model implies that voting is irrational, since a single vote affects the outcome of an election with near-zero probability. Similarly, he claims that rejecting a positive offer in the ultimatum game is "irrational." This is simply not the case. If people like to vote, because they believe it is the proper behavior of a good citizen, then voting appears in the agent's preference function, and the individual will trade off between voting and accomplishing other personal goals can be made on irrational grounds. If people care about being treated fairly, then there is nothing "irrational" about rejecting unfair offers in the ultimatum game.

It is about time sociologists stopped perpetrating the myth that rational behavior precludes costly prosocial behavior. Much of what Boudon says in critiquing the rational actor model is just wrong. Valuing the welfare of others, or valuing the human character virtues (honesty, loyalty, etc.) for their own sake, is perfectly compatible with the rational actor model. However, Boudon proposes a new model, which he call the "cognitivist model," that is eminently reasonable, but is either the rational actor model, or a strengthening of the model in particular areas (e.g., imposition of conditions on beliefs so that rationality is stronger than Bayes' rule).

Admitting the centrality of the rational actor model in a theory of action would have monumental and salutary implications for sociological theory, and would reward skills (especially mathematical skills) that are currently in short supply among sociologists. This is the task of the current generation of sociologists.

Get This Product Social Mechanisms: An Analytical Approach to Social Theory (Studies in Rationality and Social Change) (Paperback)

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Its my choice BIRTH CONTROL: How Did We Get Here? (DVD)




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"Today we live in a day where there is no fundamental difference on the issue of the child between the Church of Jesus Christ and the World. How did we get here?"

Pornography, contraception, and abortion. The modern church condemns pornography and abortion, yet yawns at contraception, calling it an exercise in wisdom on the part of the couple... and will even rejoice that the fornicating couple uses contraception.

The church historical, however, condemned these things together, along with fornication and adultery. They were all tarred with the same brush... until recently.

`Here is a simple test: Look at history and if you see God's people agreeing for 1900 years..." RC Sproul Jr.

"How did we get here" lays out the journey of how the church went from a practically universal testimony against all of these things to openeing the door for one of them (contraception) and thus all of the others. It lays out the historical case (and to a very light extent the Biblical case) of the connection between these things: how an acceptance of contraception inexorably led to an acceptance of pornography and abortion (and fornication, adultery, divorce... altho they don't mention these).

When a woman in some way drives away the seed out the womb, through aids, then this is rightly seen as an unforgivable crime. ~ John Calvin

This movie is a bonanza for the quote miner and footnoter. It lays out quote after quote, statistic after statistic. Unfortunately I am afraid it will fail with the very people it needs to succeed with.
It will be bought, watched, and cheered by the `Vision Forum' crowd. The people who are already full-quiver, homeschooling, and family integrated. It will be a much tougher sell for the `mainstream' Christian.

1908 Lambeth conference Resolution 41 The Conference regards with alarm the growing practice of the artificial restriction of the family, and earnestly calls upon all Christian people to discountenance the use of all artificial means of restriction as demoralising to character and hostile to national welfare.
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Resolution 42 The Conference affirms that deliberate tampering with nascent life is repugnant to Christian morality.

--

1930 Lambeth Conference Where there is clearly felt moral obligation to limit or avoid parenthood, the method must be decided on Christian principles. The primary and obvious method is complete abstinence from intercourse (as far as may be necessary) in a life of discipline and self-control lived in the power of the Holy Spirit. Nevertheless in those cases where there is such a clearly felt moral obligation to limit or avoid parenthood, and where there is a morally sound reason for avoiding complete abstinence, the Conference agrees that other methods may be used, provided that this is done in the light of the same Christian principles. The Conference records its strong condemnation of the use of any methods of conception control from motives of selfishness, luxury, or mere convenience.

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1874 Anglican clergy average 5.2 children
1911 Anglican clergy average 2.3 children

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1890 LCMS average 6.5 children
1920 LCMS average 3.7 children

For one thing because the mainstream Christian knows better than to engage in such a masochistic exercise as watching a `radical' film. The first thirty seconds alone will send them off for popcorn and `a break'. Even we radical Christians shy at reading or watching things that challenge our presuppositions; moderates are extremely careful.

And the format of the film just doesn't seem to work for moderates. It seems to me that a film for moderates needs to walk them through slower and with more explanation. Sure, I get why an acceptance of contraception will lead to an explosion in fornication, adultery, divorce, pornography, and abortion. I also get why a rejection of young marriages will do the same thing. And women working outside the home.

But I am a radical conservative. How do we win over the moderates? They don't care what the reformers said, they don't care what history teaches, they don't really care what Scripture says. They care about their lifestyle, what their friends are thinking. In order to be challenged they need to have some deep cord struck. They need to suddenly realize that God is talking to them, God is challenging them. They need to have their selfishness, their disobedience, their rebellion, made plain, made obvious, drawn out into the light of day.

Margaret Sanger
Founder of Planned Parenthood:
--

Our objective is unlimited sexual satisfaction without the burden of children...
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The marriage bed is the most degenerative thing in the social order...
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The most merciful thing that the large family can do to one of its infant members is to kill it...
--

Scripture and history both teach that contraception is an evil that stands along with fornication, adultery, and abortion. It teaches that the permanent marriage covenant, the reflection of Christ and the church taught in Ephesians 5, is deeply damaged by the reflection of the very blessing, indeed the very reason, that God gave us a wife in the first place. This blessing is not intended to be limited by our `wisdom' (and how foolish that wisdom is anyway!). It is intended to be poured out unto us by our Father above, above all we can ask or think.

`He proves himself in the [ruling] of his own family before he is qualified to be an elder.' K Swanson

Our society, our church, our families, has been doing its best to destroy the marriage bond for the last hundred years. Hopefully this film will be part of a catalyst to help us get back on track. Reformation and revival are called for, will the call be answered?
The above is a review of the film:
How did we get here?

On a purely technical note the film has some glitches:
1) The music was rather distracting. Intended, no doubt, to increase the dramatic tension of the film. I found it, however, to just be overwhelming and distracting.
2) There were a couple of typos in the Bible references and other places.
Minor stuff, but it was there.

On a non-technical note the film has a jurisdictional problem. It tends to glorify 'government intervention' in the areas concerned. While condoms and pornography are bad things, no doubt, and while many birth control methods and abortion are murder and should be punished as such, it isn't at all clear that it is really within the jurisdiction of the civil magistrate to ban pornography or condoms.

And of course some methods of contraception (see Onan) can't be banned; and attempting to punish them would be bizarre at best. I believe that we as Christians need to start our campaign first in the churches, and then let our example flow out into the world: examples of young fruitful marriages.

Mal 2:15 And did not he make one? Yet had he the residue of the spirit. And wherefore one? That he might seek a godly seed. Therefore take heed to your spirit, and let none deal treacherously against the wife of his youth.

1Ti 5:14 I will therefore that the younger women marry, bear children, guide the house, give none occasion to the adversary to speak reproachfully.
1Ti 5:15 For some are already turned aside after Satan.

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Reviews About Chant of Miracles (MP3 Music)




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It was July 2011. I had been tortured by bad tinnitus and sleep deprivation for months. I had to go away, had to escape to somewhere. I wanted to go to Mt. Shasta. I knew nobody there, never heard of Erik Berglund either. Nobody talked to me about Mt. Shasta. But somehow I wanted to go to Mt. Shasta. At one time I read somewhere that it's a sacred mountain. Now the Mountain was calling. So my husband and I and our two children drove there from San Diego. We spent two nights on the way. The hotel rooms were either noisy or had bad wifi radiation or both, I had bad nights of sleep, and arrived in Mt. Shasta exhausted. And it turned out that the hotel we booked in Mt. Shasta was also noisy, so had to change to another one. It was already evening. We were promised a quiet room at the next hotel, but then was told it wasn't ready until the next night, so we got into an arbitrary room that night. I had another bad night of sleep. We altogether had some 4 or 5 days in Mt. Shasta, and the first two days were basically wasted because of bad sleep. I wondered what's the point of coming to Mt. Shasta!

At Tourist Information we saw that our stay at Mt. Shasta coincided with the "Best of Mt. Shasta Conference". I didn't associate "conference" with spiritual events, but we went to the site at the City Park the next day, more for the healing water at the Park than anything else. There we saw the program. That evening was Erik Berglund's harp music concert. I wasn't particularly interested in harp prior to that. But we had no other plan. So decided to go to the concert. It was a very hot day, and the room had no air conditioning. Outside it was cooling down. After waiting in the heat a bit, I was thinking perhaps the time would be better spent taking a walk outside. At least it's cool and comfortable. We were about to leave. But just then, I heard Erik playing the first note. And everything changed. We were instantly transported to another realm. I understood why we were in Mt. Shasta. The rest of our time in Mt. Shasta unfolded like magic. The following nights I had refreshing sleep, after a few days I felt completely healed and healthy. (Though the health problems came back after we left Mt. Shasta.)

So there is miracle in Erik's music. There is a miraculous energy that centers you, that connects you with another realm. Or maybe it's his being. When he channeled the music from Heaven, he was Divinity manifest. No wonder, he was not only a musician, but also a healer and a spiritual teacher.

After the concert I purchased two CD's of his at the site, based on cover arts (I had no doubt that any album of his was good.) One was "Elysium" (for which I wrote a review earlier), another was "Chant of Miracles". When I saw the cover of "Elysium", I was stunned: Countless times I had described to my husband the kind of "house" I wanted to live in, now I saw the exact image in picture! It's a heavenly abode, so it must be a between life memory. The cover art of "Chant of Miracles" was another instant recognition of something familiar. I have since bought many of Erik's other CD's. But these two remain my favorite. "Elysium" is in my view most representative of his angelic harp music. It's music of Heaven. Pure Heaven. "Chant of Miracles" is quite different from Elysium: it's mantra chanting in Sanskrit. If Angels can chant ancient Sanskrit healing mantra, this is just how it should sound.

Erik just recently passed from this world. We are so lucky to have met him and discovered his music. May you be blessed by his music too. May Love, Light, Peace, Joy, and Beauty---the heavenly qualities that Erik's music channeled and his person embodied---prevail on Earth.

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NBA Refs Exposed




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Its a review about this product

Tim Donaghy had a great family, monetary success, his dream job, and the kind of glamour many people aspire to have. He blew it all in the process of getting caught up in his gambling addiction. But if there is any redemption in his situation it is an obvious acceptance of accountability. Personal Foul does not function as a plea for forgiveness or understanding; it is a frank and sometimes humerous tale of one man's journey of success and loss. Each of us has one. The difference is that this story has far-reaching consequences inside a beloved and respected American institution, the NBA. Even for us non-basketball fans Personal Foul is a fun read. It is very real, sometimes funny, sometimes sad, but always ringing of familiararity--making the wrong choice can have devastating consequences.

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Great Product Jabra PRO 9470 Mono Wireless Headset with Touchscreen for Deskphone, Softphone & Mobile Phone (Electronics)




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I just got this headset, and its fantastic !!! I read all of the reviews on amazon about the 9470 and noticed some people had heard an echo when they turned up the volume or feedback in the headset, I also noticed a few people complaining about the touch screen being non responsive. I called Jabra tech support and posed my concerns with them, and they informed me that there were some issues with the older software, but since , 2.5 has come out and fixed all those concerns. I took his word for it, and ordered the Jabra 9470 headset, and upgraded to the latest software and upgraded the 9470 firmware, and YES AND YES !! Everything was working fine after I did the upgrade on the firmware. The echo was completely gone ! I made some test calls to friends and they said I sounded AWESOME !! CRYSTAL CLEAR TO BE EXACT. I have no problems with the touch screen, it worked like a charm, and the setup was soooooo easy right out of the box it took me like 2 min total. This is the best headset on the planet, easy control to answer calls, change volume, or mute, I couldt ask for a better headset, ITS WORTH EVERY SINGLE PENNY !!!!!! And its so cool looking !! battery life is huge !!! I can talk all day on the phone and still had 2 clicks on the battery meter.

HANDS DOWN THE BEST HEADSET IN THE WORLD !!!

THANKS

STEVE

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Its my choice Skype For Dummies (Paperback)




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I do not recomm this version of SKYPE FOR DUMMIES!! The copyright for this book is 2007. Skype's current version is 5.8 and nothing much matches the current description about using it. The figures in the book do not relate to the most recent version. It was a waste of my $ to purchase this book as its almost worthless!!!
Its surprising that Amazon would be offering such a outdated book. I AM REALLY DISAPOINTED WITH THIS PURCHASE AND FEEL HAS DONE LITTLE TO HELP ME LEARNING SKYPE!!!!

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Great Product The Kind of Preaching God Blesses (Hardcover)




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The Kind of Preaching God Blesses (Kindle Edition) I highly recommend that you read this book. Though it was written for pastors, everyone who attends Church should read it so that they will know what they can and should expect from the pulpit. It is both an indictment against modern-day preaching and how it has strayed so far from the Biblical mandate of preaching the crucified Christ, and a clarion call for today's Church to tolerate nothing less than the preaching of the unadulterated Word of God.

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Great Product Visions of Glory: One Man's Astonishing Account of the Last Days (Perfect Paperback)




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There is a lot of fear and dread associated with the last days and all that will transpire before the coming of the Savior of the world. I have organized and prepared, buying supplies and gold, etc. That is good and needful but now, after having read Visions of Glory, my next preparations will be focused on improving myself as a charitable and Christlike person to help prepare the way for His return. This book gave my husband and me a perspective and understanding that supplemented and enhanced all prior reading. It just makes sense. If we weren't such devout Christians I might recommend this book as a fantastic thriller, but I believe it to be the absolute truth. It is a gift to help us prepare in all the right ways for the exciting future which will be "great and dreadful." Thanks to this book I am now focusing on the "great" part.

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Great Product Panasonic KX-TG7623B DECT 6.0 Link-to-Cell via Bluetooth Cordless Phone, Black, 3 Handsets (Office Product)




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The review about this product

Panasonic KX-TG7622B DECT 6.0 Link-to-Cell via Bluetooth Cordless Phone, Black, 2 Handsets (Office Product) This phone is easy to set-up, has good sound quality and signal. I think I had greater expectations for the bluetooth capabilities though. Quick Pros/Cons list:

Pros:
- Easy set-up
- Easy pairing with cell phones
- Easy Address book copy from cell phone
- Easy Answering system set-up
- Good call volume and quality

Cons:
- Limited headset capabilities
- Limited ring tone selection
- Bluetooth pairing only works with base unit, not the expansion headset. This means you may have to change where you leave your cell phone charging if you want to use the bluetooth capabilities.
- BAD user manual (manual refers to no less than 8 different models, so it can be hard to figure out if certain capabilities correspond to your particular model

Detail on my #1 complaint, Limited headset capabilities:

- Can't use a bluetooth headset to place a call.
- Can't switch to a bluetooth headset after answering a call with the handset.
- This means that headsets can't be used when you need to use touchtone control (i.e. cust service menus, conference calling, VM systems, etc)
- No jack for a wired headset.

Overall, I'm satisfied with the purchase but it isn't as amazing as I expected.

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Reviews About Burning Tigris, The: The Armenian Genocide and America's Response (Hardcover)




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Before reading this book, I knew almost nothing about its subject. I found the book very persuasive in establishing that the Turkish government committed deliberate deportations and mass murders of Armenian (and other) civilians beginning in the 1890s and continuing off and on until the end of WWI. It is a real eye opener to see the familiar pattern of genocide we typically associate with Nazi Germany being used years earlier by the Turks so they could solve their "Amernian Question." There is a great deal of detail here, including photographs, and mulitple, independent eye-witness accounts of what happened. I can see no way these attrocities can be denied.However, I did find the book to drag at times. I wished for better editing because I found the author often repeating himself and I felt he began to drone on too much. Also, it is clear that this is not a stictly objective study of these events. The author is clearly Armenian and has much (justified, I think) anger. But, as can be seen by reading through some of the reviews here on this board, it is clear that Armenians and Turks hate each other and, from reading this book, I can see why Armenians feel that way. But, what is lacking is exactly why the Turks feel that way. The book did not make it clear enough to me why the Turkish government would want to take such extreme measures against these people. I don't doubt that they did; I just wanted more background on that and don't think it was there. I suspect that there is a much longer history that needs to be told.Regardless, I recommend the book. ...

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