Ah... Computers! You either love 'em or hate 'em!
Saturday, January 28, 2006
I had this hair-brained idea that I would update the "look" of this here website. Little did I know what an adventure it would turn into. There's a little bit of everything that popped up. It seemed like everytime I'd hit the 'Preview' button, something else was broke. My hats off to any of you folks that understand CSS and HTML. I still don't know if I got all the bugs worked out of the page-layout. That reminds me. If you see an anomyly, let me know so I can try and fix it.
I was going to use this post to test a couple of things so bare with me...
Let's see if some formating will work: BOLD, ITALIC,STRIKE, UNDERLINE, COLORS.
I guess thats about it. Oh wait. I almost forgot. I was going to check 'justification':
I was reading an
article about globalization and outsourcing when I had an image flash in my mind
that we're headed for a great big flop in our economy. The picture in my mind is
clear, but lets see if I can flesh it out in words. Let's say you have a man,
John Doe, who builds cars at Ford for a living. He's been working on their
assembly lines for over twenty years. This job is all he knows. Ford, not being
bound by borders, looks out onto the sea of workers in our new, globalized
economy and sees a vast army of workers "over there" who are willing to make the
exact same car that John Doe is building. Here's the catch: That army of workers
"over there" will build it for half the wages.
I was going to use this post to test a couple of things so bare with me...
I think there is a world market for maybe five computers.
~ Thomas Watson
Always be wary of the Software Engineer who carries a screwdriver.
~ Robert Paul
Let's see if some formating will work: BOLD, ITALIC,
I guess thats about it. Oh wait. I almost forgot. I was going to check 'justification':
I was reading an
article about globalization and outsourcing when I had an image flash in my mind
that we're headed for a great big flop in our economy. The picture in my mind is
clear, but lets see if I can flesh it out in words. Let's say you have a man,
John Doe, who builds cars at Ford for a living. He's been working on their
assembly lines for over twenty years. This job is all he knows. Ford, not being
bound by borders, looks out onto the sea of workers in our new, globalized
economy and sees a vast army of workers "over there" who are willing to make the
exact same car that John Doe is building. Here's the catch: That army of workers
"over there" will build it for half the wages.
I was reading an article about globalization and outsourcing when I had an image flash in my mind that we're headed for a great big flop in our economy. The picture in my mind is clear, but lets see if I can flesh it out in words. Let's say you have a man, John Doe, who builds cars at Ford for a living. He's been working on their assembly lines for over twenty years. This job is all he knows. Ford, not being bound by borders, looks out onto the sea of workers in our new, globalized economy and sees a vast army of workers "over there" who are willing to make the exact same car that John Doe is building. Here's the catch: That army of workers "over there" will build it for half the wages.
I was reading an article about globalization and outsourcing when I had an image flash in my mind that we're headed for a great big flop in our economy. The picture in my mind is clear, but lets see if I can flesh it out in words. Let's say you have a man, John Doe, who builds cars at Ford for a living. He's been working on their assembly lines for over twenty years. This job is all he knows. Ford, not being bound by borders, looks out onto the sea of workers in our new, globalized economy and sees a vast army of workers "over there" who are willing to make the exact same car that John Doe is building. Here's the catch: That army of workers "over there" will build it for half the wages.
I was reading an article about globalization and outsourcing when I had an image flash in my mind that we're headed for a great big flop in our economy. The picture in my mind is clear, but lets see if I can flesh it out in words. Let's say you have a man, John Doe, who builds cars at Ford for a living. He's been working on their assembly lines for over twenty years. This job is all he knows. Ford, not being bound by borders, looks out onto the sea of workers in our new, globalized economy and sees a vast army of workers "over there" who are willing to make the exact same car that John Doe is building. Here's the catch: That army of workers "over there" will build it for half the wages.
That should do it.
1 Comments:
The new look is terrific. It's much better than the old one. Hope you got all the bugs fixed.
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