Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

The driver who was texting around the time he struck and killed 16-year-old Forrest Cepeda in July was arraigned in Deschutes County Circuit Court on Tuesday.

Erik Mackenzie Conn, 28, appeared by video from the Deschutes County Jail. He is charged with second-degree manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, reckless driving and reckless endangerment. On Tuesday, Conn’s bail was set at $250,000.

Conn was driving a pickup truck with a utility trailer along Southeast Reed Market Road in July when he swerved and struck Cepeda, who was riding his bike with a friend on the road’s shoulder. A search warrant return showed Conn was texting on his cell phone in the minutes leading up to the accident.

Conn was ordered not to contact Cepeda’s family or the child who was riding with Cepeda at the time of the accident.

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Sunday, September 11th, 2011

So, as her medical sales recruiter, I told her to go back to her computer and send another note:

“In my excitement over the job, I wanted to send you a thank you note as soon as possible. However, I realized that I misspelled ________. I’m embarrassed. It’s just not like me to make a mistake like that.” And so on. She ended the note with something positive, and the interview process went on. (In another situation, that would have ended her as a candidate for that job.)

The moral of the story: Be enthusiastic, send your thank you notes quickly, but take a breath and spell-check it before you send it. And maybe type it instead of texting it.

Saturday, September 10th, 2011

WINNIPEG – Winnipeg has seen deadly consequences in a suspected incident of texting while driving.

A 19-year-old man is facing possible charges after allegedly typing a cellphone text message a moment before crashing a pickup truck head-on into a car Tuesday night. The 53-year-old man died in hospital Wednesday of injuries suffered when the Dodge Neon he was driving was hit by the truck on Dugald Road.

“We want these incidents to stop happening and want people to be making better decisions when it comes to using hand-held devices,” said Const. Jason Michalyshen, a spokesman for city police.

The crash occurred about 8:30 p.m., when the 19-year-old was eastbound on Dugald in the Toyota truck. In the area of the intersection with Goodyear Avenue, police said, he saw traffic had stopped immediately ahead of him for street construction, before he veered into westbound lanes to avoid rear-ending vehicles.

The truck ran straight into the westbound Neon driven by the older man, who was taken to hospital in critical condition.

The teen suspect was taken to hospital in stable condition, and faces a future court appearance while traffic officers continue to investigate. Charges have not been formally laid.

Police allege the teen also had a prohibited weapon in the truck. Michalyshen didn’t specify the kind of weapon, saying only that it’s not a gun.

ross.romaniuk@sunmedia.ca

Friday, September 9th, 2011

In fact, more often than not, you’ll have absolutely NO idea that your spouse is committing infidelity behind your back…Work affairs are EXTREMELY difficult to catch.

Luckily, you’ve found your way to this article, where you’ll be learning exactly how to find out if your spouse is guilty:

1. Extract Email Addresses From His Contacts
2. Find Who He’s Texting at Work
3. See Who He’s Calling on His Lunch Break

I’m sure you’ve heard of cell phone tracking before, but my guess is that you have yet to take the time to figure out exactly what it can do for you.

Use Cell Phone Tracking to Sure Fire Catch a Work Affair

It’s important to recognize the most common methods of communication during a work affair. Basically, your spouse’s work email and his cell phone are going to be the prime places to find proof.

#1. Learn Who He’s Emailing From His Phone

As I’m sure you already know, in the past 10 years the cell phone has become more of a general communication tool than specifically a phone. As such, email addresses and even email messages are often stored or linked to a person’s cell phone.

With cell phone tracking you’ll be able to extract any and all email addresses from your spouse’s cell phone. In fact, that’s not all. You’ll also get access to:

* Every Name Stored in Their Phone – You can Look for Fake Sounding Names and Maybe Even Run Them Through a Reverse Phone Lookup

* Every Phone Number in Their Contacts – Again, using a reverse phone lookup service will allow you to see all public records on anyone and everyone in their phone

* Any Saved Address Information – If your spouse regularly cheats at the same place, then there’s a good chance you’ll find records of it in their cell phone.

I’m sure you can already begin to see how powerful cell phone tracking can be, and we haven’t even finished the article yet!

#2. Find Out Who He’s Texting at Work

With the popularity of texting, it’s actually been proven that America as a whole has started working less. The reason being is that so many men and women spend their days silently communicating with each other via text. This let’s them remain undetected by their boss, but still entertained by their friends.

Unfortunately, it also means that your wife or husband is much more likely to cheat, and it makes it easier for them to do so.

Luckily, with cell phone tracking you’ll be able to read every single text, either sent or received, EVEN after it’s been deleted.

Crazy, right?

#3. Who is He Calling During His Lunch Break?

If you’ve been unable to find any proof that your partner is sneaking around behind your back, then it’s likely that they’re using time at work to meet up with a lover.

Lunch breaks are a great time to check into a motel for an hour and have some fun, and I can almost guarantee your spouse has at least considered this before.

Luckily, you’ll be able to keep tabs on every single phone call that he makes or receives. There’s no way he’ll be able to meet up with someone else on his lunch break if he can’t even make a phone call without your knowledge!

How to Actually Get PROOF of an Affair

Unfortunately, cell phone tracking does NOT work on every single cell phone ever made. It actually only works on relatively recent phones. However, if you ARE eligible, then you can basically just sit back and let your spouse prove their own affair!

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

These handy websites allow you to add new events to your calendar via SMS. For instance, you can text to your online calendar, and it will automatically insert it to your diary with all the appropriate details in the right place.

If you look online you’ll find a selection of Web services which provide alerting and information options via mobile messaging, that will help keep you well-informed about appointments when you are far from your personal organiser. For example , if you need to keep up to date with when exactly a package is due to arrive on your desk, then simply forward your delivery-confirmation e-mail to a handy webpage trackmyshipments.com, and for a small fee you can receive regular text messages regarding your package’s status,its location, and details of possible delays. You can do this for things you have sent too, by forwarding the number of your shipment to a special online account.

Tracking packages by SMS is just the tip of the texting iceberg, though. If you’ve booked a flight, train, or bus online, you can receive the confirmation code by text, this means that if you lose your ticket, you can simply show the transport authority the confirmation number on your phone and they’ll give you a replacement. These days arts venues and theatres also accept texts as valid tickets, which reduces paper waste.

You can also configure online calendars to send automatic reminders before a special event. This can be done at a computer, or by sending a simple text from your phone. To In order to utilise your online calendar’s mobile options, you’ll initially need to set it up for use with your own particular mobile with use of a computer with an online connection.

Many of the main mobile service providers such as o2 and Vodafone now offer free texts to their contract customers – so if you think you’ll be a frequent SMS service user, it could be worth your while upgrading to a contract phone.

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

So we all know what a cell phone is – but did you know how many cool features are available in a cell phone these days? Long gone are the days of using your cell phone exclusively for talking and texting – now they come packed with games, cool apps and more.

Not only has the functionality of the cell phone changed over time – the hardware itself has also changed. With the increasing popularity of text messaging comes the advent of the full keyboard and the riddance of hitting keys multiple times to get the letter you want. But in today’s world, traditional texting is taking a backseat to mobile applications set in the social media realm – connect with friends and family directly using mobile versions of MSN Messenger, Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, AIM and more.

Some of the most popular cell phone features involve music applications. In the past, people loved the Walkman, the Discman and the MP3 player, brilliant little devices that let you take the music with you no matter where you went. Today, many cell phones feature built-in MP3 players, making a separate device for listening to music redundant.

Some other popular cell phone features include:
Flip Phones – compact cell phones that “flip” open and double in size
Cell Phone Cameras – Take pictures anytime without needing your traditional camera
Slider Phones – Similar to flip phones, but the phone slides open, often exposing a full keyboard for typing and texting
Satellite Phones – Connect directly with an orbiting satellite and get a signal in remote areas away from cell phone towers
GPS Cell Phones – Phones with built-in GPS (global positioning satellite) capabilities so you’ll never get lost again
3G Phones (Smartphones) – Send and receive data like email and photos plus web browsing and more
Cell Phone Games – Play your favorite games right on your cell phone

It’s important to keep in mind that the price for cell phones loaded with cool features can be much more expensive than more traditional cell phones (talk and text only). As time passes, competition between cell phone manufacturers ensures that eventually even the most basic phones will include many of the features listed above.

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

Hardly a week goes by without a warning about how educationally detrimental it is for children to spend hours of every day screen-gazing and message-sending. But now there’s a note of dissent ” from the poet laureate, no less, who says she believes texting is an ideal springboard to good poetry-writing.

“The poem is a form of texting … it’s the original text,” says Carol Ann Duffy . “It’s a perfecting of a feeling in language ” it’s a way of saying more with less, just as texting is. We’ve got to realise that the Facebook generation is the future ” and, oddly enough, poetry is the perfect form for them. It’s a kind of time capsule ” it allows feelings and ideas to travel big distances in a very condensed form.”

Duffy, who became Britain’s first female poet laureate in 2009, is passionate about the teaching of poetry in school. She believes there’s a myth that poetry is considered “difficult” or “complicated” by teachers ” but says that’s simply not borne out by what’s really going on in the nation’s classrooms, where poetry is enjoying a major revival. “The poem is the literary form of the 21st century,” she says. “It’s able to connect young people in a deep way to language … it’s language as play.” Just, one might say, as text messaging is language at play.

So, if texting is preparing children for a lifetime of poetry, are today’s youngsters better at poetry than children in the past? “I think it’s most obvious in music,” says Duffy. “If you look at rapping, for example, a band like Arctic Monkeys uses lyrics in a poetic way. And using words in an inventive way is at the heart of youth culture in every way.”

Duffy says she owes her career as a poet to her exposure to poetry at school in the 1960s and early 70s, when she was growing up ” and that’s why she’s determined to do all she can to further strengthen its place in the curriculum. “I grew up in a bookless house ” my parents didn’t read poetry, so if I hadn’t had the chance to experience it at school I’d never have experienced it. But I loved English, and I was very lucky in that I had inspirational English teachers, MissScriven and Mr Walker, and they liked us to learn poems by heart, which I found I loved doing.”

When one of her English teachers died, Duffy wrote a poem containing the lines: “You sat on your desk / swinging your legs, reading a poem by Yeats / to the bored girls, except my heart stumbled and blushed / as it fell in love with the words and I saw the tree / in the scratched old desk under my hands, heard the bird in the oak outside scribble itself on the air.”

Duffy says when she realised how much she loved poetry, she started to keep a notebook with her favourite poems in it. “I’d write them out by hand, and it was that very physical act that led me to become a writer. It was quite an intimate experience of poetry, and that’s what I’d like us to go back to now with children.”

To this end, Duffy will on Wednesday launch Anthologise, a competition for secondary school pupils, which invites them to create their own poetry anthologies. “They can do it any way they want, and they can be any sort of group they want ” so it can be a class, or it can be a poetry group in a school, or it can simply be one pupil,” she explains. “The anthology can be organised in any way they want ” it can be themed, or it can be issue-led … anything they choose. They’ll be given a budget, and they’ll also have to think about how to cost it ” so, for example, they’ll have to think about whether they’ll have to pay fees for reproducing poems, and, if so, they’ll have to think about how much these fees are.”

The idea behind the competition, says Duffy, is to foster a stronger relationship between children and the whole poetry arena ” encouraging them to think about the wider issues around poetry, but also encouraging them to read widely, and to experience ” as she herself did ” a more intimate relationship with poems. “I feel it will lead to new writing,” she says.

The deadline for entries to the competition is 1 March 2012, and as well as Duffy the judges include Gillian Clarke, the national poet of Wales; Liz Lochhead , the Scottish makar (national poet); and the Cambridge professor of children’s poetry Morag Styles. The winning anthology will be announced three months after the closing date, and it will be published by Picador with a foreword by Duffy, who will also visit the winning school.

“What I hope this competition will do is put some control into the hands of the students themselves,” says Duffy. “They will be able to create their own anthologies, and it will help to enhance the way poetry is taught in school.”

Duffy’s work is studied in schools at GCSE and A-level ” but, while she tirelessly tours the country visiting schools, her connection with the world of education has not been without its controversies. In 2008, her Education for Leisure, a poem about violence, was removed from the AQA examination board’s GCSE poetry anthology after a complaint about its references to knife crime and a goldfish being flushed down the toilet.

Duffy has always maintained that the poem ” which opens with the words “Today I am going to kill something. Anything / I have had enough of being ignored and today / I am going to play God” ” is anti-violence.

After Anthologise, she reveals, she has even bigger plans for poetry in schools. “What I’d like to do is create anthologies for other school subjects ” for history, for geography, for maths,” she says. “Ithink poetry can help children deal with the other subjects on the curriculum by enabling them to see a subject in a new way. So you’d have a maths lesson, and the teacher would hand out a poem about mathematics. Poetry is a different way of seeing something, and seeing a subject in a different way is often a very good tool to better learning.”