Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Pot-Bellied!

I was seated in the bus in a far corner then comes two ladies and one guy..we seated 2gether. As the bus cruize away 4rm the city, they started a very funny conversation. I don remember how they started but the way they were arguing attracted my attention. They were arguing about pot-bellied men/ladies! The guy waz arguing that a pot-bellied lady is not very attractive. Then the ladies waz saying that they don wanna date any pot-bellied man! They cant even imagine how they can ve sex with a pot-bellied man!

This is a big debate, can anyone here agree with these guys? Over to u.

Friday, March 02, 2007

Ad Madness!

Sometimes u wake early in the morning n u think people r crazy. I mean when u look arnd wherever u r u just get amazed, surprised or u find urself laughing alone.....like using a phone with blue-tooth..u will find a person talking n laughing...n if u dont scrutinize very well u will think 'amerogwa'.

Oh, where waz i? I waz talking abt the craziness which is hitting Kenyans. There this ad abt 'kufungua account bila chochote na Barclays'. Look at the man with only pants, socks and shoes. I just laugh to myself and thought that they didn't pass their point very well. Ati "Sasa unaweza fungua account bila chochote", first, the guy posing should ve bn pure naked 2 mean that u can open with nothing...in that everybody will b interested with the ad n will know exactly its meaning!

That will take the advertisement to another level! Isn't this crazy? Again there is something its juz killin kabisa! Are the ad companies lacking the spaces to advertise? Adverts are all over the place...now they r putting on buses! Very soon we will c them sticked on animals!

Have a gr8 advertising day!

Monday, February 19, 2007

The City Glory is Here

It has bn a long time since i blog. But i waz cruising around the city and a realised that while some people glory 'are gone', the 'glory is here' for Nairobi city. Kudos goes to the city godfathers for the work they are doing. The city is fast gaining its past glory of 'the city in the sun'. The most notable things are the tree planting..dubbed 'Nairobi City Beautification Programme' and street lighting projects. The city roads are glittering at night, thanx to one woman called..Esther Passaris n her Adopt-a-Light.

Pavements are no longer muddy on rainy days and dusty on sunny days. Currently, the projects is xpanding to the city estates. City slums and estates are nolonger dark at nite. Rehabilitations of some landmark

buildings like KICC which is fast earning Kenya foreign income through conference tourism. Whoever sees no change in the city should have a walking tour.






Nairobi city at night

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Finally, n here is the Bantuts 'thingie'. U can now bet!

Friday, February 02, 2007

Windows Vista

What way forward? I ve bn so busy nowadays, working like a termite till late evening. Guess what i ve bn doing? Trying to put up some things to ve the latest 'face' in the market. When you are working in a field where technology matters and you must get updated with the latest offers in the market and make your company be the role model to other companies who depends on technology to run their daily biz. Oooh! what a long expalnation?

The point is, i waz busy upgrading my company's system to the latest 'Bill Gates' product 'Windows Vista'. An improvement of windows Xp. It looks splendid, easy to use. The fact is, its more advanced than other windows OS. U gotta try this.

Windows vista makes the customization and deployment easier. You can easily add drivers, service packs, updates n languages to it. It provides tools that help you inventory, test, migrate data and user state.

Monday, January 29, 2007

My Part of 2007.

This is part of my 2007 developments on the net.


Wednesday, January 24, 2007

"Free Love"

"Love wins; love always wins," it has been said. But throughout most of our agrarian past, love lost, at least among the upper classes. Today I am optimistic about romantic love, because we are returning to patterns of romance that humankind enjoyed across most of our deep history: choosing lovers and spouses for ourselves.

Parents may have started to arrange their children's marriages when the brain began to develop some two million years ago. But in those few hunting and gathering societies that still survive, parents only initiate the first wedding of a son or daughter. Moreover, this contract is flexible. If the callow newlyweds are not happy with their match, they pick up their few belongings and walk home. The contract has been honored and parents are pleased to see their youth again. The young go on to choose their next partner for themselves.

But as our forebears began to settle down some 10,000 years ago, and as they acquired immoveable property like fields of grain and sturdy homes, they began to need to cement their social ties. What better way than to wed your daughter with my son? Strictly arranged marriages became a way to built one's fortune and secure one's genetic future. These marriages had to endure, too. In some farming communities, you could fall in love with whom you chose; but you married the "right" individual, with the "right" kin connections and "right" social, economic and political ties.

The widespread tradition of strictly arranged marriages began to dissipate with the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. As men and women left the farm for factory work, they no longer needed to maintain many of these connections. They could chose partners for themselves.

Today this movement is gaining speed, due to two dramatic world trends: the global rise of women in the paid labor force; and the aging world population. For millions of years women commuted to work to gather their fruits and vegetables and came home with much of the evening meal. Women were economically, sexually and socially powerful. With the invention of the plow, however, women lost much of their economic independence. But as women go back to work and come home with money, they are reacquiring their economic autonomy—and their ancient ability to choose their lovers and spouses for themselves. With the aging world population, high divorce and remarriage rates, and many modern inventions, from Viagra to hip replacements, women (and men) now have the time, opportunity and health to make their own match, what the Chinese call "free love."

And along with the rise of romantic love within marriage has come what sociologists hail as the 21st century marital form, known as peer marriages, symmetrical marriages or companionate marriages: weddings between equals. "Marriage is the only adventure open to the cowardly." Today more and more men and women have the opportunity to enjoy this adventure—life with someone they passionately love. In this way humanity is regaining a tradition that is highly compatible with our ancient human spirit.

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