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Oct 6, 2011

Steve Jobs: Living for Tomorrow

Steve Jobs: Living for Tomorrow

When Steve Jobs gave his commencement speech at Stanford University, his topic was “How to Live Before You Die.” Since most of us have no idea how much time we have left on this earth, we live as if it is endless. Steve Jobs wasn’t so fortunate. His time, like ours, was limited. The difference is that he knew it, and did something about it.
One of his messages in that speech was the importance of doing something you love. Steve Jobs was one of the greatest innovators and technological geniuses of our time, and was passionate about his work. He lived loving what he did. He died loving it. And his impact on humanity will live on forever.
Steve Jobs adamantly believed that we cannot be satisfied with how things areOne day before he passed away, the latest version of the iPhone was released. I have the iPhone 4, the earlier version. I love it. I use it daily. But Steve Jobs adamantly believed that we cannot be satisfied with how things are; rather, we must constantly strive to improve upon what is already good. Even on those things that are already great.
As the Jewish people, we have just entered a new year. We collectively ask for forgiveness, and reflect on what we can change and what we can improve. Last year may have been a healthy, productive, satisfying year. But this year offers the potential for a new version.
Steve Jobs didn’t always have it easy. He created products that lost to their competition, did things that weren’t conventional, and faced his fair share of critics. But he persisted and eventually succeeded. He knew what his goal was, he knew his direction, and he let nothing stop him from getting there.
We can easily get stuck in the past. We might figure that if something didn’t work before, it won’t work now; or, if it did work then, what’s the point of improvement? Steve Jobs, however, lived for the future in the present. He looked to yesterday only as a guide so that he could change his tomorrow.
In Hebrew the word for the past is avar, which shares the same root as the word for “sin,” aveirah. We are constantly obligated to improve, for ourselves and for the world around us.
Loving what you do is an integral part of successMy gym has a great catchphrase: “There is no such thing as staying the same. You are either striving to do better, or allowing yourself to become worse.” Steve Jobs was always striving to become better, to improve upon greatness and to create the unimaginable. In doing so, he showed the rest of us how a college dropout has the ability to change the world. He showed us that loving what you do is an integral part of success. He proved that innovation is necessary, and that things can always be better.
Each and every one of us has a new version to create. There are no limitations for what can be. So let’s take advantage of the blessing we are given each new day, and learn how to really live our lives.
Sent from my iPad
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Steve Jobs’s


Steve Jobs’s 2005 Stanford Commencement Speech [VIDEO]




As web users, tech luminaries and President Obama publicly mourn the death of Apple founder and former CEO Steve Jobs, many of us at Mashable are privately revisiting Jobs’s June 2005 commencement address to Stanford University graduates.
It’s a simple, humble, narrative-driven speech, touching on his adoption, his decision to drop out of Reed College, getting fired from and then returning to Apple, and being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2004. It’s also packed with oft-quoted advice, many pieces of which have appeared in our Twitter feeds since news of his passing was announced.

SEE ALSO: 15 Inspirational Steve Jobs Quotes
But what we predictably find most impactful watching the speech today is the parts that touch on death. “No one wants to die,” Jobs acknowledges. “Even people who want to go to heaven don’t want to die to get there. And yet death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it. And that is as it should be, because death is very likely the single best invention of life. It is life’s change agent. It clears out the old to make way for the new.”
And later, he advises, “Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma, which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.”
He closed with a quote from Stewart Brand, founder of one of Steve Jobs’s favorite publications growing up, The Whole Earth Catalog: “Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish.”
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Aug 28, 2011


hb - new delhi

It's the victory of india, fight will continue: Anna hazare

It is a victory of the people, Anna Hazare said today as he broke his fast on the 13th day and thanked his supporters for the "success" of his nationwide anti-corruption campaign. The 74-year-old Gandhian accepted a glass of tender coconut water mixed with honey from a Dalit and a Muslim 
Ikrah -- at 10:20am on the dais at the Ramlila Ground ending over 288 hours of fast that began on August 16.
After a brief address, Hazare was driven straight to Medanta Medicity run by eminent cardiologist Dr Naresh Trehan who was attending to him along with his team during his entire period of fast. Hazare will stay in the hospital for two-three days.
"I have only suspended my agitation. I will not rest until all the changes that I look to are achieved," he said to a thunderous applause from thousands of his supporters waving tricolour and shouting slogans like 'Anna Hazare Zindabad'.
Flanked by his team members, including Shanti Bhushan, Prashant Bhushan, Arvind Kejriwal, Kiran Bedi and Manish Sisodia, Hazare said what has been achieved in Parliament yesterday is a victory of the people of India, democracy and those assembled in Ramlila Ground.
Maintaining that People's Parliament is bigger than "Parliament in Delhi", Hazare said that is why Parliament had to listen to people's Parliament.
"This movement has created a faith that the country can be rid of corruption and we can go ahead with implementing laws and the Constitution made by Dr B R Ambedkar," he said.
Referring to Parliament's decision to refer three of his demands -- citizen's charter, inclusion of lower bureaucracy and creation of Lokayuktas through Lokpal bill -- for Standing Committee's consideration, he said, the country can be proud of this moment. Thirteen days of agitation has yielded fruits.
Outlining his future agenda, Hazare chose reforms in election and education systems and working for the betterment of farmers and labourers.
He said his fight would now be for Right to Recall and Right to Reject. While Right to Recall would be for those elected, the Right to Reject will be a column in the ballot paper which would ensure the voter has a right to say that he does not like the listed candidates.
"We have to reform electoral system. (we need) Right to Reject. You should be able to reject your candidate in the ballot paper. We have to do that.
"If majority say they do not like any of the candidates in the fray, the election should be cancelled. How much money they (candidates) will distribute? Once the candidate spends Rs 10 crore for one election and if the election is cancelled, then right sense will dawn upon them," he said.
He said they will have to think about farmers' problems as well as the woes of labourers and fight for them relentlessly.
Another area of concern for Hazare was the commercialisation of education and he said, "many people have commercialised education. They have opened shops. Children of poor people also should get education. This sector also needs reforms."
"Even if Jan Lokpal Bill is fully adopted, we have to continue to carry the flame of this struggle for change. I am confident that Parliament will not reject these demands. Even if it happens, people's Parliament will not reject these...The fight has just begun," he said.
Hazare said the current campaign has given him such inspiration that he will not keep quiet till change is brought. He also said he will tour the country to campaign for bringing in "much required" changes.
Against the backdrop of criticism from a section of Dalit leaders that his movement was anti-Constitution, Hazare said the movement was inspired by the Constitution written by B R Ambedkar, whom Dalits consider as their icon.
"Through this agitation we have also proved that people's parliament is supreme than the Parliament in Delhi. Ambedkar has inspired us. He enacted the constitution. We have to fight for them," Hazare said.
He also sought decentralisation of power, saying the real power should wrest with gram sabhas. "The Gram Sabhas should have the power to dismiss Gram Panchayats if they spend money without the former's permission," he said.
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hb - new delhi

Hazare's agitation protest awakened the non-political class: BJP

BJP on Sunday hailed Anna Hazare's agitation as one which had awakened even the non-political class and insisted that such movements also have a place in democracy as they serve to change the status quo. BJP felt Anna Hazare's agitation had achieved much for democracy and empowerment of
 
the people.
"This is a victory of democracy. It was a convergence of agitation on the street and debate in Parliament. People are feeling empowered after this which is a good thing," BJP spokesperson Prakash Javadekar told PTI.
He maintained that this has strengthened the fight against corruption that his party is waging.
"We also feel elated as awakening of people by this agitation will lead to the non-political class also joining the political process. As Arun Jaitley said in Parliament, this movement was against the status quo. People want change," Javadekar said. After some initial reluctance, BJP had come out in open support of Hazare when he began his fast. It even went to the extent of fully endorsing the Jan Lokpal Bill.
"People are emboldened now as more and more skeletons are coming out of the cupboard of this government," Javadekar said.
Asked if this was truly a victory of Team Anna as several of its demands like keeping Prime Minister under ambit of Lokpal, passing the Bill in this session, inclusion of higher judiciary and so on have not been met, BJP maintained that this agitation was about the larger issue of having a strong and effective Lokpal. "Hazare has succeeded in sending a message to the people and brought them out on the streets. The issue here was also the disgust of the people against corruption. Such non-political agitations also have a place in democracy," Javadekar said.
Asked if Hazare's agitation had challenged the supremacy of Parliament, Javadekar said speaking or going against the established norms in not against democracy.
"Such aberrations happen in a democracy but one should look at the solutions it leads to. The movement also showed reasonableness. Restraint and reasonableness was shown by the middle class as well as the politicians and this is the beauty and strength of democracy," Javadekar said.
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"MAIN BHI ANNA" THOUGHTS
 

Just wearing Gandhi caps with “Mein Bhi Anna (I am Anna)” will not make you Anna Hazare.
This was the message by the Gandhian to his thousands of supporters at Ramlila Maidan as he prescribed a five-point agenda for them to emulate.
“I am seeing people wearing Gandhi caps 

with “Mein bhi Anna”. Just wearing those caps will not make you Anna. If you want to become Anna, you have to keep certain things in mind,” he said.
The 74-year-old activist said while he was happy to see them wearing the white Gandhi caps, there are some essential requisites for being and becoming “Anna” like him.
“There should be no difference in what you say and what you do, you should possess clean and honest thoughts, have a clean conduct, clean character, have a feeling for sacrifice and should have the strength to take humiliation,” Hazare told his supporters.
The people took off their caps and waved them in air in response to Hazare instructions as he spelt out the cardinal rules.
Hazare also said that one should pledge not to give or take bribes henceforth.
The white “Mai bhee Anna” Gandhi caps have become a craze during the last 13-days when Hazare was on a fast for bringing in a strong Lokpal Bill.
Vendors sold these caps for a price ranging from Rs 3 to Rs 10.
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hb topstories


Anna breaks fast and now next to PM (hb- worldnews)




Hailing Parliament's nod on key elements of Jan Lokpal Bill                                                   as "people's victory", Anna Hazare on Sunday broke his 12-day-old fast declaring that electoral reforms will be on top of his agenda next so that corruption can come down. The 74-year-old Gandhian accepted a glass of tender 
As a smiling Anna sipped from a steel glass, people in Ramlila Maidan cheered and hugged each other while some sang "Desh ke pyare Anna Hamare".
After a brief address, Hazare was driven straight to Medanta Medicity run by eminent cardiologist Dr Naresh Trehan who was attending to him along with his team during his entire period of fast. Hazare will stay in the hospital for two-three days.
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