The Buggered Mind of Neale Sourna Blog
NCAD
North Coast
Academies
Diary
Novel
Excerpts
Short
Stories
Scripts /
Screenplays

Neale Sourna at
AuthorsDen.com
Writing Naked
with Neale
Neale's
Home
Project
Keanu
Home
SIGNUP
Neale's Mail
& Groups
FREE Audio
Interviews,
Reviews, Bio, Press
Books, Shop
Catalogs
$$ BUY ME!!
PayService
News,
Fun,
Games,

& Links

Nonfiction,
& Blogs
Adult Fiction at Neale-Sourna.com
"Doing for the mind,
what the body shouldn't."
--NS
Search this site powered by FreeFind
WARNING! If you are under 18 years of age, or are offended by sexually explicit material, or if it is illegal in your community to view such material, exit now. EXIT SITE. Viewing material or clicking on any links within this site means you understand and accept responsibility for your own actions, releasing the owners, partners, creators and affiliates of this site of all liability.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Keanu Reeves' Film "A Walk in the Clouds" Audio Commentary by Author Neale Sourna 

A ProjectKeanu.com Audio Commentary by author Neale Sourna (play along with your DVD): AWalkInTheClouds--1995.mp3

Fun, opinion, insightful, Free!

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,


(0) comments

Armed Forces Press: Researchers Examine Video Gaming’s Benefits 

Researchers Examine Video Gaming’s Benefits

By Bob Freeman
Special to American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Jan. 25, 2010 – Think interactive video games are a waste of time or more suited for children? Think again. Research under way by the Office of Naval Research indicates that video games can help adults process information much faster and improve their fundamental abilities to reason and solve problems in novel contexts.

"We have discovered that video game players perform 10 to 20 percent higher in terms of perceptual and cognitive ability than normal people that are non-game players," said Ray Perez, a program officer at the ONR's warfighter performance department in a Jan. 20 interview on Pentagon Web Radio's audio webcast "Armed with Science: Research and Applications for the Modern Military."

"Our concern is developing training technologies and training methods to improve performance on the battlefield," said Perez, who holds a doctorate in educational psychology.

Perez described the war against terrorists as presenting significant challenges to warfighters on the ground because they must be able to adapt their operations to innovative and deadly adversaries who constantly change their tactics.

"We have to train people to be quick on their feet - agile problem solvers, agile thinkers - to be able to counteract and develop counter tactics to terrorists on the battlefield," Perez said. "It's really about human inventiveness and creativeness and being able to match wits with the enemy."

It's also about....[go to http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=57695

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,


(0) comments

Friday, January 15, 2010

Legal Battles Over E-Book Rights to Older Books 

Legal Battles Over E-Book Rights to Older Books

By MOTOKO RICH
Published: December 12, 2009

William Styron may have been one of the leading literary lions of recent decades, but his books are not selling much these days. Now his family has a plan to lure digital-age readers with e-book versions of titles like “Sophie’s Choice,” “The Confessions of Nat Turner” and Mr. Styron’s memoir of depression, “Darkness Visible.”

But the question of exactly who owns the electronic rights to such older titles is in dispute, making it a rising source of conflict in one of the publishing industry’s last remaining areas of growth.

Mr. Styron’s family believes it retains the rights, since the books were first published before e-books existed. Random House, Mr. Styron’s longtime publisher, says it owns those rights, and it is determined to secure its place — and continuing profits — in the Kindle era.

The discussions about the digital fate of Mr. Styron’s work are similar to the negotiations playing out across the book industry as publishers hustle to capture the rights to release e-book versions of so-called backlist books. Indeed, the same new e-book venture Mr. Styron’s family hopes to use has run into similar resistance from the print publisher of “Catch-22” by Joseph Heller.

On Friday, Markus Dohle, chief executive of Random House, sent a letter to dozens of literary agents, writing that the company’s older agreements gave it “the exclusive right to publish in electronic book publishing formats.”

Backlist titles, which continue to be reprinted long after their initial release, are crucial to publishing houses because of their promise of lucrative revenue year after year. But authors and agents are particularly concerned that traditional publishers are not offering sufficient royalties on e-book editions, which they point out are cheaper for publishers to produce. Some are considering taking their digital rights elsewhere, which could deal a financial blow to the hobbled publishing industry.

The tussle over who owns the electronic rights — and how much the authors should earn in digital royalties — potentially puts into play works by authors like Ralph Ellison and John Updike.

Some publishers have already made agreements with authors or their estates to release digital editions. All of Ernest Hemingway’s books, for example, are available in electronic versions from his print publisher, Scribner, a unit of Simon & Schuster.

But with only a small fraction of the thousands of books in print available in e-book form, there are many titles to be fought over.

“This is a wide open frontier.....[more at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/13/business/media/13ebooks.html#]

A version of this article appeared in print on December 13, 2009, on page A1 of the New York edition.
========
And people ask why I publish my own works. Yes, it's work and like a voice crying in the wilderness all alone; but, it's my voice. And autonomy and independence and knowing my titles aren't ignored or pulled out of rotation for no apparent reason except boredom in waiting for the BIG NUMBERS by "my publisher" for a huge, star customer other than myself--I'm my own star!--is worth the sleep at night.--Neale Sourna

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,


(0) comments

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Interview Myths That Keep You From Landing the Job 


With so few jobs currently available and so many people currently hoping to fill those jobs, standing out in an interview is of utmost importance. While jobs themselves are scarce, job advice is overly abundant. And with an influx of information comes an influx of confusion. What career counsel do you take, and what do you ignore?

There are a number of common misconceptions related to interview best practices, experts say. Kera Greene of the Career Counselors Consortium and executive coach Barbara Frankel offer tips below that can help you stand out from other interview subjects, avoid frequent pitfalls, and secure the job.

Myth #1: Be prepared with a list of questions to ask at the close of the interview.

There is some truth in this common piece of advice: You should always be prepared, and that usually includes developing questions related to the job. The myth here is that you must wait until it is "your turn" to speak.

By waiting until the interviewer asks you if you have any questions, "it becomes an interrogation instead of a conversation," says Greene.

Greene recommends that you think of an interview as a sales call. You are the product and you are selling yourself to the employer. "You can't be passive in a sales call or you aren't going to sell your product."

Frankel mimics Greene's comments. "It's a two-way street," she says. "I recommend asking a follow-up question at the tail end of your responses."

For example, Frankel says, if the interviewer says, "Tell me about yourself," you first respond to that question and complete your response with a question like, "Can you tell me more about the position?" The interview should be a dialogue.

Myth #2: Do not show weakness in an interview.

The reality is that it is OK to have flaws. In fact, almost every interviewer will ask you to name one. Typically job seekers are told to either avoid this question by providing a "good flaw." One such "good flaw" which is often recommends is: "I am too committed to my work." But, these kinds of responses will only hurt you.

"Every recruiter can see through that," Greene says of faux flaws.

Recruiters conduct interviews all day, every day. They've seen it all and can see through candidates who dodge questions. "They prefer to hire someone who is honest than someone who is obviously lying," Greene says.

And for those of you who claim to be flaw-free, think again. "Everybody has weaknesses," Frankel states. But one is enough. According to Frankel, supply your interviewer with one genuine flaw, explain how you are working to correct it, and then move on to a new question.

Myth #3: Be sure to point out all of your strengths and skills to the employer.

Of course, you want the interviewer to know why you are a valuable candidate, but a laundry list of your skills isn't going to win you any points. Inevitably, in an interview, you will be asked about your skills. What can go wrong in this scenario?

"You don't want to list a litany of strengths," Frankel says.

"What is typical is that they will say: 'I'm a good communicator,' 'I have excellent interpersonal skills,' 'I am responsible,'" Greene explains. "You have to give accomplishments. I need to know what did you accomplish when using these skills."

Frankel recommends doing a little groundwork before your interview so that you are best equipped to answer this question. She tells her clients to find out what the prospective job role consists of. "What makes an interview powerful is to give an example related to their particular needs or challenges that you have demonstrated in the past."

Provide three strengths, with examples. You will get much further with a handful of real strengths than with an unconvincing list of traits.

Myth #4: Let the employer know your salary expectations.

One of the trickiest questions to answer in an interview relates to salary. Money talk can be uncomfortable, but it doesn't have to be. The fact is you don't even have to answer when asked about desired salary.

According to the book "Acing the Interview: How to Ask and Answer the Questions That Will Get You The Job!" a perfect response would be: "I want to earn a salary that is commensurate with the contributions I can make. I am confident I can make a substantial contribution at your firm. What does your firm plan to pay for this position?"

Greene suggests a similar response: "I prefer to discuss the compensation package after you've decided that I'm the best candidate and we can sit down and negotiate the package."

Myth #5: The employer determines whether or not you get the job.

While yes, the employer must be the one to offer you the position, interviewees have more control than they often realize. According to both Greene and Frankel, candidates have a larger say in the final hiring decision than they think.

"They should call the interviewer or hiring manager and say: 'I'd really like to be part of the company,'" says Greene. "It can't hurt you. It can only help."

"Acing the Interview" encourages all candidates to conclude their interviews with one question: "'Based on our interview, do you have any concerns about my ability to do the job?' -- If the answer is yes, ask the interviewer to be explicit. Deal forthrightly with each concern."

For more interview tips and myths, download a free book summary of "Acing the Interview: How to Ask and Answer the Questions That Will Get You The Job!" here.

Also on Yahoo! HotJobs:

'Accomplishments' to leave off your resume
6 reasons they didn't call you back
Should you keep your salary a secret?
Find a new job near you


Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , ,


(0) comments

Friday, January 08, 2010

H&M and Wal-Mart destroy and trash unsold goods 

H&M and Wal-Mart destroy and trash unsold goods
Cynthia Magnus holds up unworn, destroyed clothing she found in the garbage. Photo by Suzanne DeChillo/New York Times

Cynthia Magnus holds up unworn, destroyed clothing she found in the garbage. Photo by Suzanne DeChillo/New York Times

This week the New York Times reported a disheartening story about two of the largest retail chains. You see, instead of taking unsold items to sample sales or donating them to people in need, H&M and Wal-Mart have been throwing them out in giant trash bags. And in the case that someone may stumble on these bags and try to keep or re-sell the items, these companies have gone ahead and slashed up garments, cut off the sleeves of coats, and sliced holes in shoes so they are unwearable.

This unsettling discovery was made by graduate student Cynthia Magnus outside the back entrance of H&M on 35th street in New York City. Just a few doors down, she also found hundreds of Wal-Mart tagged items with holes made in them that were dumped by a contractor. On December 7, she spotted 20 bags of clothing outside of H&M including, "gloves with the fingers cut off, warm socks, cute patent leather Mary Jane school shoes, maybe for fourth graders, with the instep cut up with a scissor, men’s jackets, slashed across the body and the arms. The puffy fiber fill was coming out in big white cotton balls.”

The New York Times points out that one-third of the city's population is poor, which makes this behavior not only wasteful and sad, but downright irresponsible. Wal-Mart spokeswoman, Melissa Hill, acted surprised that these items were found, claiming they typically donate all unworn merchandise to charity. When reporters went around the corner from H&M to a collections drop-off for charity organization New York Cares, spokesperson Colleen Farrell said, “We’d be glad to take unworn coats, and companies often send them to us."

After several days of no response from H&M, the company made a statement today, promising to stop destroying the garments at the midtown Manhattan location. They said they will donate the items to charity. H&M spokeswoman Nicole Christie said, "It will not happen again," and that the company would make sure none of the other locations would do so either. Hopefully that's the final word. [NY Times][Huff Post]

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,


(0) comments

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

  • NEW!! Heartwild Solitaire, The Author's Edition*

    The FIRST solitaire game with a romance story.

    Romance Follow a story of Anne, as she leaves her old life behind and sets off to rediscover her true self. But then a man, dangerous kind, steps onto her path...

    Tarot Through a Tarot spread see Anne's fate unfolding. Hand painted cards will guide you.

    Solitaire Have fun with a relaxing, card-matching game. Unique bonuses and random card placement will keep you playing for hours. And if you dare, submit your best score to the online chart and compete with others!

    *Game story Written by Neale Sourna, Rated E for Everyone Version also available

  • Trade Paperback

    BUY "Hobble" Now!

    Retail & Wholesale
    1-877-BUY-BOOK
  • PIE: Perception Is Everything ebook of HOBBLE, [Adobe, Microsoft, Palm at FICTIONWISE.COM] of HOBBLE.
  • Ebook -- Adobe Acrobat, Microsoft eReader, & Palm
    at Powell's
  • Half Native American medical professional BENNET GILLESPIE'S "off track" life dangerously spirals, as his compulsive and sexual, love entanglement with DAY, a "knife-happy" African American "innocent", and her overbearing, elderly British "guardian" threatens to cost Benn more than his life.

    Is Benn falling in love or is he just "having the hottest sex" he's ever had with the luscious, hot young cripple with the childlike and homicidal mind? Will Benn take her away, before her stepfather, who's sexin' his stepdaughter, sends her back to lockdown? Or before the girl takes matters into her own hands, and kills, again?

    [Fiction / Adult Fiction / Explicit / Dark Sensual Romance / Erotica / Dark Romantic Erotica / Dark Romantica™ / Paranormal /
    Psychological Erotica / Spiritual Erotica / Multiracial / Interracial]

    NEW!! Benn:"Sex with Day is fun, exciting, and risky. It's not just her and me. She has another lover, too, her stepfather, who hates me, but needs me, because beautiful Day needs me; and does what I say. I can go anywhere, have anyone, but still this childlike woman holds me here."

    Day: "I need Benn, and I love Benn. I'll tell the world and show the world I want him, and that makes him want me more; my open, shameless, prideless need and desire for him. He's a player and I know it, but that's exactly what I need, to get away. From him, from Hoppy."

    Hopkins: "The boy thinks he can take her away, but he can't, she's my property, and if he tries, I'll sic the law on him. But, curse him, he must remain, I must keep him here, with us, to let her seduce him, over and over again, and drive him mad, until he burns like a sinner on fire in Hell, just like me; because this foul triangle of sex and madness and wrong hopes, secures her more to me, than anything I ever did to her before, and certainly more than if he were gone."

    BUY "Hobble" by Phone 877-BUY-BOOK [877-289-2665] CHECK or CHARGE!!

    Trade Paperback (retail and wholesale) Phone Buy and Online

  • The Buggered Mind of Neale Sourna
  • The Buggered Mind of Neale Sourna at Blogspot.com
  • From PIE: Perception Is Everything
    "Steve's Monkey's Paw & More" by Neale Sourna

    STEVE is a horrid bad boy, envious of friend ALEX’s turn-around attitude with his soon-to-be new love, KARA, but grandma’s monkey’s paw, gives Steve complete control over anyone he wants; even Alex’s sweet new lady, a virgin; against her will....

  • "North Coast Academies' Diaries"

    BUY Vol 1, Issue 1 -- Laila: Cozy With Daddy [7857 words] -- Brainy private school virgin, Laila Mariah Deever, seduces her handsome, middle-aged stepfather, Ross, for her first incestuous cherry-picking.... Whoo! Those overachievers.

    "OMG, I've been simply dying to have my Daddy, he's been so sad with Mama, the bitch, ALWAYS gone. He's so cute, and so hot, and so everything every girlfriend, female teacher, and PTA lady I know wants; but Daddy's all mine. Or will be, when I show him what I bought to wear, just for him, until he takes it off me and shows me how to take his huge thingy inside me and make him happy, really happy, in his bed, while she's away."
    BUY Laila's On Sale NOW
    !

  • BUY Vol 1, Issue 2 -- Yune: Suck My Kiss [3677 words] --Basketball jock Yune gets his stone hard, young Korean American piece sucked by a first time knob munching, K.A. church virgin, while his favorite, bespectacled, brown-skinned teen goddess secretly watches, and then later he's sucked off by a classmate's red-haired, society MILF mom. What a great birthday week he's having! A first throat and facial; and yes, gulp, mom swallows.

    "LOL, my friends. My best enemy's mom's been munching my nuts, so, I'll have to give a certain captain of the team's sluttin' mom a happy mouthful. And, at my birthday party, in private, almost, little Amy, my supposed Korean American, church virgin, 'future bride' won't say 'no' to me, when I completely devirginize her tight...."
    BUY Yune's On Sale NOW!

  • BUY Vol 2, Issue 1 -- Ross: Daddy's Little W----, uh, Seductress [8401 words] --Sexy middle-aged stepdad, Ross Deever, wakes naked beside his newly deflowered, multi-racial stepdaughter, Laila; then vainly tries abstaining from hitting it again. And again. With a vengeance. Shower, kitchen table spread, on kitchen floor, and an extensive private lesson in proper sucking, her first swallow, and her first facial.

    "I've been a good dad, but my little girl's come of age, and she can't get enough of what I have to put inside her, in bed, on the kitchen table, on all fours, begging for it from behind, like a bitch in heat, and our little bath together, not like old times at all. And sweet Laila wants to taste.... I am gonna rot in Hell."
    BUY Ross' Tale On Sale NOW!

  • From Ancient Egypt's Pharoah's Great House to the Wide Grass Steppes of Central Asia to the Great Himalyas of Pakistan and Kashmir. Warrior General and Prince Consort. Warrior Queen and Shamaness. Love and Betrayal.

    Watchtower, Book 1, Excerpt 1

  • Google Search
  • Archives