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The alchemist (quotes)

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Celebrating next week THREE YEARS in the New York times Bestseller List, you find below parts of the dialogue between the shepherd boy and the Alchemist on the way to the pyramids. "Why do we have to listen to our hearts?" the boy asked, when they had made camp that day. "Because, wherever your heart is, that is where you'll find your treasure." "But my heart is agitated," the boy said. "It has its dreams, it gets emotional, and it's become passionate over a woman of the desert. It asks things of me, and it keeps me from sleeping many nights, when I'm thinking about her." "Well, that's good. Your heart is alive. Keep listening to what it has to say." "My heart is a traitor," the boy said to the alchemist, when they had paused to rest the horses. "It doesn't want me to go on." "That makes sense. Naturally it's afraid that, in pursuing your dream, you might lose everything you've won.&q

Welcome to the happiest place

By Dominique Dawes   Are you really happy? It's a question that has crossed all of our minds. Just a month prior to interviewing researcher, explorer and best-selling author Dan Buettner, I had been wrestling with this question myself. Am I really happy? Am I passionate about the work that I do. Do I love my family and friends, or at least the ones I choose to keep in my small circle. My faith is at the core of my being. And I really appreciate the little things in life: a rainy Monday, the color of fall (one of my favorite times of the year), my morning coffee that lasts for hours, that special song that sparks a memory, the laughter of children — especially my niece and nephew.   For me it's these little things that seem to make me happy. But is that really enough? I learned a lot from Buettner, who travelled the world in search of the keys to happiness. His new National Geographic book, " Thrive: Finding Happiness the Blue Zones Way ," reveals secrets from the

How Spammers Fool Rule-based and Signature-Based Spam Filters

Author: Paul Judge, CTO, CipherTrust, Inc. Effectively stopping spam over the long-term requires much more than blocking individual IP addresses and creating rules based on keywords that spammers typically use. The increasing sophistication of spam tools coupled with the increasing number of spammers in the wild has created a hyper-evolution in the variety and volume of spam. The old ways of blocking the bad guys just don't work anymore. Examining spam and spam-blocking technology can illuminate how this evolution is taking place and what can be done to combat spam and reclaim e-mail as the efficient, effective communication tool it was intended to be. Heuristics (Rule-based Filtering) One method used to combat spam is Rule-based, or Heuristic Filtering. Rule-based filters scan email content for predetermined words or phrases that may indicate a message is spam. For example, if an email administrator includes the word "sex" on a company's rule-based list, any email co

Link Popularity Tool

Author: Henry James Links are widely used by various webmasters to judge their internet presence. Even the web crawlers or search engines are using the effective popularity tools to measure the rankings of the various websites. You can also use the latest tools such as link popularity software, online optimizers and prowlers to boost up the page ranking of your website(s). By using these tools, you would certainly gain a greater number of targeted traffic as well as business contacts. First of all lets us discuss the basics of link popularity. A website is always ranked on the basis of its link popularity. And link popularity is nothing but measuring the number of quality links on your website. Your website can support certain links—inbound outbound and reciprocal links— with other websites in the forms of text link, banners or advertisements. The more quality links you have, the more popular is your website. So, a good link popularity tool or software would drastically increase your p