Wire Consultancy - In this blog, we will explore 7 key lessons that can be learned from companies with strong positive safety cultures.

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Wire Consultancy - In this blog, we will explore 7 key lessons that can be learned from companies with strong positive safety cultures.
7 Lessons I learned from my last relationship
7 Lessons I have been in a relationship maybe 2 years ago. At first, it was great but as time went on things started to change. We stopped having fun together and we weren’t communicating anymore. I learned 7 lessons. We ended up breaking up last year and since then I have learned some valuable lessons about love that I want to share with you today: Photo by MART PRODUCTION on…
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7 valuable lessons imparted Android for iPhone
Android and iPhone are the two largest mobile platform, we are improving every year and integrates many useful features.
Here are seven features that iPhone was learning from Android.
1. Multitasking This is considered as one of the basic features of today’s smartphones. However, it was not available on the iPhone since the first day.
Multitasking can be understood simply as the transition between the applications running without reopening several times. This feature did not appear on the iPhone until iOS 4 was officially released in 2010.
Meanwhile, Android has multitasking support right from the first version 1.0. It took 3 years to realize this new Apple to bring multitasking on iOS platform.
Multitasking helps users do more work on the “mobile phone” her.
2. Large screen Before Samsung unveiled the first generation Galaxy Note, a smartphone giant is still considered a “ridiculous game” of Android. But then, the smartphone screen size has been improved significantly. These phones have larger screens appear massively each year.
The gap between the smartphone and tablet gradually narrowed with the advent of the phablet. This hybrid offspring quickly developed into a specific product line instead of as many anticipate trends earlier. Unfortunately, the iPhone is still “stuck” with a 3.5-inch touch screen in a long time.
Screen size gradually overtake iPhone device running Android.
Then Apple decided to improve the screen size to 4 inch iPhone 5, but keep the width of the machine. This leads to the iPhone screen looks quite cramped. Users will have the feeling like iPhone elongated instead of resizing the screen.
Soon, Apple has determined to change the iPhone 6 by improving the screen size to 4.7 inches, and unveiled its first phablet – iPhone 6 Plus with 5.5 inch screen.
3. Install panel Stroking the screen and quick access to settings for the machine has appeared on Android before iOS 7 launch. This is the “lesson” following which Android has “taught” to the iPhone.
Quick access immediately on notification bar is one of the features of Android that iPhone users have envied.
4. Update via OTA protocol Update firmware without connection to a computer is something that Android users feel comfortable. Apparently Google than Apple were quick in bringing this feature to your users. IPhone owners have to wait for the new iOS 5 can update the software for your mobile phone via OTA protocol.
Update via OTA protocol on Android appeared very early.
5. Interaction immediately on notification bar This feature helps users save time when using the phone. Specifically, upon receiving notification of a new message or email from the state, users can quickly review or answer email immediately without the need to access the application.
The utility of this function is not debatable. Unfortunately, not until iOS 8 new iPhone users have the opportunity to experience this. While users have resorted to boring features on the generation Android phones launched earlier.
6. Camera with flash The darling of the Apple phone was not equipped with flash until the iPhone 4 was officially released. The flash helps capture better pictures at night, indoor or low-light conditions. Users love photography was fascinated by this feature.
“Milky Way” Galaxy S had camera “attached” flash from the first generation, which was launched in 2009. Android phones than iPhones were quick to support the flash when taking photos.
7. Customizable wallpaper Among the “lessons” that Android has “taught” for the iPhone, have not seemed very few features were normal but Apple suddenly forgotten. Typical is the ability to change the wallpaper. Android users can customize the background image on their mobile devices right from the beginning.
Custom official wallpaper appears on the iPhone since 2010.
In contrast, the “god” of Apple to experience a black background for 3 years since the iPhone first appeared on the market. Until iOS 4, iPhone users can customize.
This feature is perhaps never to hand iPhone users if it does not appear and attract users Android. Can move freely wallpaper is one of the evaluation helps utilities improve the experience on mobile devices.
7 valuable lessons imparted Android for iPhone was originally published on
7 Lessons from 7 Years of Locking my Hair
7 Lessons from 7 Years of Locking my Hair
7 Lessons from 7 Years of Locking my Hair (original post on Blogger 1/30/15)
December 2007 is when I made an appointment to loc my hair. So many people were against it. They said, “You change your hair too much to have locs in your hair” or “You wouldn’t look right.” All the neigh-sayers were all wrong. I lasted 7 years and I looked so good! I had to put down a non-refundable deposit too.
As of…
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7 Business Lessons from Lynn Tilton, the Wonder Woman of Wall Street : Business.com
1. Own what you do. If you aren’t confident in what you offer customers and partners, how can they be confident in doing business with you?
2. Be proactive. If there’s a problem, don’t let it sit and fester. Tilton filed suit against the SEC only 48 hours after the charges were announced.
3. Be your brand. You are the public face of your company. How you project your personality is a key part of your brand identity and how you stay top-of-mind with customers, partners and investors.
4. Be different. Of course, Tilton is really different. You needn’t go to the same extreme. But an instantly recognizable identity is always an asset.
5. Play their game, but make it your own. As a woman, Tilton succeeds in part by employing a female stereotype to play the same game as men, but better than them. This isn’t just a gender issue, though certainly every female entrepreneur develops strategies to overcome male chauvinism. But if you face some kind of ingrained prejudicial thinking, attack it head on. Best Buy’s Geek Squad, for example, plays on the stereotype that only nerdy guys can help you with a PC issue. Embracing the stereotype and making fun of it is a way to quickly address—and dispense with—any “elephants in the room.”
6. Focus on what you do, not what you earn. Tilton says her wealth is really unimportant. We’ll take her at her word on that. But her wealth is likely the result of her passion, not the passion itself.
7. If you’re going maintain a high profile, get used to the slings and arrows. This is not for the faint of heart. If you’re going to worry about every little thing anyone says about you, hire a PR firm and stay out of the limelight. If you can’t help yourself from being a media focus, though, make sure you’ve applied a lot of skin toughener.
Original Article: http://www.business.com/entrepreneurship/lessons-from-lynn-tilton-the-wonder-woman-of-wall-street/
7 lessons that led me to a happy 2015
Hiii everyone! So I know I'm a little late for all the New Year's fun because I've been sick again/as usual, but I wanted to hop on here and share a little something with you guys.
As most of you know from reading Give Me Truths, I'm a clinical psychology student (last semester, woo!!) working towards a career in counseling, as well as a survivor of relationship abuse myself. I get a lot of questions from my lovely followers and readers and fans asking me about my studies and my work, and asking me if there are things I've learned in my studies that have helped me to get through the things that have happened to me and allowed me to live the happy life that I do.
In reality, while uni has taught me a lot of useful things about the human mind, when it comes to happiness most of those lessons are stumbled upon or learned the hard way out in the real world. Happiness doesn't come from a book, it comes from the way you conduct yourself in life, and if I could I'd like to tell you all the seven lessons that I've learned in college that have led me to a happy 2015.
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1. You are your own number one priority. GMT Louis has said it, I've said it, I will forever say it. Helping others if you can is awesome, but you have to make sure to take care of yourself as well, and never ever allow someone to cause you pain because you think it'll help them. It isn't noble, it isn't self-sacrificing, it's masochism and it just ends with everyone hurt.
2. Love should never make you uncomfortable. Lots of the problems people have stem from relationships, and a lot of the time it boils down to indecision about whether or not to break up. People stay for convenience, they stay for fear of being alone, they stay out of habit, but if you aren't sure if you want to be in a relationship anymore, this is a good thing to remind yourself of. If you aren't comfortable and happy, then the relationship is not good for you and something has to change.
3. You know yourself best. Don't disregard advice from other people about choices or challenges in your life, because people have different perspectives and can help you get where you want to go. But don't ever let anyone tell you what you need or want or feel. Only you know that, and no one can tell you otherwise.
4. When it comes to you, you're biased. Flat out. You don't see yourself as clearly as other people do. So when you think you're Matisse and your buddy says you should consider staying in school, listen. And when you think you're a 5 on a good day and your bff insists you're a 7 with no makeup, listen. They may be biased too because they love you, but no one will ever be as bad at evaluating you as you are. Don't try to fight that, just accept that your perceptions of yourself are a little skewed and give heed to what the people around you are saying.
5. Your feelings are valid. They may not always be logical, like feeling guilty about something you had no control over, but that doesn't make them invalid. It's okay to feel whatever you want to feel, even if it's gross and yucky and dark and embarrassing and _____, it's still okay to feel it. Never shame yourself for feeling what you do and never let anyone else do it either.
6. You have worth simply because you are a human being. Your worth does not come from what you've done, or your skills, or whether you're in a relationship. You have worth because you are a human being and you are intrinsically good and that alone entitles you to be treated right, and to be respected, and that alone makes you worthy of being loved. There is no amount of low self-esteem that can change this truth.
7. LET GO OF EXPECTATIONS. I saved the best for last because seriously this shit is life-changing. In life there are all these expectations about the way things are supposed to be, and they're all such bullshit. Who cares who you sleep with? Who you love? What you listen to? What you do with your time, or with your life? Instead of spending all your time and energy worrying about what you should be doing, just start doing what feels right. As long as you're happy and you're not hurting anyone, you're doing it just right. You don't have to please anyone else in this world unless it makes you happy to do so.
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Now I'm not saying that these seven things are the key to happiness, but I'm saying that happiness is what happens when you find peace with the world and the way you navigate it. And by learning to understand and accept the thoughts and feelings and characteristics that make you who you are, and by learning to value your place in the world as just as important as anyone else, you can start to find that peace.
I hope that everyone is having a lovely start to 2015, and that it only gets better from here. xoxo
Lots of love, Rachel Canonlarry-Iwillpaintasongforlou