Posts Tagged ‘easy’
Easy Memory Techniques for Remembering Names
Posted by Parkzone Corsair in Memory on November 26th, 2010
The world memory champion can memorize 170 names and faces in 15 minutes. Yet many people cannot recall a single name thirty seconds after hearing it. If we stay conservative for a moment and assume that remembering 170 names is the best people will ever be able to do, it should still be a piece of cake to remember one name of a person who just introduced herself to you three minutes ago. Right?
Wrong. All too often the name slips out of the mind, even after you ask for it the second time around. Then a week later you see her walking down the street and you want to call out and say hi. Except there is no name in your mind. I used to devise clever strategies for finding out the name second and third time around without asking for it directly:
- “Let me see the photo on your driver’s license.”
- “So, how do your close friends call you?”
- “You have an unusual name, how do you pronounce it?” (and hope she doesn’t say “Kate”)
- “What do they call you in this country?” (works well with foreigners)
- Hang around and wait until someone else pronounces her name. This strategy fails if the name is foreign and complicated – you hear it but cannot repeat it.
Wouldn’t it be nice if you could easily and effortlessly memorize anyone’s name in just a few seconds? Better yet capture the names of a whole group of people as you are introduced to them and remember them once and for all. If the world champion can do it with 170 names, you can certainly do it with five or ten or even twenty.
Let us first examine what is involved in storing and recalling information in your mind, and then I will come back to the specific name remembering strategy. There are three phases to storing information:
-Attention. You have got to pay attention to the information by listening, watching, sensing. Have you ever had an experience of reading a book while preoccupied with other thoughts, like the parking ticket you got in the morning? How much of what you have read did you remember afterwards? Rampant self talk is the biggest obstacle to having a great memory. You need anywhere from 3 to 15 seconds of active (!) attention to form a strong memory in your mind. (If you have an outstanding power of concentration, you only need 2 seconds or 1 second or even less. Monks practicing a certain kind of meditation can do that or people in altered states of consciousness, e.g. in trance (like our world memory champion). The formula is memory_strength = intensity_of_concentration x attention_time.)
-Strategy. Use an effective memory strategy. There are many great ones that work really well, yet most people keep using truly awful strategies they picked up accidentally along the way when growing up. For example, if you want to remember a telephone number, mental tape loops when you keep saying the number to yourself over and over again are a particularly poor memory strategy. (Especially so if you remembered the number in one language, and someone
asks for it in another!) There is not a single memory strategy appropriate for everything. You need to learn a few to handle all sorts of situations. Some of them have been invented many millennia ago. For example, a very effective memory strategy for giving long speeches without the help of written notes was created by Greek orators. I will describe a great name remembering strategy in a second.
-Neurology. Neurologically record the memory in your brain. Occasionally, these neurological processes can be affected by certain physiological conditions (powerful drugs, physical brain damage, or some rare disorders), but this is usually the rarest cause when people complain of poor memory.
Recalling information has one phase:
- See, hear or sense the trigger and recall the information. It does you no good to remember just the names – you have a name, but no face. You must associate the two together, so that the face triggers the recall of the name. We automatically take care of this in the name remembering strategy below. But for other times, make sure you create a recall trigger that naturally occurs in your environment or that you have easy access to (e.g. do not connect all of your math learnings to the textbook or your notes – you will not have access to them during the test).
BULLETPROOF NAME REMEMBERING STRATEGY
LCD TV Repair made easy # 6
Posted by Parkzone Corsair in Power Supply on October 29th, 2010
tvrepairinfo.com Now that we see a great many surface mounted components being used in modern day TVs many repairmen are so intimidated they may forget there are still a great many serviceable components and circuits, Especially the switch mode power supply. Here are a few ebooks I thought were very helpful.Troubleshooting & Repairing LCD TVs by John Preher at http For someone new to electronics the first few pages of this book may be a bit challenging but the majority of this book is easy reading with lots of pictures, diagrams, and useful troubleshooting techniques. Johns book has helpful info about servicing LCD TVs. The most helpful points I learned in this book are the main test points and their approximate voltages. ======================================== How to troubleshoot and repair Switch Mode Power supplies by Jestine Yong at davestv.jestinemichellepow.click2sell.eu This was an expensive ebook but the best I have ever read on switching power supplies.Jestine is good at getting right to the main points you need to understand about troubleshooting this kind of power supply and their associated feedback circuits. Since a majority of the problems I have seen on LCD TVs are related to bad power supplies this is one book I’m glad to have in my collection. Most of the book was easy reading with plenty of pictures and diagrams. ======================================== Testing electronic components and finding unknown resistor values by Jestine Yong. http I have not …
GTAmissions’ GTAIV Video Guide – Mission 23 – Easy As …
Posted by Parkzone Corsair in Power Supply on October 25th, 2010
GRAND THEFT AUTO IV GTAmissions’ GTAIV Video Guide – Mission 23 – Easy As Can Be PC Version of GTA IV, NO CHEATS OR MODS! Recorded using FRAPS and edited with Sony Vegas 7.0 PC Specs: AMD Phenom 9550 Quad-Core Proc., 6gb DDR2 Dual-Channel RAM, 640 gb HD, GeForce GTS 250 GFX Card, 650Watt Power Supply. Running Windows Vista Home 64-bit OS. Please visit my profile at: www.youtube.com FOR MORE MACHINIMA GOTO: www.youtube.com




