Sunday, February 13, 2011

Facebook smileys - chat emotions


  • Facebook smile emotion
    :) or :-)
    Facebook smile

  • Facebook grin emotion
    :D or :-D
    Facebook grin

  • Facebook wink emotion
    ;) or ;-)
    Facebook wink

  • Facebook happy eyes emotion
    ^_^
    Facebook happy eyes

  • Facebook laughing eyes emotion
    >:o
    Facebook laughing eyes

  • Facebook cat smile emotion
    :3
    Facebook cat smile

  • Facebook grumpy emotion
    >:-(
    Facebook grumpy

  • Facebook sad emotion
    :( or :-(
    Facebook sad

  • Facebook crying emotion
    :'(
    Facebook crying

  • Facebook shocked emotion
    :o or :-o
    Facebook shocked

  • Facebook glasses emotion
    8) or 8-) or B)
    Facebook glasses

  • Facebook cool shades emotion
    8-|
    Facebook cool shades

  • Facebook tongue out emotion
    :p or :-p
    Facebook tongue face

  • Facebook woot emotion
    O.o
    Facebook woot

  • Facebook closed eyes emotion
    -_-
    Facebook closed eyes

  • Facebook worried emotion
    :/ or :
    Facebook worried

  • Facebook devil emotion
    3:)
    Facebook devil

  • Facebook angel emotion
    O:)
    Facebook angel

  • Facebook kiss emotion
    :-* or :*
    Facebook kiss

  • Facebook heart emotion
    <3
    Facebook heart

  • Facebook Pac Man emotion
    :v
    Facebook Pac Man

  • Facebook robot emotion
    :|]
    Facebook robot

  • Facebook face emotion
    :putnam:
    Facebook face

  • Facebook shark emotion (recently added thanks to Holly's comment below) - NEW!
    (^^^)
    Facebook chat emotion - Shark

  • Facebook penguin emotion - NEW!
    <(")
    Facebook
 chat emotion - Penguin

  • Facebook 42 emotion - NEW!
    :42:
    Facebook
 chat emotion - 42

  • Skype-emotion icon

    Finger (finger)
    Bandit (bandit)
    Drunk (drunk)
    Smoking (smoking)(smoke)(ci)
    Toivo (toivo)
    Rock (rock)
    Headbang (headbang)(banghead) 
    Bug (bug) 
    Fubar (fubar) 
    Poolparty (poolparty) 
    Swearing (swear)
    TMI (tmi) 
    Heidy (heidy)
    Mooning (mooning)

    Tuesday, January 18, 2011

    Subtract month in .NET

    Dim dt As DateTime = Date.Today
    dt = dt.AddMonths(-2)


    Dim x As String = dt.ToString()

    Sunday, January 16, 2011

    Billion Dollar Lessons

    Brilliance Audio (9-2008) | Audio CD MP3 | 1423370805 | 396Mb Billion Dollar Lessons: What You Can Learn from the Most Inexcusable Business Failures of the Last Twenty-five Years /by Paul B. Carroll, Chunka Mui, and Jim Bond. Carroll (Big Blues) and Mui (Unleashing the Killer App) collaborate to perform an autopsy on some of the most spectacular business failures and corporate disasters in recent times, hunting down the fatal strategies responsible. The authors examine more than 750 inexcusable corporate collapses, neatly cataloguing them into eight common failure patterns: doomed practices, including the Illusion of Synergies, as illustrated by the ruinous merger attempts by Sears and Dean Witter; Faulty Financial Engineering, as conducted by Tyco and Revco; Staying the (Misguided) Course Too Long, a sin committed by Kodak, which missed the boat on digital photography; and Consolidation Blues, as depicted by U.S. Airways, which crashed as a consequence of buying up too many companies too quickly. While there are assuredly lessons in defeat and the authors' detailed analysis and bracing honesty is welcome, readers hoping for a more encouraging or inspirational business book might find Carroll and Mui's avalanche of disastrous failures, avoidable bankruptcies and destruction of shareholder value a depressing—if highly instructive—read. (Sept.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



    http://www.cno-o.com/viewdetail.aspx?Bname=Billion%20Dollar%20Lessons&&BID=B00000543&&PPP=0

    Monday, January 10, 2011

    Video & Slideshow: Innovative New Windows-Based PCs at CES 2011

    A slideshow of new PCs along with a guided video tour of the Microsoft CES booth highlights the variety of PC form factors Microsoft powers working closely with partners.

    LAS VEGAS, Jan. 7, 2011 -- At the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) this week, Microsoft demonstrated experiences that encompass all of your devices, regardless of screen size, whether at home or on the go.
    Advances in software, new form factors and emerging connectivity technologies are the start of an important transformation in the consumer electronics industry -- enabling people to connect and share whenever and wherever. Innovations from Microsoft and its hardware partners are enabling these connected experiences with the PC at the center, delivering a consistent Windows experience across all your devices so they work together seamlessly, taking into account your personal preferences.
    The slideshow below offers a sampling of the advances on Windows-based PCs empowering people to do new and interesting things that change the way we live.