Hamsa Most Gorgeous

Hamsa

The Hamsa is a Middle Eastern symbol for thousands of years representing the hand of G-d.


Chamsa in Arabic or Hamesh in Hebrew is actually five (or 5 fingers as in a hand). 


The Hamsa serves as an amulet to nullify the evil eye (Ayin Harah). 


A Hamsa is frequently decorated with an eye, ornate etchings, beads, and gems. 


This Hamsa that I found in New Jersey by an Israeli artist is actually one of the largest (almost 2 feet) and one of the most beautiful. 


It is made of lacquer over oil paint on wood, and I think weighs about 5-6 pounds. 


Each finger is a different and vibrant color, and it has poetry about the hand in life you are dealt and handling life the best you can. 


It has a big happy and peaceful face with rosy cheeks and a heart on its forehead. 


It is such a magnificent piece that I actually saw it in the window of a fine art store while almost driving by it in a car.


Awesome, beautiful, and G-d should bestow it with the powerful energy to help protect us from all evil and illness, defend us from any bad judgements and dangers, and shower us with his infinite mercy and blessings all the days of our lives. 😉


(Source Photo: Dori Sobin)

Microsoft + Nokia = HP + Palm

Microsoft + Nokia = HP + Palm

Microsoft buying Nokia is a desperate play at mobile computing.

Unfortunately, the purchase doesn’t add up in terms of common business sense.

Remember, in 2010, when HP bought Palm for $1.2B?

Palm once held 70% of the smartphone market to fall to only 4.9% share at the time that HP bought it and committed to “double down on WebOS.”

Now, fast forward to 2013 and Microsoft is buying Nokia for $7.2B, with a mobile software market share of about 4% combined (compared to their prior Windows desktop operating system market share of over 90%) and ZDNet reporting that it was “double down or quit.”

When HP bought Palm, it was a hardware maker buying software; now with Microsoft buying Nokia, it is the software maker buying the hardware vendor.

But in both cases, it’s the same losing proposition.

In 2010, at the time that HP bought Palm, Stephen Elop was leaving Microsoft to become CEO of Nokia (and in 2011 Nokia made the deal for a “strategic partnership” with Microsoft).

Now in 2013, when Microsoft is buying Nokia, HP has thrown in the towel and just sold off the remnants of Palm O/S to LG Electronics.

Ballmer is right that Apple and Google do not have a permanent monopoly on mobile computing, but purchasing Nokia is not the answer.

Microsoft’s stock is down more than 5% on the day of the merger announcement…and there is more pain to come from this acquisition and Microsoft’s hubris.

Buy more outdated technology, and you’ve bought nothing, but change the culture to innovate, design, and integrate, and you’ve changed your organization’s fortunes. 😉

(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)