This is my third post tonight! But I had to post this article too.
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Valentine’s Day…The Day After.
For all of you who had a less than romantic Valentine’s Day, and if you’ve tried Match.com, YahooPersonals or any other dating site wih now luck. Google has finally come up with the answer! Thank goodness for those guys at Google… (click on the link below)
Priceless!
Drive to the office in the snow and sleet: 2.5 Hours
Drive back home in the snow and sleet: 2.5 Hours
Call to say that the office is closed: 1 Minute
Would have been bloody PRICELESS!
If it had only been at 7am instead of 10!!!
The Effects of Beer on Men
You’ll Go Blind If You Stare At That TV Any Longer!!!
Haven’t we all heard that as kids? I remember playing Nintendo and even Atari and hearing that from my parents. 😉 Well, aparently they were all wrong! There is a new study out that says video game playing is actually good for your eyes. Man, I guess that doesn’t include staring at a computer all day for work, because let me tell you, my eyes certainly aren’t getting any better…
Study Says Video Games Are Good For Eyes
Wed Feb 7, 2:52 AM ET
SINGAPORE, Feb 7 (Reuters Life!) – Video game addicts, rejoice: U.S. researchers have found that playing is actually good for your eyes, and despite all those dire warnings from your parents, it won’t make you blind.
A study by the University of Rochester showed that people who played action video games for a few hours a day over the course of a month improved their vision by about 20 percent.
“Action video game play changes the way our brains process visual information,” Daphne Bavelier, professor of brain and cognitive sciences, said in the study published on the university’s Web site, www.rochester.edu, on Tuesday.
“These games push the human visual system to the limits and the brain adapts to it. That learning carries over into other activities and possibly everyday life.”
Bavelier and a graduate student tested college students who had played very few, if any, video games in the last year.
Test subjects were given an eye test similar to the one used at regular eye clinics and then divided into two groups — one played shoot-em-up action games for an hour a day while the control group played a less visually complex game.
Their vision was tested after the study, with those who played the action game scoring better in the eye test.
The researchers said their findings could help patients with several types of visual defects.