Numerous people have asked who writes Washington’s Blog and why we write under a pen name.In fact, some of the leading writers have used pen names.As one of the best financial writers – Tyler Durden of Zero Hedge – points out (edited slightly for reada…
Posts Tagged ‘pen’
“Charlie’s Angels’†Kate Jackson Writing Memoir
The “Smart Angel” is putting pen to pad for a new memoir. Actress Kate Jackson (pictured middle) will look back at her battle against breast cancer, her decision to adopt a son, and the ’70s series that jumpstarted her acting career on the pages of a forthcoming tell-all memoir, Gallery Books said Tuesday. Jackson has inked [...]
Ke$ha impresses men with homemade tattoos
Ke$ha has revealed that she astonishes men by inking homemade tattoos on their skin with sewing needles. The TiK ToK hitmaker admits she shows off her creative skills to potential partners by offering to adorn them with her personalised body art, which she creates with the ink of a pen. “A friend of mine told [...]
Using Ad Submission Software for Fast Mass Advertising Posted By : JJ Pen
Using the right Submission Software you can get tons of free Website Traffic and backlinks from 1,000′s the fast way from Directories, Classifieds, Article Directories, Blog comments, Social Bookmarking sites, Forums, Video sites/directories, RSS Feeds, Press Releases, and Link Page Networks. Learn about the available software to automatically submit 1,000′s of Ads/Comments/URLs/Articles to these different types of websites and the best ways to use them.
Pen Drive Repair Software Windows Posted By : Samual Pitt
As the computer technology is advancing day by day, it leads to the emergence of many useful devices to make work simpler and easier. One such useful device is Pen drive. These new devices dont come all alone but bring with them various problems which sometimes leads to data loss or damage. To get the data back, you can make use of SysTools Hard Drive Data Recovery software.
Look at the Latest Olympus PEN E-PL1
The Olympus PEN E-PL1 is considered to be the latest model of Olympus. It will be available in the market in March. It is a Micro Four Thirds camera that is equipped with a 14-42mm f3.5/f5.6 lens.
It has the same 12.3-megapixel image sensor found on the Olympus PEN E-P1 and PEN E-P2. It is expected [...]
The mighty pen
A feast of drawings in New York
“Old Master drawings offer a special and intimate relationship with artists and their thoughts that paintings cannot provide,” says George Abrams, a prominent Boston-based lawyer. His celebrated collection of 17th-century Dutch drawings began modestly in the early 1960s. (Although he and his late wife gave 110 of their works to Harvard’s Fogg Museum, his walls were not left bare and he continues to buy.) In late January, Mr Abrams was among a band of passionate and astute drawing collectors, curators and dealers in New York. They were lured to the city by a cluster of important events: specialist auctions at Christie’s and Sotheby’s; selling shows at the 22 galleries participating in “Master Drawings New York” (from January 23rd to the 30th), and the opening of two outstanding exhibitions, “The Drawings of Bronzino” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and “Rome After Raphael” at the Morgan Library.
At the Bronzino show, nearly all of his 61 surviving drawings are on view. Amazingly this is the first ever exhibition devoted to the 16th-century Florentine. It was arranged in collaboration with the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, which loaned many works including the strong but sombre “Study for a Portrait of a Seated Man” (see slideshow below). At the Morgan Library, the exhibition features works on paper chosen almost entirely from its own world-famous collection, including drawings by Raphael, Michelangelo, Parmigianino and Palma Giovane. …
Stationery Pr0n: Japanese Pens and More from JetPens.com

Geeks tend to love pens, notebooks, and office gadgets. Some of the most popular posts here at Lifehack have been about pens and other stationery. Let us loose in a Staples or Office Max and we’re like kids in a candy shop. We can’t pass a stationery shop without feeling at least a twinge of desire – and usually without dropping some of our hard-earned money inside. And of course, there’s our love affair with the Moleskine…
Sure, it’s a pointless pursuit and probably a waste of time and money. Sure, there’s the danger of fiddling too much with the latest cool organization gadget and not actually getting work done. Yes, it’s a kind of pornography for some of us – and almost illicit pursuit of sheer pleasure.
But it is a pleasure. To write a note across finely-grained paper with a free-flowing pen that has just the right heft and width is a sheer joy. To pack your bag with tools that beg you to touch, hold, and use them is a delight. And therein lies the rub – because while an expensive pen or just the right grade of paper shouldn’t make us any more productive, often it actually does. We itch to get to work, for the simple gratification that comes of using the tool that perfectly fits us.
So when someone at JetPens.com, a seller of imported Japanese pens, stationery, and other gewgaws contacted me and asked if I’d like to try some of their products, of course I said “yes”. Japan is like the Mother Ship for stationery buffs, and JetPens.com sells a variety of unique, not-to-be-found-in-the-US items. They also specialize in ultra-fine-tipped pens and pencils, which can be difficult to find in the US.
After playing with… I mean “using”, of course – after using the stuff they sent me for the last week or so, I thought I’d share with Lifehack readers some of the things I liked and what I didn’t find much use for. I should add that JetPens.com isn’t paying me, aside from offering me the samples. Lifehack’s editorial policy is that while we do accept products for review from time to time, we only review them if we think that doing so will be of value to our readers. JetPens.com’s offerings are so unusual or hard-to-find elsewhere, that I think most Lifehack readers would love to check them out.
Let’s start with the pens!
Pilot Frixion Point 0.4mm: Pilot’s new Frixion pens are erasable, but totally unlike the crappy erasable pens of the past! Those had gloppy ink and abrasive erasers that never seemed to really get the job done. You’d expect better from the people that brought us the beloved G2 gel pens, and the Frixion doesn’t disappoint. The heat-sensitive ink is fluid and smooth, and dries quickly so it doesn’t smear. Best of all, it erases with friction – rubbing the pen’s solid rubber eraser tip over your writing generates heat (without wearing away or leaving residue) causing the writing to simply disappear. Completely. You can easily write over it, erase again, and write over that – forever, as far as I could tell. The .4mm point is great for printing; I found it a little scratchy for cursive writing. I’m a little worried about the durability of the ink – US packaging suggests that they not be used for official documents. This is the ideal pen to pair with a Moleskine-based to-do list.

Uni-ball Signo DX 0.28mm: The Signo is a gel ink pen that writes very smoothly and cleanly. The 0.28mm line is astoundingly thin, allowing for super-small writing – this is a great pen for filling out forms! I thought I wouldn’t like the tiny little cap, but it clicks onto both ends so solidly that I ended up liking it a lot (though I’m sure I’ll forget to click it to the end some time and that will be the last time I ever see it).

Zebra Clip-On Multi: I don’t normally like multi-function pens, but this one’s pretty nice – it has the usual 4 colors of ink (black, red, green, and blue) operated by color-coded levers, plus a 0.5mm mechanical pencil operated by clicking the whole clip assembly down. I say “clip assembly†because it’s more than just a clip – the clip is on a spring-loaded swivel that allows you to clip it to whole notepads, leather padfolios, and so on. The ink is fine, nothing special – this one’s all about the form factor.

Uni-ball Kuru Toga 0.3mm Pencil: The finest mechanical pencil I’ve ever used is a 0.5mm pencil, and those are a pain – the lead breaks all the time. This pencil has even finer lead, but its auto-rotation mechanism is supposed to minimize breakage by turning the lead a bit every time you life the pencil, preventing the creation of a brittle chisel-point. It seems to work, though it’s hard to know much about something that doesn’t happen. I keep the lead pretty long and it feels pretty sturdy – and I wrote a couple test paragraphs without any breakage.

Kokuyu Beetle Tip 3-Way Highlighter: One of the store’s more unusual products, the Beetle Tip highlighter is named for it’s unusual two-pronged head (which didn’t really remind me of a beetle, but whatever…). The tip integrates fine and chisel points, allowing thick highlighting over text or thin underlining. The two can be used together to make double lines, one over and one under the line of text being highlighted. Which all seems pretty neat, but I found it hard to get and hold just the right angle to use it any of its 3 modes, especially for double-lines.
You can click on the writing sample above to get a full-sized image — hopefully that gives you a pretty good idea of what each pen writers like. Now, on to the rest of the JetPens.com package:

Kadokeshi Stick Eraser: This is an odd bird, but handy – an eraser that’s all corners! The latex eraser twists up (like a Chapstick) and is shaped like a bunch of cubes stuck together, offering 28 corners. Great for fine work, and erases without ripping up your paper. I’m not crazy about the screw-off cap, though – it’s attached to the mechanism you twist to advance the eraser, and it’s all ultra-clear plastic, so you have to look pretty close to make sure you’re twisting right.

Nomadic PD-04 Roller Pencil Case: This is a standard-sized pencil case with a roll-out “scroll†that has 5 pen pockets and two small pockets for erasers, paper clips, or similarly small doodads. It’s all very neat and tidy, but I am simply not this organized about my pens – I’d just as soon keep them in my pocket! That’s not to say I don’t use pencil cases – I do – but to hold a lot more than 5 pens. Unfortunately, if you stuff the body of this full of pens, it makes getting the scroll in and out kind of awkward. I imagine there are people out there who love this sort of thing, but I really don’t see myself getting much use out of it.

Kukoyo Systemic Special Cover Refillable Notebook: This refillable notebook cover is pretty handy, and elegant enough for business use. It’s basically an A4-sized (about 6†x 8â€) canvas folder – the black part in the image above forms a pocket so you can stick business cards, notes, and other papers in (there’s a pocket on the front and another on the back). There are two ribon bookmarks inside, and the elastic closure to hold it all together. JetPens.com sells refill notebooks, but what really excited me is that medium-sized Moleskine Cahier and Volant notebooks (the soft-cover pads) fit perfectly.
This is only a small sample of the stuff JetPens.com offers. Most of it is reasonably affordable, at least in the same ballpark as their Office Depot counterparts. Several of the pens above come in fancier “business-y†styles, with nicer barrels and a less disposable look, too. The whole site is worth looking through – I haven’t even touched on the various art pens and markers.
Dustin M. Wax is a freelance writer and project manager at Stepcase Lifehack. He is also the creator of The Writer’s Technology Companion, a site devoted to the tools of the writing trade. When he’s not writing, he teaches anthropology and gender studies in Las Vegas, NV. He is the author of Don’t Be Stupid: A Guide to Learning, Studying, and Succeeding at College.
Follow him on Twitter: @dwax.
British Defence Ministry loses 100 computers, 47 pen drives in 2009
In an alarming disclosure, the British Defence Ministry has admitted to losing over 100 computers and dozens of memory sticks this year.
According to official figures, some 91 MoD laptops were lost or stolen in the first 10 months of 2009, while 23 desktop computers have gone missing.
Forty-seven USB flash memory devices have also [...]
Bank President Admitted that All Credit Is Created Out of Thin Air With the Flick of a Pen Upon the Bank’s Books
In First National Bank v. Daly (often referred to as the “Credit River” case) the court found: that the bank created money “out of thin air”:[The president of the First National Bank of Montgomery] admitted that all of the money or credit which was us…
Attractive, Innovative Olympus E-P1 Makes a Fine Point
Product: Pen E-P1 Manufacturer: OlympusWired Rating: 6
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Olympus is taunting tigers at the zoo with its new digital “Pen” camera, the E-P1.
The “tigers” in this case are the self-appointed camera snobs, who …
John Geyman: The Public Option: Dead By Pen Strokes In Congressional Committees
The initial idea of a public option was premised on the thought that a public plan could bring needed competition into the financing of health care. Forget that dream.
Jordan has the hots for serial killers
Katie Price a.k.a Jordan has admitted to having an unusual interest in serial killers like Fred West.
The 31-year-old glamour model is even seeking a Death Row inmate to be her pen pal.
“I love sickos. Dennis Nilsen, Fred and Rose West, Ted Bundy – I”m obsessed. I”ve always been into that kind of stuff [...]
Daniel Krotz: Letters From the Pen: A Review
Letters offers an opportunity to witness a man in an unusual, if not unique, situation as he fine-tunes his craft and his understanding of the human condition.



