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Get that Bum Working for You

Microsoft Office Project Portfolio Server allows creation of a project portfolio, including workflows, which is hosted centrally. For more information about configuring your own email server to send mail to Microsoft 365 or Office 365, see Set up connectors to route mail between Microsoft 365 or Office 365 and your own email servers. She even set up a table outside a local grocery store on the weekends, where she received occasional help from her daughter, depending on Susie’s soccer schedule. When asked for comment, Susie said she was really proud of her mother and all of her hard work, adding, “She set a goal and just really went for it. That’s my mom.” At press time, Susie’s mom was placing the framed certificate on her office wall next to the ribbon she won last year for best 5th grade science project. PHILADELPHIA – For a record third year in a row, Susie’s mom has been presented with the Juliette Gordon Low Golden Sales Award, granted annually by the Girl Scout organization to the person who sells the most boxes of Girl Scout cookies in the United States. To earn the esteemed prize once again, Susie’s mom was particularly busy this cookie season, hitting up not only her usual customers – relatives, neighbors, friends, and colleagues – but also expanding her base to include thousands of employees at her downtown high-rise office building and all 437 of her Facebook friends.

Becoming friends with your boss on Facebook may reveal that the two of you share common interests. Two of the S band radios were phase modulation transceivers, and could transmit and receive information. The current focus of Office Live is on small businesses, the segment that is likely to find these services more valuable, but Microsoft is also adding Office Live services that will help students and home users share information with others, Capossela said. This was due in part to the storm’s relatively small size and the fact that it veered eastward just before making landfall. He always felt that it was much more logical to send a cat, instead of a human, because a cat’s small size makes the flight hardware much smaller and lighter. One thing led to another and I wound up spending a lot of time maintaining my cat’s website. On the day of the landing his little website received nearly a quarter of a million visitors! To make a long story short, Steve’s website got a link in the “Kids” section of the Phoenix website a short while before the landing.

What follows is a record of Steve’s trip to Mars. What follows is an archived version of Steve’s Mars adventure… Steve’s Mars adventure began in 2006 when I (Robert Riberia) put up a web page with a very short story about my cat Steve sending in his name to the Planetary Society to be included on a compact disc that was to be installed on the deck of the soon to be launched Phoenix Mars Lander. The page just happened to catch the eye of Sara Hammond, who was the Public Affairs Director for the Phoenix Mission at the University of Arizona (and a real cat person). Steve took advantage of Phoenix mission to fulfill his dream of reaching Mars. Steve also took time to observe the flight hardware while the Phoenix Lander was being constructed. Artist’s concept of the Phoenix lander and Steve’s Fabergé Egg after being ejected. Steve’s Certificate of Participation in the Phoenix Program. With a few modifications, including the addition of a Fabergé Egg life support pod (see below), the Phoenix Lander easily transported Steve to Mars.

An important part of Steve’s trip involves the Fabergé Egg life support pod. This pod will protect Steve during his trip to Mars, including the dangerous landing phase of the mission. Steve was an active participant in NASA’s Phoenix Mission to Mars. This image, one of the first captured by NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander, shows the vast plains of the northern polar region of Mars. The Phoenix Mission landed in the northern polar region of Mars in late May, 2008. The lander stretched out an instrumented arm and dug into the soil and ice. The Phoenix lander successfully touched down in the northern polar region of the planet Mars today. Eventually the Phoenix team honored Steve with his own rock on the surface of Mars! As part of their Messages from Earth project, The Planetary Society collected names to actually travel to Mars on board the Phoenix lander. The flat landscape is strewn with tiny pebbles and shows polygonal cracking, a pattern seen widely in Martian high latitudes and also observed in permafrost terrains on Earth. The names were written to the DVD using a special technique, resulting in an archival disk that should last for hundreds of years on the Martian surface.