Potential chases the illusion of tomorrow

In an on-again, off-again NFL career, the Miami Dolphins running back has succeeded in nothing so much as tumbling short of expectations which would be worse news if tumbling short of expectations weren’t such a wholly human pastime.Potential chases the illusion of tomorrow.Disappointment, on the other hand, faces the truth of today.I’m not suggesting that Williams was fated to flop in the pros. There’s a fine line between social anxiety and self-indulgence, and Ricky’s psychological struggles have undoubtedly been compounded by a failure of will. But then again all wills fail against the determinism of the past. In a league where nothing can change after the last whistle, the only meaningful postgame analysis is that which accounts for the final score.You can’t unspill your milk.You can’t unsquander your talent.If there’s a lesson in the Williams saga, it’s simply that there’s no use crying over what tears won’t fix.Football fans love to wonder “What if” Coulda, woulda, shoulda it’s a vocabulary of speculative nostalgia, language fit for remembering things that never were. The catch, of course, is that the center doesn’t snap the ball in the subjunctive tense. Draft experts will argue that Williams had as much upside as any prospect in history. An option becomes a mandate as soon as it’s selected; an outcome becomes inevitable the moment it arrives.

What might have been for Ricky Williams is beside the point, because no veteran role player can be any more or less than what he has to be Every hero sets out in pursuit of the goal line. The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be praised.Which is a sensible creed for any mere mortal.Because grace and glory are equally fleeting, and anyone who laments the loss too loudly is either jonesing for his first post-retirement joint or only just saying, is all.... Hyland Software's Solution Tops the Charts in Annual Healthcare 'Best in KLASAwards'Report finds 100 percent of users surveyed would buy the award-winningOnBase(R) document management solution againCLEVELAND, Jan. 7 /PRNewswire/ How are healthcare organizationsmanaging to improve patient care in this time of ever-tightening budgets Theanswer, for many, is with technology But finding the right product isn'teasy. There are a lot of vendors on the market, all making different claims.To help organizations cut through the clutter and make the best possibledecisions, there is the annual "Top 20 Best in KLAS Awards: Software &Professional Services" report. And according to the most recent report, thereis only one solution that users would choose to buy again 100 percent of thetime.(Logo: http:// )"Safe, high quality patient care starts with access to complete medicalrecords," said Tim Tegeder, director of healthcare solutions for HylandSoftware.

"We work hard to meet this need, and are proud that OnBase, ourdocument management solution, received the only perfect score in the telling'would you buy again' category But the work doesn't stop here we know wecan do better. That's why customers chose us the first time and why they wouldchoose OnBase again."A major reason customers would choose OnBase again is because it has allthe functionality they need. OnBase goes beyond supporting the electronicmedical record (EMR) it manages documents in administrative processes aswell as clinical images such as EKGs. In fact, 78 percent of users reportedthat OnBase has all the functionality needed, a score that is fourteenpercentage points higher than any other top ten vendor.The annual Top 20 Best in KLAS Awards for software and professionalservices are based on annual surveys completed by users of the products. Formore information about KLAS and its rankings, visit http:// .To learn more about Hyland Software's healthcare solutions, visit http:// .About the Hyland Software solution, OnBaseOne of the largest independent software vendors in the world of enterprisecontent management (ECM), Hyland Software is the developer of OnBase.

Anaward-winning suite of document and process management solutions, OnBase has aproven record of solving problems resulting from time consuming, costly anderror plagued manual tasks. Available on-premises or assoftware-as-a-service (SaaS), OnBase installs quickly, cost effectively and isdesigned to grow with organizations. To learn more, visit http:// .Media contact:Kaitlin Maurer(440) SOURCEHyland SoftwareKaitlin Maurer of Hyland Software, 1-440-788-6833, . PUNTA ARENAS, Chile (Reuters) - A yellow robot submarine will dive under an ice shelf in Antarctica to seek clues to world ocean level rises in one of the most inaccessible places on earth. research vessel, will probe the underside of the ice at the end of the Pine Island glacier, which is moving faster than any other in Antarctica and already brings more water to the oceans than Europe's Rhine River.Scientists have long observed vast icebergs breaking off Antarctica's ice shelves extensions of glaciers floating on the sea but have been unable to get beneath them to see how deep currents may be driving the melt from below.They are now stepping up monitoring of Antarctica, aware that any slight quickening of a thaw could swamp low-lying Pacific islands or incur huge costs in building defenses for coastal cities from Beijing to New York.The rate of flow of the Pine Island glacier in west Antarctica has quickened to 3.7 km (2.3 miles) a year from 2.4 km in the mid-1990s."It's taken everyone by surprise," Adrian Jenkins, leader of the "Autosub" mission at the British Antarctic Survey, told Reuters just before leaving this week after preparations in Chile. The submarine cost several million dollars to develop."If you just make measurements at the ice front all you have is a black box," Jenkins said.