Seo Tricks and Tactics

 

budgeting personal finances

March 1st, 2010

Once You Reach Your Financial Security Goals, What's Next?

Wise budgeting, spending, and saving will help you build a retirement fund and meet your other financial goals, but what happens then? Finance blog Get Rich Slowly takes a look at what to do once you've feathered your financial nest.

Photo by pfala.

At 26 years old, entrepreneur Erica Douglass found herself in the enviable position of having a surplus of cash after selling her online business. Once she established a retirement fund and paid off debt, Douglass had to figure out what to do with the income that continued to roll in from her new business venture.

Rather than blow tons of cash on impulsive purchases just because she can, Douglass limits most spending to things that allow her to live a more fulfilled life. For instance, instead of buying a new car every year, Douglass employs a personal chef to make dishes that make living with an autoimmune illness easier.

It has been more than two years since I sold my business, and I am happier than I have ever been. I made different choices than most: We rent a house instead of owning (a savings of nearly $4,000/month in our neighborhood – more than our monthly rent payment!); we only have basic cable; we don't have a landline, credit card debt, car payments, or student loans.

I chose, instead of buying more Stuff, to live a more fulfilled life. For me, even more important than holding onto my money tightly was to learn to let it go – to give it to others in exchange for work well done, and to trust that they could do tasks well. It's one of the best decisions I've ever made.

Though most of us aren't able to afford the luxuries of a personal chef or full-time housekeeper, Douglass makes an interesting point. If you have a surplus of cash left over after paying your bills and adding to your savings each month, maybe blowing it on a fancy dinner or a new electronic gadget isn't worth it in the long run. Instead, consider spending it on something that adds to your overall quality of life—like an accountant to do your taxes, or commercial productivity software that will help you more easily manage all your work tasks.

What would you do if you had a batch of extra cash to spend as you wanted? Would you hire a personal assistant to deal with all the chores you don't like, or blow it on something frivolous like good cognac or a box of truffles? Talk about it in the comments.

If you want to take control of your life, there are certain areas that require persistent tracking.  In order to track your life and make appropriate changes, you need to know what’s going on and to do that you need to track what’s going on.

Some people need to get a handle on their time (tools to track time wasted online).  Others need to better control their finances (tools for tracking expenses and budgeting).  There are also other resources that other people need to track.  These days there are tools that help in this task of tracking life’s intricacies but many of them are too complex for the needs of the everyday person.  We need something simple that we’ll actually learn and use for it to be a help.

That is why I would like to introduce you to a new start up you can use to track your life called 1DayLater.  The creators of 1DayLater originally started the project to help them track their valuable time as freelancers.  It turned out to be a tool simple enough that anyone can use and benefit from.

In my opinion a useful tool has two attributes : usability and benefit.  Let me show you how 1DayLater fits both of those attributes when it comes to tracking life.

Signing Up & Registering Is Virtually Painless!

The easier a website makes signing up and registering the better.  Obviously they should take security precautions but when they make it so complicated that you need to consult a help file or forums just to figure out how to register, they need to back off a bit.  1DayLater made the process a cinch by asking only the basics (there’s also a line for your phone number but it’s only optional).

Signing In Is A Cinch!

Once again, going with the “easier is better” philosophy, 1DayLater hits the nail on the proverbial head with the login process!  Email-password, bing!  You’re in!

Track Your Life With a Log!

Once logged in you are faced with the opportunity to begin logging your life!  To begin with, you can start logging your time by hitting the “start timer” button.  When you stop the timer, the time is automatically entered into the “value” field which can tell what kind of measurement you are trying to log.  You can also manually enter measurements into this field.  You can log measurements such as time, money and mileage.  Then you can tag the lot with a label in the “project/client” field and add the date and a note to finish off the log.  It’s all pretty straight forward.

Glance At Your Latest Activities

As you log your life, you can get a quick look at the activities you are logging.  They are sorted by date and project / client tag (which you can assign your own colors to in order to have a visual to keep them separate here and in the charts in the analysis area).  Here you also have the ability to edit the logs and delete them altogether. Very handy!

A Visual Analysis Of Your Life

There is also a nifty chart showing off time spent on different projects.  This could be key to getting an overall idea of where your time is going.  I didn’t see charts for mileage or money so I personally hope they are also incorporated too.

The Future Of 1DayLater COULD Be In Your Hands!

All I am saying is that they are a new start up and are working hard on new features!  For instance, they have released the ability to export data into a spreadsheet and are working out the bugs there.  They are also working on the ability to output to invoices and mileage claims as well as some apps.  As a new start up, they have been smart enough to offer a feedback forum to share what you would like to see them develop and a voting system to vote on other people’s ideas using Uservoice.

Right now 1DayLater is free but in the future there may be some features that will not be.

Let us know what you think about 1DayLater as a new start up.  Also, how do you track your life?

Happy Groundhog Day from Quizzle! by QuizzleTown

http://removeripoffreports.net http://www.hotfrog.com/Companies/Robert-Shumake, http://www.javaworld.com/community/user/38043 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cd58cbDVEXQ&feature=player_embedded

Making Easy Money

February 16th, 2010

Guest Post by My Friend Kelly

January is over and the Eating From the Pantry Challenge has come to a close. While you may be ready to dive back into grocery shopping, couponing, and restocking, don’t let the momentum end here. The principles behind this challenge can be applied to a variety of other projects which can help cut costs, de-clutter your home, and streamline daily life. Sometimes this means using up excess stock and other times the focus is getting more regular use out of non-expendable items.

Here’s a few ways to do that:

Personal Hygiene Products

Whether or not you can find coupons and deals on the food your family eats, most everyone will be able to find a rebate or rewards deal on hygiene products at one of the drug stores or national chains around the country. Using what you learned during Eating from the Pantry Month, give yourself 30 days before buying any new personal hygiene products. In the meantime, clear out your bathroom cabinets and see what you still need and what you don’t.

Finish up half-used bottles of shampoo and conditioner and use the last bits of lotion from gift sets. Replace the razors with dull blades or broken handles and if you have liquid soap, refill pump bottles.  Toss broken combs or hair accessories and use up the last inch of mousse or gel before starting a new bottle. If someone in your family opposes a particular brand and you have unopened items consider putting together a care package. Check out this post for ideas on what to send and who to send it to.

Pull out fresh floss and mouthwash to improve your oral hygiene and health. If you haven’t swapped out your toothbrush in the past three months or have recently gotten over an illness open up a new one but don’t throw out the old just yet–a toothbrush can clean more than your molars!

Household Cleaners

Maintaining a clean house doesn’t have to take hours and hundreds of dollars in premium cleaning products. Use similar tactics to inventory what you have, see what you need, stretch what you use and find substitutes.  While you’re digging under the sinks use up the last little bit of general cleaner and wipe down the shelves. Try to identify what you use each product to clean and how often you use up a bottle.

Don’t just think about products but other supplies as well.  Re-purpose old towels from the kitchen or bath as cleaning rags, use old worn out toothbrushes to scrub small crevices, find an old pillowcase to clean ceiling fan blades, or lone socks to dust. If you find you have a pile of dusting rags you can reduce the amount of paper towels you buy.

Office supplies

How many different places in your house do you have a stash of pens? Notepads? Tape? Round everything up and sort it out (old shoe boxes come in handy here) and toss or donate what you don’t use.  Find out what you’ll need for everyday use and what school-aged children can take to class. Just like the pantry challenge, make do with what you have–blue pens can work just as well as black ones–and substitute where you can. Whether you write grocery lists on the back of a used envelope or reuse file folders these tactics can keep money in your pocket and clutter out of your home.

Centralize one place for commonly misplaced items like tape, scissors, and sharpies. Or is that just my house?

Crafts & Decorations

If you can be described as crafty, then you’re probably well aware of the dangers that entrap quilters, scrapbookers, knitters and painters alike. It’s easy to hoard supplies and fill drawers, bins and yes, even rooms with projects that we have no hope of finishing in ten lifetimes. Make the commitment to stop buying new supplies for one month and go “shopping” at home. Dig through your stock and try to remember what project you had in mind when you brought home these items.

Finish an old project or start a new one, substitute one component instead of buying new, and give away things you won’t use to someone who will. Consider a swap amongst friends or just a potluck night in when everyone can bring a dish and a project and work together.

As Spring rolls around it can be easy to get tired of our surroundings and want something new and fresh.  Check your attics, basements, and closets for decorative items that were put away or forgotten. Re-hang a picture or touch up the paint on a table. Move around some furniture, pull out the throw blankets, fill glass vases and use the good china.  Put a new picture in an old frame or clear everything off a wall and paint it fresh.  Look for things you already have that can be used in new and interesting ways.

There are also some things we can be getting more use out of, things that are not necessarily used up.

Entertainment

Do you have family games gathering dust? Puzzles, video games, books or movies that go unused? The same principles apply even if using an entertainment item will not expend it for future use. Pull out all your puzzles and look them over together. Maybe some are missing too many pieces, another too advanced for younger children, some too juvenile for older children. Keep what you’ll use, recycle what you won’t. Donate unused items to your school or church, ask friends if their children would enjoy something new.

Do your kids have piles of half used or broken crayons? Turn them into a craft project. Go through your books and weed out volumes you no long read, reference or enjoy. Do the same for family pictures by tossing prints that are fuzzy or faded, or pictures that have no personal meaning or value. Be careful about tossing older photos that may have some value to another family member. Check out this post for tips on preserving family memories.

Clothes

If you find yourself wearing the same outfits over and over again try the Empty Closet Challenge.  Pull everything out and box up things that don’t fit or flatter your figure.  Work with what you have and fill in pieces that will create attractive looks that fit your lifestyle.  At the end of the month pull out the boxes of discarded clothes and sell them by consignment or eBay, return new items to the store, donate to a charity or give to a friend. Don’t forget to look over belts, scarves, jackets, shoes, and jewelry too. Rethinking a wardrobe can be challenge–check out this site for ideas on using thrift store finds to create stunning new looks for under $20!

I know it seems overwhelming when you think of all the places to apply the principles you learned during Eating from the Pantry Month. But just like January, take one thing at a time, make adjustments as you go, and share what you’ve learned. By 2011, you might just have a cleaner, uncluttered home, more money in the bank and new routines. Then your only challenge will be finding a New Year’s Resolution you haven’t already accomplished!

Kelly is a 25 year old single homeowner living in Northern California. Despite a high cost of living and tough job market, Kelly has created a cozy home without acquiring debt. Now just $3,000 away from eliminating student loans (the last of consumer debt), Kelly looks forward her first trip abroad, thrift store decorating, and teaching financial awareness. Kelly blogs at My Friend Kelly.

Photo credit: Fauxto_credit; Kevin McShane; Patrick Q

Like this post? Share it with someone.

ehh, what news item are you reading??
first of all this is a USA issue only, no euro car maker is involved. second, I was under the impression that europe is far ahead of usa in fuel efficiency and has been for many years. you should probably read the article again and go over your comment. a few mistakes crept in.

yes any support to make electric drive a reality. no the Volt really doesn't deserve any support as it is a half hearted over engineered attempt. it's a bit like asking how much should you give to oil companies for environmental efforts..

number one, didn't GM recently say it will be profitable at the 40k$ price point before tax credit? so let's not say they lose money at that price point.
two, take a cobalt sedan, put in a plugin drive train with minimum battery range, say 40km (25miles) with no factor 2 overdesign. plus a 2-cylinder backup generator for cruise extension. lean and mean. sell it for 20k$ with a profit and no tax rebate.
the problem is they don't really have their heads in the game. so we should have mixed feelings about subsidies.
what should be done is one of two things, Obama tells them how things are going to go down along the design lines I just mentioned. or he should start a car company for that very purpose to force the way. it is more than a little foolish to put faith in the big auto we know have fought and still do fight against EVs.

this should be obvious to all. we're now 3½ years into the revolution and the big auto makers all still beating around the bush. come to think of it I'm not sure where that expression comes from but it sounds a little pornographic :) you could say they're jerking off but that's not much better. seems fitting though.

case in point, they could easily do better, and that should be on your minds before giving them money.

online stock trading, robert shumake, robert shumake, loss mitigation training

Cell Phone News 2010

Making Money Without

February 15th, 2010

I had a boss, years ago, whose favorite saying was “Doing something is always better than doing nothing.” That was effective in some cases, especially in a manufacturing environment where a down line is always far worse than a crippled one. And while it might have been used successfully more often than not, it was not fool proof; making bad widgets and passing off production line blunders to the unsuspecting end-user was not a really good business model-one tends to shrink their customer base when they make a habit out of such wrecklessness.

Speaking of wrecklessness, it should be noted that our President (and the ideology that drives the party over which he presides) appears to be suffering from the same disease my old boss did. And while I am tempted to just poke a pointy stick at him and mock his colleagues, I think time would be better spent here taking a closer look at what he has in mind for us in dealing with the mess that Congress has been making for a very long time now; looking for ways to spend and worrying about how to fund them after the fact.

I understand the sensation Politicians must feel when they get elected, sworn in, and set loose in the halls of Congress to do “the People’s business” because it is the righteousness of their principles that inspires them to pursue public service in the first place. Of course, magazine covers, tv appearances, and newspaper headlines are the heady things that keep them motivated (and keep them looking for ever-new ways to justify their re-election bids) and who can blame them? The problem, however, presents itself when those they intended to serve become those upon whom they must prey in the name of their political survival.

We certainly have big problems, and they certainly need attention. And we send our elected officials to Washington to work together do just that. But, as a dear friend and colleague pointed out to me recently, “the problem is not that the political system is unable to deal with the issue(s). The problem is that enough politicians are not willing to deal with the issue(s).”

Fundamentally speaking, Liberals believe Government is the answer to our big problems and Conservatives believe Government (in super-large doses at least) is the cause of them. That no bridge can be built to span this ideological chasm is reflected by the partisan rancor we see every few years as one side takes the majority, squanders it, and hands it back to the other. Our President finds himself at risk of squandering his own majority these days and now frantically searches for ways to appease the growing unrest amongst the American People over real and perceived crises he may (or may NOT) be to blame for.

If you believe President Obama, our biggest issue is that we don’t have enough revenue coming in to the Fed coffers to solve all of these big problems Americans are facing these days. He sees this as a problem requiring new and ever-more creative ways to derive more money from us in order to pay for the things he and his majority have convinced themselves we cannot live without. No grocery list is needed here, but suffice it to say that should our Politicians have to manage their personal checkbooks the way this economy has forced the every-day American to manage his/her own, they would likely not align themselves with some of the loftier goals this Administration has in mind:

“Our real problem is not the spike in spending last year, or the lost, even the lost revenues last year, as significant as those are,” he said. “The real problem has to do with the fact that there is a just a mismatch between the amount of money coming in and the amount of money going out. And that is going to require some big, tough choices that, so far, the political system has been unable to deal with.”

The Obama administration’s budget already takes that route with its proposed $970 billion tax increase over the next decade on Americans earning more than $200,000 a year, largely by not extending former President George W. Bush’s tax cuts for the wealthy beyond 2010.

Even with those revenues — and a proposed three-year freeze on some discretionary spending by the government — the administration still projects a deficit of $752 billion in 2015, equivalent to 3.9 percent of gross domestic product.

Analysts say that middle-class taxes will need to be increased because the government can’t raise enough money from the wealthy alone to close the budget gap. “It’s just not possible to get the revenue you need only from this group,” said Joel Slemrod, director of the Office of Tax Policy Research at the University of Michigan.

This articulates Obama’s conundrum very succinctly, and it’s clear he doesn’t see the flip side of the argument. Rather than pursuing lofty goals and grand ambitions…and looking at how low in the wage-earner classes he can safely go (politically) to increase their tax burdens in order to fund them… Obama could be looking at ways to stop spending (like “we, the People” have been forced to do). It’s a tough choice to be sure, but not an unreasonably requested one.

He could be looking at which of his agenda line items might be eligible for the back burner until more of us are working and contributing the broader share of taxes we’d have to offer if we were collecting a standard paycheck (as opposed to the one from our local unemployment offices). He could be looking, along with his colleagues on the left, at cuts beyond discretionary spending. But he’s not.

And they are not. They promised too many freebies to too many constituents and for some reason believe delivering on them is more important to their political survival than working to improve the overall fiscal health of the general population.

Sometimes the simultaneously easiest and most difficult choice a person can make is to just STOP; just do nothing. Take a step back, assess, recalibrate and restart. We can wait on health care reform. We can wait on climate change. We can wait on a whole host of issues that, while noble and just, do not serve the immediate need of the people on whom our elected officials rely for their daily sustenance…and continued reign in office.

Many of us out here in the hinterland long for the bygone days of politicians who consider themselves having had a good day when they prevent legislative evil versus having voted to make it bearably evil. Choosing to do nothing at all (for a brief moment), in this case, might just be better than doing something.

Mobile location-based social network and gaming service Foursquare has been generated a bit of buzz lately, especially amongst the early adopter crowd. In just under a year, it has amassed a user base of 300,000, and with deals like the one it recently signed with television network Bravo, some believe Foursquare may be ready to hit the mainstream.

That's good news for the company and its investors, but as Foursquare starts exploring the commercial opportunities that come with popularity, it may find that maintaining the 'cool' factor and maximizing commercial opportunities at the same time is a difficult thing to do.

As AdAge details, various businesses are starting to experiment with Foursquare. The appeal is obvious: Foursquare knows where you are. That means that Foursquare offers a lot of potential to businesses with physical locations. One such business is frozen dessert chain Tasti D-Lite. It's using Foursquare to deliver promotions to Foursquare users who check in to a location near one of the chain's 50 stores. And it's also testing out a loyalty program that rewards users for checking in and making purchases.

According to Tasti D-Lite, “preliminary data is showing that this is driving foot traffic in stores“. That's good news for Tasti D-Lite, and for Foursquare. But before anyone jumps to the conclusion that Foursquare may be on the verge of cracking the location-based mobile advertising nut, it may not be quite so easy.

On Sunday, TechCrunch's MG Siegler discussed how Foursquare's 'Douchebag' badge was creating controversy amongst some users. The complaint: it's offensive. The badge is awarded (if that's the right word) to users who check in to locations that other users have tagged. These tend to be 'trendy' locations, such as Barney's.

Putting aside the political correctness of a 'Douchebag' badge, it's obvious that this badge creates a potential conflict between the interests of the businesses Foursquare needs to court and the interests of its users. As one commenter, Jim Kerr, put it:

They are an innately local business, which will live and breathe with the success of dealing with local brands and establishments, and yet they…overtly tag local businesses (their lifeblood) with badges like “douchebag.”

Foursquare, which, according to AdAge, is earning little to no revenue from its initial deals with businesses, apparently has no plans to ditch the badge. Dennis Crowley, the company's co-founder, posted a response:

The douchebage badge isn’t going anywhere. :) It’s supposed to be a joke, I feel like 97% of users are in on it, and the only way to unlock the badge is to check-into places that *other users have tagged* douchebag. Sure, it’s a little out of control in some places (I unlocked it on the N/R train over the Manhattan bridge!) but that’s part of the fun of it.

While it would be premature to claim that a somewhat offensive badge is going to destroy Foursquare's business potential, there is a question as to whether things like this will fly once Foursquare decides to start asking businesses for money.

When it comes down to writing a check, a business might be inclined to look at the situation and demand some protection in return. A guarantee that users who check in to their locations aren't labelled 'douchebags' would probably be a good start. Will Foursquare give in, potentially diminishing its 'cool' factor with the early adopters propelling its current growth, or will it decide to give potential paying customers a reason to second guess deals? Only time will tell.

Foursquare's dilemma is not unique of course. Many successful consumer internet businesses find that certain elements of their original offerings that contributed to early appeal eventually come to threaten their potential as businesses. Without users, of course, that potential ceases to exist. But users and no revenue isn't exactly viable either. In short, sometimes you can't stay cool and become filthy rich at the same time.

Photo credit: cambodia4kidsorg via Flickr.

online stock trading, robert shumake, robert shumake, loss mitigation training

personal finance money management

February 10th, 2010

There are many ways to save money. One way to save money is to join a money, or personal finance forum. Taking part in a money forum will help you save money in a variety of ways.

There are a variety of reasons someone may want to save money. Due to the current state of economy, it may be necessary to save money to reduce expenses or to make up for lost income. Most people who read or post on the forums are looking for ways to save money are doing so to eliminate debt. However, there are also those who may want to save money for retirement or a college fund. Whatever your reason to save money, there is tons of advice, tips, budget help, and experienced people to help you reach your goal in the money forums.

A forum designed to help you save money is somewhat different than just a blog, although blogs are most likely a part of the website. The forum website most likely includes articles on various topics concerning saving money, and message boards broken out by subject where you can go to read or comment on various subjects on how to save money, develop a budget, or eliminate debt. Most forums appealing to those who want to save money are free to join and simple to establish an account and participate at any level. Setting up an account will allow you to read ideas from others who want to save money, and post ideas of your own. Often, a helpful feature available when you sign up, is the ability to choose to receive an e-mail any time a new post is added to a message board you are interested in. Joining one forum often leads to information about other forums, some of which may be of more specific interest to you and your plan to save money.

One of my favorite web sites, SavingAdvice.com, is a great place to start your forum experience. The layout is simple and neat, with an introduction to the web site that describes it as “a personal finance website created specifically to show you different ways to save money”. Another website, LivingLikeNoOneElse.com, is a forum established based on financial guru Dave Ramsey, his money management principles, and his quote of “If you'll live like no one else, later you cLan live like no one else” . The first step in Dave Ramsey's baby step plan is to save money-an emergency fund of $1,000.

Another very popular site with forum discussions on how to save money, is part of the MSN site, Money Central on MSN. One very popular message board on this site, Women in Red, is targeted to women who are “seeking financial sanity”. Columnist MP Dunleavey (Mia) and eight other women came together on the MSN money site in 2006, exposing their personal financial struggles to save money and get out of debt. The forum is now so popular it is freqented by members all over the world and sub-groups, such as WIRR (Women in Red Racers), have evolved.

If your objective is to save money, for any reason, a world of advice is out there waiting for you. Becoming part of a money forum brings like-minded people together with the same question – how can I save money?

Environmental Economics: Comforting <b>news</b> for John…

This is why I love science… "We hope that one day we can demonstrate that xanthohumol prevents prostate cancer development…" Xanthohumol is derived from hops…

Google Customer Service Number Now Live | TmoNews – Unofficial T <b>…</b>

After taking quite a beating in the blogosphere after the initial launch of the Nexus One, Google has officially launched phone support. That's right;

Hot Air » Blog Archive » Great <b>news</b>: Captain America ready to take <b>…</b>

Great <b>news</b>: Captain America ready to take on evil scourge of, er, tea partiers.

online stock trading tips, online stock trading tips, online stock trading tips, online stock trading tips, franchise opportunities, franchise opportunities, franchise opportunities, franchise opportunities, franchise opportunities, franchise opportunities, franchise opportunities, franchise opportunities, robert shumake, robert shumake, robert shumake, robert shumake, surface encounters granite counters, surface encounters granite counters, surface encounters granite counters, surface encounters granite counters, surface encounters granite counters, surface encounters granite counters, surface encounters granite counters, bill bartmann's plan, bill bartmann's plan, bill bartmann's plan, theleaseoptionking atlanta real estate agents

Environmental Economics: Comforting <b>news</b> for John…

This is why I love science… "We hope that one day we can demonstrate that xanthohumol prevents prostate cancer development…" Xanthohumol is derived from hops…

Google Customer Service Number Now Live | TmoNews – Unofficial T <b>…</b>

After taking quite a beating in the blogosphere after the initial launch of the Nexus One, Google has officially launched phone support. That's right;

Hot Air » Blog Archive » Great <b>news</b>: Captain America ready to take <b>…</b>

Great <b>news</b>: Captain America ready to take on evil scourge of, er, tea partiers.

Environmental Economics: Comforting <b>news</b> for John…

This is why I love science… "We hope that one day we can demonstrate that xanthohumol prevents prostate cancer development…" Xanthohumol is derived from hops…

Google Customer Service Number Now Live | TmoNews – Unofficial T <b>…</b>

After taking quite a beating in the blogosphere after the initial launch of the Nexus One, Google has officially launched phone support. That's right;

Hot Air » Blog Archive » Great <b>news</b>: Captain America ready to take <b>…</b>

Great <b>news</b>: Captain America ready to take on evil scourge of, er, tea partiers.

personal finance budgets

February 9th, 2010

buy mutual funds, buy mutual funds, buy mutual funds, buy mutual funds, internet marketing, yahoo, google, Online advertising, http://www.prlog.org/10512637-franchisesforsalecom-launch-heralds-the-next-wave-in-franchisee-lead-generation.html, http://www.prlog.org/10512639-restaurant-franchise-opportunities-providing-new-job-opportunities.html, http://www.emailwire.com/release/30658-New-Lead-Site-FranchisesforsaleCom-Goes-Live.html, http://www.emailwire.com/release/31568-New-Franchise-Opportunities-for-2010-Online-Tools-and-Resources-for-Buying-a-Franchise.html, http://www.ideamarketers.com/?New_Franchise_Opportunities_for_2010_%E2%80%93_Online_Tools_and_Resources_for_Buying_a_&articleid=883071, http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/new-franchise-opportunities-for-2010,1100822.shtml, http://www.newsalbum.com/Read/473435-New-Franchise-Opportunities-with-Successful-Franchise-Companies-Putting-People-Back-to-Work/, http://www.transworldnews.com/NewsStory.aspx?id=164465&cat=9, http://www.zimbio.com/Housing+Bubble+News/articles/7/Dr+Robert+S+Shumake, http://mortgagefraudreportmichigan.blogspot.com/2009/12/robert-shumake-fraud-report-tax.html, http://personals.szczecin.pl/index.php?topic=2.0, http://tweetmeme.com/story/339636355/surface-encounters-in-wixom-going-green-with-marble-granite-countertop-production, http://finance.bnet.com/bnet/?GUID=11076222&Page=MediaViewer&ChannelID=6526, http://www.ideamarketers.com/?Surface_Encounters_Ohio,_LLC_Celebrates_100_Years_of_Experience_with_Columbus_S&articleid=880865, http://viralvideochart.unrulymedia.com/youtube/surface_encounters_macomb_mi__counter_tops?id=VGJx3FcNE50, http://www.veoh.com/browse/morelike/v19614992esMzfMCZ#, http://deals.yahoo.com/local-store-coupons/mer-surface-encounters–dept-home-garden, http://www.bignews.biz/?id=835928&keys=Shopping-counter-surface-Granite, http://www.businessweek.com/bios/Bill_Bartmann.htm, http://www.businessweek.com/archives/1998/b3603113.arc.htm, http://www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/content/apr2009/sb20090421_494148.htm?chan=smallbiz_smallbiz%20index%20page_top%20small%20business%20stories atlanta real estate agents

Perry to keynote Festival of Games | <b>News</b>

Development veteran and Shiny Entertainment founder David Perry is to keynote the Festival of Games 2010, discussing his…

<b>News</b> to know: Server wars; Windows 7; GMail; China hacker arrests <b>…</b>

<b>News</b> to know: Here are today's notable headlines. You can get <b>News</b> To Know via email alert and RSS daily. For continuous updates are BNET's.

<b>News</b> Corp. Got $12.5 Million In Flixster Stock For Rotten Tomatoes <b>…</b>

<b>News</b> Corp. (NYSE: NWS) received $12.5 million in Flixster stock when it sold its Rotten Tomatoes movie reviews site to the startup last month, according to an SEC filing. We first reported about it on Twitter this morning, …

Making Fast Money

February 5th, 2010

http://www.webjam.com/gabrielle71 http://www.prlog.org/10248797-reitbuyercom-offers-opportunity-to-onlinereal-estate-stock-traders-in-albuquerque-new-mexico.html http://www.prlog.org/tag/online-stock-trading/ http://www.prlog.org/10219817-online-traders-discover-reits-and-real-estate-mutual-funds-to-be-good-investment.html http://www.prlog.org/10248797-reitbuyercom-offers-opportunity-to-onlinereal-estate-stock-traders-in-albuquerque-new-mexico.html http://www.webjam.com/gabrielle71

officeladydsk by deedonta

Original Xbox Live to close in April | <b>News</b>

Microsoft has announced that it will discontinue Xbox Live for the original Xbox on April 15. The move will end online p…

Bill O'Reilly Bravely Defends Fox <b>News</b> Against Blanket Liberal <b>…</b>

Bill O'Reilly used his interview with Jon Stewart and the Comedy Central host's criticism of Fox <b>News</b> to defend his network against the general blanket criticisms of the network. It's a familiar defense – an unsurprising look around the …

Viral Video Chart: Charlie Brooker on TV <b>news</b> and Super Bowl ad <b>…</b>

Mercedes Bunz: Charlie Brooker shows us how TV <b>news</b> works and Super Bowl ad slots are hit by controversy in this week's clips rundown.

http://www.shumakerelays.com/

Making Money Ideas

February 5th, 2010

…hopelessly outgunned presidential campaign as if it was a business, not even spending more money than he had in hand. C'mon now, how laughable is that in this day and age in modern America that someone who wants to run the federal government should live within his own campaign means? Just like normal people who live on a real budget with no ability to vote themselves a pay raise and a higher debt ceiling when no one is watching C-SPAN!

When the ultimate Democratic winner, in league with the extraordinary gentleman Harry Reid and the tough-talking San Francisco grandma who's House speaker, has decided to spend a gazillion more dollars than any non-federal calculator has digits to display.

These people, for Nancy's sake, are already spending the income taxes of the unborn grandchildren of those 4,000 babies that Paul delivered. A shocking realization that may be helping to fuel the recent re-examination of Ron Paul, who never met a federal dollar that needed spending — unless it was going back to his district near Houston.

Ron Paul came within something like 1,000 delegates of catching John McCain for the Republican nomination in St. Paul. But when he finally gave up, Paul still had about $5 million left over. He's been investing it traveling around the country to speak and helping like-minded RFR's (Republicans For Real) organize all over. And, who knows, maybe sell a few books.

But now, just as his fierce supporters fearlessly predicted all along, many in American politics are coming around to think that maybe RP's crazy ideas, for example, of auditing and controlling the Federal Reserve, are maybe not quite so crazy.

Our news colleague in Washington, Don Lee, details the sea-change in opinion in a comprehensive look at the old guy's rebirth for weekend print editions, which we're sharing here this morning as a distinguished guest post for Ticket readers around the world.

And for any surviving Ron Paulites, who won't dare leave their typically snippy comments below because that would require them acknowledging that their favorite fiction about a MSM conspiracy to ignore the old guy is fiction.

– Andrew Malcolm

Because no federal funds are involved, Ron Paul would want you to click here for Twitter alerts of each new Ticket item. Or follow us @latimestot. Or join us over here on The Ticket's new Facebook FAN page.

Here's Lee's reported news item:

For three decades, Texas congressman and former presidential candidate Ron Paul's extreme brand of libertarian economics consigned him to the far fringes even among conservatives. Not a few times, his views put him on the losing end of 434-1 votes on Capitol Hill.

No longer. With the economy still struggling and political divisions deepening, Paul's ideas not only are gaining a wider audience but also are helping to shape a potentially historic battle over economic policy — a struggle that will affect everything including jobs, growth and the nation's place in the global economy.

Already, Paul's long-derided proposal to give Congress supervisory power over the traditionally independent Federal Reserve appears to be on its way to becoming law.

His warnings on deficits and inflation are now Republican mantras.

And with this year's congressional election campaign looming, the Texas congressman's deep-seated distrust of activist government has helped fuel protests such as the tea-party movement, harden partisan divisions in Washington and stoke public fears about federal spending and the deficit.

"People are wondering what went wrong. And they're not happy with what the….

….government is offering up," said James Grant, editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer, offering an explanation for why seemingly wonkish arguments over interest rate policy and the money supply are spilling over onto ordinary Americans.

Some of Paul's most extreme views are still beyond the pale for most economists. Despite the eroding value of the dollar, no one expects the U.S. to return to the gold standard, as Paul advocates; most economists think that could wreck the economy.

In their less drastic forms, however, Paul's ideas are being welcomed by conservatives and viewed with foreboding by liberals. For conservatives, runaway inflation constitutes the biggest potential threat to the nation's future. Liberals worry that cutting back stimulus efforts too soon could slow or even halt the current recovery.

The debate over that question — what the basic thrust of U.S. economic policy should be — is likely to dominate the coming elections and Washington policymaking.

And so far, Paul and his fellow conservatives are on the offensive. President Obama and congressional Democrats are repeatedly pledging not to increase the deficit and to begin cutting back soon.

"I think we're going to be in for more revival of fiscal responsibility," said William Niskanen of the Cato Institute, who headed the Council of Economic Advisors under President Reagan.

Niskanen sees the Texas Republican's increasing influence as stemming from the continued economic weakness. "To this extent, Ron Paul gains voice," he said.

Paul would go a lot further in cutting back the government's role than even free-marketers like Niskanen support. If Paul had it his way, for instance, he would do away with the Fed entirely. In his bestselling book "End the Fed," he lambasted the central bank as an "immoral, unconstitutional . . . tool of tyrannical government."

Such rhetoric might once have been dismissed as extremism.

But Paul's anti-Fed message has drawn broad support because of the central bank's failure to restrain the flood of cheap money and excessive risk-taking in the years leading up to the financial crisis.

It has stirred rallies on college campuses and supportive commentaries from Wall Street pundits. More than 300 representatives in Congress have embraced Paul's ideas for reining in the Fed.

The response "is even more than I ever dreamed," Paul said in an interview, reminiscing about one evening during his 2008 White House run when University of Michigan students chanted "End the Fed" and burned dollar bills.

Paul, a skinny 74-year-old with a hangdog expression, understands that historical circumstances have thrust his ideas to the fore. "An intellectual fight is going on," he said.

Paul traces his economic views to his frugal upbringing in Pittsburgh at the tail end of the Depression. He saved pennies from delivering newspapers and helping out his father's small dairy business.

And his first economics class at Gettysburg College was an eye-opener, Paul said. When a professor explained how banks keep only a tiny part of their deposits on hand and earn money by lending out the rest, Paul discovered one of the "tricks" of the financial system.

Beyond that, Paul's ideas are grounded in the work of economic thinkers from an earlier era who focused on problems similar to those besetting the U.S. today.

In particular, Paul is a disciple of Ludwig von Mises, an Austrian theorist born at the end of the 19th century who contended that government intervention in an economy would fail because free markets were better at allocating resources and fueling growth.

Having lived through Germany's devastating hyperinflation in the early 1920s, which helped pave the way for Hitler, Mises wrote long before the Great Depression that over-generous credit policies would encourage excessive borrowing, creating a boom and then a bust.

Mises' ideas became central to what is known as the Austrian School of economics, which emphasized tight controls on credit and money supply, a strategy that discouraged financial ups and downs but tended to slow growth.

By 1940, when Mises arrived in America, most Western economists had embraced the competing theories of Britain's John Maynard Keynes, who called for government to stimulate the economy by spending on infrastructure and cutting interest rates.

Obama has largely followed the Keynesian script, as President George W. Bush did when the economic crisis broke.

Paul's once-lonely espousal of the Austrian School's ideas has gotten new impetus from conservative economists and Republican political strategists.

"A lot of good ideas were shoved aside because of the Depression and the rise of the Keynesian view of the world," said George Selgin, an economics professor at the University of Georgia.

Paul contends that Austrian economics explains the most recent financial meltdown: "It says if you inflate too much, if you have no restraint on monetary authorities, you're going to bring on a crisis." Now, Paul says, administration policies are leading the country toward disaster.

Selgin and many mainstream economists agree that pumping too much money into the economy can lead to trouble, but they say Paul goes too far.

In the 1930s, say Selgin and many other economists, including Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, the U.S. economy began pulling out of the Depression thanks to federal easing of monetary policy.

The economy tipped back into depression after the reins were tightened too soon.

"In this aspect of the monetary system, he's just blown it," Selgin said of Paul.

However, like Mises, whose portrait hangs on his Washington office wall, Paul is intransigent, and that has earned him an ardent following.

"His views are strong and hardheaded, but you've got to stand firm or you'll get blown over in this world," said Mark Skousen, editor of the newsletter Forecasts & Strategies and a former economics professor at Columbia University.

– Don Lee

Photo: Larry Downing / Reuters; Orlin Wagner / Associated Press; Associated Press (Paul argues with Mike Huckabee in a GOP primary debate).

Ten Ideas for Bono and his New York Times Op-Ed on Ten World-Changing Ideas

“Another fucking Bono op-ed,” a tipster astutely notes! The U2 frontman has Ten Ideas to Change the World, and they're in the Times' Op-Ed section “in the spirit of rock star excess.” So how 'bout ten ideas to change Bono?

1. Stop writing Op-Eds. Don't be one of those people, Bono.

2. Stop licensing your songs out. Especially “One.” You have enough money and we still like some of them.

3. Stop it with the lasers. You don't need lasers. “Ultraviolet” is awesome enough without them.

4. Save the drama for your concerts. Yes, like you say, it would be nice if Nelson Mandela came out to drop the first ball on the line at the World Cup or whatever. But

If he shows up, the world will weep with joy.

isn't entirely necessary.

5. You have enough money to figure out how to follow through with some of these ideas. So do it. Especially the one about making cars more like iPods, which, besides being awesome-sounding, is certainly on the right track. And about getting rotavirus vaccinations to everyone in Africa. This requires money, which you have, and can get out of your rich friends. Do it.

6. Take a difficult position. Balls out, Bono. Noting that there are bad places like “North Korea, Myanmar” in the world who need their Gandhis is nice, sure. But what about Iran? And why not take a stance on Israel-Palestine? Geopolitical conflicts that need opinions now more than ever, as they're constantly on the cusp of either solution or total chaos. You can only spread the good will for world peace for so long before the message starts to become rhetoric in and of itself.

7. Stop looking in the past. Especially like this:

Dr. Anton Zeilinger, an Austrian physicist, is becoming a rock star of science for his work in quantum teleportation, which I know very little about but which I think I may have achieved backstage one night in Berlin in the early 1990s.

Unless it's in regards to recording another Achtung, Baby. While we're at it, don't ever—ever—count in Spanish again. Ever.

8. If you're going to write an Op-Ed, write it for the Las Vegas Sun. Do I think it's ridiculous that you have an Op-Ed page in the New York Times? For fuck's sake, absolutely. But do I think it'll get some people who didn't read the New York Times yesterday to read it today? Yes. That's not a terrible thing. Hell, write for the Las Vegas Sun. They won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service Journalism this year and had to lay off the editor who oversaw the reporting on the prize-winning piece. If you can't, get The Edge to do it. What's he doing right now, eating bananas? Call his ass.

9. Get new sunglasses. Do it for the Children. We're okay with them because we're just used to you but I can imagine you're scaring the children by looking like the future model of SkyNet Terminators. And the children are our future. I'm serious. A pair of Clubmasters would do you just fine.

10. Stop it with the Jesus complex. Are you Bono? Yes. Are you Jesus? No. Your intentions are excellent and at least 60% of your music catalog is still indisputably great. But if you were to play the whole “Bono Thing” a little more low key, tipsters and I might not laugh every time you talk about changing the world like it's the pop culture punchline it is—regardless of the excellent work you've already done!—if you keep on delivering it to everyone year after year.

Send an email to Foster Kamer, the author of this post, at foster@gawker.com.

http://www.webjam.com/gabrielle71 http://www.prlog.org/10248797-reitbuyercom-offers-opportunity-to-onlinereal-estate-stock-traders-in-albuquerque-new-mexico.html http://www.prlog.org/tag/online-stock-trading/ http://www.prlog.org/10219817-online-traders-discover-reits-and-real-estate-mutual-funds-to-be-good-investment.html http://www.prlog.org/10248797-reitbuyercom-offers-opportunity-to-onlinereal-estate-stock-traders-in-albuquerque-new-mexico.html http://www.webjam.com/gabrielle71

…hopelessly outgunned presidential campaign as if it was a business, not even spending more money than he had in hand. C'mon now, how laughable is that in this day and age in modern America that someone who wants to run the federal government should live within his own campaign means? Just like normal people who live on a real budget with no ability to vote themselves a pay raise and a higher debt ceiling when no one is watching C-SPAN!

When the ultimate Democratic winner, in league with the extraordinary gentleman Harry Reid and the tough-talking San Francisco grandma who's House speaker, has decided to spend a gazillion more dollars than any non-federal calculator has digits to display.

These people, for Nancy's sake, are already spending the income taxes of the unborn grandchildren of those 4,000 babies that Paul delivered. A shocking realization that may be helping to fuel the recent re-examination of Ron Paul, who never met a federal dollar that needed spending — unless it was going back to his district near Houston.

Ron Paul came within something like 1,000 delegates of catching John McCain for the Republican nomination in St. Paul. But when he finally gave up, Paul still had about $5 million left over. He's been investing it traveling around the country to speak and helping like-minded RFR's (Republicans For Real) organize all over. And, who knows, maybe sell a few books.

But now, just as his fierce supporters fearlessly predicted all along, many in American politics are coming around to think that maybe RP's crazy ideas, for example, of auditing and controlling the Federal Reserve, are maybe not quite so crazy.

Our news colleague in Washington, Don Lee, details the sea-change in opinion in a comprehensive look at the old guy's rebirth for weekend print editions, which we're sharing here this morning as a distinguished guest post for Ticket readers around the world.

And for any surviving Ron Paulites, who won't dare leave their typically snippy comments below because that would require them acknowledging that their favorite fiction about a MSM conspiracy to ignore the old guy is fiction.

– Andrew Malcolm

Because no federal funds are involved, Ron Paul would want you to click here for Twitter alerts of each new Ticket item. Or follow us @latimestot. Or join us over here on The Ticket's new Facebook FAN page.

Here's Lee's reported news item:

For three decades, Texas congressman and former presidential candidate Ron Paul's extreme brand of libertarian economics consigned him to the far fringes even among conservatives. Not a few times, his views put him on the losing end of 434-1 votes on Capitol Hill.

No longer. With the economy still struggling and political divisions deepening, Paul's ideas not only are gaining a wider audience but also are helping to shape a potentially historic battle over economic policy — a struggle that will affect everything including jobs, growth and the nation's place in the global economy.

Already, Paul's long-derided proposal to give Congress supervisory power over the traditionally independent Federal Reserve appears to be on its way to becoming law.

His warnings on deficits and inflation are now Republican mantras.

And with this year's congressional election campaign looming, the Texas congressman's deep-seated distrust of activist government has helped fuel protests such as the tea-party movement, harden partisan divisions in Washington and stoke public fears about federal spending and the deficit.

"People are wondering what went wrong. And they're not happy with what the….

….government is offering up," said James Grant, editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer, offering an explanation for why seemingly wonkish arguments over interest rate policy and the money supply are spilling over onto ordinary Americans.

Some of Paul's most extreme views are still beyond the pale for most economists. Despite the eroding value of the dollar, no one expects the U.S. to return to the gold standard, as Paul advocates; most economists think that could wreck the economy.

In their less drastic forms, however, Paul's ideas are being welcomed by conservatives and viewed with foreboding by liberals. For conservatives, runaway inflation constitutes the biggest potential threat to the nation's future. Liberals worry that cutting back stimulus efforts too soon could slow or even halt the current recovery.

The debate over that question — what the basic thrust of U.S. economic policy should be — is likely to dominate the coming elections and Washington policymaking.

And so far, Paul and his fellow conservatives are on the offensive. President Obama and congressional Democrats are repeatedly pledging not to increase the deficit and to begin cutting back soon.

"I think we're going to be in for more revival of fiscal responsibility," said William Niskanen of the Cato Institute, who headed the Council of Economic Advisors under President Reagan.

Niskanen sees the Texas Republican's increasing influence as stemming from the continued economic weakness. "To this extent, Ron Paul gains voice," he said.

Paul would go a lot further in cutting back the government's role than even free-marketers like Niskanen support. If Paul had it his way, for instance, he would do away with the Fed entirely. In his bestselling book "End the Fed," he lambasted the central bank as an "immoral, unconstitutional . . . tool of tyrannical government."

Such rhetoric might once have been dismissed as extremism.

But Paul's anti-Fed message has drawn broad support because of the central bank's failure to restrain the flood of cheap money and excessive risk-taking in the years leading up to the financial crisis.

It has stirred rallies on college campuses and supportive commentaries from Wall Street pundits. More than 300 representatives in Congress have embraced Paul's ideas for reining in the Fed.

The response "is even more than I ever dreamed," Paul said in an interview, reminiscing about one evening during his 2008 White House run when University of Michigan students chanted "End the Fed" and burned dollar bills.

Paul, a skinny 74-year-old with a hangdog expression, understands that historical circumstances have thrust his ideas to the fore. "An intellectual fight is going on," he said.

Paul traces his economic views to his frugal upbringing in Pittsburgh at the tail end of the Depression. He saved pennies from delivering newspapers and helping out his father's small dairy business.

And his first economics class at Gettysburg College was an eye-opener, Paul said. When a professor explained how banks keep only a tiny part of their deposits on hand and earn money by lending out the rest, Paul discovered one of the "tricks" of the financial system.

Beyond that, Paul's ideas are grounded in the work of economic thinkers from an earlier era who focused on problems similar to those besetting the U.S. today.

In particular, Paul is a disciple of Ludwig von Mises, an Austrian theorist born at the end of the 19th century who contended that government intervention in an economy would fail because free markets were better at allocating resources and fueling growth.

Having lived through Germany's devastating hyperinflation in the early 1920s, which helped pave the way for Hitler, Mises wrote long before the Great Depression that over-generous credit policies would encourage excessive borrowing, creating a boom and then a bust.

Mises' ideas became central to what is known as the Austrian School of economics, which emphasized tight controls on credit and money supply, a strategy that discouraged financial ups and downs but tended to slow growth.

By 1940, when Mises arrived in America, most Western economists had embraced the competing theories of Britain's John Maynard Keynes, who called for government to stimulate the economy by spending on infrastructure and cutting interest rates.

Obama has largely followed the Keynesian script, as President George W. Bush did when the economic crisis broke.

Paul's once-lonely espousal of the Austrian School's ideas has gotten new impetus from conservative economists and Republican political strategists.

"A lot of good ideas were shoved aside because of the Depression and the rise of the Keynesian view of the world," said George Selgin, an economics professor at the University of Georgia.

Paul contends that Austrian economics explains the most recent financial meltdown: "It says if you inflate too much, if you have no restraint on monetary authorities, you're going to bring on a crisis." Now, Paul says, administration policies are leading the country toward disaster.

Selgin and many mainstream economists agree that pumping too much money into the economy can lead to trouble, but they say Paul goes too far.

In the 1930s, say Selgin and many other economists, including Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, the U.S. economy began pulling out of the Depression thanks to federal easing of monetary policy.

The economy tipped back into depression after the reins were tightened too soon.

"In this aspect of the monetary system, he's just blown it," Selgin said of Paul.

However, like Mises, whose portrait hangs on his Washington office wall, Paul is intransigent, and that has earned him an ardent following.

"His views are strong and hardheaded, but you've got to stand firm or you'll get blown over in this world," said Mark Skousen, editor of the newsletter Forecasts & Strategies and a former economics professor at Columbia University.

– Don Lee

Photo: Larry Downing / Reuters; Orlin Wagner / Associated Press; Associated Press (Paul argues with Mike Huckabee in a GOP primary debate).

Ten Ideas for Bono and his New York Times Op-Ed on Ten World-Changing Ideas

“Another fucking Bono op-ed,” a tipster astutely notes! The U2 frontman has Ten Ideas to Change the World, and they're in the Times' Op-Ed section “in the spirit of rock star excess.” So how 'bout ten ideas to change Bono?

1. Stop writing Op-Eds. Don't be one of those people, Bono.

2. Stop licensing your songs out. Especially “One.” You have enough money and we still like some of them.

3. Stop it with the lasers. You don't need lasers. “Ultraviolet” is awesome enough without them.

4. Save the drama for your concerts. Yes, like you say, it would be nice if Nelson Mandela came out to drop the first ball on the line at the World Cup or whatever. But

If he shows up, the world will weep with joy.

isn't entirely necessary.

5. You have enough money to figure out how to follow through with some of these ideas. So do it. Especially the one about making cars more like iPods, which, besides being awesome-sounding, is certainly on the right track. And about getting rotavirus vaccinations to everyone in Africa. This requires money, which you have, and can get out of your rich friends. Do it.

6. Take a difficult position. Balls out, Bono. Noting that there are bad places like “North Korea, Myanmar” in the world who need their Gandhis is nice, sure. But what about Iran? And why not take a stance on Israel-Palestine? Geopolitical conflicts that need opinions now more than ever, as they're constantly on the cusp of either solution or total chaos. You can only spread the good will for world peace for so long before the message starts to become rhetoric in and of itself.

7. Stop looking in the past. Especially like this:

Dr. Anton Zeilinger, an Austrian physicist, is becoming a rock star of science for his work in quantum teleportation, which I know very little about but which I think I may have achieved backstage one night in Berlin in the early 1990s.

Unless it's in regards to recording another Achtung, Baby. While we're at it, don't ever—ever—count in Spanish again. Ever.

8. If you're going to write an Op-Ed, write it for the Las Vegas Sun. Do I think it's ridiculous that you have an Op-Ed page in the New York Times? For fuck's sake, absolutely. But do I think it'll get some people who didn't read the New York Times yesterday to read it today? Yes. That's not a terrible thing. Hell, write for the Las Vegas Sun. They won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service Journalism this year and had to lay off the editor who oversaw the reporting on the prize-winning piece. If you can't, get The Edge to do it. What's he doing right now, eating bananas? Call his ass.

9. Get new sunglasses. Do it for the Children. We're okay with them because we're just used to you but I can imagine you're scaring the children by looking like the future model of SkyNet Terminators. And the children are our future. I'm serious. A pair of Clubmasters would do you just fine.

10. Stop it with the Jesus complex. Are you Bono? Yes. Are you Jesus? No. Your intentions are excellent and at least 60% of your music catalog is still indisputably great. But if you were to play the whole “Bono Thing” a little more low key, tipsters and I might not laugh every time you talk about changing the world like it's the pop culture punchline it is—regardless of the excellent work you've already done!—if you keep on delivering it to everyone year after year.

Send an email to Foster Kamer, the author of this post, at foster@gawker.com.

Day 119 - Project 365 - 28th Apr 08: MONEY MAKING IDEA by Shai Coggins

<b>News</b> Ticker: Weezer, The Strokes, Pavement, Men at Work : Rolling <b>…</b>

<b>News</b> Ticker: Weezer, The Strokes, Pavement, Men at Work. 2/4/10, 8:33 am EST. Photo: Moore/WireImage. Unreleased Weezer, Ween, the Donnas and more tracks are up for pay-what-you-want download to raise money for cancer research via …

Stewart on Fox <b>News</b> « Don Surber

1 cable <b>news</b> show ever — Bill O'Reilly — had Jon Stewart on last night and will air the rest of the interview tonight. The Daily Show host — a liberal who is actually funny — used the spot to rip the network. …

Is online <b>news</b> just ramen noodles? What media economics research <b>…</b>

The New York Times' announcement that it would be charging for some access to its website, starting in 2011, rekindled yet another round of debate about.

http://www.shumakerelays.com/

why internet marketing

January 29th, 2010

Why Can't Girl Scouts Be Digital Cookie Pushers?

As Girl Scout Cookie season approaches, the age old conversation around parental involvement in cookie sales is rearing its head. However, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution outlines a new twist – are kids allowed to push Samoas on the internet?

While marketing cookies using email is okay, the leadership of the Scouts has put the kibosh on other online initiatives, hoping to encourage a return to knocking on wood.

In an effort to boost door-to-door sales, the Girl Scouts of Greater Atlanta is offering new incentives including a specific “Walkabout” patch (featuring a girl taking strides), according to Sarnethia Wilkinson, product sales marketing representative for Girl Scouts Greater Atlanta cookie program. The patch will be given to girls who participate in chaperoned door-to-door sales in early March (or troops can select a different date to do a Walkabout).

It used to be against the rules to send e-mail cookie pitches, but the Girl Scouts reconsidered because technology and e-mail are such a part of the girls' lives, according to Wilkinson. Meanwhile, Internet sales, such as setting up a payment account or creating a Web site to sell the cookies, is strictly prohibited.

Why can't the girls set up their own e-commerce sites? I can completely understand the drive to have girls out and interacting with their communities, instead of passively sitting behind a computer screen and fulfilling orders. However, since the cookie program is about teaching girls life skills, wouldn't website management, maintenance, order fulfillment, and digital marketing all be a vital part of today's skill set? There are lots of ways to make it work – maybe there's a master troop website, or a maximum web allotment (where each girl receives a portion of the web sales, and has to do the rest through more direct sales methods.)

Perhaps the Girl Scouts organization is reluctant to allow online sales because they already beat the kids to the punch:

In ye olden days, a Girl Scout used to come knocking on every door in the neighborhood offering up Thin Mints and Trefoils. Then came the world of two working parents, pedophiles hiding behind doors and a crappy economy. Kids just don't go door-to-door anymore. But that doesn't mean we don't crave minty chocolatey goodness.

So the Girl Scouts have set up a site for you to indulge your inner blue monster – Find Cookies Now connects you with your local Girl Scout Council via zip code.

But providing a cookie connection does not preclude other online sales techniques or strategies. While there is a Cookie Biz badge to reward girls who are willing to do things like create infomercials for Thin Mints, most of the badges related to internet savvy are way too basic, particularly when dealing with older Scouts. It's considered normal for teenage boys to launch web companies in their basements or in their first few years of college, but the GS leaders seem to think teen girls only use the computer for email – even as casual gaming (which girls disproportionately participate in) is becoming a larger industry, and social networking can provide thousands of innovative ways to sell and draw awareness to the cookie drive. If 32% of teen girls have enough web-savvy to build their own sites, clearly, there's a hell of a lot of untapped potential around leveraging technology to benefit the Scouts beyond email based instruction.

Pushing Girl Scouts to push doorbells [Atlanta Journal-Constitution]
Online Tool Guarantees Girl Scout Cookies Without the Girl
Cookie Biz Badge [Girl Scouts]

Computers in Everyday Life [Girl Scouts]
Girls rule the internet [Napa Valley Register]

Send an email to Latoya, the author of this post, at latoya@racialicious.com.

Why don't you clam up and do something already?

On Sunday, I asked question “Should you dump Internet Explorer, NOW?” and quickly offered yes as the answer for all versions of the browser. Reaction to the post surprised me. As I write, there are more than 155 comments. Clearly, IE is a sensitive topic with readers — and also with Microsoft, which has once again taken a “security by PR'' approach to the problem rather than to offer a real solution.

I first started talking about Microsoft's “security by PR” strategy more than five years ago. Rather than manage the problem — a current zero-day threat affecting Internet Explorer 6, 7 and 8 — Microsoft is trying to manage the reaction. That simply is the wrong approach to quality customer service or instilling users with confidence about using the Web browser.

Quick recap: On January 12, Google disclosed security breaches, affecting more than 20 companies, that were traced back to China. Two days later, McAfee pegged a previously publicly unknown Internet Explorer exploit as one of the mechanisms used in the attacks, which the security software firm dubbed “Operation Aurora.” On January 15, McAfee and Microsoft reported that code for the zero-day exploit was in the wild, potentially putting millions of Windows PCs at risk. Meanwhile, the French and German governments recommended that their citizens switch — at least temporarily — to another browser.

Microsoft's security by PR reaction to the exploit is the problem. Quickly summarized before I more throughly explain:

  • Microsoft used the Aurora exploit as a marketing tactic, recommending that customers switch from IE6 and Windows XP; what timing with IE8 and Windows 7 as newer available products.
  • Early, cleverly-word blogs or statements made it seem like only IE6 is vulnerable to the Aurora exploit, when newer Microsoft browsers are exploitable, too.
  • Microsoft tried to diminish the risk by asserting that the Aurora exploit had only affected businesses, which is absurd considering how much more they have to lose than consumers.
  • Over the U.S. holiday weekend, Microsoft posted new blogs and videos that offered “duck and cover” fixes. Meanwhile some executives defended IE by blaming other Web browsers.

Security by PR

Marketing Tactic. In a January 15 post warning about Aurora becoming a real zero-day exploit, Microsoft “recommend users of IE6 on Windows XP upgrade to a new version of Internet Explorer and/or enable DEP [Data Execution Protection]. Users of other platforms are at reduced risk. We also recommend users of Windows XP upgrade to newer versions of Windows.” The post also recommended that IE users disable JavaScript.

In comments to my “Dump IE?” post, AnthonySPT defended Microsoft: “How many more years should Microsoft support IE6, when they have released several new replacement versions?” That's a good question. According to Net Applications, IE6 usage share was 20.99 percent in December — or about the same as IE8 (20.88 percent).

Commenter bourgeoisdude responded: “As they will support Windows XP through 2014 (extended support), and XP came with IE6 installed, they will have to support it that long, unfortunately. Yeah, it sucks.”

I, too, find it strange that so many businesses continue using IE6. Based on my conservations with IT staff at companies doing so, legacy dependency, most often some ActiveX controls, is usually the reason. How's that for irony, given how much ActiveX has been an attack vector for IE exploits and how much Microsoft tried to diminish the plug-in architecture's usage in versions 7 and 8. Microsoft and its customers still pay for past security sins.

Blaming IE6. Microsoft could possibly justify blame IE6 if that browser only was vulnerable. The wording of blog posts, different versions of security advisory 979352 and videos about the exploit sure seem to lay all the blame on IE6. From a January 14 blog post: ”Microsoft has not seen widespread customer impact, rather only targeted and limited attacks exploiting IE 6 at this time.” Restated in yet another Microsoft security blog post, yesterday: “As we've previously reported, attacks remain targeted to a very limited number of corporations and are only effective against Internet Explorer 6.”

But the 979352 security bulletin lists in section “affected software” IE7 and IE8 running on Windows XP, Vista, 7, Windows Server 2003 and 2008. Meanwhile, over the weekend, security researchers reported the Aurora exploit running in IE7 on Windows Vista. Microsoft's response: Hunker down behind IE8. From yesterday's blog post:

We have not seen successful attacks on Internet Explorer 8. We continue to recommend customers upgrade to Internet Explorer 8 to benefit from the improved security protection it offers. Additionally at this time, we have not seen any successful attacks against Internet Explorer 7. However, earlier today, we were made aware of reports that researchers have developed Proof-of-Concept (PoC) code that exploits this vulnerability on Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP and Windows Vista. We are actively investigating, but cannot confirm, these claims.

Only businesses affected. In one of the two videos accompanying the aforementioned blog post from yesterday, Jerry Bryant, Microsoft's senior security communications manager, says: “These attacks are not widespread. We have not seen any focused on consumers. In fact, it's only been a very limited number of corporations that have been targeted.”

He downplays the Aurora exploit's severity by saying only a small number of corporations are affected. At first glance, this seemingly smart PR spin is anything but. The majority of Microsoft customers are businesses, which have much more to lose if exploited than consumers. If, for example, criminals steal 1 million social security numbers from a single company, the damage is more far-reaching than exploitation of  even a few thousand consumer PCs. How would Microsoft executives react if someone stole the source code to Windows 7 or the designs for Natal?

Duck and cover. Besides emphasizing IE6 blame and diminishing IE7 and IE8 risk, Microsoft retreated to its security technology of greatest strength: DEP. The company was right to tell IE7 users to turn on DEP, which is on by default in IE8 (In most, but not all, circumstances). In comments to my earlier post, there has been fierce debate about the effectiveness of DEP, as a security deterrent.

Yesterday, security researcher Dai Zovi generated buzz with tweet: “And now my Aurora exploit works on IE7 on Vista as well as IE6, IE7 on XP. Remember kids, DEP is useless if the app doesn't opt in.” In a very good blog explaining the effectiveness and limitations of DEP, Larry Seltzer writes about the tweet: “Dai Zovi is not a black hat and hasn't released his exploit, so don't expect this work to end up hacking innocents any time soon. But this does prove that the IE7 port isn't all that hard. The bad guy versions may be done already.”

According to Net Applications, IE 7 usage share is only 15.53 percent, even less than Internet Explorer 6. The question: What about IE8? According to a Security Dark Reading post by Kelly Jackson Higgins early this afternoon: “Chaouki Bekrar, CETO of VUPEN Security, says his team was able to bypass DEP on IE8 and execute arbitrary code.”

I will praise Microsoft for telling customers to turn on DEP, but the larger PR maneuverings diminish the guidance. Microsoft should have stepped up sooner with promise to fix the problem. By the way, whether or not that fix is made available for IE8 and Windows 7 will demonstrate whether there was more risk than Microsoft's talk.

Microsoft finally responds

While I was writing this post, Microsoft acknowledged in another blog post that an out-of-band security patch would be coming for the Aurora exploit.

But the reasons are bad and themselves reveal how much Microsoft is stepping up because of public relations. George Stathakopoulos, GM of Microsoft Trustworthy Computing Security, writes: “Given the significant level of attention this issue has generated, confusion about what customers can do to protect themselves and the escalating threat environment Microsoft will release a security update out-of-band for this vulnerability.”

Translation:

  • “The significant level of attention this issue has generated” (Microsoft is trying to fix a huge public relations problem).
  • “Confusion about what customers can do to protect themselves” (Microsoft cannot control the PR information).
  • “The escalating threat environment” (Microsoft has stopped denying — at least to itself — that there is a real problem that will get worse).

Microsoft also didn't give a timeframe for releasing the fix, but presumably it would come before the next Security Tuesday in February.

Wrapping up, two clarifications are in order. I am not asserting in this post that Internet Explorer is any more or less secure than any other browser. My purpose here is only to assess Microsoft's mishandling the messaging by making security by PR the priority. Additionally, my January 17 “Dump IE?” post was written to stir up discussion about the exploit, particularly assertions by Microsoft and some bloggers that Internet Explorer users upgrade from IE6. I took the more extreme position to generate debate, because I see it as a highly effective tool for resolving problems. Likewise, this post is intended to stir up debate about IE security and how Microsoft publicly handles it.

Bill bartmann, Bill bartmann, Bill bartmann robert shumake, robert shumake

Endangered Species: <b>News</b> Librarians are a Dying Breed « ResourceShelf

According to data collected by Michelle Quigley, a researcher at the Palm Beach Post, over 250 <b>news</b> librarians (sometimes called <b>news</b> researchers) lost their jobs in the U.S. since 2007. Membership in the Special Libraries Association …

Video: Comedian Charlie Brooker on TV <b>News</b> | Peter Kafka <b>…</b>

This excellent deconstruction of TV <b>news</b>, via comedian/writer Charlie Brooker, has been circulating for the past few days, but there's a good chance you haven't seen it since it never mentions the word "Apple," "tablet" or "iPad.

Technology <b>News</b>: iPhone: Apple Lets VoIP iPhone Apps Use 3G <b>…</b>

Apple is allowing iPhone owners to use Internet calling services over cellular networks. Several companies offering Voice over Internet Protocol — or VoIP — services said this week that Apple now allows their applications to work on …

Videolicious.tv Traffic From StumbleUpon.com - 06/08/09 by DavidErickson

Choosing a Career

December 22nd, 2009

To get a sensible career planning method, we need ask ourselves and give an answer to the following two simple questions. What is the difference between job and career?
Does searching for a job mean the same as choosing your career strategy?
Of course there is a big difference. The terms career and job can?t be comprehended reciprocally. Looking for a job and planning your career does not mean the same thing. Let?s consider some differences between these meanings.

The dissimilarity between career and job
Career and job are two dissimilar meanings. Career is an all embracing, broader meaning but job is a confined method.
The job hunt starts when you finish your education or when you need it, but a career needs to be controlled. It needs to be defined right from the level of high school.
It is not significantly that a job or for that case a perfect job may be a progressing line towards reaching your career objective. Advancing it further, there is no need that the advancement in your job may influence the progress of your career objective.

Both career control and job hunt needs a network. Really, your networking is very important. In the case of a job the network is very shallow. Your benefit in the network and the networks connections do not have a great sense. On the other hand, building a career, your network includes good relations with people. In a career you and the way you networking make a great sense to reach the success.

Concerning a career, you should work very hard and provide serious efforts of improve your abilities and qualities. You should be striving to advance your skills and constantly work on yourself. Improving your skills and abilities makes you closer to your career objective. On the other hand concerning a job, you try to get skills which help you do your job better, or help you to find a promotion.

In your job your success is managed by what other people suppose and realize but concerning a career, you look at your success from another sides. You think about your success according to the time span that you settle for yourself.

Sensible career strategy goes together with comprehending, but most of all realizing, these dissimilarities. People who have a job get the job to do a job. They have an aim to reach someone else objective. When the task is accomplished, the job is accomplished. People, who get a career, work on its advancing ever day. It is a growing progress.

Just look up the definitions of these terms in a dictionary.

Career is an occupation or profession. Career specifically needs an appropriate training, it can take a long time span.

Job is a part of work. Job is an accomplishment of a task as part of the order of one’s profession or for a specific price.

Find out how a job coach can help you with everything, starting from the job search up to the building of your career freedom. Hire Dusty Rollins to be your job coach and you will see what new horizons a competent job coach can show you.

http://www.myfoxdetroit.com/search/SERP?search_type=web&top_search_field=bill+bartmann+site%3Aemailwire.com itaintbrikeyet bill bartmann bill bartmann bill bartmann bill bartmann bill bartmann bill bartmann bill bartmann bill bartmann surface encounters macomb mi loss mitigation training loss mitigation training bill bartmann bill bartmann bill bartmann bill bartmann bill bartmann dryer vent cleaning dryer vent cleaning

Jason Bay: No News is Good News? : Mets Today

Ah, and that's why I say “no news is good news”: because we know he's unlikely to be worth that kind of money playing in a park made for Lilliputians, much less one whose dimensions are similar to that of the Grand Canyon. …

Iran bans reformist paper, warns news agency: reports (AFP via

Iran has banned a reformist paper and warned ILNA news agency against reporting on the “Green Movement” as pro-opposition media face mounting pressure by the government, reports said Monday. See the original post here: …

Perez Hilton: More True Blood Casting News!

Since 2004, Hollywood's most hated website has been delivering the juiciest celebrity gossip. The blog is The go-to source for daily happenings in Hollywood. Written by the internet's most notorious gossip columnist, Perez Hilton (Mario …

Three Doors - Which to Choose by iQoncept

Careers Major

December 21st, 2009