Article city

read,write express your opinion

3 décembre, 2008

The most easy way to give life to articles

Enregistré dans : Non classé — easyjournal @ 18:46

Many SEO and webmasters find that writing articles for their sites is a very hard task.Many people who need to write articles also delay as much as they can the amount of writing they need to do it. Many people dread writing articles because they find researching for the topic and writing down original materials will be too expensive for them.You need to have your creative juices flowing and simply downloading an article would be plagiarism or tantamount to stealing, not exactly. Have you ever heard about public domain? These are articles written down by many authors that have declared their works to be public domain, which means anybody can use it for whatever purpose they want. While most articles authors would like to copyright their work for their rights, there are also a number who doesn’t mind sharing their work. Public domain articles are not owned by anybody and can be used and abused by anyone. The writers have waived their rights to their works and it is out there for the public to make use of.You can use public domain articles in helping you write your articles.With the public domain articles you can simply edit them to your own style and rewrite them as you please to make it suitable for your needs. All the ideas are there already and its just a matter of finding the write article with the topic or subject you need.

This is maybe the easiest way if you want to write articles. You don’t need to scour around the library or the internet for hours for information and start an article from scratch.For webmasters who are looking for articles to fill their site and to generate a high ranking for their website in search engine results, they can just modify the article by infusing keywords and keyword phrases related to their site.A seo or a webmaster do not risk any chance of getting sued for copyright infringement because they are public domain, once again meaning that anybody can use it.Writing articles by using public domain wont require as much work as writing one from scratch would. You save a lot of time also.One good thing in using public domain articles for your site or for any project is that you save a lot of money. You dismiss the need to hire experienced and seasoned writers that some website operators use to write their articles.While a single five hundred worded article would only set you down 10 to 15 dollars, this cost will drastically increase when you need hundreds of articles to fill the needs of your site.For those who need articles to generate newsletters or an e-zine, public domain articles will be very good.You don`t need to count on your contributors or pay writers to write articles for your newsletters or e-zine.You can fill all the pages without any cost or the worry of being sued. You can just copy the articles and place them on your newsletter and e-zine.

Public domain articles are a virtual resource that many people fail to realize their true value and potential.The power of articles, keywords and phrases have been deemed invaluable in the past few years for many internet based businesses and sites that want to high-rank in SE results.The number of article and content writers have grown significantly due to the rise in the demand for articles.As newer and newer topics and subjects have arisen, there are many demands for new articles to be written.An industry has been formed and this is a worldwide demand.Public domain articles have given a great alternative for those who are cash strapped as well as do not have the time nor the skills to do their articles for themselves.Searching for public domain articles is as easy as a-b-c. You can search for those kind of articles in search engines and make searches in many directories for the topic or subject that you need.Read them and simply copy and paste them to a word processing program and just edit them to suit your needs and purpose.Article marketing get better year by year and many talented people fill the web with the best and strong ideas about life and internet marketing.



6 décembre, 2007

Acomplia(rimonabant)

Enregistré dans : Non classé — easyjournal @ 13:13

Acomplia is a diet pill manufactured by Sanofi Aventis for weight loss treatment. Acomplia (also known as Rimonabant and Zimulti) has been approved by European Union in the summer of 2006 and now has become the most popular treatment for weight loss.Acomplia is also known as magic drug as it helps for smoking cessation as well as heart diseases. Acomplia was made marketable in the UK and rest of Europe as result of a conformity made by 25-member European Union. Acomplia is an anti –obesity with Rimonabant, as its main constituent. Rimonabant was discovered and manufactured by a French pharmaceutical firm, Sanofi-Aventis. It works on the principle of targeting the CB-1 receptors, found in the Endo- cannabinoid (EC) system. These receptors control food and tobacco intake in the body. When these receptors are blocked, your appetite tends to reduce. As a result you eat less than your normal appetite and therefore you loose weight. It shows maximum results when used in addition with a low calorie diet and regular work out.The diet drug Acomplia Rimonabant reflects a few side effects, which go away once you get adjusted to the Acomplia treatment such as: 1. Dizziness 2. Muscle cramp 3. Sleep disorders 4. Nausea 5. Stomach upset 6. Diarrhea.There are many online pharmacies related with this article from where you can buy acomplia and many other weight loss pills.

16 novembre, 2007

Biochemic Cell Salts and Astrology Equals Health

Enregistré dans : Non classé — easyjournal @ 22:20

Astrology and Cell Salts Biochemistry

In this chaotic and materialistic world we can thank Dr. George W. Carey for giving us a priceless key to mental and physical health. He wrote a small book entitled “The Relation of the Mineral Salts of the Body to the Signs of the Zodiac;” circa 1900.

The heritage of all humans on the planet is perfection; perfect health. Our solar system just entered the age of Aquarius, which is the human sign. The sign of the truth about man. This is the age of truth. Only truth matters not opinions. Know the truth and the truth shall set you free. Know the truth and heal yourself. The process necessary to the attainment of perfection was given to us by Dr. William Schuessler in his biochemic system of medicine. The key was supplied by Dr. Carey.

Dr. Schuesselr's system supplies the blood with it's component parts. When the blood is chemically perfect, God-Power enters the body. Deficiency means disease, lack of ease, in harmony, or imperfection. A perfect supply of the right chemical elements means perfect cells, a perfect brain, perfect thought, perfect acts, “perfection-a God-Man!” Neitschze was right … we are men gods. Most people do not know that biochemistry is an ancient sanskirt science. What goes around comes around.

Dr. Carey, in a strange and rare meditation ascribed to each sign of the zodiac a corresponding chemical element or salt. His book is the most unique and valuable work of the last century. The cell salts are a key to physical regeneration and spiritual illumination. His information is required to produce or create the new man. The man for the age of Aquarius.

The revelation came to Dr. Carey in his “seventieth year!” This revelation was that each of us is to make a new being of ourselves. We must all work out our own salvation. And this salvation takes many lifetimes. Patience is the fruit of the gods.

Esoteric Astrology is the nobel science that synthesizes the physiological, anatomical, chemical and metaphysical aspects of man.

The age of Aquarius is telling mankind to look upward or it will be forced to do so.

The cell salts, the process of physical regeneration is not of one life, one incarnation, but of many. Be patient. But, start now. He is gone but when the time is ripe and the astrological moment arrives which will produce the vibration necessary for his reappearance in the objective, he will come forth again in the physical manifestation to go on with his work.

The age of Aquarius is giving us the laws of quantum physics. The laws of quantum physics tell us that there is no time in the infinite ocean of energy called the quantum ocean. There is no past, present nor future, only the now!” Everything that ever was, is or will be is in the quantum ocean now.

Dr. Carey is there awaiting the time when he will blink out of the quantum ocean and into physical reality. It is the blink that he and all of us have done many times… at the right time.

10 Design Tricks to Save Big Money Redecorating a Home

Enregistré dans : Non classé — easyjournal @ 22:20

It's always amazing to me how much money people are willing to throw at remodeling projects. Most people pay about market prices for real estate, making it unlikely they could resell quickly and get all the money back at closing. It's a better strategy to spend less, get good value for purchases and wait at least a few years before you move again.

There are lots of ways to get good value and save money on your remodeling projects. In many areas you have to be willing to eat the cost of granite counter tops when you resell. Maybe tiles would be the better choice. Clean homes with an uncluttered, Zen like appearance resell pretty well. The best insurance you can get that your property will hold its value is in picking the right neighborhood. If you can get a house in the right area that needs work it can still do well.

What's the right way to do the work? Here are just a few of my favorites.

1. Keep it simple. Avoid wild paint treatments and over the top custom decorating. Simple, uncluttered and restful will be easier to live with and better at resale, too. Throwing money at a project is REALLY risky, especially if you have to resale quickly. Restraint may be your best bet.

2. Decide what will make your house better for you to live comfortably and concentrate on those items first. It may sound self indulgent, but, hey, it's YOUR house. Built in storage could make you a lot more comfortable. So could intelligent reuse of other people's discards. One of the cutest houses I ever saw was a great conglomeration of reused materials and resold in one day in a depressed market. Shop around for sales and/or good used stuff. Stuff that might end up in a landfill could work just fine.

3. If you need a second bath, consider adding one to your existing home instead of moving. It will make your 1 or 1&1/2 bath home more comfortable for you and more marketable when and if you want to move. Moving is a very difficult thing. Only do it if someone makes you.

4. Plan your projects down to the last details. You want to find out what the complications may be and make good decisions about how to deal with them. A good finish carpenter may be able to deal with a lot of things, a good plumber can make sure everything meets code with new plumbing, a good electrician can tell you whether your wiring and breaker box can take the load of your new kitchen. Ask to see licenses and check for financial responsibility.

5. Imagine tearing out your kitchen and then finding out the cabinets you want will take 9 months to ship from Europe. Meanwhile you have no kitchen and you now need to add the cost of all those months of eating out to your total costs. What's wrong with domestic items anyway? Just tell folks you imported the rock half way around the world. How would they know? Don't do it. Importing is not green or good value!!!

6. Have all work possible inspected to make sure it meets or exceeds code in your area. It may be your best protection against contractor incompetence. Your local municipality or county can help you with this. Pay your contractor when it passes both your and the municipality's inspection.

7. Demolition may be something you can do to save money on your project. Preparing work areas for trades and cleaning up after they are done may help, too. Just be careful and don't get hurt. We know a watchmaker who has always been interested in wood working, but doesn't do it. If he saws off a finger he could end his career. Those tools and ladders can be dangerous.

8. Learn enough about good building to recognize when someone is not good at what they are doing. You can download building code from the Internet for your local area. Download and study up. It could save you big money.

9. Have all materials and supplies on site before work starts. Many projects take forever just WAITING. If your special bathtub is not on site when the installers come, you could wait forever for the next opportunity. This is especially true if you are building in an out of the way building site. Many wood floors need time to acclimate to the humidity or lack of it in the house where it will be installed. Plan as much as you can. I once refaced a kitchen in a weekend because we had everything we needed to finish the job, doors, trim, paint…everything. Planning matters. Many decorators and contractors don't plan well. Save yourself the wait and frustration with good planning.

10. Use home store's affiliated installers for some of the work you have done. They have to give a level of satisfaction to keep their jobs. It may be a lot less risky than hiring some friend of a friend who calls himself a “professional”. A lot of people who are working at building are not as good at it as I am and I don't call myself a pro. I am a better painter than many professionals and often do it to save money on my own projects.

There is only one more thing I want to tell you about what ever you do updating your house. That is that you need to be sure not to mess up your floor plan. Make sure it will pass the appraiser test at resale. Did you know that in most municipalities in the US, a bedroom must have egress and a closet? You also don't want to walk through another bedroom to get to a bedroom. So study up and avoid messing up.



10 novembre, 2007

How To Create An Organized Filing System

Enregistré dans : Non classé — easyjournal @ 20:08

The test of a good filing system is being able to find something when you need it, regardless of how you choose to organize it. However, there are two basic approaches to setting up a filing system:

 

·         Establish categories for like items by subject (e.g., Hobbies)

·         Establish an index based system with files identified numerically by item (e.g., File 1=Document 1)

 

You can choose the method that makes the most intuitive sense to you.  People who have trouble categorizing may feel more comfortable with the indexing approach.  Regardless of which type of system you choose, if you feel overwhelmed about where to start, pick a group of papers in any pile.  It does not matter where you start…..you just need to start with a manageable subset of paper.

 

Active files are those which you must access regularly.  Historic files are those that it is unlikely you will need to access, but which you must keep for record retention purposes (i.e., tax files).  Your inactive files should not be kept in your active file space, if file cabinet space is limited.  These files can be stored in boxes in an out of the way location (since you should not be accessing these files regularly).  To create your active files, follow the steps outlined below.

Organizing By Category

 

Step 1 Sort & Discard

 

Review your papers and discard any papers you no longer need to keep.  If you feel unsure about discarding an item, in order to make the decision easier, ask yourself what’s the worst thing that could happen if you throw it away?  It helps to put things in perspective.

 

When you decide to keep a paper, sort the paper into various categories/piles. Use post-it notes to label the top page of each pile until a permanent file location/category name is established later. 

 

Use categories that are broad for sorting.  For example, if you have lots of information on various leisure interests, you can create a hanging file called “Leisure” (vs. creating a hanging file for every type of leisure topic in your papers). 

 

If you have a major hobby such as photography, for which you collect a lot of information, create a separate hanging folder named “Photography”.  This makes more sense (so that the “leisure” file won’t become too unwieldy).

 

You can create multiple interior file folders that reside within the hanging file folder, each labeled with the category sub-topic.  This makes it easier to search by sub-topic.  For example, within the “Leisure” hanging file category you might have file folders for the sub-categories of Art, Music & Reading.

 

Step 2: Determine Quantity Files Needed  

 

Once you are finished sorting, count and double check the number of “piles” you have to keep.  The number of piles equals the number of hanging file folders you will need for your active files. You should buy a minimum of the same number of interior file folders to insert inside the hanging file folders (more if you will have some categories with multiple sub-topics).

 

Step 3: Identifying/Labeling the Files

 

Create a set of hanging file folders and associated interior file folder(s) for each pile and its sub-categories.

 

In order to maintain the transition from active to historic status at the end of each year, the interior files should be labeled by subject and current year (e.g., Life Insurance 2004). This dating approach is best for those categories that involve monthly statements or bills. 

 

For your hanging folders that do contain dated material, it is best to keep static papers that don’t change from year to year in front of the interior folders (e.g., the life insurance policy versus the quarterly invoices).  This will make it easy to transition files from active to historical status at year end.

 

Step 4: Estimate file cabinet size

 

Once you put the appropriate papers in the files, you can get a sense of how many file cabinet drawers you will need. Using a single “Bankers Box” (heavy corrugated storage box) to stand the files up to measure the inches in depth needed is very helpful.  These boxes are available at office supply stores, and also will serve later for inactive storage purposes). 

 

The total number of depth inches you have equates to the number of file

drawers you will need in the file cabinet.  Be sure to measure the depth of any file cabinet drawers you may be thinking of buying to ensure you’ll have enough space (allowing at least 4 inches in each drawer’s clearance for sliding & viewing files.

 

Maintaining the System Annually

 

At the end of the year, transfer the past year’s interior files to inactive storage.  Keep the same hanging file folder in place, and create a new set of interior file folders labeled with the New Year.  Keep the “static materials inside the hanging file folders from the past year.

 

Suggested Category Headings

 

  • Automobile
  • Children
  • Computer
  • Credit Cards:
    • Mastercard
    • Visa
    • Am Ex
    • Discover
  • Education
  • Employer
  • Frequent Flyer Program
  • Fitness
  • Hobbies
  • Holidays
  • Life Insurance
  • Renter’s or Home Insurance
  • Business insurance
  • Medical Insurance
  • Dental Insurance
  • Disability Insurance
  • Long Term Care Insurance
  • Mortgage
  • Retail
  • Services
  • Legal
  • Finances
    • Stocks
    • Bonds
    • 401K
  • Subscriptions
  • Taxes
  • Travel
  • Utilities
  • Warranties

 

 

Index Based Organizing

 

Step 1: Discard & Pile

 

Review your papers and discard any papers you no longer need to keep.  For the papers you need to keep, sort your papers into a single pile (no need to categorize). 

 

Step 2: Create the File Index

 

For each one of these papers or related group of papers (if that relationship is very obvious to you), you will create a numerical file.  You will then record File #1’s contents in an excel log (or other computerized tool) that describes the contents of the file.  For example, if I have a utility bill from March 2004, you would make the description “March 2004 Utility Bill”.  This file description will get assigned a random file number in a pre-identified location (i.e.,  File #1 in the office filing cabinet).  Should you ever need to find this bill again, you would do an Edit/Find search in Excel and enter “March 2004 utility” to find it.  The advantage of this approach is it does not rely on categorizing.  When your May 2004 bill arrives, you can assign a totally unrelated file # to it.

 

You can create & record these indexes with Excel or Access by using their search capabilities.  There is also a software program called “The Paper Tiger” from The Hemphill Productivity Institute that is designed for this purpose, and it adds some nice bells and whistles (like tracking files that have been pulled out but not put back). There is a free trial offer and tele-class if you are interested (information can be found at their website http://www.thepapertiger.com/.).

 

The major disadvantage of the indexing approach is that you must maintain many more files in your storage unit, as well as the data base to track them.

 

Other Filing Tips      

 

·         You should have “action” folders for bills to pay, things to do and pending matters.  This serves as a holding place for things you have not had time to get to that week, but that still require action on your part.  It is also helpful to have a calendar file to keep things needed for events already recorded in your calendar (e.g., directions to event, handouts, etc.)

 

·         You can use color coded folders to visually identify subject categories

 

·         You can alphabetize your file folders by hanging folder tab name, but if you use staggered file tabs, you’ll have to redo the order every time you add or delete a subject. 

 

·         Pendaflex, a leading manufacturer recommends that files should be no more than ¾” thick.  If you need a file with a greater thickness, you can use the “box bottom” hanging folders. 

Copyright 2004 – The Organizing Wiz

 

As The Organizing Wiz, Ilene Drexler works with residential clients in New York City who want to get organized in their home or home offices.  She is a member of the industry's leading resources for professional organizing:

·         National Association of Professional Organizers

·         National Study Group on Chronic Disorganization (NSGCD)

Ilene honed her organizing skills during 20 years working in corporate operations management for various Fortune 500 companies including Disney, Scholastic, Accenture, Random House and McGraw-Hill. Her work there was focused on redesigning & streamlining operational processes, as well as helping project teams to be more organized.

Ilene earned a certificate of study in Chronic Disorganization from the NSGCD, and has a B.S. in Business Administration.  Her “How To” organizing articles have been published by

  • My Organized life.com
  • Online Organizing.com
  • Professional Organizers Webring
  • Article City.com
  • GO Articles.com
  • OnlyHer.net