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February 18th, 2008 at 8:32 pm

High Speed Internet Connections – a More Efficient Way to Stay Connected

in: Communication
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The right information and access to the same has become very important in the
present day world. People need to remain in the knowledge of the multitude of
news, views, opinions and developments to stay ahead in their respective areas
of work. The importance of the internet can be understood in this context. As a
matter of fact, the world wide web together with internet connectivity has
brought in a revolution of sorts in way we are ‘networking’ with others – here
and now.
The point is that for some time now, the internet has been the
facilitating medium wherein users can connect, socialize, chat and keep in touch
with people and events. The availability of “broadband” internet has accelerated
this entire process. Users are now connecting with others at speeds that were
unimaginable even a couple of years ago.
High speed internet connections are
better than dial-up ones. This is because the speed at which the internet can be
accessed is significantly higher. As a matter of fact, the speed of data
transmission is more than 200,000 bits per second in one direction. This is
possible due to the incorporation of the latest transmission technologies. The
text, images and sound are converted into digital bits before being
transmitted.
High speed internet connections are quite invaluable for both
professional as well as casual users. One can attach
personal computers to these
connections and make the most of some very unique services. It is possible, for
instance, to use the high speed broadband connections to make long distance
calls at very economical rates. Broadband users can also go for online shopping
and web surfing and be assured of a completely trouble-free experience.
Moreover, unlike dial-up connections, the phone lines are free and can be used
for making calls.
High speed internet connections have several merits to
their credit. It is very easy to transfer and upload important files and
documents, for instance. There is also an element of cost efficiency, wherein
users can do without printing all the information that is required in specific
instances.

About the Author:

Jack Daniel is an expert author and the webmaster of Mobile Phone
Blog
. The website having details of Internet Phones and Broadband Internet Connections.

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January 31st, 2008 at 8:55 pm

Valentine’s Day Sms Messages

in: Communicate, Greeting, Relationship
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 roseHope you enjoy this article about some of the interesting ways that we can share our love for each other on Valentine’s Day. Truly in this technological age there can be no excuse for not telling everyone in your life that you love them on Valentine’s Day. With so many avenues of communication available, even a simple text message can speak volumes on Valentine’s Day. I encourage you to leave your comments at the end.

Valentine’s Day is the day celebrated on 14th February every year around the globe to express the feelings and passion between the loved ones. Valentine’s Day is celebrated by exchanging the gifts, flowers, greeting cards, chocolates, Valentine’s Day cards and heart shaped balloons. Exchange of the red rose is specifically associated to lovers. The common misconception about the Valentine’s Day is that it is for the lovers but instead Valentine’s Day is the day to show your care and feelings for any relationship that is important. It can be your father, mother grandparents, siblings or any friend. With the arrival of mobile phones, people around the world send millions of text messages to greet their loved ones on the Valentine’s Day. Here are some cool Valentine’s Day sms messages which you can copy and send to your loved ones:
· No poems no fancy words I just want the world to know that I LOVE YOU my Princess with all my heart. Happy Valentine’s Day
· Without Love — days are sad day, moan day, tears day, waste day, thirst day, fright day, shatter day. So be in love everyday…Wish you a Happy Valentine’s Day!
· My soul is shattered without your arms to hold me.
· Like a mirror without a reflection. I Love U my Valentine.
· I’m enthralled by your beauty, mesmerized by your charisma and spellbound by your love. No wonder I am always thinking about you. I wish to celebrate every Valentine with you. Happy Valentine’s Day!
· Love so much my heart is sure. As time goes on I love you more, your happy smile. Your loving face no one will ever take your place. Wish you a Happy Valentine’s Day!
· I have seen angels in the sky,
I have seen snowfall in july,
I have seen things you only imagine to see,
But I have not seen anything sweeter than you.
· Your love is like a river peaceful and deep,
Your soul is like a secret that I never could keep,
When I look into your eyes I know it’s true,
You were made for me and me for you
· Seasons will Change,
Colors will Fade,
But….One thing that will never Change…
The way that I Feel about you..
And….One thing that will Never Fade that is My LOVE 4 you…..
I LOVE U SO MUCH
· Love is what I see in, your smile every day.
Love is what I feel in, every touch you give.
Love is what I hear in, every word you say.
Love is what we share, every day we live.
· Every Hour I think of you
Every Minute I think of you
Every Second I think of you
I live for you and I die for you
It’s not for days; it’s not for weeks,
It’s not for months or years, its forever.
So if you have a true love in your life then sending sms is the best way to greet them on the Valentine’s Day. So this valentine’s day amaze your loved ones by sending them these lovely sms messages.

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January 14th, 2008 at 4:02 pm

In our Grasp - How the Interment and New Technology Will Democratize Publishing

in: Communicate, Communication, communicating
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Once you are done reading the following article pertaining to one man’s perspective on the advancements of technology. Please share your thoughts as comments are appreciated. 

My name is Philip Spires and I am a Libros International author. It’s about six months since I first held a copy of my book, Mission, in my grasp. Mission was a project I had lived with, on and off, for twenty years. I wrote the book in the 1980s and forgot about it until November 2006. I retrieved it, decided to finish it and then there was Libros International. So, in my grasp, there was the book. It was a strange feeling. It felt like it had a life of its own, as if it had nothing to do with me any more.
I am proud of Mission. It’s not autobiographical, but many of the events in the book did happen. But, of course, I re-ordered them, changed them, made them fit the overall idea that I decided would underpin the book. I would not be so crass, so clichéd, as to say that it is “based on real events”, but I would claim that Mission contains a lot that derives from my personal experience. The book is my way of communicating that experience, hopefully in a way that goes beyond merely listing a series of events. There’s meaning there, somewhere – at least I hope there is.
Writing, obviously, is a form of communication. Creative writing is personal communication. It offers a particular, yes, a personal view of existence. When we write, we claim that we are special, that we have something special to say. There would be no point in doing it, otherwise.
So what might I be able to communicate? What is so special about me that might motivate others to read about the experiences I relate? Who is this “Philip Spires”, resplendent on the cover of the book?
Well, I was born in 1952, so that makes me 55 years old. I was brought up in what was then a mining village in the West Riding of Yorkshire. The home we lived in had no garden. You walked directly from the front room onto a main road. We spread cinders from the fire across the back yard to fill out the puddles. My mother had to go out and lift up the washing line with a prop to let the coal wagon through. We had an outside toilet with torn up newspaper on a nail. We had no bathroom, and running water only in the kitchen sink. Baths were taken once a week in a galvanized tub set in front of the kitchen fire. The cellar used to flood and I spent many hours sailing the tin bath in that subterranean sea. Tell ‘em that you lived in a shoe box in the middle of the road and do they believe you? No.
But it turned out that I was quite good at school. I was accelerated. I did my eleven plus at nine and went to Normanton Grammar School. From there I won a scholarship to Imperial College in London where I studied Chemical Engineering. Yes, I am a mathematician and a physicist. End of conversation…
But I didn’t want to design oil refineries, so I trained as a teacher. I have always been conscious that I am a product of the 1944 Education Act. Had that legislation not sought to widen access to education then I would probably have become an electrician like my father or gone down the pit like my grandfather. For me the 1944 Education Act changed everything. So I went to university. I was always conscious of this opportunity that had never been available to previous generations of my family. That’s why I decided to teach. I wanted to help other poor people to empower themselves, as I thought I had done.
And then I went to Kenya. I did two years as a volunteer in a self-help secondary school in Kitui District, eastern Kenya. I became a head teacher after just three months and so, as a 22 year old, I found myself running a school with 180 students, 120 of which were full-time boarders. I had six full-time teaching staff and five ancillary staff. I had to construct a science lab, library, kitchen, dining room, two teacher’s houses and a large concrete water tank. I did all the school accounts, extracted fees from the students, paid the staff, handled governors’ and parents’ meetings in Swahili etc. It was quite an experience. Things that happened in those two years formed the basis of Mission and, indeed, A Fool’s Knot, my next book awaiting publication by Libros International. It’s thirty years since I wrote A Fool’s Knot, incidentally, though I revised it this year having retrieved my original hand-written manuscript after 15 years of separation. Ten years ago I threw away the two copies of the book that I had typed. At the time I needed to offload luggage. And now it will be published.
After Kenya, I went back to London where I met Caroline. We married and lived and worked in London for 16 years. I taught in schools and colleges and was involved in some very interesting spare time projects.
Then, in 1992 we upped and went to Brunei in South-East Asia. We lived there for six and a half years and then moved to Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates for three years. Then we gravitated here to Spain, and have been here for five years. I have taught mathematics and information technology throughout, but I have also studied. I have a Master’s degree in education and a PhD in social sciences, specializing in the psychological aspects of economic change. So here I am, a maths teacher who does computers, grounded in educational theory and a specialist in how economic change impacts the individual’s identity, beliefs and culture. Perhaps I am unique, but then we all are, because we are all individuals and have an individual and thus individualized experience.
A pause here to say thank you and for being patient while I talked about “me”. But what’s the point? How does this come together? Well let’s start with the 1944 Education Act. And let’s remember that it’s only 150 years or so since economically developed countries actively tried to widen access to education. Prior to that it was a controlled, utterly exclusive path, open to only a miniscule fraction of the population. It is still true that 95% of all scientists who have ever lived are alive today. This statistic is a direct consequence of a deliberate global widening of access to education in the last century, which itself has led to an amazing flowering of knowledge and discovery. Human population and life expectancy have soared. In Brunei, for instance, life expectancy rose from 40 to 80 years in one generation. Yes, “progress” results in environmental pressures, social tensions, conflict, perhaps, but personally I would not want to return to a life expectancy of 40, and neither would I volunteer to forego the technology that so enhances the quality of my life. Our ingenuity got us here. It will take us somewhere else as well. But if that ingenuity is not literally “schooled”, not presented with opportunity to develop and express itself, then it will be wasted, never realized. So it is my assertion that all of this human transformation, most of which is positive, came about primarily as a result of wider access to education.
I am also a social scientist. If physical sciences observe natural phenomena with a view to categorizing them and extracting patterns of predictability and behavior, then social sciences do the same with groups of people. It’s harder to categorize in the social sciences because the targets keep moving. Societies tend to change before they have defined themselves, certainly before they have succumbed to description, let alone analysis. The mechanisms of the physical world are relatively constant, if stubbornly hard to reveal, whereas those of the human world are a seething pot of bubbles.
There’s an approach to social sciences called phenomenology. What it uses for data is individual experience. I’ve done a bit myself. It takes many hours of work to conduct interviews, transcribe them, analyze them and then reflect upon the content. When, as a researcher, you try to contrast the phenomenological data provided by people here and now with that of the past, you quickly realize that there really isn’t anything to work with. If access to education only increased a hundred or so years ago, access to the means of recording individual human existence really has never widened. It remains restricted, access to it controlled in the way that education used to be the privilege of the few.
If you want to communicate your own personal and particular experience, you write something. Speech is both free and common, but it’s ethereal: once spoken it’s gone for ever. Until the end of the twentieth century, individuals who wanted to record experience first had to secure access to education to learn literacy. They then had to have enough time off from securing the necessities of life to write. And finally they would be presented with the highly unlikely task of finding a publisher, someone who was willing to invest money in the production of a record of that highly personal experience. Interesting it may be. Marketable it generally was not. In addition, the publisher doing the paying usually demanded the call of the writer’s tune, so the individual part of that individual experience was generally dropped as the publisher inserted his own requirements.
But where are we now? New technology means that we can produce books with little investment. The print-on-demand technique currently produces relatively expensive books, but that will soon change. Electronic self-publishing can be free. The blogosphere is something entirely new. And, as a consequence, for the first time in human history, the voices of ordinary people, living ordinary lives, having ordinary experiences can be heard. The word ordinary, by the way, is illusory. What we really should say is “particular”, “individual”, “different”, or “interesting”.
Currently there is no phenomenological human history. It does not exist. We are witnessing its birth. Imagine a hundred years from now being able to say that 95% of all the authors who have ever lived are currently alive – and all because of changes in technology at the end of the twentieth century, allied with the initiative of a few visionaries at the time who saw the potential. So thank you to all five of the founding partners of Libros International, the author’s publisher, for being prime movers in a revolution, a revolution to make the voice of the ordinary, the particular, the unique individual heard. Thanks to you, it’s now in our grasp.

About the Author:

Philip Spires
Author of Mission, an African novel set in Kenya
http://www.philipspires.co.uk
Michael, a missionary priest, has just killed Munyasya. It was an accident, but Mulonzya, a politician, exploits the tragedy for his own ends. Boniface, a church worker, has just lost his child. He did not make it to the hospital in time, possibly because Michael went to the Mission to retrieve a letter from Janet, a teacher, and the priest’s neighbor. It is Munyasya who has the last laugh, however.

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January 9th, 2008 at 8:10 pm

Watch Your Business Skyrocket with 4-Way Video IM (Instant Messaging)

in: Communicate, IM Video, communicating
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How did finding new ways to communicate for your business become so important to you that you found this article. Perhaps the following will change your perspective and you will share your thoughts.

When it comes to business, communication is fundamental. If you can improve your Communication Capabilities you will increase your company sales. With that in mind, if you are the owner of a business, it behooves you to stay abreast of the latest technological developments and advancements when it comes to communication. Towards this important goal, you will want to closely consider how four way video instant messaging might play a crucial role in meeting the communication needs of your business not only today but into the future as well.
If you are like an ever growing number of businesses, you have staff located off site and away from a central office. Indeed, many businesses today have staff that work from home or that are located hundreds of miles away. Whatever the specific case, when you have staff located at distant locations, the need for effective and appropriate communication becomes all the more significant.
Four way video instant messaging can be an ideal way for you to stay in appropriate contact with your staff located at distant locations. For example, you can readily have staff meetings, bringing together your team through the four way video instant messaging system.
With four way video instant messaging, you can also connect with clients and strategic partners located anywhere in the world. You will find that this type of technology can prove invaluable in assisting you in providing the ultimate in professional services to your clients. You can communicate with them in a manner that is completely convenient for them and that does not take a great deal of time out of your own very full schedule.
You might immediately conclude that the costs of such video technology will render this type of communication beyond your budget. The fact is that this company has made this four way video instant messaging as well as other invaluable video technologies available to professionals just like you for a fraction of the cost that you historically would have had to spend on these services. Indeed, you can access not only this type of video instant messaging but also video email, live video broadcasts and related features for a cost of $9.95 per month with no contracts. While so called competitors would have had to spend over $15,000 for these combined technological features, you can obtain all of these services for literally pennies on the dollar.
With absolutely NO COMPETITION in this arena the services provided are sought after by major Fortune 500 Companies. In addition, the integrated services should be available to every major country in the world by the end of 2008. Finally, the company itself is headed up by a team of stellar leaders who have played significant leadership roles in three of the most profitable and dynamic companies in operation in the world today.

Watch Your Business Skyrocket with 4-Way Video IM (Instant Messaging)

About the Author:

Lance is an expert in streaming video technology. For more information on streaming video or to sign up for only $9.95 month go to http://www.vmstreamingvideo.com. There are some great examples at http://www.videoexamples.com. If you have any questions or would like video tutorials on the products please give me a call (813-317-4009) or email me at lancemohr@vmdirect.com.

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