Internet Marketing Tips: Online Kindle Profits by James Hughes

Will this eBook series really show you how to publish your eBook faster than a speeding bullet?

These online secrets are not just about publishing your eBook and selling it. Its an entire learners blueprint. An IDIOTS GUIDE to online success!

After reading this special report, you?ll discover the following:

What you need to get started

The REAL Process of Creating an eBook

Top Strategies to Research Your Topic ? And Offer Books that ACTUALLY SELL!

Top Effective Marketing Strategies to Market Your eBook and MAKE SALES!

Make Unlimited Streams of Income at the same time!

How One Mistake in Publishing Can Hurt Your Business ? And What You Can Do to Stop It!

And much much more?

I found out very quickly how James uses these ninja tactics to drive his online business on to a whole new different level.

He walks you through the online publishing process. You get the full run through from start to finish.

If you are serious about your eBook sales and internet business, then I can give Online Kindle Profits a big thumbs up. It has everything you need to get you started and make your internet business a great success, I urge you not to leave this one in the in tray or on your desk as the information is just too valuable.

Online Kindle Profits is one of those resources you will return to time and time again for ideas and suggestions.

?A great piece of writing which will catapult your eBook sales!?

Will this special report take your online business on to a new level, creating multiple cash streams in the process?

?Yes, for sure!?

Check out Online Kindle Profits <== <== Click Here!

Source: http://6ways.blogspot.com/2012/10/online-kindle-profits-by-james-hughes.html

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How to Take Better Photos With Your Smartphone [Photography]

There's a large contingent of photo enthusiasts online who will dismiss a photo straight away if they find out it was taken with a smartphone. The rally cry of "get a real camera" can be heard echoing through the rafters of comment sections for many websites. We think everyone should have a dedicated camera, but a good photo is a good photo, regardless of the gear used to take it. More »

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/iuCwkhJYHRw/how-to-take-better-photos-with-your-smartphone

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?Ironman? suit could help paraplegics walk

20 hrs.

A robotic exoskeleton similar to Ironman?s powered armor suit could help paraplegics walk, according to NASA researchers who designed the device to keep astronauts in shape on flights to Mars.

The 57-pound X1 suit is worn over a person?s body and can be used to either assist or inhibit movement of the leg joints.?

Inhibit mode provides the resistance astronauts need for a workout while idle for months-on-end in a spaceship bound for Mars or doing time on the International Space Station.?

In reverse mode, the exoskeleton works with the wearer, providing stability and movement assistance. This could be used to help paraplegics walk on Earth.?

Other potential applications for the X1 include rehabilitation, gait modification, and offloading weight from the wearer to the exoskeleton.

This isn?t the first exoskeleton built. In fact, this August a British woman paralyzed from the chest down in a horse riding accident took home a robotic exoskeleton that enables her to walk.?

And Raytheon has been working on its Exoskeleton for the military for several years which will help soldiers in the field gain super-human strength.?

The X1, however, is more comfortable, easier to adjust, and easier to put on than other exoskeleton devices, according to preliminary studies on the technology at the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition.?

The exoskeleton is currently in the research and development stage. Future improvements may include additional joints in the ankle and hip areas for greater movement.

The suit is a spinoff technology from NASA?s Robonaut 2 project, a humanoid robot currently getting its first workout on the International Space Station.

To see the X1 in action, check out the video below.

? via Network World?

John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. To learn more about him, check out his website. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/futureoftech/ironman-suit-could-help-paraplegics-walk-1C6435842

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Bruyneel out at RadioShack following USADA report

FILE-This July 24, 2005 file photo shows Lance Armstrong, left, and Johan Bruyneel, sporting director of the Discovery team, posing on the Champs Elysees during a victory parade after Armstrong won his seventh straight Tour de France cycling race in Paris. Team staff, including director Bruyneel, "seemed to have an outstanding early warning system regarding drug tests," Jonathan Vaughters testified. "We typically seemed to have an hour's advance notice", plenty of time for riders to manipulate their blood with infusions of saline solution to make it look normal. (AP Photo/Alessandro Trovati,dapd,File)

FILE-This July 24, 2005 file photo shows Lance Armstrong, left, and Johan Bruyneel, sporting director of the Discovery team, posing on the Champs Elysees during a victory parade after Armstrong won his seventh straight Tour de France cycling race in Paris. Team staff, including director Bruyneel, "seemed to have an outstanding early warning system regarding drug tests," Jonathan Vaughters testified. "We typically seemed to have an hour's advance notice", plenty of time for riders to manipulate their blood with infusions of saline solution to make it look normal. (AP Photo/Alessandro Trovati,dapd,File)

FILE-This Sept. 30, 2012 file photo shows David Zabriskie from the United States competes in the men's elite time trial at the World Road Championships in Geelong, Australia. After joining the U.S. Postal squad, Zabriskie broke his vow never to take drugs himself. He testified that team manager Johan Bruyneel, the brains behind Armstrong's assaults on the Tour, pushed him to dope with EPO and that a team doctor, Luis Garcia del Moral, administered his first shot of the blood-boosting hormone, in Spain in 2003. (AP Photo/Andrew Brownbill, File)

GENEVA (AP) ? Lance Armstrong's former manager Johan Bruyneel left the RadioShack-Nissan team Friday after he was singled out as a central figure in the former Tour de France champion's doping program.

The RadioShack-Nissan team said the decision was by "mutual agreement," adding Bruyneel "can no longer direct the team in an efficient and comfortable way."

"His departure is desirable to ensure the serenity and cohesiveness within the team," it said in a statement.

Bruyneel said he was leaving to "concentrate on my defense," having chosen an arbitration hearing to fight charges leveled by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.

Armstrong was banned from Olympic sports for life by USADA and stripped of his seven Tour titles after choosing in August not to contest the allegations, including that he used and supplied banned drugs.

Friday's announcement came two days after USADA's damning report on Armstrong exposed the doping program in the U.S. Postal Service and Discovery Channel teams that Bruyneel managed when Armstrong rode to seven straight Tour de France victories from 1999-2005.

"In light of these testimonies, both parties feel it is necessary to make this decision," RadioShack said. Its sponsors include longtime Armstrong backers Nike, Trek, Oakley and Livestrong.

Bruyneel, who was general manager of the Luxembourg-based team, now has his own legal battle with USADA. The agency placed him at the heart of doping programs for Armstrong's teams through the rider's second retirement in 2010.

"I am surprised and extremely disappointed that USADA released information in the public domain relating to their pending case against me before I had been given any opportunity to review the evidence and provide my defense against it," Bruyneel said.

"I still hope to be able to defend myself in a forum free from bias, although I now fear that USADA's calculated action may have irreversibly prejudiced my case," he said in a statement on his personal website.

Armstrong and Bruyneel were an unbreakable partnership for years, with Armstrong widely crediting the Belgian for helping him achieve his Tour successes on a U.S. Postal Service team that dominated cycling's showcase race.

Armstrong rode his final Tour in 2010 under Bruyneel's leadership, with the new RadioShack team that Armstrong co-owned. Bruyneel also helped Spaniard Alberto Contador win the 2007 Tour for the Discovery team and worked with both Armstrong and Contador on the 2009 Tour, which Contador also won.

USADA's dossier pinpointed Bruyneel as the focal point of massive doping throughout the USPS team's heyday.

"The overwhelming evidence in this case is that Johan Bruyneel was intimately involved in all significant details of the U.S. Postal team's doping program," USADA said in its 200-page report. "He was on top of the details for organizing blood transfusion programs before the major Tours, and he knew when athletes needed to take EPO to regenerate their blood supply after extracting blood."

The report added that "Bruyneel learned how to introduce young men to performance-enhancing drugs, becoming adept at leading them down the path from newly minted professional rider to veteran drug user."

Former Armstrong teammates also said Bruyneel appeared to have advance knowledge of when drug-testing teams would arrive to take samples.

RadioShack thanked Bruyneel for his "dedication and devotion" to the team, but was quick to further distance itself from him.

"The USADA investigation does not concern the activities of Mr. Bruyneel while managing," the team, the statement said.

At this year's Tour, RadioShack-Nissan team leader Frank Schleck tested positive for a banned diuretic. The Luxembourg rider was pulled from the Tour after the International Cycling Union said he had tested positive for the banned diuretic Xipamide. Schleck has a disciplinary hearing Monday with the Luxembourg cycling federation.

___

AP Sports Writer Jerome Pugmire in Paris contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-10-12-CYC-Doping-Armstrong-Manager/id-ae70bbf815a1419caaf6d71afe53836c

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Pakistan: Car bombing kills 13 in northwest

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pakistan-car-bombing-kills-13-northwest-070758312.html

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CDC: Meningitis outbreak growing, 14 people dead - Health ...

By LAURAN NEERGAARD and MIKE STOBBE | AP Medical Writers ? Published October 11, 2012 Modified October 11, 2012

WASHINGTON ? Federal health officials have tracked down 12,000 of the roughly 14,000 people who may have received contaminated steroid shots in the nation's growing meningitis outbreak, warning Thursday that patients will need to keep watch for symptoms of the deadly infection for months.

"We know that we are not out of the woods yet," Dr. J. Todd Weber of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said as the death toll reached 14.

Of the 170 people sickened in the outbreak, all but one have a rare fungal form of meningitis after receiving suspect steroid shots for back pain, the CDC said. The other case is an ankle infection discovered in Michigan; steroid shots also can be given to treat aching knees, shoulders or other joints.

Fungus has been found in at least 50 vials of an injectable steroid medication made at a specialty compounding pharmacy in Massachusetts, investigators said. Health authorities haven't yet said how they think the medication was contaminated, but they have ruled out other suspects - other products used in administering the shots - and the focus continues to be on that pharmacy, the New England Compounding Center.

Compounding pharmacies traditionally supply products that aren't commercially available, unlike the steroid at issue in the outbreak. And Dr. Madeleine Biondolillo of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health said it appears the company violated state law governing those pharmacies, which aren't supposed to do large-scale production like a drug manufacturer. Instead, they're supposed to produce medication for patient-specific prescriptions, she said.

"This organization chose to apparently violate the licensing requirements under which they were allowed to operate," she told reporters Thursday.

Company officials weren't immediately available to comment Thursday but earlier this week declined comment except to say they were cooperating with the investigation.

Idaho becomes the 11th state to report at least one illness. The others are Florida, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee and Virginia.

Last month, after illnesses began coming to light, the company recalled three lots of the steroid medicine - known as preservative-free methylprednisolone acetate- that were made in May, June and August. The recall involved about 17,700 single-dose vials of the steroid sent to clinics in 23 states.

It's not known if all or just some of the vials were contaminated, or how many doses were administered for back pain or for other reasons. Those given joint injections are not believed to be at risk for fungal meningitis, which is an inflammation of the lining of the brain and spinal cord. A back injection would put any contaminant in more direct contact with that lining.

Symptoms of meningitis include severe headache, nausea, dizziness and fever. The CDC said many of the cases have been mild, and some people had strokes. Symptoms have been appearing between one and four weeks after patients got the shots, but CDC officials on Thursday warned at least one illness occurred 42 days after a shot.

The fungus is difficult to grow in lab analyses, and health officials on Thursday issued an unusual piece of advice to doctors: If a patient who got the injection starts to develop meningitis symptoms, he or she should be treated, even if testing is negative for the fungus.

The fungus behind the outbreaks was initially identified as Aspergillus, but as more testing of patients has been completed, it's become clear that another fungus - a kind of black mold called Exserohilum - is the primary cause. As of Wednesday, CDC's fungal disease laboratory confirmed Exserohilum in 10 people with meningitis and Aspergillus in just one.

Exserohilum is common in dirt and grasses, but this is the first time it's been identified as the cause of meningitis, said Weber, who is managing the CDC's response to the outbreak.

Health officials are hurriedly trying to determine the best way to treat this kind of an illness, and have settled on two very strong anti-fungal medications. Consulting with experts, they're making a best guess as to the dosage and length of time patients will have to be treated.

"This is new territory," Weber said.

Fungal meningitis is not contagious like the more common forms.

----

Stobbe reported from New York.

-----

Online:

CDC information: http://www.cdc.gov/HAI/outbreaks/meningitis.html

Source: http://www.theolympian.com/2012/10/11/2281843/cdc-meningitis-cases-reach-170.html

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A Homeschool Minor in Field Trips - Homeschool Blogger

There are times in the dead of night when I wake in terror from a nightmare where my children are applying for college and all that?s on their transcript is a list of homeschool fieldtrips?.to the grocery store.

Well, I?m exaggerating quite a bit, but the my point is we do make more field trips as a homeschooling family than I ever did as a public school student. ?Not every trip we take is educational, either.?The one we took recently with another homeschool family sure was fun, though. ?We attended a local fall festival, complete with desserts, crafts, desserts, pumpkin and watermelon contests, desserts, BBQ , pork rinds, and desserts. See here for another boatload of posts about it.

Now I ask you, can you have?any kind of a festival at?any time of year without it having a car show component? NO. It?s probably in the Constitution somewhere. Now I think it is, and don?t bother me with facts to the otherwise.

I think my husband married me because I like cars as much as he does. Some of our dates were spent test driving cars?particularly Cameros. That and the fact that I could cook convinced him I was the gal to bring home to Mother.

Some of my faves:

Felt like I needed a ball gown and fur coat just to walk by this one.

My 2nd favorite. Made me want?these shoes:

Dreamy blue.

And my favorite:

This one had my name on it. (Thanks to picture editing.) My husband and son were pretty smitten with this one, too. The girls were gaga over a pink Betty Boop car in the next row. ?The only way I?d have loved it more was if it were that sassy burnt orange color so appropriate for a Tennessee girl.

Source: http://homeschoolblogger.com/doehillhomeschool/784378/

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News Summary: Teachers sell materials online

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/news-summary-teachers-sell-materials-online-162708081--finance.html

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Mailing a letter to cost a penny more next year

FILE - In this Dec. 5, 2011, photo, a customer places first class stamps on envelopes at a U.S. Post Office in San Jose, Calif. It'll cost another penny to mail a letter in 2013. The cash-strapped U.S. Postal Service said Thursday that it will raise postage rates on Jan. 27, including a 1-cent increase in the cost of first-class mail to 46 cents. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

FILE - In this Dec. 5, 2011, photo, a customer places first class stamps on envelopes at a U.S. Post Office in San Jose, Calif. It'll cost another penny to mail a letter in 2013. The cash-strapped U.S. Postal Service said Thursday that it will raise postage rates on Jan. 27, including a 1-cent increase in the cost of first-class mail to 46 cents. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

(AP) ? It'll cost another penny to mail a letter next year.

The cash-strapped U.S. Postal Service said Thursday that it will raise postage rates on Jan. 27, including a 1-cent increase in the cost of first-class mail to 46 cents.

It also will introduce a new global "forever" stamp, allowing customers to mail first-class letters anywhere in the world for one set price of $1.10. Currently, the prices vary depending on the international destination, with letters to Canada and Mexico costing 85 cents.

Under the law, the post office cannot raise stamp prices more than the rate of inflation, or 2.6 percent, unless it gets special permission. The post office, which expects to lose a record $15 billion this year, has asked Congress to give it new authority to raise prices by 5 cents, but lawmakers have failed to act.

The mail agency also will increase rates on its shipping services, such as priority mail, by an average of 4 percent.

The post office, which is struggling with debt and low cash flow, said the rate hikes were partly aimed at bringing in new revenue while maintaining its pricing advantage in the shipping business. Private companies such as UPS and FedEx, which offer similar shipping services, regularly adjust their prices.

The post office lost $5.1 billion in fiscal 2011, mostly due to a 5.8 percent decline in revenue for first-class mail. Financial results are expected to be even worse when final figures for fiscal 2012 are released next month. Earlier this year, it was forced to default on two payments due to the Treasury totaling $11.1 billion for future retiree health benefits because it lacked sufficient cash reserves.

While the Postal Service has said it will continue seeking ways to cut costs, Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe has made clear that the agency has little left it can do to bring in significant new revenue. After months of congressional delay, he said it's now up to lawmakers to pass a postal fix when they return to Washington after the November elections.

The latest rate increase, for instance, will make only a small dent in the Postal Service's losses, caused by the economic downturn, movement of mail to the Internet and a congressional requirement that the mail agency fund future retiree medical benefits years in advance. Earlier this year, the mail agency floated a proposal to Congress aimed at increasing stamp prices to 50 cents as a way to generate $1 billion in new revenue.

The Postal Service has also asked Congress to allow it reduce mail delivery from six to five days a week and reduce its annual $5 billion payment for the future retiree health benefits.

The current 45-cent rate for first-class mail in the U.S. has been in effect since January. Since 2006, the Postal Service has now increased the price of the stamp five times, from 39 cents to 46 cents.

Because stamps are now being issued as forever stamps, they will remain good for first-class postage. But buying new forever stamps will cost more when the prices go up.

While the price for the first ounce of a first-class letter will rise to 46 cents, the cost for each additional ounce will remain at the current 20 cents.

Other price increases:

?Postcards will go up one penny to 33 cents.

?Priority mail, small box, $5.80; medium box, $12.35; large box, $16.85.

?Priority mail, regular envelope, $5.60; legal envelope, $5.75; padded envelope, $5.95.

?Delivery confirmation will be free on packages, including priority mail and parcel post, rather than being an extra charge.

The Postal Service, an independent agency of government, does not receive tax money for its day-to-day operation but is subject to congressional control.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-10-11-Postal%20Prices/id-0b9526deaced47428e87df423667873a

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