Thursday, March 28, 2013

Sean Penn's son slurs paparazzo in altercation

By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

Sean Penn has never been a fan of the paparazzi, and based on an incident caught on tape Tuesday, neither is his 19-year-old son Hopper Penn.

Zodiac / Splash News

Hopper Penn gets into an altercation with a photographer while visiting an office building with dad Sean Penn on Tuesday in Beverly Hills.

The younger Penn was following his father into a Beverly Hills building Tuesday when the incident occurred. Sean sauntered past the clicking photographers without a word or acknowledgment, but his son walked over from across the street and began engaging the photographers. Based on a video shot by one of the snappers, Hopper pushed past him (possibly making contact) and the two began engaging in a verbal altercation.?

"What the hell?" the photographer who got pushed aside said.

"You f------ kidding me?" Hopper shot back, never pausing.

"You kidding me?" the photographer continued, following him into the building. "Don't play yourself. Don't ever do that, dude."

Hopper shot his middle finger in the air and the verbal parrying continued. But then it took a more aggressive turn, as Hopper's retreating figure first called the photographer a homosexual slur.

"That the kind of talk you're teaching him, Sean?" the photographer, undeterred, called down the emptying hallway.

Hopper's last riposte was to shoot back that the photographer, who was African-American, was a "f------ n-----."

"Oh, word?" the photographer, now outraged, called out.

Police showed up at the scene, according to E! Online, and the photographer is seen in another video showing officers footage on his camera. The photographer declined to press charges. No one was cited.

Hopper later issued a statement, saying, "I was accosted by paparazzi and made to feel like an animal -- threatened and under attack, but that does not condone my own actions. ... I deeply regret my choice of words."

Sean Penn's own altercations with the paparazzi have been well documented. Here's video from 2010 of the actor kicking a photographer. And here's a classic image from back in the Madonna days of Penn throwing a punch.?

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Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/03/27/17484562-sean-penns-son-hopper-slurs-photographer-in-altercation?lite

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How Psychology is Used in Advertising | Channel N

A cute and educational animated short film about ?Psychology and Advertising.? Using images and style from the 1950s, the cartoon character ?Little Timmy? learns lessons about direct and indirect messages, the psychology of colours, and more.

Sweet, funny, clever, and you?ll likely have fun while learning a few things about how marketers persuade you to buy products.

Sandra Kiume is a mental health advocate from Vancouver, Canada, and the founder of @unsuicide. Along with maintaining Channel N, she contributes to World of Psychology.

Like this author?
Catch up on other posts by Sandra Kiume (or subscribe to their feed).



????Last reviewed: 28 Mar 2013

APA Reference
Kiume, S. (2013). How Psychology is Used in Advertising. Psych Central. Retrieved on March 28, 2013, from http://blogs.psychcentral.com/channeln/2013/03/how-psychology-is-used-in-advertising/

?

Source: http://blogs.psychcentral.com/channeln/2013/03/how-psychology-is-used-in-advertising/

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Special Report: Behind the charm, a political pope

By Paulo Prada and Helen Popper

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - When Jorge Bergoglio finished studying chemistry at high school his mother asked him what he would study next.

"Medicine," replied the skinny 19-year-old, according to his younger sister, Maria Elena.

Bergoglio's mother cleared a storage room in the family's working-class Buenos Aires home for him to use as a study. Every day, after his morning job in a lab, he would arrive home and disappear into the room.

One morning, though, his mother got a surprise. In the room, she found not anatomy or medicine texts but books on theology and Catholicism. Perturbed at his change of course, she confronted her eldest son.

"What is this?" she asked.

Bergoglio responded calmly: "It's medicine for the soul."

For the man who last week took over at the head of the Catholic Church, the shift from medicine to religion was the first of many in a career that has often defied expectations. It was also an early hint at what Argentines who know Bergoglio, now 76, describe as a steely determination - prepared even to mislead his mother - that lies beneath his charming and modest exterior.

"Jorge is a political man with a keen nose for politics," says Rafael Velasco, a Jesuit priest and former colleague who is now rector of the Catholic University of Cordoba, in central Argentina. "It's not an act, the humility. But it's part of his great capacity to intuitively know and read people."

The first pope from Latin America is also the first Jesuit pope. Like priests from other orders, Jesuits take vows of poverty, chastity and obedience, as well as a fourth special vow of obedience to the pope. They also make a promise to refrain from seeking high Church offices.

But Bergoglio rose steadily through the order's leadership posts and beyond, sometimes crossing swords with colleagues and once proving so meddlesome that a Jesuit boss dismissed him from the school where he was teaching. After being named a bishop he climbed through the Church hierarchy itself, rising to lead Argentina's largest archdiocese and eventually being named a cardinal.

Throughout his rise, Bergoglio eschewed the trappings of the positions he attained. As Archbishop of Buenos Aires, he famously took the subway from his one-room apartment in the Argentine capital instead of accepting the grand residence at his disposal. When his name emerged as a possible successor to John Paul in 2005, Bergoglio told family, friends and Argentine media that he didn't want to be pope. He loved Buenos Aires too much, he said. He had no desire to leave.

When the conclave named him successor to Pope Benedict earlier this month, he joked: "May God forgive you."

In Argentina, countrymen have expressed glee that one of their own has become the first non-European pope in 13 centuries. Francis has also charmed millions with his plainspoken banter, refusal to wear ornate vestments and his insistence that he pay his hotel bill in person the morning after the conclave. Some genuinely hope he can revive a Church roiled by scandal and undermined by rival religions and secularism, which many Catholics find to be out of touch with contemporary values.

Pope Francis blesses a baby as he arrives to lead the weekly general audience in Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican March 27, 2013. Holy Week is celebrated in many Christian traditions during the ... more? Pope Francis blesses a baby as he arrives to lead the weekly general audience in Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican March 27, 2013. Holy Week is celebrated in many Christian traditions during the week before Easter. REUTERS/Tony Gentile (VATICAN - Tags: RELIGION) less? ?

At the same time, questions remain, not least about the exact nature of Bergoglio's role during the Argentine dictatorship's "Dirty War" against leftists and other political opponents in the 1970s and early 1980s. Some also point to his description of gay marriage as "the work of the devil" as proof of a hard-line conservatism.

The Vatican has moved quickly to defend Francis. The attacks, said Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi, "reveal anti-clerical, left-wing elements that are used to attack the Church."

Interviews with nearly two dozen people including his sister, colleagues from the Jesuit order in Argentina, his archdiocese and social circle, build a picture of a devout and dedicated priest whose scholarly grasp of Church doctrine rarely hindered his down-to-earth focus on charity, compassion and social work. They also reveal a calculating leader so used to getting his way that he once summoned a courtroom to him, rather than walk a few blocks to the courthouse.

EARLY YEARS

Bergoglio, the first of five children, was born and raised in the blue-collar neighborhood of Flores in central Buenos Aires. His father, an Italian immigrant, worked as an accountant in a hosiery factory. His mother, also of Italian descent, worked at home.

His paternal grandparents, who lived close by, taught him Italian. His grandmother, he has said, taught him to pray.

Friends and family recall the neighborhood as a simple and friendly area where residents would sometimes set up tables in the street and share meals. Maria Elena, his only surviving sibling, recalls that their father would gather the family to pray the rosary before dinner.

Bergoglio, she said in an interview, was a studious and kind brother. "He was a great companion," she says. "He always looked out for friends and family."

During his first year at high school - a six-year vocational course focused heavily on chemistry - Bergoglio sought permission to ask classmates if they had taken their first communion. The school director agreed and Bergoglio tutored four classmates about the sacrament and introduced them to a local priest. A few months later, all four took communion.

"He already had that vocation," says Alberto Omodei, one of the classmates. "He had a desire to bring people closer to God."

Four years on, Bergoglio decided to make it his life. Walking to a spring picnic one morning, he felt the strong urge to enter a church. At a confessional, he had an intense conversation with a priest, decided to skip the picnic and vowed to enter the priesthood.

"I don't know what happened," he told an Argentine radio station last year. "But I knew I had to become a priest."

When he eventually let his parents into his plan, his mother worried the life of a priest would be too lonely. His father embraced the idea.

At 21, he was set to join a seminary in Villa Devoto, another working-class area just west of Flores. But his studies were delayed by a fever that doctors feared could kill him. They removed three cysts in his right lung. According to an account in "The Jesuit," an authorized biography by journalists Sergio Rubin and Francesca Ambrogetti published in 2010, Bergoglio was annoyed by the hopeful assurances of people who tried to cheer him. Instead, he found strength in a nun's declaration that he was "imitating Jesus" through suffering.

"Pain is not a virtue in itself," Bergoglio told his biographers, "but the way that one handles it can be."

The young man recovered, entered the seminary and decided to join the Jesuits. The order at the time administered the seminary and Bergoglio found their focus on education and brotherhood appealing.

A year later, in 1960, he moved to Cordoba, Argentina's second city, where the order trained initiates. The atmosphere, fellow initiates recall, was disciplined and formal. "Brother Bergoglio" was cheerful, but devout. He embraced the order's curriculum with its emphasis on language, literature, and philosophy.

Occasionally, something else caught his eye. In a book of conversations with a rabbi friend, one of several Jewish leaders with whom Bergoglio has maintained a public dialogue over the years, he mentions a young woman he met while attending a wedding while at seminary.

"Her beauty and intellectual glow surprised me," he says in the book, "On Heaven and Earth," published in 2010. "I couldn't pray for an entire week because whenever I tried the girl would appear in my head."

The infatuation passed. For much of the next decade, as he worked towards ordination, he studied at Jesuit universities in Argentina and Chile, and taught at Jesuit schools. Colleagues and students remember a firm but enthusiastic teacher, able to bond with almost anyone - from young pupils and their families to Church superiors and scholars. At one point he convinced Jorge Luis Borges, one of the giants of Argentine letters, to read to his students.

A DIRTY WAR

After his ordination in 1969 and a brief assignment in Spain, Bergoglio returned to Buenos Aires to run the order's program for initiates. There, he quickly impressed superiors, according to fellow Jesuits from the period. In 1973, aged 36, Bergoglio was chosen as the order's national leader, or "provincial," a post that usually lasts six years.

He earned a reputation as someone who remembers names, home towns, acquaintances and other small details about his colleagues and Church faithful, say several Jesuit peers. He also made important contacts, most notably with Antonio Quarracino, the bishop who would precede him as archbishop and cardinal.

But Bergoglio's tenure coincided with one of the most tumultuous periods in Argentina's history. Like much of the rest of Latin America, the country was riven by economic crisis and growing conflict between right and left. Some members of the regional Church were beginning to flirt with Liberation Theology, a movement that sought to empower the poor. Priests at the extremes of the movement began to advocate armed struggle.

Though Bergoglio had worked for the poor, he made it clear in discussions that the order would not stray too far toward Marxism, according to several of his successors as provincial as well as other Jesuit officials.

Things got much harder when the Argentine military seized power in a coup in 1976 and cracked down on opponents in a brutal campaign of kidnappings, torture and murders that left between 10,000 and 30,000 dead or "disappeared." Among the regime's victims were at least 19 priests and scores more Catholic leftists.

One particular episode drew in Bergoglio. In May 1976, naval officers seized two Jesuit priests, Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics, because of their pastoral work in a Buenos Aires slum. The military believed the priests were helping anti-government activists.

Fellow Jesuits say Bergoglio, by that time well versed in local politics, would sometimes get tips about pending military sweeps and alert colleagues to avoid them. In the case of Yorio and Jalics, though, no hard evidence has emerged that Bergoglio knew about the abduction in advance.

But Horacio Verbitsky, an Argentine journalist who has written extensively on the period, has said Bergoglio did not do enough to warn the priests of the danger. According to Verbitsky's book "The Silence," Bergoglio withdrew his order's protection of the two priests after they refused to quit visiting the slums, paving the way for their capture. He offers no proof of this.

In the authorized biography, Bergoglio said he long ignored such accusations "so as to not get caught in their game, not because I have anything to hide."

In the book Bergoglio said he worked tirelessly to secure the men's freedom. He said he convinced a military chaplain - no name is given in the biography - to miss a Mass so that he himself could officiate and ask the head of the governing junta to set them free.

The priests were held for five months, blindfolded and chained, before being drugged and released in a field. It's not clear what ultimately secured their freedom.

Bergoglio and others have described his efforts to hide or help other targets flee, including one who Bergoglio said resembled him and crossed the northern border in clerical garb and carrying his identity card.

Another case that involved Bergoglio shows the delicate balance that he and many others sought between helping victims and not falling foul of the regime. In 1976 and 1977, seven members of a leftist family near Buenos Aires disappeared, including a pregnant woman who would give birth to a baby girl in captivity. Siblings who had exiled themselves in Rome, and believed their family members had been abducted by the military, appealed to the head of the Jesuits in Italy. He contacted Bergoglio, who wrote a carefully worded letter for the father of the family, Roberto Luis de la Cuadra, to give to Mario Picchi, a bishop near the family's home.

"I bother you to introduce you to Mr Roberto Luis de la Cuadra," Bergoglio wrote, according to a photocopy of the letter still in the family's possession. "He will explain to you what this is about, and I will appreciate anything that you can do."

Several months later, Picchi told de la Cuadra he had learned that the infant girl was alive, but had been handed for adoption to another, less troublesome family, according to a surviving family member, Estela de la Cuadra.

The bishop, now deceased, told de la Cuadra he had no further details about the baby. Bergoglio, in written testimony to a court looking into the case in 2011, said he received no more specifics about the case and only learned further details through the media.

Bergoglio's allies and many historians say there was little he could do to limit such atrocities. Many of those who did speak out were killed, and Bergoglio, though the head of the Jesuits, was far less prominent than more senior clerics outside the order.

Even those who did more at the time sympathize with Bergoglio's position. "If I hadn't come face to face with someone who had been tortured, I wouldn't have been able to speak out," says Miguel Hesayne, a retired bishop who is widely regarded as one of the few senior Church officials who criticized the regime.

But others, including Estela de la Cuadra, other family members of disappeared and human rights activists, criticize him for not speaking out more at the time and for his reluctance to talk about the period later.

INTERFERENCE

Bergoglio's tenure as provincial ended in 1979. His successor appointed him rector of the top Jesuit school in Buenos Aires, the Colegio Maximo de San Miguel, where he taught, continued his own studies and remained an influential voice.

In 1986, the next provincial sent Bergoglio to Germany to work on a doctorate. Staying near Frankfurt, he studied the work of Romano Guardini, a Catholic philosopher active in the 1930s who wrote about the moral hazards of power.

"Catholicism and confronting violence is something he too had to think about," says Michael Sievernich, a professor of theology who met Bergoglio at the time and noted the parallels between the subject matter and the recent Argentine horror.

Bergoglio stayed just a few months, to the surprise of his fellow Jesuits, returning to Argentina with books and photocopies. The order lodged him at another Buenos Aires school, where he continued his studies, resumed teaching and wrote.

His standing in the capital remained high. But soon, several Jesuits recall, Bergoglio began voicing disapproval of the way his peers ran the school, mostly petty details about courses and administration. His interference was unwelcome. Soon the provincial at the time Victor Zorzin sent him back to Cordoba.

"He needed to go somewhere he could relax," says Zorzin.

In Cordoba, Bergoglio's duties would be simple: say Mass, hear confessions and continue to work on his doctorate. He complied, colleagues recall, but he also brooded.

"He was no longer as active," says Andres Swinnen, a contemporary in the order and a successor to Bergoglio as provincial.

Bergoglio's exile ended abruptly in 1992 when Quarracino, now a cardinal, recommended to his superiors in Rome that he be made auxiliary Bishop of Buenos Aires.

He returned to the city, but instead of moving into a house at the archdiocese, went back into a Jesuit residence. There, colleagues from that period say, he began to meddle again. Once, when a friend of the order left them a gift of pastries, Bergoglio grabbed it and carried it to the kitchen, where maids and cooks could share the goodies.

"We didn't need a bishop to teach us how to share," recalls one Jesuit present, who requested anonymity because he does not want to offend the pope.

After a few months, some Jesuits began to ask when Bergoglio would leave. Eventually, says a senior Jesuit at that time, the order formally asked him to move.

"PRAY FOR ME"

Bergoglio is not the first Jesuit to climb the ranks of the broader Church. While they do not seek higher office, they accept appointments as bishops, archbishops and cardinals in obedience to the pope, who decides these promotions.

In the archdiocese, Bergoglio ascended quickly. By 1997, with Quarracino ailing, Pope John Paul II designated Bergoglio his successor to lead the archdiocese. Eight months later, Quarracino died.

Church officials say Bergoglio inherited an archdiocese whose finances were in disarray. He soon proved an efficient administrator; one who would rearrange its affairs to focus more on ministry to the poor.

Among other measures, he created a new vicariate to organize the charity work and preaching that priests carry out in the many villas, or slums, that surround Buenos Aires. More than 30 priests are now permanently based in the villas - there were nine when he first took over.

"He carried the church out into the streets of Buenos Aires," says Gabriel Marronetti, the parish priest at the church in Flores where Bergoglio felt the call to service.

His popularity grew among parishioners. Photographers captured images of Bergoglio, on his own trips into the slums, washing the feet of poor faithful as part of the ritual on Holy Thursday before Easter.

Bergoglio's political profile also grew.

He angered President Nestor Kirchner in 2004 with a speech criticizing the "exhibitionism and strident announcements" of political leaders. In a chaotic dispute with the administration of President Cristina Fernandez, Kirchner's widow and successor, he sided with farmers and opposed her push for a gay-marriage law. He did support an alternative bill to allow civil partnerships.

With growing renown came renewed questions about his actions during the Dirty War. Lawyers looking into many of the disappearances sought to question Bergoglio, but he exercised a provision in Argentine law allowing senior church officials to decline a summons to court.

When attorneys insisted in 2010, he forced the court to come to him, prompting a group of dozens of lawyers and judicial officials to set up a tribunal inside the archdiocese. An image of the Virgin Mary hung on one wall and other priests sat nearby, protectively.

"What sort of humility is that?" asks Estela de la Cuadra, the aunt of the disappeared baby, who is still seeking answers about her missing family members. "He'll pose for photos paying his hotel bill, but he won't testify in court like the rest of us?"

When Benedict stepped down in February, many Church observers thought that Bergoglio's moment had passed. He had lost out in 2005 and was now perhaps too old to contend for the papacy at a time many Catholics were calling for the rejuvenation of the Church.

His sister, Maria Elena, recalls how she and a now deceased sister, Marta, had joked with their brother when he returned from the previous conclave.

"So you got off the hook," Marta told him.

"Yes," Bergoglio replied. "Thank the Lord."

This time, before he left, Bergoglio phoned Maria Elena for a quick goodbye. "Pray for me," he told her. "I'll see you when I get back."

(Additional reporting by Guido Nejamkis in Buenos Aires and Edward Taylor in Frankfurt; Edited by Simon Robinson, Richard Woods and Sara Ledwith)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/special-report-behind-charm-political-pope-100813173.html

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Monday, March 25, 2013

'The Voice' season premiere promises to be 'best episode' ever

By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

Get ready for some chair-spinning action -- "The Voice" returns for an all-new season of the talent competition Monday night. But this time, the would-be contestants won't be the only new part of the show.

Coaches Usher and Shakira are joining the act, filling the spots vacated by Christina Aguilera and Cee Lo Green -- not that the shakeup should concern faithful fans. According to host Carson Daly, the new additions just add to the appeal.

"You're looking at a guy that could have been on any one of these (TV? talent) shows," Daly said, gesturing toward Usher, who joined him on TODAY Monday morning. "But him and Shakira, they were fans of 'The Voice,' and that was a great place to start."

It's especially great for fellow fans, who have high hopes for season four.

"(Monday night) is the best episode of 'The Voice' ever," Daly added, "and it's in large part to Usher and Shakira, Blake (Shelton) and Adam (Levine)."

As for Usher, he offered a sneak peek of the talent reviews to come by evaluating TODAY's Matt Lauer -- who didn't even sing.

"Well, the first thing that I have to make you aware of is that you were incredible -- an incredible talent," the singer said with a smile before demonstrating how he would persuade Lauer to join his team. "In my opinion, I think that you need a coach that really understands how to nurture your talent. Now you've heard from the rest of them, you need to rock with the best of them."

See just how the actual auditioners handle the evaluations when the "The Voice" returns Monday at 8 p.m. on NBC.

Are you looking forward to seeing what Usher and fellow new coach Shakira bring to "The Voice"? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page.

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Comment sauvegarder ses donn?es pour les transf?rer vers un autre Android ?

Bonjour ? tous,

je souhaite abandonner l?chement mon "vieux" Huawei U8350 pour mon tout beau tout neuf Jiayu G3, mais...

J'ai des tas d'applis, un agenda plein de contacts donc une bonne part sont sur le t?l?phone et non dans les comptes gmail...

Comment faire pour le plus simplement et le plus rapidement possible "emballer" tout ?a pour l'emporter sur mon nouveau joujou ? :D

Edit : zut, je me suis tromp?e de forum, merci aux mod?rateurs de transf?rer mon message dans celui du U8350

Modifi? par Hada de la Luna, hier, 21:13.

Source: http://forum.frandroid.com/topic/143530-comment-sauvegarder-ses-donnees-pour-les-transferer-vers-un-autre-android/

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Free respite holidays for disabled people and their families, from ...

A press release from the Papworth Trust:

?

Charity Papworth Trust is offering free respite holidays to disabled people and their families thanks to ?2 million of Lottery cash.

Typical respite is where the disabled person goes away while their family stays at home. The Trust?s respite holidays are unique because they offer a chance for the whole family to together have a supported break, without the pressures of everyday life.

Papworth Trust ran a pilot for this new service, shown on Channel 4?s The Secret Millions. 19-year-old Luke from Peterborough took part in the filming with his parents Chris and Jane. Luke has Down?s Syndrome and was quite shy at first. Since the respite holiday he has become much more independent, taking part in local amateur dramatics and setting his sights on a role in EastEnders one day.

Dad Chris saw some real changes from the respite holiday. He said: ?I thought Luke was going to struggle but he just took to everything. He amazed me. I think it proved to us that Luke can do things that we didn?t think he could, and perhaps sometimes we were holding him back slightly. We can now let him go that little bit more.?

Mum Jane said: ?It was such a benefit having more quality time together ? normally Luke just has respite on his own. It?s really brought the family close together. Anybody that gets the opportunity will have a fantastic time.?
Adrian Bagg, Papworth Trust?s Chief Executive, said: ?At Papworth Trust we understand the impact disability can have. It can be hard to have quality, stress free time together as a family.

?

?Disabled people and their families will now be able to apply for free respite holidays thanks to the Big Lottery Fund. The pilot shown in The Secret Millions was an amazing experience for the families involved. It is fantastic that Papworth Trust will now be able to offer that farm experience to disabled people of any age, wherever they come from in the UK.

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?We?re going to renovate a 16th century farmhouse in a beautiful part of Wales and start welcoming families from late summer this year. Please go to www.papworth.org.uk/kerryfarm to find out more.?

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Source: http://samedifference1.com/2013/03/25/free-respite-holidays-for-disabled-people-and-their-families-from-channel-4s-secret-millions-charity/

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Monday, March 11, 2013

A Must Have Three Marketing Tools For Serious Affiliate Online ...

What are the great qualities to become a successful online affiliate networker? What are the ingredients of an affiliate marketing success?story? Is there a short way to Affiliate Marketing glory? These are the questions that appear in the minds of those affiliate networkers who want to become rich in their online business. Even if ?online internet affiliate marketing is believed to be as an uncomplicated way to make money scheme, on the contrary that is not true.

A clever affiliate marketer always plans every action he or she ?does and completes it in a good way. He should also?maximize the potential to earn by utilizing the right tools necessary for a successful affiliate marketing business. We?have consulted some of the most successful affiliate marketers in the business and below are the top three in demand tools?for a successful affiliate marketing business.

Important Tool #1: Your individual Website
In the online affiliate marketing business, owning your own website is very crucial. To become successful in any affiliate online business one must build a good, relevant content and simple yet professional looking website. Your website is the jump off?point of all your marketing efforts. Thus, you must first build a user-friendly website, which will appeal to your?prospects and encourage them to click on the links to the products and service you are promoting and make a purchase.?Thus, you must first focus your efforts in building a website that will benefit to what your prospects need.?

The most important thing you need to take into account is that almost all internet users go on the internet to look for information, not?necessarily to go and purchase something. Most importantof all ,? make your website full of original, relevant and useful content.?People will love articles that are pleasing and helpful. Remember that, in the world wide web, content is still king and?good quality content will not only build your credibility, it can also help you attain a higher search engine ranking. By?posting relevant and useful articles, you set up yourself as a credible professional in the field, making you a more?trustworthy endorser of the product or service you promote. Establishing a good credibility?is a good step in building up a?loyal customer?base.

Important Tool #2: Incentives
Competition is very big in the internet world. You must always be one-step ahead of your competitors to guarantee that you?capture a vital share of your target market. Thus, you must use every single possible means to motivate people not?only to pay a visit to your site but also to click and proceed to the websites of the merchandise and services you are selling.?Creating an opt-in email list is one of the best ways to collect prospects. It is a nice idea to offer your customers a newsletter, a min report or an e-zine. Better yet,?offer incentives to your prospects to inspire them to subscribe to your newsletters. You can present free softwares,?access to exclusive services and other freebies that will be valuable to your prospects.

Important Tool #3: Link Popularity
The value of generating extremely focused traffic to your website cannot be highlight enough. The all-important web?traffic is at the top of the list of the most important entities in the internet world. Funneling people to your website should be the initial step you must do. Do everything to attain a high search engine ranking. Website link?Popularity is?one of the components that search engines use to determine search engine rankings. As a result, to increase your link popularity,?you must kick off an intense reciprocal link campaign. One of the best methods to do this ? at free of charge at all ? is by posting articles, with your website?s link at the resource?box, to e-zines and free article sites. You will not only gain publicity, you will also have the opportunity to promote?totally free, just include a website link back to your internet site. The more sites you submit your articles to, the better your link?popularity is. Make your articles original, relevant and useful so that more websites will pick it up and publish it.

These are only three of the numerous tools that an affiliate marketer can use to increase earning potential. The opportunities?are countless and are limited only by your imagination, creativity, resourcefulness and dedication. You can always explore?other ideas and adapt other approaches, which you think might help you become a high rolling affiliate marketer.

For more information about Affiliate marketing watch these free videos here: Free Internet Marketing Video Course

About The Author:

Orlando Racelis is an expert ezine article writer and an affiliate internet marketer for almost 10 years. He attends online webinars too from where he receives very useful marketing tips from experts like Adam Short. This is the Free Webinar?s URL link where he attends to: ? http://AffiliateInternetMaster.ws/NPC/auto-webinar.html

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Source: http://www.gdpodcast.com/994/a-must-have-three-marketing-tools-for-serious-affiliate-online-marketers/

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Malta election returning Labor party to power

VALLETTA, Malta (AP) ? An election victory is returning Malta's Labor party to power after 15 years in the opposition.

Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi of the Nationalist Party conceded defeat on Sunday as ballots were still being counted in the island nation and eurozone member. Labor leader Joseph Muscat will be sworn in as the new prime minister on Monday.

Projections by both parties indicated a decisive victory for Labor, giving it 55 percent of the votes cast, compared to 43 percent for the conservatives.

Smaller parties took the rest of the votes, as Labor clinched its biggest victory since Malta obtained independence from Britain in 1964.

Complete results weren't expected until late Sunday, and the exact breakdown of seats in Parliament was still being determined.

Analysts said the shift in power apparently reflects voter desire for change.

The conservative Nationalists had kept unemployment at 4.3 percent and pledged to reduce taxes. But Labor promised to lower energy tariffs and fight corruption.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/malta-election-returning-labor-party-power-184307884.html

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Karzai Inflames U.S. Tensions (WSJ)

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

Greedy Lying Bastards (Powerlineblog)

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Would you switch to LED light bulbs if they were half price?

One of the main drawbacks to energy-saving LEDs is the high upfront cost. But as cheaper versions creep into the market, is it time to make the shift?

By Emily Dovi,?Contributor / March 9, 2013

A compact florescent light bulb at the home of Carol Hayward in South Orleans, Mass. High upfront costs for LEDs may be lessening as manufacturers come out with cheaper models.

Mary Knox Merrill/Staff/File

Enlarge

Over the last decade in households across America, the compact florescent light bulb (CFL) has replaced many an incandescent bulb. And while consumers have had to make investments in such an energy-saving switch (of an average cost of $5 per bulb), most folks justify the upfront expense as Energy Star-qualified CFLs can save over $40 over their lifetimes in energy costs, and use about 75% less energy than cheap, traditional bulbs.

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In addition to funny-shaped CFLs, LED bulbs too save on energy costs, though the public has been less keen on them, as price points for 40-watt bulbs begin around $20 a pop. But that may soon change as Cree, an LED chips and part maker, introduces a new line of low-cost LED light bulbs.

Already popular with owners of commercial and industrial buildings, Cree hopes that marketing its line of three new LED bulbs to consumers at affordable prices will spark a change in energy consumption behavior. The bulbs, to be sold at Home Depot, come in two output capacities ? 40-watt and 60-watt ? and are priced from $9.97 to $13.97. Even for the high-end 60-watt day light, that's a savings of at least $7 over other energy-efficient LED lights, which could additionally save energy-conscious consumers hundreds of dollars in electricity and cooling costs over a bulb's lifetime. Plus, all Cree's LED light bulbs come with a 10-year warranty.

And while there are other LED bulbs on the market that are priced to sell (Netherlands-based Lemnis Lighting sells a 200-lumen LED bulb for $5, as we've occasionally seen some notable discounts on more expensive options), there are few LED bulbs on the market with the same specs at as affordable consumer price points as Cree's.

We are all about investments in the environment and love long-term savings, and we're even more interested in saving money now. Cree's line of ultra cheap energy-efficient LED bulbs, while more expensive than incandescent and CFL lighting, fulfill all those requirements and just may be, as the company claimed in trademark, "the biggest thing since the light bulb."?Will you make the switch to energy-efficient lighting? Is there enough long-term savings associated with switching to LED bulbs over CFL??

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/CR3Rl_UOD-Y/Would-you-switch-to-LED-light-bulbs-if-they-were-half-price

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Quantum refrigerator offers extreme cooling and convenience

Mar. 8, 2013 ? Researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have demonstrated a solid-state refrigerator that uses quantum physics in micro- and nanostructures to cool a much larger object to extremely low temperatures.

NIST's prototype solid-state refrigerator uses quantum physics in the square chip mounted on the green circuit board to cool the much larger copper platform (in the middle of the photo) below standard cryogenic temperatures. Other objects can also be attached to the platform for cooling. Credit: Schmidt/NIST View hi-resolution image

What's more, the prototype NIST refrigerator, which measures a few inches in outer dimensions, enables researchers to place any suitable object in the cooling zone and later remove and replace it, similar to an all-purpose kitchen refrigerator. The cooling power is the equivalent of a window-mounted air conditioner cooling a building the size of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.

"It's one of the most flabbergasting results I've seen," project leader Joel Ullom says. "We used quantum mechanics in a nanostructure to cool a block of copper. The copper is about a million times heavier than the refrigerating elements. This is a rare example of a nano- or microelectromechanical machine that can manipulate the macroscopic world."

The technology may offer a compact, convenient means of chilling advanced sensors below standard cryogenic temperatures -- 300 milliKelvin (mK), typically achieved by use of liquid helium -- to enhance their performance in quantum information systems, telescope cameras, and searches for mysterious dark matter and dark energy.

As described in Applied Physics Letters, the NIST refrigerator's cooling elements, consisting of 48 tiny sandwiches of specific materials, chilled a plate of copper, 2.5 centimeters on a side and 3 millimeters thick, from 290 mK to 256 mK. The cooling process took about 18 hours. NIST researchers expect that minor improvements will enable faster and further cooling to about 100 mK.

The cooling elements are sandwiches of a normal metal, a 1-nanometer-thick insulating layer, and a superconducting metal. When a voltage is applied, the hottest electrons "tunnel" from the normal metal through the insulator to the superconductor. The temperature in the normal metal drops dramatically and drains electronic and vibrational energy from the object being cooled.

NIST researchers previously demonstrated this basic cooling method but are now able to cool larger objects that can be easily attached and removed. Researchers developed a micromachining process to attach the cooling elements to the copper plate, which is designed to be a stage on which other objects can be attached and cooled. Additional advances include better thermal isolation of the stage, which is suspended by strong, cold-tolerant cords.

Cooling to temperatures below 300 mK currently requires complex, large and costly apparatus. NIST researchers want to build simple, compact alternatives to make it easier to cool NIST's advanced sensors. Researchers plan to boost the cooling power of the prototype refrigerator by adding more and higher-efficiency superconducting junctions and building a more rigid support structure.

This work is supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Peter J. Lowell, Galen C. O'Neil, Jason M. Underwood, Joel N. Ullom. Macroscale refrigeration by nanoscale electron transport. Applied Physics Letters, 2013; 102 (8): 082601 DOI: 10.1063/1.4793515

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/IoOUTSTWBJM/130308183821.htm

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Friday, March 8, 2013

We Could All Do with a Roll of 36 exposures

Gizmodo friend and Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Vincent Laforet recently swapped out his Canon 1D X for a Canon A2e—a film camera he hadn't touched in 14 years. Restrained by only a roll of 36 exposures, Laforet actually loved going back to shooting with film. He writes about his experience below. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/5iHRofsv8yk/we-could-all-do-with-a-roll-of-36-exposures

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Billboard defaced with stickers advertising jobs in wintery...

Diamonds & Wood
Diamonds & Wood Blog: A blog along the lines of; internet diversions | photography / lens media | animals | Fashion | stripes | film stills | Detail shots | gold | Palm trees | foliage | Architecture | screenshots | A collaborative effort by Claire and Neeve

Source: http://diamonds-wood.tumblr.com/post/44698315222

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Backing For Cuomo Declines Upstate (WSJ)

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More gun laws = fewer deaths, 50-state study says

FILE - In this Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2009 file photo, two guns lie at the scene where five people were shot and two suspects were taken into custody in a shooting incident that happened along the Mardi Gras parade route in New Orleans. States with the most gun control laws have the fewest gun-related deaths, according to a study published Wednesday, March 6, 2013 in the medical journal JAMA Internal Medicine. The study suggests sheer quantity of measures might make a difference. States with the fewest laws and most deaths included Louisiana, Alaska, Kentucky and Oklahoma. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2009 file photo, two guns lie at the scene where five people were shot and two suspects were taken into custody in a shooting incident that happened along the Mardi Gras parade route in New Orleans. States with the most gun control laws have the fewest gun-related deaths, according to a study published Wednesday, March 6, 2013 in the medical journal JAMA Internal Medicine. The study suggests sheer quantity of measures might make a difference. States with the fewest laws and most deaths included Louisiana, Alaska, Kentucky and Oklahoma. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

(AP) ? States with the most gun control laws have the fewest gun-related deaths, according to a study that suggests sheer quantity of measures might make a difference.

But the research leaves many questions unanswered and won't settle the debate over how policymakers should respond to recent high-profile acts of gun violence.

In the dozen or so states with the most gun control-related laws, far fewer people were shot to death or killed themselves with guns than in the states with the fewest laws, the study found. Overall, states with the most laws had a 42 percent lower gun death rate than states with the least number of laws.

The results are based on an analysis of 2007-2010 gun-related homicides and suicides from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The researchers also used data on gun control measures in all 50 states compiled by the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, a well-known gun control advocacy group. They compared states by dividing them into four equal-sized groups according to the number of gun laws.

The results were published online Wednesday in the medical journal JAMA Internal Medicine.

More than 30,000 people nationwide die from guns every year nationwide, and there's evidence that gun-related violent crime rates have increased since 2008, a journal editorial noted.

During the four-years studied, there were nearly 122,000 gun deaths, 60 percent of them suicides.

"Our motivation was really to understand what are the interventions that can be done to reduce firearm mortality," said Dr. Eric Fleegler, the study's lead author and an emergency department pediatrician and researcher at Boston Children's Hospital.

He said his study suggests but doesn't prove that gun laws ? or something else ? led to fewer gun deaths.

Fleegler is also among hundreds of doctors who have signed a petition urging President Barack Obama and Congress to pass gun safety legislation, a campaign organized by the advocacy group Doctors for America.

Gun rights advocates have argued that strict gun laws have failed to curb high murder rates in some cities, including Chicago and Washington, D.C. Fleegler said his study didn't examine city-level laws, while gun control advocates have said local laws aren't as effective when neighboring states have lax laws.

Previous research on the effectiveness of gun laws has had mixed results, and it's a "very challenging" area to study, said Dr. Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center For Gun Policy. He was not involved in the current study.

The strongest kind of research would require comparisons between states that have dissimilar gun laws but otherwise are nearly identical, "but there isn't a super nice twin for New Jersey," for example, a state with strict gun laws, Webster noted.

Fleegler said his study's conclusions took into account factors also linked with gun violence, including poverty, education levels and race, which vary among the states.

The average annual gun death rate ranged from almost 3 per 100,000 in Hawaii to 18 per 100,000 in Louisiana. Hawaii had 16 gun laws, and along with New Jersey, New York and Massachusetts was among states with the most laws and fewest deaths. States with the fewest laws and most deaths included Alaska, Kentucky, Louisiana and Oklahoma.

But there were outliers: South Dakota, for example, had just two guns laws but few deaths.

Editorial author Dr. Garen Wintemute, director the Violence Prevention Research Program at the University of California, Davis, said the study doesn't answer which laws, if any, work.

Wintemute said it's likely that gun control measures are more readily enacted in states with few gun owners ? a factor that might have more influence on gun deaths than the number of laws.

___

Online:

JAMA Internal Medicine: http://www.jamainternalmed.com

CDC: http://www.cdc.gov

___

AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner can be reached at http://www.twitter.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-03-06-Gun%20Laws-Deaths/id-91d5b5a3573d48978328b8bde7af962a

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

WordPress.com Launches Business Accounts With Custom Domains, Unlimited Storage & Support For $299 Per Site Per Year

wordpress-logo-stacked-rgbAutomattic’s WordPress.com just launched WordPress.com for Business. The business accounts, which will cost $299 per site per year, include advanced design tools with support for custom web fonts, 50 premium themes and unlimited storage for videos and audio, as well as live chat support. Business users will also get a free domain name for their sites. Some of the features in this package are also available in WordPress.com’s $99 per year Pro Bundle, but the live support option, premium themes and unlimited storage are only available through the Business accounts (or as part of the company’s higher-priced Enterprise and VIP versions). The sites, of course, will also be free of ads. Support for business customers will be available during U.S. business hours (EST), and users who need a bit more hand-holding while customizing their sites will be able to call upon a “Happiness Engineer” who will, presumably, be there to engineer some happiness for them. WordPress.com is clearly targeting small and medium businesses with this service, but the announcement also noted that it could be an option for “a pro blogger who wants to try out a bunch of premium themes before committing” or a “non-profit building its first website.” Premium themes on WordPress.com start at $50 each, and the largest storage upgrade (200GB) costs $290 per year, so businesses that need these features are now better off subscribing to this new service.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/I1Y4kp4xw5o/

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888 Holdings Gets Preliminary Approval in Nevada | Online ...

March 6, 2013

888-nevada-approvalThe quest by Gibraltar-based online gambling operator 888 Holdings for a Nevada interactive gaming license has won preliminary approval. Two years ago, the Nevada Gaming Control Board had deemed 888?s technology partnership with Nevada-licensed casino operator Caesars Entertainment a ?suitable? match, and on Wednesday, 888 reps were back in front of a GCB panel to successfully plead their case for a license. The matter now goes before the state Gaming Commission for final approval on March 21.

It?s a big week for 888, having just released its first real-money casino app on Facebook. 888 had previously released its Bingo Appy real-money bingo app on the social network in December, but MAGIC888 represents the first attempt to bring 888?s slots, table games and live dealer product to Facebook fans in the UK.

In addition to providing Caesars with a technology platform for the World Series of Poker brand, 888 also have plans to supply gaming device maker WMS Industries and Nevada casino operator Treasure Island with online poker product. Treasure Island also received the GCB?s interactive nod on Wednesday, in a total five-minute ?grilling? that included GCB chairman A.G. Burnett saying he didn?t really have any questions to put to Treasure Island advocate Frank Schreck ?unless you want me to make some up.? (H/T to the Las Vegas Review-Journal?s Howard Stutz for live-tweeting the hearing.) Schreck was equally candid in his testimony, stating that Treasure Island intended to be a dumb, silent partner that ?just hopes to collect the money.?

THE AMERICAN GAMING ASSOCIATION?S DOUBLE STANDARDS
The issue of 888?s ?suitability? for US gaming licenses has been a hot topic ever since the American Gaming Association (AGA) launched its attack on PokerStars? suitability to hold a New Jersey gaming license. The brief filed by the AGA on Monday alleged that not only had PokerStars failed to pull out of the US market following passage of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) in 2006, but that Stars had also operated in violation of the laws of at least eight states that had declared online gambling illegal prior to 2006.

888 did pull out of the US market in 2006, thereby avoiding being on the wrong side of the ?bad actor? deadline in Nevada?s interactive gaming legislation. But according to the AGA?s arguments against PokerStars, 888 would be equally guilty of breaking those state laws. The same would go for other European operators, including Bwin.party, which has struck an online gambling partnership with AGA members MGM Resorts and Boyd Gaming.

The AGA-defined scarlet letter could even be extended to individuals who worked for these companies, including former PartyGaming exec Mitch Garber, who now heads Caesars? digital division, Caesars Interactive Entertainment. Small wonder then, that IGT CEO Patti Hart admitted on Tuesday that the AGA board?s vote to file the brief against PokerStars ?wasn?t unanimous.?

Source: http://calvinayre.com/2013/03/06/business/888-receives-initial-nevada-license-nod/

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Sunday, March 3, 2013

The NFL Appears Totally Ready For An Openly Gay Player, So Long ...

The NFL Appears Totally Ready For An Openly Gay Player, So Long As You Overlook Its Teams And PlayersOne of the most unintentionally hilarious sentences currently in print can be found on this SB Nation post by Robert Wheel, a.k.a. Bobby Big Wheel, called "What the NFL can do to support gay players." Beneath, a comma-spliced subhed reads: "The NFL is ready for a gay player, the problem is the rest of society."

Got that, everyone? The NFL's ready to roll out the rainbow carpet. It's just waiting for the rest of us Family Research Council types to get our acts together.

Toward that "society" clause, which is supported by nothing else in the column, Wheel makes the following points:

"The NFL has done a good job so far to lower the burden of being a pioneer, but there is more that they [sic] can do."

Sure. So far, so good.

"We saw that this week when the commissioner's office told teams that they could not ask players if they were gay in Combine interviews."

OK, whoa. That the NFL head office explicitly reminded teams not to ask players' sexual orientations, which the collective bargaining agreement already forbids, doesn't speak to the NFL's overall readiness for openly gay players. It suggests instead that the league's corporate honchos recognize that individual teams need to be reminded how to behave in 2013. And if teams are less than ready, players could lag behind as well. Perhaps it's splitting hairs, but in this case it appears "NFL teams" and "NFL players" might herein be lumped in with "the rest of society" dragging down the NFL's otherwise scout-like preparedness for the LGBT Jackie Robinson.

Jason Whitlock suggested that the NFL hasn't done enough though, and that they should have suspended Chris Culliver for the Super Bowl. But Culliver quickly apologized for his homophobic comments to Artie Lange. The NFL didn't need to suspend him, he'd already learned his lesson from the public outcry.

The public outcry from ? the rest of society, no? But does that include NFL players or not? Because it was Culliver who said "I don't do the gay guys, man. ? We don't got no gay people on the team. They gotta get up out of here if they do." Even if his is a rare sentiment in locker rooms, you could scarcely blame a gay player from interpreting it to an end other than "the NFL is ready for a gay player."

The best way to address homophobic behavior is to make it socially unacceptable.

This is a half-attempt at insight that appears initially to be unassailable but which, devoid of context, could be hopelessly wrong?sort of like "children are our future" or "chance favors only the prepared mind" or "Reagan-Bush '84." In fact there's no precise line to making something socially unacceptable. An action can be outlawed and yet remain, in most quarters, socially acceptable. (See: drinking during Prohibition, racial discrimination in the Jim Crow South, presently paying CEOs 380 times what their average worker makes, etc.)

Wheel appears to be suggesting that the culture needs to change, and he's right to laud the NFL head office for its steps toward doing so. And yet he's still talking about the culture of the NFL, a culture he says is ready to accept gay players but which the Culliver mess, like many similar outbursts over the years, demonstrates clearly isn't ready, at least not fully. Meanwhile according to Wheel, "the rest of society" is what's holding football back?excluding, we must only assume, the areas of society that have seen fit to welcome openly gay, lesbian and queer folks into the workplace: visual arts, performing arts, culinary arts, news media, entertainment media, the film industry, publishing, the music industry, local government, state government, national government, design, social activism, law, fashion, education, the sciences, hospitality, the frickin' military and, notably, many other albeit lower-profile sports.

You know, the rest of society. To which the NFL, far from some spearhead of societal advancement, is still hoping to catch up.

What the NFL can do to support gay players [SB Nation]

Source: http://deadspin.com/5988102/the-nfl-appears-totally-ready-for-an-openly-gay-player-so-long-as-you-overlook-its-teams-and-players

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