Wednesday 31 October 2012

Gingrich raising cash, profile for Akin Senate bid

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Smith almost perfect, 49ers flatten Arizona 24-3

San Francisco 49ers defensive back Chris Culliver breaks up a pass intended for Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald (11) during the first half of an NFL football game, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

San Francisco 49ers defensive back Chris Culliver breaks up a pass intended for Arizona Cardinals wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald (11) during the first half of an NFL football game, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

San Francisco 49ers quarterback Alex Smith (11) drops back to pass against the Arizona Cardinals during the first half of an NFL football game, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree (15) pulls in a touchdown pass as Arizona Cardinals cornerback Patrick Peterson (21) defends during the first half of an NFL football game, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

Arizona Cardinals quarterback John Skelton (19) looks to pass under pressure from San Francisco 49ers defensive end Justin Smith during the first half of an NFL football game, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Paul Connors)

San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree (15) scores a touchdown against the Arizona Cardinals during the first half of an NFL football game, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in Glendale, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

(AP) ? So much for Alex Smith and his lost confidence.

"It was in my closet," he said. "I found it."

Indeed.

Smith was almost perfect in San Francisco's 24-3 victory over the Arizona Cardinals on Monday night. But for a dropped pass, he would have been.

The 49ers quarterback completed 18 of 19 passes for 232 yards and three touchdowns after a week that saw some speculation that Smith's belief in himself was shaken following a pair of poor outings.

Coach Jim Harbaugh said questions about Smith's confidence came from "a couple of reporters," nothing more.

"I don't think there ever was a question there," Harbaugh said. "I think it was just a lot of gobble, gobble, turkey. Just gobble, gobble, gobble turkey. That paints a pretty good picture. He's a very confident guy."

Smith threw two touchdown passes to Michael Crabtree and one to Randy Moss.

"Eighteen of 19, I have never seen that," Harbaugh said. "How important for your quarterback to play very well? It is very important and I don't know how you play much better. It was a fantastic game by him.

It was a performance that caught the Cardinals by surprise.

"Everyone's surprised. My 5-year-old son's surprised," defensive tackle Darnell Dockett said, "but at the end of the day it wasn't like he had to make the long perfect throws. He had some guys open and we missed some tackles and they made plays."

Smith said he had no idea his stats were that good.

"Which is a good thing," he said. "I don't want to think about my stats or incompletions or anything like that. I was kind of in a good rhythm, the whole offense was. "'

The dominant victory opened a two-game lead for San Francisco (6-2) in the NFC West. Arizona (4-4) lost its fourth straight after a 4-0 start.

The Cardinals managed only a field goal against the No. 1 defense in the NFL.

"They're a good defense, don't get me wrong," Arizona quarterback John Skelton said. "They are a very talented defense. But to only put up three points, that's embarrassing, as an offense and as a team. It's in front of a national audience and we put up only three points and lost by 21. It's frustrating and it's humiliating."

Smith was 14 of 15 for 146 yards and two touchdowns, both to Crabtree, as the 49ers built a 17-0 halftime lead.

Moss caught a 47-yard TD pass, juking tacklers down the sideline on a play that seemed to turn back the clock to the receiver's prime. With the catch, he tied Terrell Owens for fourth on the NFL career touchdown list with 156.

Smith, who tied a career high with the three touchdown passes, spread his completions among 10 receivers. Crabtree led the way with five catches for 72 yards.

Arizona's defense, supposedly the team's strength, missed tackle after tackle in an embarrassing nationally televised performance at home. The 24 points were the most allowed by the Cardinals this season.

"This was a big test for us, and everyone saw how it went," Arizona coach Ken Whisenhunt said. "It was disappointing to say the least."

Led by Smith's pinpoint passing, the 49ers methodically dominated from the start. He had the best completion percentage of his career, and he would have been perfect had Delanie Walker not dropped the ball when he was wide open on a crossing route in the first half.

The Cardinals, down 17-0, were booed off the field by the home crowd at the half.

Things didn't get any better for the home team in the third quarter. On third-and-9, Smith threw 30 yards to Crabtree, who evaded a host of tacklers. Then on third-and-8, Smith tossed a short pass to Moss, who sidestepped a series of would-be defenders all the way to the end zone, putting San Francisco ahead 24-0 with 7:27 left in the third quarter.

The Cardinals averted a shutout with Jay Feely's 28-yard field goal

Skelton, making his second start since Kevin Kolb went down with rib injuries, completed 32 of 52 passes for 290 yards, often overthrowing receivers. The Cardinals rushed for just 7 yards in nine attempts against the 49ers, who entered the game as the No. 1-ranked defense in the NFL, No. 2 against the run.

Arizona's final possession ended when Larry Fitzgerald was stopped at the 1.

NOTES: The roof was open at University of Phoenix Stadium, a rarity for Cardinals games. ... San Francisco C Daniel Kilgore left the game in the first quarter with a concussion. ... Daryl Washington had two sacks, giving him eight for the season. ... In its two nationally televised night appearances this season, against St. Louis on a Thursday and San Francisco on Monday, Arizona was outscored 41-6. ... The 49ers improved to 3-1 on the road, winning their last two away from home by a combined 55-3. ... Only Jerry Rice (208), Emmitt Smith (175) and LaDainian Tomlinson (162) have more touchdowns than Moss. ... The 49ers' Justin Smith had two sacks. ... The 49ers have a bye this week. The Cardinals are at Green Bay on Sunday.

___

Follow Bob Baum at www.twitter.com/Thebaumerphx

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-10-30-49ers-Cardinals%20Folo/id-f5d778e3f400411898775173cac2914e

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Thursday 18 October 2012

Terry's forced apology and Chelsea's private justice will not do ...

COMMENT
By Liam Twomey

For those who have waited a year for some public sign of contrition from John Terry, Thursday?s statement apologising for the racist language directed at QPR defender Anton Ferdinand and accepting his FA punishment might be viewed as a small victory.


But far more will remain dissatisfied by what they see as an attempt by Chelsea and their captain to draw a line under the incident rather than properly confront what is, at the very least, a very serious error of judgment which requires their full attention.

In truth, Terry could do little else than apologise. The comprehensive and compelling nature of the FA?s written justification for reaching a different conclusion to the one arrived at by Westminster Magistrates? Court back in July left him no other alternative.

"Although I'm disappointed with the FA judgment, I accept that the language I used, regardless of the context, is not acceptable on the football field or indeed in any walk of life,? his statement read.

"As I stated in the criminal case, with the benefit of hindsight my language was clearly not an appropriate reaction to the situation for someone in my position. My response was below the level expected by Chelsea Football Club, and by me, and it will not happen again."

Terry did not go as far as to validate the FA?s view that his defence against the charge was ?impossible, implausible and contrived?. Nor did anyone expect him to, given that to do so would leave him open to a possible criminal charge of perjury.

For the first time, he did publicly accept that his words were unacceptable in any context and apologised for any offence caused, although the fact that such an expression of regret has taken so long and did not name Ferdinand, the victim of all of this, on its eventual arrival will anger many.

But perhaps the bulk of criticism will be directed at Chelsea themselves, who have stalled and stalled on the issue of punishing Terry for his misdemeanour while hiding behind the fact that their captain still enjoyed a right of appeal against the FA.

Now, belatedly, they have elected to take action, and its timing is in itself puzzling. If the club believe, as they say in a statement released shortly after Terry?s own, that their player made the right decision in not appealing his ban and fine and had already conducted a full internal investigation which found against him, why did they not sanction him earlier?

But the most troubling issue is the news that any consequences Terry will face at his club may never be made public. Of course, Chelsea are just one of many clubs who routinely keep their disciplinary procedures internal, but this was far from a routine situation. For the club simply to say they have done something is not enough. They must allow themselves to be seen to have done something.

The likeliest cause of the Blues? unwillingness to reveal the level of punishment is that they suspect it will be deemed insufficient, leaving them open to a similar level of castigation from football, anti-racism groups and society at large to what the FA endured when they elected to hit Terry with only a four-game ban and ?220,000 fine.

But if an instinct for self-preservation is the best reason for Chelsea not to reveal what steps they have taken, this simply will not do. True justice does not exist if it is not done in public and open to scrutiny. The club's chosen course merely strengthens the growing suspicion that ethical concerns take secondary importance to the issues of financial prudence and sporting competitiveness in modern football.

It is highly likely that, if Terry was a middling 18-year-old in the Chelsea youth system or a fan mouthing such filth in the stands, the club would have been unerring and very public in applying their often trumpeted zero tolerance policy on discrimination to the letter. Indeed, Blues fan was banned from Stamford Bridge for life in May for racially abusing Didier Drogba, and Jon Obi Mikel's Twitter abusers will, if found, face a similar punishment.

As things stand, however, despite his reputation now lying in tatters and his ability appearing to be on the slide in his twilight years, Terry remains too valuable to upset or discard.

Follow Liam Twomey on

Source: http://www.goal.com/en/news/1717/editorial/2012/10/18/3459311/terrys-forced-apology-and-chelseas-private-justice-will-not

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Megan Fox and Brian Austin Green Welcome Son Noah Shannon

"I gave birth to our son Noah Shannon Green on September 27th. He is healthy, happy, and perfect," Fox writes.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/wyDE3F1skSM/

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Watch a Microsoft Exec Hilariously Rap with a Rapper About F*cking Two B*tches [Watch This]

Microsoft exec Michael Angiulo had a pretty good day today: Microsoft Surface, an awesome product he helped make and introduce, opened up for pre-orders and this beyond awesome rap he did with rapper Too Short for his 40th birthday came out to the public. This guy is my new favorite technology executive. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/5LwIN94FHbY/watch-a-microsoft-exec-hilariously-rap-with-a-rapper-about-fcking-two-btches

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Wednesday 17 October 2012

The Nexus 7 is already the UK?s all-time best-selling Android tablet

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Similar names create trouble in prostitution case

Retired sheriff's deputy Paul Main poses in his shop at his home Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012 in Alfred, Maine. Main's phone has been ringing off the hook since a person with his same name, accused of visiting a prostitute in Kennebunk, was released on Monday. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

Retired sheriff's deputy Paul Main poses in his shop at his home Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012 in Alfred, Maine. Main's phone has been ringing off the hook since a person with his same name, accused of visiting a prostitute in Kennebunk, was released on Monday. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

Retired sheriff's deputy Paul Main poses in his shop at his home Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012 in Alfred, Maine. Main's phone has been ringing off the hook since a person with his same name, accused of visiting a prostitute in Kennebunk, was released on Monday. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

Retired sheriff's deputy Paul Main poses in his shop at his home Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012 in Alfred, Maine. Main's phone has been ringing off the hook since a person with his same name, accused of visiting a prostitute in Kennebunk, was released on Monday. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

FILE - In this Oct. 9, 2012 file photo, Alexis Wright, 29, turns towards her attorney Sarah Churchill, left, during her arraignment in Portland, Maine on 109 counts of prostitution, violation of privacy, tax evasion and other charges for allegedly providing sex for money at her Kennebunk fitness studio and office. The first batch of more than 100 men accused of paying a fitness instructor for sex were laying low after police began releasing their names in a small New England town where rumors have run rampant for weeks. Police on Monday released 21 names of men who were issued summons for engaging in prostitution with a 29-year-old Zumba instructor who's charged with turning her dance studio into a brothel in this seaside community and secretly videotaping her encounters. (AP Photo/Joel Page, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 12, 2012 file photo, a sign is seen near a marina in Kennebunk, Maine. The first batch of more than 100 men accused of paying a fitness instructor for sex were laying low after police began releasing their names in the small New England town where rumors have run rampant for weeks. Police on Monday released 21 names of men who were issued summons for engaging in prostitution with a 29-year-old Zumba instructor who's charged with turning her dance studio into a brothel in this seaside community and secretly videotaping her encounters. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

(AP) ? Paul Main's quiet evening was shattered by a phone ringing off the hook and a half-dozen TV crews showing up on his porch. Everyone wanted to know: Was he the same Paul Main who's been accused of visiting a prostitute in Kennebunk?

The answer was no. But a decision to release the names of alleged prostitution clients without any ages or addresses caused big problems for men who have the same names as the accused, until a judge deemed more information should be public.

For weeks, rumors about a prostitution business have run rampant in this small New England town best known for its proximity to the Bush family summer compound in neighboring Kennebunkport.

On Monday, authorities released the first batch of names out of more than 150 men accused of paying a Zumba fitness instructor for sex.

"I don't have a problem with releasing names. I think it's a wonderful thing, but I'll be darned if it's right to do it in a shoddy manner," said Main, a retired spokesman and head of the detective division for the York County Sheriff's Department.

The addresses, ages and other identifying information of the johns were withheld after a judge ruled that state law required them to be kept confidential because the alleged sexual encounters may have been videotaped, making the men potential victims of privacy invasion.

On Tuesday, Superior Court Justice Thomas Warren reversed his decision, ruling in favor of a request from The Portland Press Herald newspaper that sought the release of the addresses and other information.

Kennebunk police re-issued the names with the added details. The revised list included former South Portland Mayor James Soule and suspects from more than a dozen towns in Maine, as well as one from Boston and another from New Hampshire. The men ranged in age from 34 to 65 and also included a lawyer, a forester and a real estate appraiser.

Soule did not return calls to his home and business, and no one answered door at his home.

Before the extra information was released, the lack of addresses and dates of birth made it impossible to verify exactly who was among the accused. Most records released by police and courts have that information.

The Associated Press declined to distribute the names until the suspects' precise identities could be confirmed. None of those who have matching names returned calls.

But many media outlets released the first list, causing problems for men like Main, whose name is shared by at least 20 others in Maine alone.

The town had been awaiting the release of the list since 29-year-old Alexis Wright was charged this month with engaging in prostitution in her dance studio and in an office across the street and secretly videotaping many of her encounters. Police said she kept meticulous records suggesting the sex acts generated $150,000 over 18 months.

Wright, from nearby Wells, has pleaded not guilty to 106 counts of prostitution and other charges. Her business partner also pleaded not guilty to 59 counts.

Police released the first 21 names Monday evening. The list was then revised to include the men's middle initials. Main's middle initial was different from the Paul Main who was listed.

Stephen Schwartz, a Portland lawyer who represents two of Wright's alleged customers, argued that the names and addresses of the alleged johns should be kept private.

Warren declined to keep the names secret but at first agreed with Schwartz's contention that if persons charged with paying a prostitute are also possible victims of invasion of privacy, then their addresses should be confidential under Maine law.

Press Herald attorney Sigmund Schutz argued Tuesday that releasing only partial information was unfair to people not on the list.

"The fact is that by releasing names only, you're getting a lot of false positives. You're implicating people who may be completely innocent and simply share the same or similar names with people charged, and that's a real harm," Schutz told the AP.

In southern Maine, two TV stations, one daily newspaper and a weekly newspaper published the list. Several others, including newspapers in Maine's three largest cities, withheld the names.

Roy Peter Clark, senior scholar at the Poynter Institute, a Florida-based journalism think tank, said that just because a name becomes public doesn't mean news organizations have to race to publish it.

"What journalistic purpose is served by publishing the name, and how do you balance that against the harm that may be done to these people, their families, their children?"

Clark said the situation would be different if the name of a public figure appeared.

"If the police chief is on the list, if the school superintendent on the list, I would approach those people directly and try to determine whether their actions are not just a personal moral failure but climb to the level of social, public hypocrisy," he said.

The Kennebunk Police Department plans to release the names of johns who've received summonses on a bi-weekly activity log, meaning the disclosure of names could continue until the end of the year. The next batch is due to be released Oct. 26.

As a former law enforcement officer, Main said releasing the names helps hold suspects accountable for their misdeeds. But, he added, other information should be released as well to protect those whose only connection to the case is having a common name.

"I don't want to see other people going through the same thing that I've been through," he said.

___

Associated Press writers David Sharp in Portland and Glenn Adams in Augusta contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-16-Zumba-Prostitution/id-4db24888d8654420accc62d9e8a76589

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Why Prize Investment Properties Are No Prize | Serious About Real ...

Here?s a little real estate investing secret that few rental property investors know: The fancier and more prize location of a property, the worse the cash flow. In fact, most ?prize? properties are going to have negative cash flows. And that?s not a smart way to invest your hard earned cash equity dollars.

Consider the options

Let?s look at an example. You want to buy about $500,000 worth of real estate, and with a 25 percent down payment plus costs, you?ll need about $150,000 in cash to close the deal. You have two choices:

  1. A swanky downtown San Diego condominium for $500,000, or
  2. Three nice moderately priced boring suburban $165,000 condominiums.

Now most people would think location, location, location and want to buy the prize downtown. That?s because their only investment criteria is that they want to buy real estate in hopes that it will go up in value. And the problem with that strategy is that they are totally missing the most important piece of rental property investing?? the cash flows the property can produce.

Immediate cash flow

In reality, moderately priced cash flow positive condominiums are the best location, location, location, and here?s why.

A $500,000 downtown San Diego condo would probably generate negative cash flows of about $1,000 per month. That?s $12,000 per year?? ouch?? on a $150,000 cash investment or negative 8 percent return on the investment.

A moderately priced $165,000 suburban San Diego condo would probably generate positive cash flows of about positive $250 per month. Multiplied by three condominiums?? so apples to apples on the $500,000 investment?? is positive $750 per month. That?s positive $9,000 per year on a $150,000 cash investment, or positive 6 percent return on the investment.

See the difference? You can allocate your hard-earned $150,000 of equity into either a fancy prize property with negative cash flows of $12,000 per year, or into moderately priced properties with positive cash flows of $9,000 per year. That?s a difference of $21,000 per year on $150,000 equity investment into $500,000 of real estate.

Building wealth

If you?re hoping appreciation in value will make up the difference on your negative cash flow property, good luck with that. To be fair, over long periods of time, most real estate should appreciate in value about the same percentage each year. But as you can see, cash flows can be very different, and that?s where you earn your wealth!

You might assume that because rents increase and mortgages stay constant, the fancy prize property would turn positive one day. This is true, but it would take about 40 years until the fancy prize condominium owner really got their first dime of positive cash flow.

Think that through and pencil out your real estate deal before you take the plunge. Some properties are just much better wealth-building investments than others, primarily due to the cash flows.

Related:

Leonard Baron is America?s Real Estate Professor? ? his unbiased, neutral and inexpensive ?Real Estate Ownership, Investment and Due Diligence 101? textbook teaches real estate buyers how to make smart and safe purchase decisions. He is a San Diego State University Lecturer, blogs at Zillow.com, and loves kicking the tires of a good piece of dirt! More at ProfessorBaron.com.

Note: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or position of Zillow.

Source: http://www.seriousaboutrealestate.com/Blog/2012/10/16/why-prize-investment-properties-are-no-prize/

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Tuesday 16 October 2012

Video: Jessie Jackson, Jr. under investigation



>> the subject of a criminal investigation is, looking into using campaign funds for a home investigation. the federal investigation apparently pre-dates his sudden and unexplained disappearance from congress, which was followed by a statement from office that at first he was being treated for bipolar disorder. he has not spoken publicly about this or any other matter since june.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/49423793/

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ASUS PadFone 2 unveiled in Taiwan, boasts quad-core CPU, LTE, NFC and lighter tablet (video)

ASUS PadFone 2 unveiled in Taiwan, packs quadcore chip, NFC and lighter tablet

Today's no doubt a big day for ASUS: while chairman Jonney Shih is gearing up to introduce the PadFone 2 in Milan later today, we just saw CEO Jerry Shen wowing the crowd with the same phone-in-tablet combo back in Taipei. Just as the recent leaks have shown, ASUS' surprisingly quick follow-up to the original PadFone is simply bigger and better in many ways, notably with a screen upgrade to 4.7-inch 720p Super IPS+ panel (with up to 550nits brightness thanks to Sharp's IGZO technology), Qualcomm's awesome quad-core APQ8064 SoC instead of its dual-core sibling, 13-megapixel f/2.4 BSI sensor from Sony, 1.2-megapixel front camera, and a much slimmer PadFone Station slate -- partly because it no longer features a docking bay cover! New owners will be greeted by Android Ice Cream Sandwich, but ASUS promises a Jelly Bean upgrade soon. There's much more than meets the eyes so read on to find out more.

Continue reading ASUS PadFone 2 unveiled in Taiwan, boasts quad-core CPU, LTE, NFC and lighter tablet (video)

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ASUS PadFone 2 unveiled in Taiwan, boasts quad-core CPU, LTE, NFC and lighter tablet (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Oct 2012 01:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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'Physical Internet': Shared transportation system would increase profits, reduce carbon emissions

ScienceDaily (Oct. 16, 2012) ? The Physical Internet -- a concept in which goods are handled, stored and transported in a shared network of manufacturers, retailers and the transportation industry -- would benefit the U.S. economy and significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, according to a new study by engineers at the University of Arkansas and Virginia Tech University. If 25 percent of the U.S. supply chain operated with such an interconnected system, profits for participating firms would increase by $100 billion, carbon dioxide emissions from road-based freight would decrease by at least 33 percent and consumers would pay less for goods.

"Our results indicate that the Physical Internet represents a virtuous cycle in which manufacturers, retailers and transportation providers all benefit in terms of increased profit margins and smaller environmental footprints," said Russ Meller, professor of industrial engineering and director of the Center for Excellence in Logistics and Distribution. "The transportation network that is anticipated to emerge will also create better network design and customer service and will help address the problem of driver shortages and turnover."

Currently, the transportation industry -- with an economic value of trillions of dollars annually -- is mostly a segmented enterprise with roughly three-fourths of manufacturers or retailers transporting their own goods without integrating or combining logistics with other carriers, manufacturers or retailers. Although there has been some success at integrating resources, most manufacturers still transport their own goods, a wasteful and inefficient process. According to U.S. Department of Transportation statistics, average truck-trailer loads are less than 60 percent full, and at least one out of every five -- and possibly one out of four -- trips is made with an empty trailer. This means that overall efficiency rates are no greater than 50 percent.

This problem has a significant impact on the U.S. economy and the environment. In 2007, road-based freight carriers consumed nearly 30 billion gallons of fuel, and from 1990 to 2008, carbon dioxide emissions associated with road-based freight carriers increased by nearly 15 percent, up to 517 trillion grams per year.

As a potential solution, the Physical Internet proposes an efficient system in which global supply-chain logistics are enabled by an open, intermodal (transportation by land, rail, ship or barge) system that uses standard, modular and re-usable containers, real-time identification and coordinated routing through shared logistics facilities. In other words, all supply-chain stakeholders -- manufacturers, transportation providers and retailers -- act independently to use a shared logistics network that increases the size of trailer loads and reduces or eliminates miles traveled by empty trailers.

Meller, holder of the James and Marie Hefley Professorship in Logistics and Entrepreneurship, and his research colleagues developed models to quantify the effects on profits and sustainability if industry stakeholders shifted to a fully interconnected logistics system. They focused on principal potential participants -- consumer-packaged-goods manufacturers, retailers, diversified manufacturers/shippers and transportation service providers. They used their results to predict the impact of the Physical Internet on key performance indicators and to motivate organizations to consider moving toward adoption of the system.

The models showed that the Physical Internet would increase stakeholder profits by $100 billion annually and would reduce annual carbon emissions from road-based freight by more than a half,. These are conservative estimates, based on only 25 percent of all freight flows in the United States. The researchers also were surprised by their discovery that the shift toward a shared system would lead to more inventory holding points located closer to customers than the current distribution centers.

One major consequence of this shift, Meller said, would be more predictable short-haul or relay shuttle runs, rather than the prevailing point-to-point or hub-and-spoke designs used today. These shorter runs would have many positive consequences -- higher profits for stakeholders, savings for consumers, better customer service and lower driver turnover rates.

"We predict that a relay network would get drivers home more often, which we believe would drastically reduce driver turnover," said Kimberly Ellis, engineering professor at Virginia Tech and co-author of the study.

Finally, the research showed a net reduction in prices paid by the consumer.

"The technology to make this happen is currently available," Meller said. "All parties, including the consumer, will benefit. Now we need industry partners to pilot a mini-Physical Internet and allow us to share those results with others in the industry."

The researchers' results are part of a two-year project sponsored by the National Science Foundation and 18 industry leaders.

"This research clearly shows how fundamental changes to logistics procedures and infrastructure can have significant impact on costs, equipment utilization, driver retention, customer service, fuel consumption and pollution," said Jim LeTart, marketing director for RedPrairie, an industry partner headquartered in Alpharetta, Ga.

"Phase I of the Physical Internet initiative proved that there is real potential to fundamentally change the way we move objects in the physical world, where everybody wins in a dramatic fashion," said Frank Broadstreet, senior director of engineering services for J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc.

A final report can be downloaded at the project's website (http://faculty.ineg.uark.edu/rmeller/web/CELDi-PI/index-PI.html.) The researchers hope to find partners for the second phase of the project, in which they will focus on pilot studies in the industry.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/VsHnolZoNLg/121016092158.htm

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Monday 15 October 2012

Near Field Communication ? Coming to a Library Near You? | SLA ...

Posted on 15 October 2012.

Near field communication (NFC) is a means of exchanging information wirelessly across short distances. ?It could be the next step beyond RFID and QR codes. ?Although it is currently in much wider use outside of the United States and in commercial settings, rather than in US libraries, there is a great deal of potential for libraries in the future.

Two librarians, Sheli McHugh and Kristen Yarmey, of the University of Scranton are strong proponents of the technology for libraries. ?They offered a webinar on July 25th (the slides from which are available at http://www.slideshare.net/kristenyt/near-field-communication-introduction-and-implications-13740255?from=share_email ) and also have authored an article entitled ?Near Field Communication: Introduction and Implications? published in the Journal of Web Librarianship, Vol. 6, 2012, pp 186-207.

Along with detailing how NFC is currently being used in the larger world, they also propose many possibilities for how it could benefit libraries. ?Like RFID and QR codes, NFC can link physical materials to digital information. ?Book reviews, editorial reviews, and author?s biographical information could be made available on the book; bibliographic information could be captured in various citation formats. ?Even more, a projected rating for the value of the book could be made based on the user?s LibraryThing or GoodReads preferences. ?Like RFID or QR codes, NFC requires tags; however, it doesn?t require a cell phone?s camera to be used to read the tags. ?Proximity to the phone itself would be sufficient. ?More information can be stored in an NFC tags than in RFID or QR codes; the NFC tag doesn?t make a visual impact on the poster/book cover/etc. like a QR code does; also, NFC allows for two way communication.

A common use for NFC is for payment for goods and services just by tapping the mobile phone on an NFC-enabled cash register without any need for a credit card. ?In libraries, fines, photocopies, printing, scanning, and purchasing tickets to library events could all be done via NFC. ?It could also serve as the library card for check out of material. ?In fact, the user would just use his/her own phone to check the book out?no need to go to Circulation. Mobile phones with NFC could as electronic keys for after-hours access to the library space as well.

Because NFC can be interactive, it can be used for mobile marketing. ?A poster could allow the viewer to buy tickets to the event, get a coupon downloaded to their phone or get directions. ?Reference books could link to relevant databases or other e-resources; library doors could offer library hours, connect users to online resources, or offer an augmented reality tour of the building/collection.

Libraries could link to social media via NFC. ?A book with NFC tapped by the user?s phone could be added his Good Reads or Library Thing account. ?Group members needing to meet could use building-wide NFC tags to identify each person?s location and select an optimum meeting spot. ?Scavenger hunt type games could also be easily adapted to NFC.

?NFC requires and rewards physical proximity. ??For libraries, this technology is a new opportunity to connect physical collections (for books to media) with digital extras.? ?The importance of physical proximity could be a boon to libraries, enhancing the value of the place itself.

The authors do caution that there could be privacy and security concern with NFC, similar to those with RFID and anything concerning credit card security. ?Still, it is an exciting new technology with many possibilities for libraries. ?NFC empowers objects to communicate with just the tap of a cell phone; libraries are all about housing objects with information users need; this technology can streamline and enhance that transfer of information. ?Please consider reading the article by McHugh and Yarmey cited above for more.

Mary-Frances Panettiere
SLA-GA Past President
mary-frances.panettiere@library.gatech.edu

Source: http://georgia.sla.org/2012/10/near-field-communication-coming-to-a-library-near-you/

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Video: Colbert: Romney keeps comedians alive

Recycled heart devices offer new life to poor

Recycled ICDs -- the devices that jolt a failing heart back into rhythm -- can be collected safely from U.S. patients and funeral homes, transported, sterilized and re-implanted in people who otherwise would not be able to afford them, says a Pittsburgh heart specialist.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/49423004#49423004

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VIDEO: Coldstream Guards parade in Doncaster

HUNDREDS of shoppers cheered as the Coldstream Guards brought Doncaster town centre to a standstill with a colourful military parade.

The 2nd Battalion were given a heroes? welcome as they marched past Mansion House, resplendent in scarlet tunics and black bearskin hats.

Shoppers craned their necks for a better view and captured the marchpast by more than 150 guardsmen on cameras and mobile phones, as the parade snaked its way around the town centre before a service at Doncaster Minster.

The parade was held ahead of the Laying Up Of Colours service at the church, where the regiment?s flag was presented to the Reverend Canon Paul Shackerley and the Bishop of Doncaster, the Right Reverend Peter Burrows.

Crowds young and old braved the cold and blustery weather as servicemen gathered at Sir Nigel Gresley Square for the march.

The parade headed down Wood Street and Cleveland Street before turning onto High Street, where Mayor Peter Davies and civic mayor Coun Chris Mills took the salute from the steps of the Mansion House, along with other civic dignitaries.

Police cordoned off roads as dozens of former soldiers, proudly displaying medals and regimental ties, walked behind the parade, accompanied by toddlers playfully mimicking the Guards? marching and singing along to a selection of military and brass band music.

Shopper Delia Collins, of Woodlands, said: ?They looked absolutely fantastic.

?I think we should all support our soldiers because they do a marvellous job. I am so pleased so many people came out to see them.?

Bystander Mick Daley, of Balby, said: ?Doncaster should really celebrate things like this. The lads have done us proud and I wouldn?t have missed the parade for anything.

?It was quite cold standing at the side of the road waiting for them, but they looked and sounded brilliant when they came past and it was good so many people were there to see it.?

The minster was chosen to be the custodian of the regiment?s former flag after being presented with new colours by the Queen this year in recognition of Doncaster?s history as a recruiting ground for the Guards.

The church was packed for the public service which included music from The Band Of The Coldstream Guards, with hymns including To Be A Pilgrim, Greater Love and the National Anthem.

Mr Shackerley said: ?We are gathered together in this minster to lay up the colours of the 2nd Battalion Coldstream Guards.

?This is a fitting holy place to lay down these emblems of duty and service.

?May all who look upon them be reminded of their duty to their God, their Queen and their country.?

In the evening, the band performed at the Doncaster School for the Deaf in aid of Doncaster cancer support organisation Firefly and the Army Benevolent Fund.

Source: http://www.thestar.co.uk/video-coldstream-guards-parade-in-doncaster-1-5022093

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Former Sen. Arlen Specter dead at 82 (CNN)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/255471458?client_source=feed&format=rss

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TrackBack - MS Estate Planning

Other qualities to look for in an offshore jurisdiction include:

  1. Economic and Political Stability of the Jurisdiction;
  2. Costs associated with the Asset Protection Trust;
  3. Ease of travel and communication;
  4. Availability of banks and investment advisors;
  5. Crime rates in the jurisdiction; and
  6. Influence of other countries.

Excerpt from The Complete Guide to Estate and Financial Planning in Turbulent Times (Collaborative Press, 2011) - Walt Dallas, Contributing Author

Click here to register for our?eNewsletter.

For more information on?Madison and Jackson MS Wills Trusts and other Estate Planning?please visit our website.

For a Video on Health Care Directive please visit our website.

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Source: http://blog.estateplanning123.com/2012/10/asset-protection-planning-what-are-some-other-qualities-that-are-important-in-choosing-an-offshore-j.html

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Sunday 14 October 2012

What You Must Know About Writing on the Web | Learning from Lorelle

1975.

While that number might mean different things to you, like your birthday, an anniversary, graduation year, part of a lottery number ? to me it represents a quota.

Several years ago, a fan counted up all the articles I wrote every year and came up with an estimate of 1,975 articles published annually across multiple sites.

I was stunned. No, staggered. I now had a number. I didn?t know what to do with it. It freaked me out. That?s 164 articles a month. Thirty-eight articles a week. Five and a half a day. That?s a lot.

Don?t even ask to add up the word count. I couldn?t. Yet, the same person estimated that I wrote 2,370,000 words annually.

It took a long time for me to come to grips with that number. I worried when I became smarter with my time and dropped some of the online columns and magazines to concentrate on more influential sites. What if I couldn?t keep up with the numbers?

After a while I gave up and realized it was just a number. Like a random phone number or birth date. Another number not to worry about. Much.

Along the way to generating all those words every year for many years on end, I learned a few things worth sharing.

?Words may not do it alone, but a picture is NOT worth a thousands words when fed through feeds and search engines. You must have the words.?

I?m often consulted by businesses about their SEO, their search engine optimization and ranking within search results (SERP). The key is to use words, real words, to be adequately evaluated by search engines in their secret sauce for ranking.

You don?t have the words, you won?t rank.

It?s that simple.

Use your words.

?Visualize a person or small group and write as if you are talking directly to them. If that?s too formal or uncomfortable, imagine you are writing to a friend.?

When working on my first website, I realized that I couldn?t write to the masses. I had to write to someone, a specific someone. This way, my words had meaning and emphasis behind them. I chose one of my best friends, Susan. I would visualize her reading this, laughing at the funny parts, groaning at the not so funny parts, and leaning forward with questions as she got to the technical parts.

I knew I had to answer her questions in my writing. She became my audience, the representative of everyone reading that site.

As my site grew, more numbers came my way. First there were ten steady readers. Okay, I can talk to ten people. Then it became 100. Can I talk to 100 people. Maybe. Then it was 1,000, 2,000, 10,000, 20,000 ? I can?t talk to 20,000 people! Can you?

Think about the person you are writing for. The one person you have in mind as a friend, customer, family member. Do you know them? What do they look like? What do they like? What thrills them? What disappoints them? What do they need? And what do they need to know from you.

Write what they need to know.

Cat next to computer saying I am in ur WordPres fixin ur Ps.

Respect your audience.
Respect copyright.
Respect trademarks.
Originality will always win

?Original content will always win over redundant, blockquoting, and echo chamber content. Even if you can?t write well, the attempt to say it in your words is always appreciated and welcome.?

There is a capital P in the middle of WordPress. Many in the WordPress community lose respect for those writing brilliant things about WordPress and not using the proper upper case on that middle P. It sends clear messages to those who know WordPress. It says the writer doesn?t respect the WordPress trademark. It says they don?t pay attention to details. People notice the smallest details.

Respect trademarks, but also respect your audience.

For over ten years I?ve asked my audiences how they know a site or blogger is trustworthy. While they can come up with many visual factors such as too many adds verses too little content, they admit that they just instinctively know. It?s a gut response. People pay attention to the smallest detail, and the smallest detail can tell them not to trust you.

Respect your audience. Treat them like the intelligent adults the majority of them are. Don?t talk down to them, over them, or even at them. Talk with them. Be inclusive. Share.

It is normal to quote and requote and share on the social web. If we like something, we want to share it with everyone we know.

However, if it isn?t yours, don?t imply that it is. Give credit where credit is due and honor the originator of original content, as you wish they would yours.

?Share with us your thoughts, feelings, experiences, and knowledge. Teach us, oh, great blogger, how to live and function in this crazy world.?

Share your thoughts and ideas, your expertise, all your wisdom with your readers. They are there to learn from you. Teach them well.

In my workshops, I often hear ?I don?t have anything interesting to say.? That?s not true. Look deeper.

What was your childhood like? I grew up picking berries in the summer for extra money, getting freckled and sunburned in the early summer heat of the Pacific Northwest. Did you grow up gardening or working in an orchard or farm? Do you even know what it is like to grow your own food? I often traveled by horseback long before I had a bicycle. Did you? That way of life is mostly gone. If you remember such a childhood, you have something to teach others who will never know that kind of experience.

Did you have an interesting job? Did you travel and find adventure around the world? Or did you stay home and watch your community change around you?

Did you have interesting family or a partner or spouse? Did you break rules or obey them?

Everyone has a story to tell and share with others. By sharing, you teach.

?Use nouns and synonyms to help the reader know what you are writing about and increase the keywords in your content.?

It?s fantastic. Everyone should use it. I use it. I love it. I couldn?t live without it. It?s such an important part of my life, I would be lost without it. You need it, too.

What am I talking about? WordPress? Love? Water? My car?

We are taught in school to use the primary noun at the beginning of a page or paragraph and then refer to it as a pronoun from that point forward. Search engines don?t work that way. They need the words and the proper names of the words.

WordPress is fantastic. Everyone should use WordPress. I use WordPress. I love WordPress. I couldn?t live without WordPress. WordPress is such an important part of my life, I would be lost without it. You need WordPress, too.

It seems excessive when you read it slowly, but if your eye is scanning fast down a web page looking for the words to ring the bell and tell you that you?ve found the answer you?ve been looking for ? using a lot of words helps the reader know they found the answer.

?Learn how to write keyword-rich content to increase your page ranking. More importantly, write with keywords to help your reader know exactly what you are writing about.?

Just as you need to use nouns not pronouns, you need to use all the words that describe what you are writing about.

That scanning process, skimming the page to find the answer, is a critical part of our web experience. Using the words people look for, all the synonyms and related phrases, helps them not only find what the are looking for, but it helps search engines help them find the words.

There is no greater joy in my blogging world than to get a comment from someone saying thank you for having the answer they needed so desperately. My words helped them find my page and get the answers they needed.

?If you make your readers think, you?ve succeeded in interacting with them. If you make them write, you?ve succeeded twice over.?

Many years ago, I received one of the first Thinking Blogger Awards. I was so humbled, I wrote Are You a Thinking Blogger? to explain why I should not have received the award as I felt I lacked the right qualifications.

That?s what I?m looking for in a thinking blogger. Someone totally committed to their belief. It?s more than that, too.

It?s passion.

It?s that fire in your belly, morally committed passion that leaps off the blog page.

You know it from the moment you land on the blog and read the first sentence. You know this person knows what they are talking about, how to talk about it, and that this is place to find the information you want. You know you?ve come to the right place.

There is no doubt. You know in an instant that this is someone who knows what they are blogging about.

That?s a thinking blogger.

Platinum Thinking Blogger Award given out to a real thinking blogger.They honored me with the first ever Platinum Thinking Blogger Award for making them rethink their own award.

I believe that a good blogger is one that publishes content worth reading. I believe a great blogger publishes content worth linking to, worth spreading around the social web, worth discussing over the water cooler.

?The fresh perspective will help you edit and improve the content. You might find new life in your old posts and direct more traffic their way.?

In my classes and workshops I ask participants where they think on their site most people enter and visit. They usually answer the front page or their most popular post.

The correct answer is ?any post.?

Any post can be a gateway to your site. If it pops up in a person?s search results and has the right answer, it?s the perfect post for them.

Clean up all your old posts once in a while. Well, most of them.

Start with your most popular posts and make sure they say what you want them to say, and say it well. Stumble across a post that needs a little spring cleaning, clean that one up, too.

?A great idea does not translate automatically into good writing. It?s the editing that clarifies your writing so the idea comes through. It?s as much about the words you add as the words you take away to increase the post?s clarity and power.?

Many years ago, I was asked to write an article for a popular photography magazine on five photographers photographing and leading photo tours in Africa. The article was almost done when the email came in from the editor that made me scream in agony so loud, my husband could hear me through the entire house to the backyard. He came running.

?Are you okay? What happened??

?The article!?

?The article??

?The editor gave me the word count.?

My husband waited patiently as I gathered up the courage to put the number out into the air.

?2000 words.?

You should have heard his strangled scream.

Do the math. 2000 divided by 5. That?s 400 words each. Barely enough to squeeze in the types of cameras and names of the places they visit. No room for tips, techniques, recommendations to future travelers, nothing.

We went into panic mode and started editing like mad, words flying off the computer?s virtual paper. Three days later, 5,000 words down to 3,000, my husband had this revelation.

?When I was in college, I used to think how hard it would be to be a professional writer. Given a 1000 word paper to write in college, I thought, ?How do they come up with all those words?? Now I know that it?s easy to come up with the words. It?s harder to get rid of the words.?

Editing is about removing the words, about sifting through the words to find the ones that best convey their message.

Blogging is writing, never forget that. Edit, edit, edit. Great blog posts don?t just happen. They are edited.

?If they don?t get it, they won?t click it. If they do click, and the content doesn?t match, they won?t be back.?

Make your titles count. Make your titles encourage clicks. They are usually the first thing someone sees when they search, so make a good first impression.

I had a popular article published many times called ?The Business of Nature Photography.? I was bored with the title and wanted something snappier for the much-visited article. My mother came up with ?Making $$ Doing What Comes Naturally.? I liked the originality. In three months, the stats for that page dropped by 75%. Ouch. A few months later, pageviews were down to single digits daily. I changed the name to ?How to Succeed in the Business of Nature Photography? and three months later the article was back at the top.

It doesn?t pay to get clever with your post titles. Trust me.

Titles that don?t match the content, often used to catch someone?s attention rather than deliver quality content, makes people angry. Trust me, they won?t be back, and they are likely to warn their friends.

?You have less than a second to capture your reader?s attention. If the user on your site, feed, or search engine summary doesn?t ?get the point? in the first two or three sentences, you?ve lost them.?

Just as you need words to get the attention of search engines, thus visitors, you have less than 200 words to grab their attention and keep it.

Those first few words are also highlighted in search results, so they had better make a good impression to encourage a click.

?Don?t waste words. Don?t tell your readers things they really don?t want to know. Get to the point and stop wasting your time and theirs.?

?I still have to take a shower, and I?m late for work, but I wanted to tell you about this because I think it?s important, so I?ll just rush this off before I jump in the shower and head to work.?

This is quoted directly from a blog post about something of value to me, but I had to bite my lip in agony until I got through the opening paragraph to the meat of the subject.

The shower, late for work, excuses ? the useless words had absolutely nothing to do with what they were writing about. She was writing about a WordPress technique I was eager to learn about ? if I didn?t know the writer, I would have abandoned the page immediately.

Watch the wasteful words you use, the excuses, and the back story we don?t need to know. Get to the point.

?As a guide, write on three points, all related, and publish that. Want to write about 40 different unrelated topics? Don?t stuff them all into one post. Publish one for each topic.?

I heard this from a childhood mentor. ?If you are interested in 100 things, you are interested in nothing.? She was right.

We want to know you are the expert in your subject, and we want that information delivered in digestible chunks.

My general rule of blogging thumb is one point per paragraph, no more than three main points per blog post. Moving onto a new subject, write a new post.

?When readers follow along with the process, they better understand how it works and why it works for themselves.?

What works is the same technique that holds true for public speakers as well as technical writers and bloggers.

Tell them what you are going to tell them. Tell them. Then tell them what you told them.

I?ve tried all the other techniques. Trust me, it works. Use it.

?Web writing is very different from traditional writing. Learn the difference and you will have happier readers.?

Blog paragraphs are short. Traditional writing can have paragraphs that go on across multiple pages.

Example of a blog post with long paragraphs. Example of a blog post with the paragraphs broken up into smaller sections.

?Move the reader through the story. Make each sentence lead the reader to the next sentence, and each paragraph draws them into the next. They want to turn the page and consume the words as they read along. Make them want to scroll down for more.?

Example of a well formed article with section headings, bullets, and the proper use of bold.How long is too long for a blog post? Asking my classes, they often answer with interesting word counts: 200, 300, 400 words.

The only study I found early in the blogging industry years found that people will read to the end of a blog post no matter the length if it was interesting enough to finish reading.

Someone came up with the 400 word limit and it spread, but it is anecdotal. If you can find actual research, please let me know.

Until then, write your blog posts in an length appropriate to your audience needs, and in a way that makes them want to keep reading to the very end.

Use headings, those bold subtitles created with HTML tags such as <h1>, <h2>, <h3>, etc., to divide up the content by sections and pull the eye visually through the page.

?Writing in HTML, I blog faster, more efficiently, and I control how my words look and are presented on the page.?

Example of HTML in a web page source code.If you talk to power bloggers, the ones that have endured and have the income to brag about, you will find that the majority of them skip the visual, WYSIWYMG editor and go straight to writing in HTML.

When you write in HTML, you write faster. No more wasting time moving your hand away from the keyboard to the mouse and hunting for the buttons. Your fingers do all the work, focused on the keyboard, leaving it only to add images.

Before you freak out, learning HTML is just like learning enough words to get you through your next vacation. There are 10 HTML tags you need to know to blog, of which five you will use on a regular basis.

If you can learn to say hello, goodbye, how much is this, where is the bathroom, and taxi, you can learn the minimal HTML required to blog.

?Lists are great ways of conveying a lot of information in digestible chunks.?

To get to the store, go down the driveway and turn right, then go until you see the white mailbox, the big one, and turn left. Go another mile and turn right on Orange Street. Go two blocks and turn at the Hazelnut Tree ? it?s the only one on the block ? and the post office will be on the right.

Hard to read and remember. Try this.

To get to the store:

  1. At the end of the driveway, turn right.
  2. At the large white mailbox, turn left.
  3. Travel one mile and turn right on Orange Street.
  4. Go two blocks and turn left.
  5. Go two blocks. You will see a large Hazelnut tree.
  6. The post office is on the right.

We are orderly people. We tend to like a lot of information in lists.

We like ordered lists for directions. We like bullets to breakdown the information.

It?s faster to read, easier to absorb, and looks cleaner on the web page.

?Don?t assume we know what you are talking about.?

If your readers are strictly in your industry, then they will easily recognize all the jargon and acronyms you toss out here and there in your content.

If your readers are the general public, let us in on the secret code.

I often forget that people don?t understand all the jargon associated with WordPress. I write about it so much, it is easy to take shortcuts and use WordPress terminology to explain how things work. Within a few minutes of publishing such a post, the first comments usually ask to clarify what I was talking about. I have to dig back into the article and add explanations to the terminology so everyone knows what I?m talking about.

It?s easy to get comfortable with industry-speak. Watch yourself and make sure that everyone understands what you are writing about.

?Your writing should give the illusion you are speaking directly to the reader without including all of the stutters, ?ums?, and ?likes? we hear in every day conversation. Don?t write like you have a dictionary or thesaurus sitting next to you. Match the writing style with the content.?

The first rule of writing is to write what you know. The second is to write like how you speak.

I don?t agree. Here is a real comment example from my article, ?Blog Writing: I lk yr blg.?

hello ive done most of it but doesnt wrk with me, ive gt a decent content on ma blog? what do u suggest?

You know, I kinda like like your blog and I think that you, like, should, like, blog more, like, right. BTW, kinda cool that you, like, have a blog, you know, like how.

Seriously, if you speak that way, don?t you dare blog that way.

However, if you are blogging for an audience that speaks like that, blog that way. Blog for your audience and speak their language.

For the rest of us, um, keep, um, your stutters, um, and, you know, pauses, like that, you know, kinda sorta to the safety of your, um, home and office, like.

?No Wishy-Washy Passive Voice. When people are searching, they like to be told what to do. Tell them.?

Passive voice is writing with words that lack authority or offer doubt or insincerity. Have, have been, kind of, maybe, might, could of, should of, all the words we use when we aren?t sure what we are talking about.

Speak with authority. It?s your blog. Own it.

?Don?t leave your reader wondering why she is on this page. Make your point early. Make your point obvious. Back it up with the details.?

We have a friend who starts speaking in the middle of a paragraph rather than at the beginning. While starting in the middle can be exciting, it usually leaves us totally ignorant of what he is talking about until he is almost done and we get the words that make all the puzzle pieces fall into place.

?Oh, you are talking about your boat. I thought you were talking about your dog!?

?What??

He can?t figure out what?s wrong with us that we can?t read his mind and figure out what he is talking about.

We all have these people in our lives. Don?t blog like them. Don?t assume the reader can read your mind.

When you write, ?As I was saying yesterday,? make sure that ?yesterday? is in a link to the post you just referenced so we can click back and catch up with the story.

Use intra-site links every time you can to help the reader follow your track and learn more about what you are writing about.

?Wild accusations, suggestions, and analogies do not build trust and respect. Make your opinions be based upon valid facts and identifiable references and citations. Be prepared to back your word up with the truth.?

As I explained in ?If You Can?t Say Anything Nice, Come Blog By Me? on the The Blog Herald, there is an art to being a nasty blogger or one that thrives on conjecture and innuendos, snacking on rumors.

Remember that truth inspires respect. Earn it.

We all need to rant once in a while. It helps to write it all out and get it out of your system. Just don?t hit publish until you can ask yourself if it really serves your audience well. Does it help them? Does it educate? Does it offer helpful advice? Or is it just a rant for the sake of a rant?

If it serves the greater good, hit publish. If it is self-serving, keep it as a draft or hit delete.

?WRITING IN ALL CAPS IS SCREAMING. Use Caps Correctly.?

This isn?t new news. Then why are you still using CAPS in your blog posts?

Here is the order of emphasis when writing on the web.

Italics are emphasis and used to represent air quotes, foreign words, and titles.
Bold is very loud and used for loud emphasis and subtitles. Use bold rarely and only for a word or two.
ALL CAPS IS CONSIDER SCREAMING.
ALL CAPS IN BOLD IS SHOUTING.
Words in italic and bold are considered lunatic screaming.
ALL CAPS IN ITALIC AND BOLD MEANS WE?RE CALLING THE FUNNY FARM TO RESCUE YOU FROM YOURSELF.

Use them all judiciously and rarely.

?People will condemn less than perfect writing. Don?t give them a chance with careless grammar mistakes.?

The grammar and punctuation police are everywhere. Let not a period or comma catch their notice. Seriously.

Yet, if you do get into their sights, remember than any comment is a good comment. Its interaction, even if they are fixing your writing. Writing in traditional formats, you never get a chance to make a correction. With the crowd-sourcing of web content, you do.

[Note: The lack of an apostrophe in the above contraction was left to serve as an example. If it irritates you, you are a member of the grammar and punctuation police and I respect your gift.]

  • ?Air quotes? are not created with quote marks. Air quotes are italics air quotes.
  • Quotes are for titles and dialog.
  • Quote marks are ALWAYS outside ?punctuation,? not ?inside?.
  • Links are always inside punctuation not outside.

Example of a blog post with improper use of bold words.Example of a blog post written with too many smilies or emoticons making it hard to read.

Point made.

?Ugly is as ugly does. Don?t clutter up your site with ugly link dumps.?

http://lorelle.wordpress.com is a link dump.

Link dumps are ugly and hard to read.

Lorelle on WordPress is the right way to create the link. It is easier to read, incorporates itself into the sentence, and looks cleans.

Converting a long link into a short link with a link shortener is popular today with sharing of links through social media. When included in post content, they are still ugly.

Learn how to link properly.

?If you aren?t using titles in links and alt in images, you are missing out on a very valuable use of keywords and content building. You are also not in compliance with web standards.?

Under the hood, a properly formed link looks like this:


 <a href="http://example.com/" title="Article on Wedding Photography">wedding photography</a>
 

Note that the link is properly formed and features the title attribute, a description of what the destination link is about. This is required by US Federal Law and many international governments in accordance with web standards and accessibility laws.

The same applies to a properly formed image link, the link that makes an image appear on a website. It must have an alternative description and optional title.


 <img src="http://example.com/smith-wedding.jpg" alt="Photograph of bride and groom in park." title="Smith Wedding Couple" />
 

The alternative description must describe the image in a complete sentence. The title attribute is the ?title? of the photograph.

Search engines use words, remember? Use every opportunity to get those words in your content, including on links and images. It benefits you with SEO and keeps your site in compliance with the law.

?Convince us to click to play. A picture may speak for itself, but you have to do the writing for it.?

You need the words. You need to convince us to take time out of our day to day life and stick you in our ears or eyes.

Describe what the audio, podcast, screencast, video, whatever multimedia you are using. Include show notes. Give us the words to make us click and pay attention.

?Comments are mini-resumes, for you and your commenter.?

One of my most popular articles is ?How NOT to Comment on Comments.? It?s list of recommendations on how to comment well includes saying something intelligent, asking something intelligent, writing something intelligent, and adding to the conversation.

It also was the first to describe a comment as a mini-resume. It?s true. When you comment on blogs, your name becomes a link to your website. Say something brilliant, people will follow that link through to your own site. They want to know more about you. Give them a good reason to check you out.

Comments are also content. You have the right to edit blog comments or delete them.

My rule of thumb is this. I think I have the best readers and commenters in the world. We all mistakes, so I will gladly clean up their mistakes in their comments to make both of us look good. If you say something totally off topic and stupid, I will delete it. If you stay something on topic and stupid, I might leave it as I believe comments speak loudly for themselves and their authors.

Whatever your rule of thumb, make sure you publish your comment policy among your policies. It helps to let everyone know the rules of your sandbox.

?The words you fill your blog with tend to last. Make sure the words you use and the things you say are worth reading twenty years from now.?

There is timely content and timeless content. I tend towards the latter.

I really respect personal blogs, the ones that rattle on about the day to day life we lead, their adventures, the normal acts of a life lived.

In 10,000 years when archaeologists of the future dig through the remains of our present, the little data bytes we leave behind will help them understand how we lived, why we did what we did, and what happened to us in the dust of the past.

I write for them as well as for you. Maybe you should, too.

?Even if you write badly, if you write with conviction and passion, then we will read you.?

Honestly, this has been proven time and time again. Social media, especially Facebook and Twitter, are prime examples. You don?t have to write like an award winning author. If you write with conviction, passion, and sincerity, even the grammar and punctuation police will forgive you.

  • Content is synonymous with the subject.
  • Links are synonymous with the subject.
  • It builds a reputation.
  • It builds authority.
  • It becomes a destination.
  • It becomes a source.

If you want to get someone?s attention,
show them something
they?ve never seen before,
or show them something in a way
they?ve never seen before.

If you write with passion and conviction, who cares how you write or how you tell your story.

Make it up as you go along.

It?s the telling that matters.

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Source: http://lorelleteaches.wordpress.com/2012/10/14/what-you-must-know-about-writing-on-the-web/

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