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Saturday, September 30, 2006

Free Online Classes from The-Log.net

Teaching an online class just became easier with free resources from The-Log.net. The FREE services offered can be used to design and teach your own classes to your students for no charge.

Businesses can use the services to train newly hired employees and conduct in-service training wherever there is an Internet connection.

Schools can conduct lower cost distance learning classes without the high cost of licensed programs. This is a fully functional and robust system you can personalize to your needs.

The service is FREE for the asking!

Sunday, September 17, 2006

The #1 Affiliate Marketing Mistake

There are many ways to get started on the Internet and no few people will try Affiliate Marketing at some point in their journey. The attractions of this model make it an easy sell to novices. You just put some code on your page and visitors will follow the link to where an experienced company makes the sale for you and sends you a check.

Sounds like easy money, right? Well, if it was that easy wouldn't ALL the people wanting big money just be affiliates?

If the model was that profitable, why would people bother to create businesses of their own? Why not just promote established products?

Okay, so for most people who try to be Affiliate Marketers, the rewards are slender and not what they were hoping to see. Do their experiences make Affiliate Marketing a bad business model? Is this just a waste of time?

No. Affiliate Marketing can be a profitable way to make some money if you are willing to work at it just a little bit. The biggest mistake most people make is in not promoting their affiliate links the right way.

If all you do is put some link code on your page you are throwing away the visitors you have worked hard to find.

What should you do instead? If you are seriously interested in correcting this problem I have the answer for you. And I'll tell you for free. Here's the link.
http://www.myklin.com/affilate-mistakes.html

Saturday, September 09, 2006

Where do the sex offenders live?

Have you ever wondered just where someone who is convicted of a sexual crime ends up living after they spend their time in jail (if they do jail time, of course). It would be nice to think they have specially watched accommodations somewhere they can't get into more trouble. Unfortunately, this isn't a story, it's real life and the sad truth is they are likely to move into your neighborhood before you realize they are there.

Although there are laws that say we are allowed to know when a sex offender lives in our neighborhoods, there aren't any rules that say the offender has to come up and introduce themselves to you so you'll know who they are. Yes, they must report themselves to the police but that's as far as it goes.

It's up to you to keep yourself aware of these added risks to your neighborhood's safety.

There is a free service that will tell you about the sex offenders who live near you. The website is www.Be-Warned.net.

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Missing Steve Irwin

Some events in the world can leave us a little speechless at times. I had been unable to say what Steve's passing had meant to me (even though I'd never met him in person). Fortunately for me, a friend sent me this wonderful letter and expressed much that I was unable to articulate.

Thank you, Corina, for saying what I not been able to. Here are her words,

"In Memory of Steve Irwin 1962-2006

Steve Irwin came into our lives in a big way only ten years ago. Although he'd spent his whole life absorbed in an all-out mission to save the planet's wildlife, he became a world-wide television icon around 1996.

The Crocodile Hunter died doing what he loved. Irwin was known for pushing the envelope to the extreme in his wildlife documentaries. On September 3, his enthusiasm and exuberance lead him into the path of a sting ray. In an instant, Steve met his end. He was struck with the large ray's poisonous barb. It pierced through his rib cage and into his heart. In mere moments, he was gone.

Certainly no one who had watched this man risk life and limb on a daily basis could have been surprised if he was injured, even seriously, in filming a documentary or in presenting some giant, dangerous wild animal to the public. His comfort level with truly deadly creatures was far greater than most people's. His grasp of an animal's temperament and mood were uncanny.Even armed with this innate awareness, however, Irwin must have had more than his fair share of close calls and near misses; probably more than any of us will ever witness.

Irwin never advised the rest of us to take the chances he did. What he did (thrilling audiences world-wide on a weekly basis) he did for two reasons. First and foremost, he risked his own life to save the lives of animals. Second, and just as important, he did it in a very important, public way, bringing the rest of us into the animal world in a fashion we would never, thankfully, experience without him.

Steve's theory was simple. He wanted to spread his infectious love for wildlife and his understanding of the natural world to the rest of us, so that we, in turn, would value and protect it. It was his singular mission in life. It is, ultimately, the mission he died for.

Irwin's enthusiasm was incredible, and contagious. He was more than a television personality, more than a fang wrangler. He was personable, passionate, engaging. You didn't have to be from Australia to identify with him. In time you would come to love his peculiar way with words, his genuine accent, his bobbing eyebrows, his infectious smile. He was incapable of speaking in a monotone, even when he tried to whisper. His eyes were forever alive with the possibility of a new adventure.

I never met Steve Irwin. When his passing was announced Monday morning, I felt as though I had lost a close and personal friend. I am probably not alone in this sentiment. Steve didn't leave any of us out of his myriad journeys. He brought us into the heart and home of his family and his life's work. He looked directly into the camera as though he was speaking one to one with each and every one of us. Steve was not reserved or polite about requesting our attention. He was on a mission, and he wanted us all to understand how urgent it was, and how vital our own participation in preserving the natural world really is. He spoke in plain language, and he spoke to all of us.

The world has lost one of its best known and most passionate conservationists. But even as I mourn his loss, I can almost feel his presence. What can we possibly do to offer this man a fitting memorial?We have to stand up, and take the place he left so suddenly. If Steve could speak to us now, I don't think his message would be any different than it has been throughout his brief lifetime. He would ask us to stand up for animals; to protect their habitats, to petition our governments to create and maintain sanctuaries for wildlife. He would urge us to push for tougher laws against animal cruelty and the sale of wild animals. He would passionately encourage us to do all that we can to protect and preserve this precious planet and all of its inhabitants. And I think he would tell us to love and cherish our families, and share our love for nature with them.

Steve Irwin was one of the most important conservationists of our era. He gave everything he had to bring the natural world to our attention. Let us honor his legacy with more than words. Let us honor his lifelong contribution with effort and attention of our own. Not one among us may possess his charisma, but we are all capable of dedicating time and effort toward preserving and protecting the natural world; our world, the only world we have."

Corina Roberts
FounderRedbird
P.O. Box 702, Simi Valley, CA 93062
www.RedbirdsVision.org