Friday, July 30, 2010

personal finance and budgeting


penis enlargement

Brad Friedman and Desi Doyen: Green <b>News</b> Report: July 29, 2010 (Audio)

a href="http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=324031097"> TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.

<b>News</b> comment: &#39;The government isn&#39;t exactly doing the oil industry <b>...</b>

In response to Bruce Alpert's report on NOLA.com "Sen Mary Landrieu proposes oil spill liability compromise," reader ourtime has this to say: "Please explain how this is a 'bailout.' The companies will still be liable for damages if ...

Small Business <b>News</b>: Ups and Downs | Small Business <b>News</b>, Tips <b>...</b>

With recovery shaky at best and fears of a double dip recession still looming, small businesses have seen many ups and downs. There are many ways to deal with.



New Feature: Neighborhood Reports! by QuizzleTown


internet marketing course

Brad Friedman and Desi Doyen: Green <b>News</b> Report: July 29, 2010 (Audio)

a href="http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=324031097"> TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.

<b>News</b> comment: &#39;The government isn&#39;t exactly doing the oil industry <b>...</b>

In response to Bruce Alpert's report on NOLA.com "Sen Mary Landrieu proposes oil spill liability compromise," reader ourtime has this to say: "Please explain how this is a 'bailout.' The companies will still be liable for damages if ...

Small Business <b>News</b>: Ups and Downs | Small Business <b>News</b>, Tips <b>...</b>

With recovery shaky at best and fears of a double dip recession still looming, small businesses have seen many ups and downs. There are many ways to deal with.


big white booty

New Feature: Neighborhood Reports! by QuizzleTown































Tuesday, July 27, 2010

foreclosure law

I have not contributed much to the Moderate Voice during 2010 while I actively posted numerous submissions during 2009. This is due to a variety of factors that some TMV contributors and readers might understand and others may simply dismiss as just worthless excuses.


Throughout 2010, I have continued to read TMV once a day, sometimes dropping by twice as it adds new posts far more frequently than all other major Internet blogs. I really enjoy the many excellent contributions of current bloggers and editors. I constantly tell friends and acquaintances to read TMV as a great alternative to the generally biased, ignorant, and worthless crap incessantly emanating from most other Internet sources. The new commentary system also works well and the reader comments are really worth digesting.


Over the past 6 months, I have started a number of posts and abandoned them because other TMV contributors have written similar and much better articles, printing them as I still labor to finish mine while scrambling on a few part-time contract assignments that might generate some measly income. I am not a journalist so I do not possess that talent or drive to write frequently or even that well.


I have spent most of my life writing but 90% of my work has been dedicated to business and legal memoranda, contract drafting, creating business plans, making governmental applications and responses to regulatory, tax and zoning issues, legal briefs and court filings, and a variety of complex business and legal correspondences on many subjects. I could churn out those “babies” quite rapidly when the prospect of continuing or future financial compensation was involved. My pro bono assistance to some home owners with mortgage and foreclosure issues has not generated any referrals.


Internet blogging is not my strong suit. Some friends and acquaintances have recommended that I also try writing some novels, but decent character and plot development appears to be beyond my abilities. Two longer literary works lay around incomplete and garbled in various computer files. Besides, there have been published millions of literary works by far better writers, all of which can be found all over the Internet and in our bookstores and libraries. One can easily choke on all the cooking books out there today. Its disappointing to realize that my limited past contributions have been pretty useless even when cross-posted on other well-known blogs. I appear to be a prolific “writer” who in reality simply can’t write.


For the second time during my family’s 5-year residence in Arizona, we are being forced to move due to our landlord’s impending foreclosure. Fortunately Federal Public Law 111-22, effective 5/20/09, requires that all tenants receive 90-day’s notice to leave their rented premises from any owner, bank or trustee involved in a mortgage foreclosure, whether they are on a lease or on a month-to-month tenancy. We’re trying to get out of our current digs in less than half that time because the condominium complex is half empty and is no longer being well maintained.


I have nothing against our landlords but they were and are so under water financially with respect to their mortgages and current property values, they really have no sane alternatives. Legally, I can push the envelope to stay put over a longer period of time but our 11-year-old son starts the 6th Grade in Mid August, so what’s the point in fighting to stay in a place that we need to eventually leave? Of course there are additional financial burdens and logistic problems with moving. But in this depressed economy, those are probably not worth complaining about.


I am now on the free-fall toward personal oblivion that occurs to each of us who pass 50 years on this planet. I did not anticipate being in such a miserable financial state a decade ago.


When I complained about the national and global economic mess destroying so many lives in all age groups, two lucky arrogant imbeciles told me that my current plight and those of most individuals are solely our own faults and that we should not look to blame big business, casino banks and financial institutions, “laissez-faire” government, and the complete unleashing of sociopaths during the past 30 years. We should instead blame godless liberals, illegal immigrants, gays, and other lazy minorities for some of the nation’s ills. Overall they told me that I am a whiny socialist who cannot accept my divinely-assigned lot in life.


Naturally I slugged both of these commentators in the stomach and face and yelled a few choice profanities. I really felt better for a few days. I’m a small person and they were much larger individuals, so they fortunately felt nothing physically. I don’t worry about any civil lawsuits for assault though I would enjoy the ruckus I could cause in any Arizona courtroom, not being licensed here. However, writing on TMV, I cannot recommend others engaging in such wacko and uninhibited behavior.


Fortunately my spouse is working full-time and her income covers most all our basic living expenses. She also has a small 401K plan and health insurance for herself and our son. It’s not easy living on net income of around $2,000 a month but it can be done.


I have gone without any meaningful or affordable health insurance for many years. What I have purchased in the past has only been for catastrophic coverage with huge annual deductibles. It’s hard enough financially covering occasional physician visits and medications that fall well below the annual deductible. Others tell me that I am lucky to be generally healthy at my advanced age (50) and that I only require only 2 inexpensive pills to control my high blood pressure.


If I really get sick, I’ll do it on the public dole so the rest of you insured people pick up the tab because I won’t and can’t. Otherwise the U.S. medical industrial complex will simply refuse to assist me unless I come up with money up front. Well we all have to go sometime and my death panel is the quintessential American Capitalist system based upon ability to pay. Since I am not wealthy and not making a lot of money now, I’m really not worth anything to our society. Healthcare reform did not really tackle our bloated, wasteful health system that principally caters to wealthy hypochondriacs.


Over the past year, my small group of wary and sometimes frightened business clients has produced only sporadic work in any given month. Various marketing efforts to other shrinking or stagnating local small enterprises have not proven fruitful. The Phoenix prosperity since 2000 was principally based upon “growth” and when that stopped, so did the overall economy. Endless “job” searches, networking socials, or contract work applications in response to Internet research on various companies, job boards, Craigslist and other sources, have not garnered anything but a few dead-end interviews.


To state the obvious, I join many Americans in an overall sour mood towards our long-mismanaged economy. I have no interest commiserating with a bunch of out-of-work independent contractors and consultants who are as clueless as I am about what to do next. Most of the people inside companies with the authority to make contracts, buy things and services, hire people, and make decisions are no where to be found near any networking groups. I believe our weak economy is actually in the short-term “eye” of the proverbial hurricane, with a lot more permanent danger, wreckage, excitement and disaster coming over the next 2 to 10 years.


Our country has degenerated into a perverted crony capitalist system dominated by a corrupt oligarchy propped up by an Ivy League “meritocracy” that exists on paper only. Those people born into the right families, with the right schooling, networks, friends, and luck are successful financially in the American economy – even if they are wholly ignorant and incompetent. All those anecdotal “evidence” on a few success stories are merely ruses to keep Americans believing in worthless myths about our bankrupt “capitalist” system.


Our oligarchs, business and political leaders are continuously rewarded themselves for greater and greater failures merely because they are on top of our warped and bankrupt economic system. Other successful players in the U.S. economy have chosen crime, gambling and other unregulated activities. I am trying to discover my inner sociopath as I see most successful businesses today being based upon screwing others as quickly as possible, and then disappearing and starting the next short-term scam. Of course, this is only possible in our completely “unregulated” free-enterprise system. Anyone who believes that our economic and political systems are the best in the world is a complete moron.


Our society and economy no longer value or reward those who try to provide worthwhile goods and services to others. Because those with the power in government and our private sector to determine and influence national economic and political decisions are so out of touch with reality, greedy, narcissistic and sociopathic; I hold little hope for this country or even this planet’s long-term future. Our country and people cannot come up with a rationale set of priorities, and balance between competing interests. Some readers may argue with these basic premises, but most facts stubbornly point to my dismal conclusions.


Certainly the lack of any meaningful progress on any domestic or international issues, plus the continuing massive oil gush in the Gulf does not make me a “Happy Camper” during 2010 I have watched this country become consumed by various intellectual cancers: Ignorance, fear, anger, selfishness, extreme political, social and religious polarization, the rise of extremist views, and the overall sense that we as a nation can no longer accomplish anything except yell endless and mindless rants at each other.


TMV has a group of writers and editors that vainly try to speak rationally and sensibly, but compared to the 24/7 din or our superficial media and national obsessions with celebrities and useless new electronic gadgets, does anything matter any more?


To say the least, I’m in a deep funk and depression – all of which is my own damn fault according to some experts. I used to climb out by focusing on bigger issues than those plaguing me, or on other people rather than contemplating myself. Those tactics have not been working for me anymore. I’m not too sure what to do with the few decades I have left on this planet.


I have no interest in doing volunteer work – the ruse of the American right to get Americans to work for free. There are no valuable connections to be made in such work, nor will it ever turn into even modestly paid work at some future date. That’s simply not a viable option when one needs to make some money to survive. Those who propose such pointless alternatives to solve massive national unemployment and under-employment also deserve to be punched in the face.


Now our nation’s arrogant oligarchs and cluelss pundits are preaching miserly governmental fiscal policies as their “recession” has ended. When will the private sector ever grow again – only if it gets more tax cuts and subsidies? It has become more important to constantly worship and serve the gods of our bond and equity markets over the real lives of tens of millions of Americans and their families. What kind of convoluted and short-sighted thought process came up with such stupidity?


My views on all types of political, social and economic issues have been radicalized over the past 10 years and particularly during the past 6 months. This country might need an updated 1789 French Revolution “cleansing” of its powerful political and wealthy economic classes. However, they have successful convinced the masses to get angry at all the other small and powerless groups in the country, based upon all types of useless distinctions, but that has successfully deflected where the real anger should be directed.


The only thing that matters in the U.S. today is the huge and obscene disparity in wealth and income between the top 10% and the rest of the country. Until that is radically altered by any means possible, nothing will improve. I no longer consider myself to be a “moderate.” Thus my frequent contributions to TMV might be counter-productive and unwanted by the editorial staff.


I think there no longer exists any rational middle or center left in this country. The choices we face are simply incompatible and cancel each other out completely. This extreme polarization will necessitate a long-needed political and economic split of this country into many post-empire self-sustaining pieces. Our 18th Century Constitution and similar mindsets of many Americans are hopelessly outdated for the 21st Century realities.


I hope the end of the American experiment comes sooner rather than later. The baby boomers and my nameless generation currently in power deserve to reap what we have sown during our destructive, greedy, narcissistic short-sighted and worthless lifetimes. Great empires commit suicide from within and our country is rapidly moving towards such a complete collapse. I am really having trouble giving a damn anymore about this country or anyone living in it.


Marc Pascal, fed up and still ranting in Phoenix, AZ



Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli has sued two Virginia Beach mortgage loan modification companies, claiming they charged consumers as much as $1,200 in advance for help to fend off foreclosures.



Under the state's foreclosure rescue law, a business can't charge a fee for its services until after completing the job, as long as the deal doesn't include the sale or transfer of residential property. The two lawsuits filed Monday in Virginia Beach Circuit Court claim Nationwide Loan Modification Bureau LLC and Real Estate Resolutions LLC charged fees of as much as $1,200 and $995 respectively before starting work. The suits seek refunds for consumers in cases for which services were not completely performed, and also seeks civil penalties of as much as $2,500 for each alleged violation.



"During these difficult times, the last thing people need is to be kicked when they are down," Cuccinelli said in a statement. Real Estate Resolutions could not be reached immediately for comment and an automated operator said the number for Nationwide Loan Modification Bureau was not in service.



Paying up-front fees is a "red flag" to avoid when looking for foreclosure prevention help, says the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. The agency recommends contacting your lender first to try to negotiate a new repayment schedule. But if that fails, the FTC says to stay away from businesses that:


  • guarantee to stop the foreclosure regardless of the circumstances

  • collect fees before providing services

  • tell consumers not to contact lenders, lawyers or credit and housing counselors

  • accept payment only by cashier's check or wire transfer

  • instruct consumers to make mortgage payments to them, rather than the lenders

  • tells customers to transfer the property deeds to them or offers to buy houses for cash at a price not set by the housing market

  • offer to fill out the paperwork or put pressure on consumers to sign paperwork they haven't fully read or understand


Consumers facing foreclosure have other options before enlisting a foreclosure prevention company. Read about some of those on WalletPop.
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Sony unveils 24mm F2, 35mm F1.8 and 85mm F2.8 Alpha lenses <b>...</b>

Sony unveils 24mm F2, 35mm F1.8 and 85mm F2.8 Alpha lenses: Sony has released three prime lenses for its Alpha SLR system. First up is the eagerly-awaited Carl Zeiss Distagon T* 24mm F2 SSM, which we saw in prototype form at PMA.

iPhone 4 hitting 17 more countries on Friday | Apple - CNET <b>News</b>

The newest flavor of Apple's smartphone will arrive in additional markets July 30, including Canada, Denmark, Ireland, Italy, and Singapore--but not South Korea. Read this blog post by Lance Whitney on Apple.

Family: NATO Recovered Body of Missing US Sailor Justin McNeley in <b>...</b>

(July 27) -- NATO has recovered the body of one of the two US servicemen who disappeared in Afghanistan last week, the international force said today, and the military pressed the search for his comrade who's believed to have been ...



Balmoral Road House by jasonnathan


internet marketing course

Sony unveils 24mm F2, 35mm F1.8 and 85mm F2.8 Alpha lenses <b>...</b>

Sony unveils 24mm F2, 35mm F1.8 and 85mm F2.8 Alpha lenses: Sony has released three prime lenses for its Alpha SLR system. First up is the eagerly-awaited Carl Zeiss Distagon T* 24mm F2 SSM, which we saw in prototype form at PMA.

iPhone 4 hitting 17 more countries on Friday | Apple - CNET <b>News</b>

The newest flavor of Apple's smartphone will arrive in additional markets July 30, including Canada, Denmark, Ireland, Italy, and Singapore--but not South Korea. Read this blog post by Lance Whitney on Apple.

Family: NATO Recovered Body of Missing US Sailor Justin McNeley in <b>...</b>

(July 27) -- NATO has recovered the body of one of the two US servicemen who disappeared in Afghanistan last week, the international force said today, and the military pressed the search for his comrade who's believed to have been ...


big white booty

Balmoral Road House by jasonnathan


Monday, July 26, 2010

about internet marketing


I’m Neil Glassman and my beats for Social Times include social media marketing and advertising tools, techniques and success stories. Sometimes my posts go off on a tangent, focusing on small business social media issues or research with broader implications.


How did I get the gig? Well, I certainly did not tell Nick O’Neill the whole story that follows.


I didn’t realize growing up that AM radio was one of the original social networks. It had Top 40 formats (mashups), DJ shout outs (tweets), contests to win logo T-shirts (badges) and exclusive clubs to which everyone belonged (Facebook groups).


I got into late night talk shows (blogs), which had an intimacy and affinity with listeners that radio has lost and web social networks have yet to fully discover. My parents didn’t think it was such a great idea for me to stay up late listening on school nights and took away my TV privileges for one night as punishment. That was the night of The Beatles’ first appearance on Ed Sullivan.


My luck with media improved over the years and I found myself marketing technology for media companies. My training was much like everyone else’s in the field: a box of Mad Magazine “best-of” books, learning how to touch-type and a brief career teaching emotionally disturbed junior high schoolers.


In the beginning, I worked with startups, turning underdogs into wonderdogs. Recently I’ve helped a few companies avoid a mid-life crisis. Whatever my responsibilities are for a particular company, my favorite part is finding ways to present a solution to the marketplace and having the marketplace react by saying, “Ah-Ha!”


Successful marketing means thinking outside the box while delivering campaigns inside the box. I leaped on the web-based and electronically delivered marketing platforms very early and with good success. When Nick put out a call for writers on marketing and advertising, I thought it was a cool opportunity and am grateful to have been chosen to contribute to Social Times. My posts are a great way to share my explorations of the potential of the social web, not just for marketers, but for the world’s cultures.


As marketers, our first priority is to develop campaigns that are effective. If we manage to leave a slogan, image or song in our collective unconscious in the process, that’s a great bonus. In my collaborations, I’ve had the chance to participate in some firsts — at least I think they were firsts. If you know something I don’t, teach me.


The first music video shown on TV that was shot and produced totally on video — no film conversion at any step. The Towel Tapes, February 1979.


Marketing the first hardware product to include mp3. Telos Zephyr, April 1993.


The first time the Internet ground to a halt because too many were trying to log in to a multimedia event. Streaming George Clinton concert audio to demonstrate Macromedia Shockwave, the precursor to Flash. November 1996.


On the personal front, I’m a New Yorker with a huge appetite for great songwriters and musicians of diverse genres. Tweet me and I’ll send you a link to my calendar of all the free concerts in town this summer.


Blogging works best when it’s participatory, so join in the conversation with the talented team on Social Times. Pitch me ideas for posts about using social media for marketing and advertising. Don’t forget to include how you are going to make the market say, “Ah-Ha!”


Susan Payton is the President of Egg Marketing & Public Relations, an Internet marketing firm. She blogs at The Marketing Eggspert Blog. Follow her on Twitter @eggmarketing. Download her newest e-book, “Content is Queen: How Article & Blog Writing Will Increase Your Sales.“

Companies love positive feedback. They share it on Twitterclass="blippr-nobr">Twitter, post it on their website and use it as marketing fodder. But what about when feedback is, well, less than pleasant? What can you do with a handful (or more) of irate customers? Do you ignore them? Bury them out back? Not in today’s social atmosphere.

Rather than try to sweep these unhappy customers under the rug, look at them as a challenge and an opportunity to improve your brand and leverage them for some publicity.

Why You Want Angry Customers

Well, maybe you don’t want angry customers, but let’s be honest — you’ll never have 100 percent customer satisfaction. No one does. So use those unhappy customers to better understand what you’re doing wrong, and learn from the experience. And while you’re at it, turn the angry customers into brand evangelists.

There are several ways to connect with unhappy customers in a meaningful way:

  • Hold a panel or forum in person; give them a tour of your facility and hold a venting session
  • Work virtually; host an online panel to get feedback from them
  • Work one-on-one to understand their concerns and address them individually

In-Person Events

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Dell recently held its first Customer Advisory Panel event at their headquarters in Round Rock, TX. They invited two groups of 15 bloggers and social media gurus. One group was full of people who had negative experiences with the company and who were vocal about their displeasure. The second group was made up of people that Dell considered brand evangelists; people who loved Dell and told others.

The attendees started the morning with their gripes; customer service issues came up again and again. The heads of customer service and marketing were present and actively engaged. As they listened, they took notes, then asked questions and they promised they would make changes.

That type of customer empowerment is important. Now, whether they’ll go through with the promised changes is another story, but it was clear that Dell understood it was time to start paying attention to the public’s perception of its brand, and make some changes to keep their customers.

Nestlé is another company that has been successful at holding an event to let people engage with its brand directly. After a resurgence in interest in the Nestle Boycott a few years ago, Nestlé decided to invite a group of bloggers to what it called its “Happy, Healthy Gathering” in 2009. Mommy bloggers, who’d been tweeting up a storm about the company’s stance on breastfeeding in third world countries, were invited to tour the facilities and give their input on the company.

Whether the event truly changed perceptions remains to be seen, but it did a great deal to show that Nestlé was putting in the effort to reach its audience.

Disclosure: I was one of the bloggers invited to participate Dell’s Customer Advisory Panel.

Virtual Panels

Virtual panels are decidedly less effective than in-person ones. But they can be good replacements for focus groups. Pssst is General Mills’ online testing ground for new products. The company sends participants coupons and free products to try, and in return they are asked to fill out surveys. The program is so successful that bloggers who write about saving money are gladly turning others onto joining Pssst.

Similarly, the Starbucks Passion Panel was designed to get customer feedback — for better or worse. The community of Starbucks drinkers gives their input via surveys and forums.

Passion Panel member Jennifer Boyd said, “Being on the Passion Panel means that I have access to direct input and discussion with other members. It enables me to give my opinion on Starbucks’ current and future products through surveys. The panel is a great way to engage with their loyal customers and solidifies a relationship with a consumer to a brand.”

Wal-Mart’s Elevenmoms platform is another example of how a mix of online community, shopper experience and in-person visits can work together to help the company gather new insights. John Andrews, former Senior Manager of Emerging Media for Wal-Mart and founder of the Elevenmoms, said the community succeeded in getting Wal-Mart’s attention in a few areas where it was lacking.

When the iPhone was launched in Wal-Mart stores, the Elevenmoms were invited to go through the purchase process. Some had no problems, but others did. It took one blogger two hours to buy a phone. Each blogger published her experience, and Wal-Mart took the feedback to its operations staff, who took notes and improved the purchase process.

“The Elevenmoms used direct social media interaction to improve the shopping process,” said Andrews.

Other feedback caused Wal-Mart to reconsider its layaway strategy. Having canceled the layaway plan due to costs, Wal-Mart got some flack from the Elevenmoms, who felt it made it easier to make big purchases. As a result, Wal-Mart developed its Site to Store platform, which provided the benefit of layaway online, so that local stores didn’t incur extra costs.

Disclosure: John Andrews now works with Collective Bias, a company with which I have collaborated on projects.

One-on-One

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Solving a customer’s problems and changing their perception individually is the least cost-effective method, but a little work goes a long way. And it starts with customer service personnel being properly trained to solve problems, and not to simply stick to “the script” at all costs. Look at Zappos or Disney for great examples of how service reps are empowered to solve problems.

Disney empowers each of its “cast members” (staff) to solve a guest’s problem. From the street sweeper to the reservation specialist, everyone has the ability to turn a negative situation into a good one. That might mean replacing a fallen ice cream cone, upgrading a guest’s hotel room, or simply answering politely the most commonly asked question on Disney property: what time is the three o’clock parade?

Disney is so good at customer service, they’ve opened the Disney Institute, a customer service training program helps other corporations use the same techniques that has made Disney such a success.

Likewise, Zappos is also famous for its customer service tactics. The reps don’t use scripts, and seem to genuinely care about solving problems. Many customers are pleasantly surprised when their shipping gets upgraded and they get their shoes even faster – at no additional charge.

By providing instant happiness to the customer, these brands can prevent a lot of the bad karma that comes down the road when an unhappy customer becomes an enraged customer who tells everyone he knows about how bad the company is (no one wants their own version of DellHell).

Conclusion

No matter how you interact with unhappy customers, the point is not to brush them off, and make sure you learn from it. Don’t just pretend to listen and then go on doing business as usual. Take the feedback as constructive criticism that can help you determine your company’s future. How you handle your failures could make you or break you.

More Business Resources from Mashable

- HOW TO: Evaluate Your Social Media Plan/> - Why Your Next Business Card May Be Virtual/> - HOW TO: Improve B2B Sales Productivity with Social Media/> - HOW TO: Use Social Media for Lead Generation/> - HOW TO: Use QR Codes for Small Business Marketing

Stock: Image courtesy of iStockphotoclass="blippr-nobr">iStockphoto, biffspandex

For more Business coverage:

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AMERICAblog <b>News</b>: &#39;Afghan War Diary&#39; — Wikileaks massive <b>...</b>

Note which news-blond(e)s trash Wikileaks. (I'm looking at you, Chuck Todd; prove me wrong.) Those that do — list them as unreliable. They're part of the War Sales Team. Operatives. I'll have more. This exposes a whole layer of analysis ...

Francine Hardaway: <b>News</b> Died This Week

But both the news and journalist Daniel Schorr died this week. Schorr died peacefully after a long and productive life. The news, however, was murdered. Unworthy commentators destroyed news.

Robert Naiman: Defense <b>News</b>: War Supplemental Not Needed to Fund <b>...</b>

If the war supplemental is not approved this week, the troops will still be paid and the troops will still be fully supplied. There is no "emergency" requiring action this week.



Darcy red&amp;white by cosraifoto


























Sunday, July 25, 2010

web internet marketing


I’m Neil Glassman and my beats for Social Times include social media marketing and advertising tools, techniques and success stories. Sometimes my posts go off on a tangent, focusing on small business social media issues or research with broader implications.


How did I get the gig? Well, I certainly did not tell Nick O’Neill the whole story that follows.


I didn’t realize growing up that AM radio was one of the original social networks. It had Top 40 formats (mashups), DJ shout outs (tweets), contests to win logo T-shirts (badges) and exclusive clubs to which everyone belonged (Facebook groups).


I got into late night talk shows (blogs), which had an intimacy and affinity with listeners that radio has lost and web social networks have yet to fully discover. My parents didn’t think it was such a great idea for me to stay up late listening on school nights and took away my TV privileges for one night as punishment. That was the night of The Beatles’ first appearance on Ed Sullivan.


My luck with media improved over the years and I found myself marketing technology for media companies. My training was much like everyone else’s in the field: a box of Mad Magazine “best-of” books, learning how to touch-type and a brief career teaching emotionally disturbed junior high schoolers.


In the beginning, I worked with startups, turning underdogs into wonderdogs. Recently I’ve helped a few companies avoid a mid-life crisis. Whatever my responsibilities are for a particular company, my favorite part is finding ways to present a solution to the marketplace and having the marketplace react by saying, “Ah-Ha!”


Successful marketing means thinking outside the box while delivering campaigns inside the box. I leaped on the web-based and electronically delivered marketing platforms very early and with good success. When Nick put out a call for writers on marketing and advertising, I thought it was a cool opportunity and am grateful to have been chosen to contribute to Social Times. My posts are a great way to share my explorations of the potential of the social web, not just for marketers, but for the world’s cultures.


As marketers, our first priority is to develop campaigns that are effective. If we manage to leave a slogan, image or song in our collective unconscious in the process, that’s a great bonus. In my collaborations, I’ve had the chance to participate in some firsts — at least I think they were firsts. If you know something I don’t, teach me.


The first music video shown on TV that was shot and produced totally on video — no film conversion at any step. The Towel Tapes, February 1979.


Marketing the first hardware product to include mp3. Telos Zephyr, April 1993.


The first time the Internet ground to a halt because too many were trying to log in to a multimedia event. Streaming George Clinton concert audio to demonstrate Macromedia Shockwave, the precursor to Flash. November 1996.


On the personal front, I’m a New Yorker with a huge appetite for great songwriters and musicians of diverse genres. Tweet me and I’ll send you a link to my calendar of all the free concerts in town this summer.


Blogging works best when it’s participatory, so join in the conversation with the talented team on Social Times. Pitch me ideas for posts about using social media for marketing and advertising. Don’t forget to include how you are going to make the market say, “Ah-Ha!”










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Real-Time Web



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More Real-Time Web coverage. Don't miss the next wave of opportunity on the Web supported by real-time technology! Get ReadWriteWeb's report, The Real-Time Web and its Future.



Augmented Reality




  • Qualcomm Launching SDK for Vision-Based AR on Android this Fall


More Augmented Reality coverage




Augmented Reality for Marketers and Developers: Our Newest Research Report


We're pleased to announce ReadWriteWeb's latest premium report, Augmented Reality for Marketers and Developers: Analysis of the Leaders, the Challenges and the Future. This report will help you develop a sophisticated understanding of Augmented Reality (AR), the mobile and Web technology that places data on top of a user's view of the physical world. The research included will help you decrease your AR development time to market by learning from the first wave of early adopters. AR offers a new marketing and product paradigm for a high impact, high value customer experience. More than 1,000 AR campaigns were kicked-off last year and we expect to see many more in 2010. In this report, we profile key AR development companies, their campaigns as well as development lessons learned. For more information or to buy the report, visit here.



Mobile Web




  • Kindle App for iPhone, iPad Now Does Audio and Video

  • Despite Glitches, iPhone 4 is Apple's Biggest Launch Ever

  • Footfeed Jumps into the Check-in Aggregation Game


More Mobile Web coverage




Internet of Things



  • Kuniavsky's Orange Cone: Designing Read-Write Web-Created Things


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ReadWriteStart


Our channel ReadWriteStart, sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark, is dedicated to profiling startups and entrepreneurs.




  • Top 5 Reasons Why Your Startup Needs an API

  • GitHub Introduces Organizations, Makes Managing Code Repositories Easier

  • YouPhonics Launches Music Collaboration Tool




ReadWriteCloud


Our channel ReadWriteCloud, sponsored by VMware and Intel, is dedicated to Virtualization and Cloud Computing.



  • Alcatel-Lucent Acquires Programmable Web - Well-Known Source For APIs

  • How to Connect an Office Building to an Activity Stream

  • The Cloud Can Save Us Billions...But Can We Afford it?



ReadWriteEnterprise


Our channel ReadWriteEnterprise is devoted to 'enterprise 2.0' and using social software inside organizations.



  • Antivirus Product Testing is Changing, Whether Vendors Like it or Not

  • Scheduling App Doodle Now Features Calendar Integration

  • Cisco Entering Tablet Market with Android-Based Device



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Our channel ReadWriteBiz is a resource and guide for small to medium businesses.



  • InDinero Launch Gives Small Businesses Real-Time Financial Tool

  • Essential Tools For SEO on a Budget



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<b>News</b> and Announcements | AAVSO

News and Announcements. New Web Site Launch! July 23, 2010 - 12:34am. AAVSO Alert Notice 422 July 16, 2010 - 5:20pm. Observing Campaign on Hubble's First Variable in M31: M31_V1. July 16, 2010: An observing campaign is being carried out ...

Small Business <b>News</b>: The Social Media Trend | Small Business Trends

Social media as a small business tool is definitely no fad. Look at how social media, from blogs to Twitter to Facebook, has changed the way businesses operate,

Google, LA hit speed bumps on move to cloud | Digital Media - CNET <b>...</b>

Google had a June 30 deadline to get all of Los Angeles' city employees up and running on Google Apps, but that didn't happen. Delay could cost Google more than $100000. Read this blog post by Sam Diaz on Digital Media.


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Web 2.0 and Marketing, HUH? by jtunkelo

























Thursday, July 22, 2010

manage personal finances




Five Best Personal Money Management Sites





Web-based financial management tools have grown in sophistication to the point where many people manage their entire financial lives with online tools. Here's a look at five of the most popular personal money management sites.

Photo a mashup of images by Leonardini and Wilton.


Earlier this week we asked you to share your favorite personal money management site; now we're back to highlight the five most popular contenders.


Click on the screenshots below to take a closer look.


Buxfer (Basic: Free, Premium: From $2.79/month)


Many people are hesitant to use online banking services because of security concerns. Buxfer's compromise to provide ease of use while also assuring users and keeping things as controlled as they would like is to offer multiple methods for storing your credentials. You can manually synchronize your financial accounts with the site, you can store your passwords and login credentials locally using Google Gears, Firefox, or Safari, or you can use the Firebux Firefox extension—Firebux helps you automate the process of downloading financial data from your banking institutions and reviewing Buxfer data. If you'd like to skip the hassle of handling your own syncing, Buxfer offers automatic nightly syncing of your financial data, automatically logging into and pulling data from your various online money portals. Buxfer comes in three flavors: Basic (free), Plus ($2.79 per month), and Pro ($3.79 per month). All accounts include features like split bills, automatic tagging, and mobile access, but you'll pay a premium for unlimited budgets, bill reminders, and balance projections. You can try a live demo of Buxfer here.


Yodlee MoneyCenter (Free)


As many readers were quick to point out, Yodlee provides the guts to the user sites for hundreds of banking and financial services. Organizations like Mint, Thrive, and large banks like Chase use rebranded but Yodlee-powered interfaces. Yodlee users will often characterize Yodlee as similar to Mint, but without such a strong emphasis on flashy graphics. Instead it focuses more on analyzing your raw data—transaction descriptions, for example, are easier to search and more detailed. Yodlee can import data from thousands of institutions, help you generate a budget, automate your bill paying, and send out user-defined alerts. If you like the idea of a site like Mint but want more fine-grained control and the ability to manually tweak things when necessary, Yodlee is a solid alternative.


Mint (Free)


Mint has risen to prominence as a major player among web-based financial management tools by putting an extreme emphasis on user-friendliness and automation. The focus on automation is so strong, in fact, they only recently added the ability to add in any sort of manual transactions. By providing Mint with your various logins, you can track all your financial accounts in one place—checking, savings, credit cards, investments—and easily generate budgets and projections based off your data. Mint has won many people over, especially in the younger demographic, by being the first tool they've used to really get a good look at their money and where it's going.


ClearCheckbook (Basic: Free, Premium: $4/month)




ClearCheckbook is a web-based checking account ledger on steroids. You can track your spending, input your daily expenses from the web-interface or from your iPhone, Android, or Palm, and generate a budget with spending limits. Upgrading to a premium account gets you a custom report tool, custom transaction fields, future balance projection, and editing of the auto-suggest feature. Visit ClearCheckbook at the link above to check out the video tours of both the free and premium accounts—available at the bottom of the main page.


Mvelopes ($39.60/quarter)


Mvelopes is a robust web-based financial tool built on the old principle of budgeting with envelopes—each budget category gets an envelope with a set amount of money. Its focus on an old budgeting technique, however, doesn't mean you're stuck with dated tools. Mvelopes automatically pulls transaction data from hundreds of financial institutions, supports automatic bill payment, and helps you generate snapshots of your net worth as you adjust your budget and goals. Mvelopes is notable for being the only contender in the Hive without a free account option, a testament perhaps to how happy people are with the service that it made an appearance in the top five despite the lack of free-as-in-beer option.



Now that you've had a chance to look over the top five contenders for best personal money management sites, it's time to cast a vote for your favorite:





Have a favorite web-based tool that didn't get a nod or want to talk up your favorite a bit more? Let's hear it in the comments. Have an idea for the next Hive Five? Send us an email at tips@lifehacker.com with "Hive Five" in the subject line and we'll do our best to get your idea the attention it deserves.





Send an email to Jason Fitzpatrick, the author of this post, at jason@lifehacker.com.



Web technology has revolutionized finance by making it easier than ever to monitor cash flow and track trends in your spending. Mint.com has been a leader in this realm for personal finance: its technology helps you track multiple accounts, analyze spending trends, and manage financial goals.

There isn’t a clear counterpart to class='blippr-nobr'>Mintclass="blippr-nobr">Mint for businesses, though. That’s where inDinero, a Y-Combinator-funded startup, comes in.

inDinero, which launches today, is a web-based financial dashboard for small businesses. Like Mint, it aggregates financial data from bank accounts, investments, and other sources and places them in a simple, easy-to-navigate interface where you can quickly see your income, spending, recent activity, and your financial runway.

The app is divided into five parts: Dashboard, Income, Spending, Planning and Trends. Dashboard provides an overview of your business finances, Income provides detailed information about your income streams, Spending breaks down your different costs, Planning helps you set goals for your business, and Trends analyzes and graphs out spending and income trends in order to provide useful insights.

Businesses need this type of information in order to minimize costs while maximizing revenues. While solutions such as Mint also aggregate financial information and analyze it, they are not focused on small businesses. We look forward to seeing inDinero’s business toolset grow and evolve.

Image courtesy of iStockphotoclass="blippr-nobr">iStockphoto, jwohlfeil

For more Business coverage:

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Shepard Smith Unloads On Fox <b>News</b>, White House Over Shirley <b>...</b>

Shep Smith laid into his own network Wednesday, calling out Fox News for its role in hyping the Shirley Sherrod story based on an edited videotape (h/t Mediaite). Smith's critique began when he cut into Wednesday's briefing by White ...

The Rise of Private <b>News</b> : CJR

The big question for these organizations is the inverse of the one troubling the mass news outlets in a digital world: their concern isn't to find a model that allows their influential newsrooms to keep humming along; it is to achieve ...

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MABUHAY ALLIANCE HOST THE 6TH ANNUAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE by mabuhayalliance


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Shepard Smith Unloads On Fox <b>News</b>, White House Over Shirley <b>...</b>

Shep Smith laid into his own network Wednesday, calling out Fox News for its role in hyping the Shirley Sherrod story based on an edited videotape (h/t Mediaite). Smith's critique began when he cut into Wednesday's briefing by White ...

The Rise of Private <b>News</b> : CJR

The big question for these organizations is the inverse of the one troubling the mass news outlets in a digital world: their concern isn't to find a model that allows their influential newsrooms to keep humming along; it is to achieve ...

More Touchscreen Innovation: ABC <b>News</b> for iPad Launches

Launched this week, ABC News for iPad is a notable free application which continues the trend of companies developing innovative and creative interfaces designed specifically for tablet-sized touch ...


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MABUHAY ALLIANCE HOST THE 6TH ANNUAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE by mabuhayalliance































Wednesday, July 21, 2010

personal financeonline personal finance


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The iPad just got a game changing <b>news</b> reader, it&#39;s called Flipboard.

It offers a way to “flip” through news, photos and updates from what your friends on Facebook and Twitter are sharing. Rather than scrolling through posts and links, Flipboard organises everything shared into a magazine like format, ...

Good <b>News</b> For Lohan! | PerezHilton.com

Only two weeks in the clink! If Lindsay Lohan ends up behaving herself in prison, she will only serve about 14 days of her 90-day sentence due to overcrowding in the LA County jail system. It had...

Liberal journalists suggest government shut down Fox <b>News</b> | The <b>...</b>

FILE - In this Jan. 22, 2009 file photo, President Barack Obama, center, stands near Fox News' Major Garrett, left, in the kitchen of the Brady press briefing room at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta) ...































Tuesday, July 20, 2010

personal finance planning


Normally when people sign payment plans with a bank, they are not able to calculate the final costs themselves. This is mostly because they do not know how to factor in everything and how to derive the final charges. Thankfully they can use the services of a wonderful tool name CalcMoolator.


CalcMoolator is a website that offers a collection of free financial calculators online. You can use the site to compute payments involving vehicles, mortgages, jobs, taxes, money saving schemes, loans, credit cards, and anything else.



Each type of calculator has different values you input to reach your result. For instance the “Mortgage Payment Estimate Calculator” requires you to enter values of principal amount, interest rate (in percentage), duration of plan (in years), home value, annual taxes, annual insurance, and annual PMI. It factors in all these values and reaches the required mortgage amount.


Similarly other calculators on the site help people conduct financial calculations without having to learn any mathematical formulas.



Features:



  • A collection of free online financial calculator.

  • Each calculator factors in a number of values to reach a reasonably accurate result.

  • No extensive knowledge of banking or financial formulas is required.

  • Can be extrememly helpful for anybody planning to sign up a payment deal with a bank.

  • The website also has an iPhone app that Apple device owners can use.

  • Similar tools:  Mookal, MyBankTracker, IRS Withholding Calculator, WhatsTheCost, TripLittle and Repayment Calculator.


Check out CalcMoolator @ www.calcmoolator.com (by MOin from ThumbPress)



Mint.com is arguably one of the most popular personal finance management tools out there. For all that it has done well, up until this week, it hasn't been the best place to track financial goals. Now, with the introduction of Mint Goals you can link all of your financial goals with the accounts that you have connected to Mint to better track your progress.



Mint Goals improves on the Planning section, which Mint users had until now used for goal-setting. The new Mint Goals section provides users with eight goal areas which can be tailored to the individual so that the goal is realistic and achievable. These eight goals include getting out of debt, saving for an emergency, saving for retirement, buying a home, buying a car, saving for college, taking a trip and improving your home; you can also set a custom goal.



Mint Goals Video from the Wall Street Journal:









When you create a goal Mint will ask you a few questions to find out when you want to achieve it and suggest a monthly contribution to this account. If you have Mint connected to all of your accounts the service can use the data it already has to automate some of the planning process. For example, if you are setting up an emergency fund, Mint knows about how much you spend a month so it is easy to figure out how much you need to cover three months' worth of living expenses. If you are working to pay down debt, and have your credit cards linked, you'll get a look at what you owe and a pay-down plan based on that amount.



After you choose the amount you want to save, Mint allows you to link the goal to a specific account, add a new account or suggests an account to open that fits the goal's purpose. When I was setting up an emergency fund goal, Mint shared several high yield savings accounts.



If your goal is getting out of debt, Mint may suggest that you get a loan through a partner like Lending Club, a peer to peer lender that offers personal loans at rates more than 50% lower than the average credit card APR. The suggested accounts are not all encompassing and you should still take a few steps to find the best bank or account for you.



In addition to budgeting for your day-to-day expenses, setting a goal for purchases and events such as buying a new HDTV, a house or taking a vacation is an important step to getting out of debt and staying out. If you need help after setting up your goals, Mint provides a checklist of to-do items and advice. You can also come back to WalletPop to learn more about all topics personal finance.



What do you think about the new Mint Goals?
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Before you can begin mastering your personal finances, you need to understand what personal finance is all about. First, it's personal - meaning it's about you and it's unique to your situation. Second, it's about finances - meaning it involves money. Personal finance is more than just paying off debt, picking your investments, and buying your first home. Those things alone will not achieve your goals. Personal finance requires you to define your goals and dreams and then to apply the ideas and behaviors required to reach those goals. It's all about managing your money with an end in mind - achieving your goals.

Identify Your Issues

You probably aren't reading this article just for the fun of it. There is a reason you are seeking personal financial advice. Maybe you never seem to have enough money to make it through the month - or week. Perhaps you just need to figure out how to prepare yourself for those unexpected emergencies. Or you could be just fine, but you'd like to polish your financial plan and accomplish goals you never thought possible. Whatever your reason, it's important to begin by identifying the obstacles that lie ahead. Here are some common financial problems:

Repeated Overspending - We have all experienced the temptation to buy more than we can afford at some time or another, but making a habit of overspending will quickly destroy any financial plan. Debts can easily become too much to handle and prevent you from ever reaching your true financial goals.

Emergencies - Your car breaks down, your paycheck comes late, or you forgot about that insurance bill that only comes twice a year. Financial emergencies can wreak havoc on the best laid plans. By not preparing for these emergencies, you are setting yourself up for future failure.

Procrastination - Who hasn't put something off until the last minute? We're all likely to do this sometime or another, especially with long-term goals that don't seem very urgent. But saving for retirement is a lot easier if you start early - even if you're only saving a little bit.

Emotional Decision-making - Financial decisions require prudent forethought and careful execution. By allowing our emotions to take over, we often make terrible financial mistakes. Those get-rich-quick schemes you see in infomercials late at night may seem like a good idea, but they're just another quick way to kiss your hard-earned money goodbye.

Personality Mismatches - Money & finances are one of the top reasons people get divorced. But how do you manage to create a financial plan when you are a saver but your spouse is a spender? By working together to create a solid basis for your personal finances, you and your spouse can utilize all your strengths to ensure financial success.

The Basics

Personal financial planning draws from aspects of finance, investments, insurance, law, employee benefits, and taxes. But you don't have to be an expert in all of these areas to reach your goals. Three basic rules will help you stay on track in your personal finances:

1. Money, income, and wealth are all different. Your financial situation doesn't depend solely on how much money you make - it really depends on how much money you keep. Personal finance focuses on the accumulation, preservation, and distribution of the money you keep - your wealth.

2. Be on your best behavior. All the nifty financial tricks in the world can't save you if you don't learn to control your spending, begin saving, and change your habits to achieve your goals.

3. It's an ongoing process. Managing your money requires more than creating a financial plan and following it for the next 10 years. It requires a lot more than just making sure you paid all your bills for the month. Personal finance demands that you are fully aware at all times of your responsibilities and actions - otherwise all your effort will be for naught.

Income Is Not as Important as You Might Think

If I told you I make $100,000 a year, you'd think that sounds pretty good, right? But what if I'm spending $150,000 every year? Doesn't sound so great now, huh? Income is important - but only to a certain extent. What's more important is what you do with that income and how much you keep at the end of the month. Your financial success depends much more on how you manage your expenses than the money you make on each paycheck.

Another important factor is your net worth. Your net worth is basically your assets (what you own) minus your liabilities (what you owe). Net worth is the real measure of financial wealth. You might live in a $300,000 home, but it doesn't mean much if you owe $270,000 to the bank for your mortgage. Take a minute and think about your net worth. Do you know what it is? Do you have any idea? Keeping track of this number helps you see where you are, where you came from, and where you are going.

What's Your Financial Type?

You may have heard of the Myers-Briggs Typology. To borrow from that system, think about how you would categorize your financial type. Are you aware or oblivious? Can you easily control your spending, or do you have problems? Are you committed to your financial goals, or do you lack follow-through because you haven't established firm goals yet? Are you an aggressive investor, or do you prefer to safely manage your risk by taking a more prudent route?

The answers to these questions can help you determine the make-up of your financial type. These questions can also help you realize the areas where you and your significant other may differ. Take the time to answer these questions honestly, and you'll soon find yourself on the path to a better understanding of your current financial behavior and what you may need to work on.

Your Habits Will Make You or Break You

The financial habits you adhere to will ultimately determine your success or failure. You can make all the plans in the world, but if you don't stick to them you'll never achieve your goals. Begin thinking about your current financial habits and ask yourself how you started those habits. Ask yourself if those are good habits - in that they will lead you to your goals. If you need to change your habits, what should you do instead and how will you make the change? Start today by thinking of a simple change you can make. Stick to that one little change for two weeks or four weeks and you'll soon find you can begin to make bigger changes. Eventually you will have all of your habits aligned with your goals, and you will be on the path to achieving your dreams.

Stay tuned for the rest of this Personal Finance series. We will cover net worth, financial math, budgeting, reducing debt, understanding credit, investing, insurance, taxes, education planning, retirement planning, estate planning, and other important topics along the way. In the meantime, you may visit Free Financial Plannerto get answers to your specific and unique financial questions.


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ASUS EP101TC Now Shipping with Android | Netbooknews - Netbooks <b>...</b>

Today the Netbook News team went down to the ASUS headquarters to hang out with the Eee Pad team, and we learned something that actually made us breath a sigh of relief. The EP101TC pad will dropping Windows CE and will be shipped with ...

Project Milo back on Xbox 360 <b>News</b> - Page 1 | Eurogamer.net

Read our Xbox 360 news of Project Milo back on. ... Latest Features. Milo & Kate Interview . Milo & Kate Hands On . Milo & Kate Interview . Latest Videos. E3: Project Natal - Milo demo 2 June, 2009. Latest News ...

Investors Back China <b>News</b> Outlet - DealBook Blog - NYTimes.com

Many news organizations around the world have been cutting back on staff, resources and coverage. But a new media outfit backed by one of Hong Kong's most prominent businessmen is bucking that trend.


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Monday, July 19, 2010

how to budget personal finances


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Many of us will remember 2009 as the year of change. Unemployment, foreclosures, reduction in payroll, layoffs and a weak economy have affected most of us with our spending habits. With 2010, quickly approaching, it may be time for us to sit down, examine our personal finances, and set goals that may better prepare us for the unknown road ahead. Here are some suggestions to help you map out your financial future.

Reduce Expenses: Without the reduction in debt, it is almost impossible to save money. Most financial advisor's will tell you this is a necessity. Knowing where your money is going each month is the first step. Grab a pad and pencil and start writing down what your expenses are. Look at your credit card statements, bank statements and receipts to tally up items you may not remember. Most people who do this are surprised to see exactly how their income is expensed. After writing down the items examine the ones that are reoccurring. Are these expenses a necessity or luxury item? Buying five dollar coffee is not a necessity, especially when the total amount spent in one month can exceed $100 dollars. If the items are a luxury, see which can be changed or eliminated. If they are a necessity, such as utilities, examine how these items can be reduced.

Eliminate Credit Card Debt: Credit cards are great consumers of your income. Especially if you are paying the minimum balances. With the current economy, many credit card users are finding their interest rates skyrocketing, which in turn, increases the amount of payment due. If you want to know how long it will take to pay off a credit card, go to www.bankrate.com. They offer a credit card calculator. You can enter the information, and based on your minimum payment, it will tell you the length of time for payoff. Make it a goal to eliminate your cards balances, one at a time. For many, that plan may not be achieved in one year, it may take several. But rest assure, once the payments are gone, you will be on the path to financial freedom and available disposable income.

Start Saving: Do you remember when you were a kid and you saved money in a jar? In the beginning, the few coins didn't amount to a lot, but over time, the coins grew and grew into a large enough sum to have real buying power. It is the same with saving. The in ital amount doesn't have to be big, but as the balance grows, so will your desire to see it get even bigger. "Saving" has now become a key word with this new economy. Just two years ago, Americans were spending more than they saved, today the opposite is true. Saving for a unexpected event or retirement, must become part of your personal financial goal for the New Year of 2010.

Create a Budget: In the past, with the convenience of equity lines, refinances and credit cards, most of us didn't give much concern to how much we spent. If we wanted it, we got it. Today, the world is much different. All of us are facing returning back to a budget. When you create a budget, you set a certain dollar amount that is applied to purchases or expenses. This means that before you buy a item, you consider how much you are willing to pay for it. Once this is decided upon, you do not deviate from it. One of easiest ways to help stick to a budget is by only using cash for purchases. The temptation to overspend is more easily eliminated when you know you are depleting your cash supply each time you buy. If needed, there are many great programs and websites that offer budget spreadsheets and advice such as, www.christianpf.com, which offers 10 free budget spreadsheet, or www.docs.google.com.

Delaying Major Purchases: Many people ask me about buying a new car, home, or other expensive items. The answer is that you need to examine whether it makes sense to take on the additional expense. If buying a new car, is being done for no other reason than to update your vehicle, that purchase should be delayed. If your current vehicle needs repairs, it is better to fix the car than to incur a debt of a monthly payment that can last up to 6 years. The purchase may make sense if it is strictly on a cash basis for a amazing deal. With many foreclosures on the market, you may be tempted to jump in and buy a home. Make sure that you have a sustainable down payment. This will help to reduce the monthly payment, making it more affordable. Owning a home comes with more expenses than renting. There are repairs, maintenance, taxes, insurance and those unexpected emergency items. Consider the possibility of these items when looking into the mortgage payment of home ownership. With the uncertainty in the job and housing market, it is important to decide if acquiring debt is a wise decision.

With the New Year of 2010 around the corner, its time to take seriously your personal financial goals and what you want for the future. The goals can be short or long term. By examining your spending habits and expenses, you will become aware of where your hard earned money is going and how to gain a understanding of how it is spent. By taking control of your finances you reduce the stress of dealing with the uncertainty of a volatile economic environment. No one can predict if 2010 will be a better year, but by setting goals and attaining them you can assure yourself, that for you, it will could be.





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Animated Taiwanese <b>News</b> On “Evil” Steve Jobs, Now With Subtitles <b>...</b>

That hilarious animated Taiwanese news segment on Steve Jobs and the iPhone 4 we posted earlier now has English subtitles, thanks to reader Michael Chang. It shows Jobs defeating Bill Gates in a lightsaber battle and donning a Darth ...

Stabroek <b>News</b> - 200 YEST youths to join workforce

Daily News, Sports, Business, Entertainment and more from Guyana.

US Economy Recovering Faster Than Europe and Japan, IMF Says

(April 21) -- Thanks in part to an injection of government stimulus money, the ailing US economy is rebounding from the financial crisis more strongly than Europe and Japan, according to the International Monetary Fund, ...


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Friday, July 16, 2010

managing your personal finance

As you’ll read tomorrow (or Monday), I’ve entered a new phase in my life. After years of hard work and long hours building this blog (time that I’ve enjoyed), I’ve been shifting things around so that I have more free time. As a result, I’m going to have more time to devote to creating quality blog posts, instead of rushing around at the last minute looking for something to write about.


Because of this, it’s time yet again to take requests. I do this about once a year, and it’s a great way to get a feel for what GRS readers are interested in. I’d be grateful if you’d take the time to leave a comment below with topic suggestions or article requests. It doesn’t matter if we’ve covered the subject in the past. If you’d like me (or one of the other GRS staff) to write about it, let me know.


Have there been too many articles about credit cards? Too few articles about credit cards? Would you like to know more about individual savings accounts? Do you like the articles about the psychology of spending? Would it be helpful to have somebody come in to explain insurance concepts in plain English? Should I try to persuade my wife to share more of her recipes now and then? Let me know what you’d like to read about!


While you’re all providing feedback about the site, here are a few recent articles of note:


Over at The Simple Dollar, Trent and his readers had a thoughtful discussion about the obligations of wealth. “I think there is some inherent distrust of the rich in the mainstream of American society,” Trent writes as he describes how a wealthy person can keep from alienating his friends. There’s so much to say about this topic; I’m tempted to write an entire article about it.


GRS reader Steven writes a blog called Hundred Goals, which is about achieving your goals while managing your finances. After Sierra’s post this morning about travel, he dropped me a line to let me know that he has a recent article about how to have a great vacation.


Speaking of vacation, my pal Jason over at No Credit Needed spent time compiling day-use fees and free days for state parks across the United States. Handy page to bookmark!


And here’s more travel! At The Art of Non-Conformity, my good friend Chris Guillebeau has posted a beginner’s guide to travel hacking. I’ve been asking him to share this info for a long time; now I’ve got to take responsibility to use the knowledge he’s shared.


Finally, I’ve been giving a lot of interviews lately. I’m much more comfortable with these than I used to be. (They used to scare me to death!) Some examples:



  • Colleen from The Frisky interviewed me about how to save money even when you’re living paycheck to paycheck. This is a tough quandary, something I’m asked about a lot.


  • In an interview with BeFrugal, I discuss frugality, happiness, and conscious spending. (Note: “the ballot” should be “the balance” — I must have mumbled.)


  • Jeff Rose at Good Financial Cents also interviewed me. This interview is very much about the process of writing a book, which may or may not interest you.


  • I also spoke with Beverly Harzog from Card Ratings. We chatted about credit cards, of course, but also about other aspects of personal finance.


  • Finally, USA Weekend has a short piece on how to give your 401(k) a midyear check, for which author Richard Eisenberg interviewed me back in May. This is a perfect example of how much work goes into even a small newspaper article. Eisenberg spent 20-30 minutes on the phone with me, and I’m sure he did the same with the other folks he quotes. Plus, I’ll bet he spent a lot of time writing. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were 4-6 hours in this small piece.


Okay, one last thing before I go. Tim pointed me to a two-year-old New York Times series about the debt trap, which includes an interactive infographic showing average household debt loads over the past century.


That’s enough links for today. Please do leave a comment with topic requests or other feedback. Meanwhile, it’s time for me to go do some yardwork…









As you’ll read tomorrow (or Monday), I’ve entered a new phase in my life. After years of hard work and long hours building this blog (time that I’ve enjoyed), I’ve been shifting things around so that I have more free time. As a result, I’m going to have more time to devote to creating quality blog posts, instead of rushing around at the last minute looking for something to write about.


Because of this, it’s time yet again to take requests. I do this about once a year, and it’s a great way to get a feel for what GRS readers are interested in. I’d be grateful if you’d take the time to leave a comment below with topic suggestions or article requests. It doesn’t matter if we’ve covered the subject in the past. If you’d like me (or one of the other GRS staff) to write about it, let me know.


Have there been too many articles about credit cards? Too few articles about credit cards? Would you like to know more about individual savings accounts? Do you like the articles about the psychology of spending? Would it be helpful to have somebody come in to explain insurance concepts in plain English? Should I try to persuade my wife to share more of her recipes now and then? Let me know what you’d like to read about!


While you’re all providing feedback about the site, here are a few recent articles of note:


Over at The Simple Dollar, Trent and his readers had a thoughtful discussion about the obligations of wealth. “I think there is some inherent distrust of the rich in the mainstream of American society,” Trent writes as he describes how a wealthy person can keep from alienating his friends. There’s so much to say about this topic; I’m tempted to write an entire article about it.


GRS reader Steven writes a blog called Hundred Goals, which is about achieving your goals while managing your finances. After Sierra’s post this morning about travel, he dropped me a line to let me know that he has a recent article about how to have a great vacation.


Speaking of vacation, my pal Jason over at No Credit Needed spent time compiling day-use fees and free days for state parks across the United States. Handy page to bookmark!


And here’s more travel! At The Art of Non-Conformity, my good friend Chris Guillebeau has posted a beginner’s guide to travel hacking. I’ve been asking him to share this info for a long time; now I’ve got to take responsibility to use the knowledge he’s shared.


Finally, I’ve been giving a lot of interviews lately. I’m much more comfortable with these than I used to be. (They used to scare me to death!) Some examples:



  • Colleen from The Frisky interviewed me about how to save money even when you’re living paycheck to paycheck. This is a tough quandary, something I’m asked about a lot.


  • In an interview with BeFrugal, I discuss frugality, happiness, and conscious spending. (Note: “the ballot” should be “the balance” — I must have mumbled.)


  • Jeff Rose at Good Financial Cents also interviewed me. This interview is very much about the process of writing a book, which may or may not interest you.


  • I also spoke with Beverly Harzog from Card Ratings. We chatted about credit cards, of course, but also about other aspects of personal finance.


  • Finally, USA Weekend has a short piece on how to give your 401(k) a midyear check, for which author Richard Eisenberg interviewed me back in May. This is a perfect example of how much work goes into even a small newspaper article. Eisenberg spent 20-30 minutes on the phone with me, and I’m sure he did the same with the other folks he quotes. Plus, I’ll bet he spent a lot of time writing. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were 4-6 hours in this small piece.


Okay, one last thing before I go. Tim pointed me to a two-year-old New York Times series about the debt trap, which includes an interactive infographic showing average household debt loads over the past century.


That’s enough links for today. Please do leave a comment with topic requests or other feedback. Meanwhile, it’s time for me to go do some yardwork…










mike fuljenz mike fuljenz mike fuljenz mike fuljenz mike fuljenz mike fuljenz

Sad <b>News</b>: Heskey retires from England Duty - England

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Exclusive: A 2nd Christmas Attack, In NYC? « Liveshots

Law enforcement officials who spoke with Fox News could not say what came of the report. Even though one FBI official acknowledged he couldn't "rule out" that a test run and attack in New York City were ultimately attempted, ...



IMG_6974 by G20London2009







IMG_6974 by G20London2009






























Thursday, July 15, 2010

foreclosure homes


RealtyTrac, as reported on Housing Wire, gave a gloomy update on the US housing market. RealtyTrac does granular collection of data on foreclosures, capturing every filing. One of the shortcomings of this approach is that processes vary by state (as in some state require more court filings over the course of a foreclosure than others). In addition, homes can go in and out of foreclosure (an owner gets the first notice, contacts the servicer and works out a catch-up plan, and later falls behind again). So the commentary of RealtyTrac and other market participants is essential in interpreting the data.


The key takeaway:


James Saccacio, CEO of RealtyTrac, said at the current pace, more than 3m properties will receive a foreclosure filing by the end of the year, and lenders will repossess more than 1m of them. According to a report from the Toronto-based Capital Economics, the weight of the shadow inventory may contribute to a double dip in the housing market. The report found that for every home currently on the market, two homes are waiting to be sold.


“The roller coaster pattern of foreclosure activity over the past 12 months demonstrates that while the foreclosure problem is being managed on the surface, a massive number of distressed properties and underwater loans continues to sit just below the surface, threatening the fragile stability of the housing market,” Saccacio said.


Yves here. The scary part here is this estimate of market overhang refers only to foreclosed and distressed property. There is another category of hidden inventory, people who would like to sell but aren’t even listing their houses. These would include people who want to relocate, aging individuals who’d like to downsize and had hoped to be able to liberate some equity.


More detail from HousingWire:


Foreclosure filings decreased 3% in June after another 3% drop in April. It’s the third straight month of declines. Foreclosure filings were down 7% from June 2009. Despite the recent downward swing, June marked the 16th straight month of more than 300,000 filings.


For the second quarter of 2010, foreclosures dropped 4% from Q110 and remained 1% above Q209. As default and auction notices fell, REOs increased 5% from the last quarter and 38% from Q209. It’s the most REOs measured in a quarter since RealtyTrac began publishing the reports in January 2005.


“The second quarter was a tale of two trends,” Saccacio said. “The pace of properties entering foreclosure slowed as lenders pre-empted or delayed foreclosure proceedings on delinquent properties with more aggressive short sale and loan modification initiatives. Meanwhile the pace of properties completing the foreclosure process through bank repossession quickened as lenders cleared out a backlog of distressed inventory delayed by foreclosure prevention efforts in 2009.”












Energy-efficient homes
have significantly lower default and delinquency rates than typical homes, according
to an internal analysis conducted for a major financial institution last
year. Here's yet another reason why it
makes no sense that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have effectively killed Property
Assessed Clean Energy (PACE), a financing tool that has helped make
efficiency improvements affordable for thousands of American homeowners.


Homes built to federal Energy Star
standards for efficiency had default and delinquency rates 11 percent lower
than other homes, the 2009 analysis found, according to two people familiar
with the document. The analysis accounted for variables including income and
location, since many new homes are built in sprawling areas (where high transportation costs
contribute to foreclosure rates).


"It was a robust
statistical analysis that found, with a 99-percent confidence interval, that
energy-efficient homes had significantly lower default and delinquency rates," said
one person. Both sources asked to remain anonymous to protect relationships
with finance institutions.


Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac have effectively
shut down PACE programs around the nation.
The programs let homeowners tack the cost of insulation, furnaces, and
other efficiency improvements onto their property tax bills, letting them gradually
pay off the cost over 10 to 20 years. The tax assessments are "senior" to
mortgages, meaning they get paid off first in a foreclosure, which concerns Fannie
and Freddie, the government-sponsored mortgage-finance corporations that
guarantee more than half of the nation's mortgages.


A letter from the Federal
Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), which regulates Fannie and Freddie, claims PACE
programs "pose unusual and difficult risk management challenges" for lenders. But
the internal analysis supports what PACE defenders have been claiming -- that
energy-efficiency improvements, when done correctly, make borrowers more financially stable, not less.


"If you're Fannie or
Freddie, in many ways PACE should be the best tax or assessment you've ever
seen, because it improves cash flow," said Cisco
DeVries, president of Renewable Funding, a company that sets up PACE
programs for cities and counties. "Homeowners are reducing their energy bills.
No other assessment does that. For a sewer system [a common use of tax
assessments], you have access to sewers, which is great, but it's not like your
cash flow improves."


The research in the
internal analysis does not focus on PACE or other financing methods, but it
addresses the core focus of PACE: the energy use of buildings. Most PACE
programs require an energy audit and efficiency improvements before funding
rooftop solar or wind (since it's a waste to put solar panels on a leaky
building). Buildings account for 38
percent of the nation's carbon dioxide emissions, so retrofitting them is a
crucial near-term step in addressing climate change -- with the added bonuses
of creating local jobs and cutting utility bills for property owners.


The nation's largest
PACE program, in Sonoma County, Calif., has also found that energy-saving
improvements tend to make homeowners more financially secure. The property-tax
delinquency rate for the county's 900-some PACE participants was 1.2 percent,
compared with 3.5 percent for the county as a whole, according to deputy county
counsel Kathy Larocque.


"The people in our
program are better taxpayers than the general public," she said.


Sonoma County residents
have jumped at the chance to make home improvements through the program since
it launched last spring. The county expected investments to reach $7 million or
so in the first year; instead they reached $30 million as of last month,
according to county Treasurer/Tax Collector Rod Dole.


Another year-old
program in Boulder County, Colo., proved popular with residents, helping them
make more than $10 million in home and business energy improvements. Middle-school
teacher Kayla Thomason wanted to join in; she applied for $11,000 in
funding to fix up her leaky house, had a home-energy audit performed, and had
contractors bidding on the work -- and then Fannie and Freddie forced
the program to shut down.


Boulder County
commissioner Will Toor says local residents are anxious for the program to get
back up and running. "The reactions that we're getting from people are
primarily anger at Fannie and Freddie, as opposed to people feeling like
there's something wrong with the program," he said. "If we can get the federal
issues resolved and clearly state to people that we're able to move forward, I
think that we will see people still participate. I don't think it will be a
long-term blow to the program, once we get the issue resolved."


Dozens of members of
Congress, governors, and mayors have spoken up in support of PACE. Rep. Steve
Israel (D-N.Y.) said he plans to introduce legislation addressing Fannie and
Freddie's concerns, but there's no sign that the bill would move quickly
through Congress. The Department of Energy, which invested $150 million in stimulus
money in PACE programs, urged
Fannie and Freddie to let the programs proceed, without success. It even
offered FHFA a two-year reserve fund to guarantee against losses, an
offer that was refused, according to The
New York Times
.


"Every single issue
raised by FHFA was raised previously and resolved, from almost everybody's
perspective, with excellent answers," said DeVries of Renewable Funding. "It's
clear they didn't want to take 'yes' for an answer."


Spokespersons for
Fannie Mae and FHFA did not respond to requests for comment.


Do you have more information on Fannie, Freddie, and the PACE dispute? If
so, we'd like to hear from you (jhiskes grist org).















hormones


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Brad Friedman and Desi Doyen: Green <b>News</b> Report: July 15, 2010 (Audio)

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