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Twitter on Autopilot – (TTT) Twitter Traffic Tactics

  • Posted on May 30, 2010 at 8:20 pm

If you’re not using Twitter yet, you best believe you are missing out. Twitter is an online service that enables you to broadcast short messages to your friends or “followers.” It also lets you specify which Twitter users you want to follow so you can read their messages in one place.

Twitter is a very powerful social networking tool. Here are some easy steps to follow to use twitter effectively to build your brand, gain exposure, gain visibility and position yourself as a knowledgeable marketing resource.

1.) Send out an email for everyone to follow you on your list.

* Offer internet marketing tips & how to get traffic through your twitter tweets…..

* Since Twitter is not email based, it will get delivered 100% of the time no questions asked.

2.) Get involved with your followers. When you do this you are building relationships. Be active in the community and network with other people. Review their videos, articles, blogs, sites and give feedback to them.

3.) Branding – Communication will allow you to establish a reputation of an active twitter and helping people out.

4.) Video or Buzz Group – Rate, vote, digg people content.  People love to see others checking out their content, and usually they will return the favor..

5.) Let them know out your articles, blog post, videos, press releases or newsletters and ask them for some feedback.  This can also create a social buzz.

Powerful Tools To Use with Twitter:

Twitter application in Facebook – posts my Twitter updates to Facebook status. I seem to have a different network on Facebook than I do on Twitter so this helps spread the content.

twitter.ezinearticles.com – This is EzineArticles twitter research page.  Lets you search & follow other marketers in your niche — very simple

TweetLater. Was explained in the video.

TweetDeck – Desktop application that allows me to show Twitter searches, DMs and Replies in one screen. There are any number of tools to get this done, but I like the interface of TweetDeck

Twtter lets you build your list while communicating at the same time.  Email marketing is great but you have to build your list first before you can communte with them.

Twitter helps almost everything you need go viral.

No Time To Wait Take Action Now….. Check out Video Tutorials on making your twitter on auotpilot.

 

Creating Expensive Olympic Queen Sheets

  • Posted on May 30, 2010 at 6:55 am

We offer pillow cases in several fabrics, colors, and thread counts. This is like olympic comforters usually. Polycotton blends should never need to be ironed, but if 100% cotton sheets are placed driectly on the bed after being taken from the dryer, you can avoid ironing of those as well. Here is a lovely Olympic Queen fitted sheet.

Queen sheets usually tend to be a little less expensive too. Some people consider fitted sheets to be the same. Each set is finely woven with 50/50 Egyptian cotton and polyester yarns to reduce wrinkles and increase durability while still maintaining incredible softness. These fitted sheets are woven in 100% Egyptian cotton fibers to ensure incredible softness. The bottom edge of the bottom sheet is fully elasticized, so even if your mattress isn’t quite 25 inches thick, the set will still hold firmly in place without excess fabric in the middle of the bed.

We offer them in satin, 100% Egyptian cotton, and Flannel. Sometimes pillow sham cases can be similar to bed sheets. Anyone who has slipped into a quality flannel shirt on a cold morning can attest to its undeniable appeal. It has a hypoallergenice polyester fill and is sure to keep you warm and cozy for many years to come.

A Guide to Big Cat Photography Part One

  • Posted on May 30, 2010 at 6:52 am

Introduction

The purpose of this guide is to give you some top tips for getting great pictures. Big cats have a personality all of their own and each breed is quite different. This will affect how you photograph each species of cat. For instance some are quick and move rapidly, others will sit and take a more leisurely approach. This article is set out into sections so you can dip into the bits most relevant to you.

So what do we mean by Big Cats, lets begin with the rarest cats in the world, The Russian Amur Leopard, around 150 in captivity and only 30 in the wild, then we have the Snow Leopard, now only found in the inaccessible mountains in Pakistan. On the Tiger front you have the Sumatran Tiger, then the Amur Tiger as it now know but better known as the Siberian Tiger. Then there are Lynx, Lion, Cheetah, Serval and Puma also known as the Mountain Lion or Cougar – they are all the same cat.

First of all don’t be fooled into thinking that you need a top of the range film or digital SLR camera and lenses to get great pictures. You don’t. Both compact and the intermediate bridge cameras are more than capable of capturing great images. Many photographers that have come on Big Cat Photo Experience Day have started with a compact camera and found that they can get amazing images. They have come back and some have even found that they got so much more from photography than they ever thought they could. Others just come and enjoy the close contact with such magical animals.

This guide is based upon many years as a professional photographer capturing some of the rarest cats on the planet, all kept within a private collection for breeding purposes with the aim that they are returned to the wild, so long as the human race hasn’t ruined the original habitat. For the Sumatran Tiger, that I fear is a rare hope, but with new cubs born late 2008 there is a glimmer of hope.

Compacts and Bridge Cameras

The real advantage of these cameras is their size. Being small and compact they fit through the wire of the cage so that’s one less thing to worry about. All you do need to do is watch what the cats are doing so they don’t take your camera off you! And trust me if they get hold of it they will win – no negotiation!

Captive animals are quite nosey so you will find they get too close. Key settings would be either close up / macro or a sports mode if you are using pre-set shooting modes. More advanced cameras have Aperture Priority, Shutter Priority and Full Manual. If you are more comfortable with these settings then please read the sections underFilm and Digital SLRs as the same rules apply.

One main problem of these cameras is what is called “shutter lag”. This is the time the camera takes to fire the shutter and capture the image after you press the shutter button. On static subjects this won’t be so much of a problem, but on fast moving or erratic moving subjects this is where this will be noticed. You aim at the head and the camera takes a picture of the tail!

ISO – Film Speed or Sensor Sensitivity

The speed of your film or sensor sensitivity as it’s really called on a DSLR will affect the camera settings in a given light. A typical sunny day will let you shoot on ISO 100 or 200, being the base setting of your camera depending upon the make of camera or film you’re using. With a DSLR you have the ability to change your ISO or sensor sensitivity as the light changes, so you can go up and down from 100 to 200 or 400 (or more) as the light changes. With film you are fixed per roll. OK you can “bump it” up or down but only if your film processor knows what they are doing, automated developing just won’t hack it and will leave you with a ruined roll of film. As a commercial photographer I shoot digital and enjoy it – when all the technology works of course!

Using an additional body is an option if you can afford it as it gives you another lens to shoot from or another roll of film different from the first body. Lenses or course are interchangeable.

With speed or sensitivity comes a compromise – grain. The higher the ISO the more noise or grain there will be. But, and a big but, under exposure will create more noise than high ISO – so make sure the shot is exposed correctly. Being a commercial photographer amongst other things, I shoot using Nikon cameras and with these I have to shoot slightly over exposed to get the shot right – Nikon metering seems to be slightly on the safe side in my experience.

White Balance

This is not an easy area to explain but it comes down to the colour of light. What I hear you say, but all light looks the same to me, yes it will, the human eye and brain is very clever, it shows you a white subject as white in any light so you can’t actually see what your camera sees.

Until that is you take a picture indoors, ever had a picture on a digital or film camera come out orange? Light is measured as a temperature similar to that of heating a metal rod in a flame. The colour moves from orange to white and finally blue. Now this isn’t measured in degrees C or F but in the wider scientific range called Kelvin. Digital cameras use this Kelvin number to determine the colour of light.

For example Orange is at the lower end or 3400K the same as a household bulb with a tungsten filament, also known as incandescent- day light and studio flash is around 5200K to 5600K and fluorescent light is a real nightmare depending upon the type of tube and colour temperatures vary from 2700K up to 7200K – so pretty much the whole spectrum.
Tip – on a flat grey day use the pre set white balance of Flash – it gives a slightly warmer shot.

Tip – don’t use Auto white balance for two reasons. While it might be fairly accurate light is not a fixed entity it changes all the time and so too will your cameras setting for White Balance when on Auto. Secondly if you then go on and edit your images you have the potential for having to manually correct each image if you’re not happy with the setting. And on a Big Cat Day guests regularly shoot 400 to 600 images – now that’s a lot of time chained to your computer.

Tip – pick a pre-set value, even if its not correct , some cameras allow fine tuning warmer or cooler. If then you want to edit the images at least you can batch process all the images in one go as the White Balance value will be the same – so too will be the adjustment. Just shoot RAW, then you can correct it, Jpeg gives you less control.

Tip – try taking a custom white balance measurement if your camera has this function.

Tip – remember a Snow leopard is Grey and White – it should not be cream.

Film and Digital SLRs

Camera bodies vary in design and my view is that megapixels aren’t the be all and end all of quality images. As an example a 6 mega pixel camera will get a great image, in fact many press photographers still use a high quality, robust 4 mega pixel digital camera body. Why, because other functions are come into play.

Whereas the norm for many companies is now, at the time of writing this Big Cats guide, is to offer 10 – 12 mega pixel camera bodies, other key features come into play.

Autofocus – General

AF-S , AF-C or Manual, Single point, Multipoint Dynamic or Closest Subject? AF-S will give you a function that shoots only when the subject is in focus. AF-C gives you a continuous mode where by the AF systems tracks the subject adjusting focus all the time you have the shutter release pressed half way down and the focus point on the moving subject. This is good for fast / moving subjects, the shutter will however fire even if the shot is not in focus. 3D tracking found on Nikon cameras is good for some subjects as it tries to work out where the subject will be if it leaves the focus area or frame – try it and see how you get on, you may find you come back to a dynamic – movable – focus point chosen by the photographer – you!

Manual focus gives you total control but chasing a moving subject is difficult and takes time to practice.

Metering

Spot, centre weighted or matrix or average? The main problem with Matrix is that it takes an average setting across the whole frame so you can end up with a poorly exposed image especially if you catch some sky in the frame. This being brighter, normally, makes the camera close down the settings, leading to an under exposed subject.

For improved results with cats I find centre weighted works best as the camera metres from the centre of the frame and this is normally where the subject matter will be.

Spot metering would be best used for a close head shot where the cat is stationary being sat or lying down, as you’d find with the Lions in the afternoon after they are fed.

Part two continues with more settings and equipment discussions as well as common mistakes.

Individual Dental Insurance

  • Posted on May 30, 2010 at 6:48 am

An insurance company sells insurance dental coverage directly to clients under the form of various packages with different availability and specifics. When it comes to client preferences, the individual dental insurance represents the most popular and widely used of all services practiced by health insurance companies. Without a dental plan, it would be a debt nightmare to try and pay for all the dental services one needs per year. Most people who lack the possibility to contract an individual dental insurance and are not provided with one through their employer, will be tempted to skip regular checkups and cleanings and eventually reach at a deterioration of the oral health. For this cases, you can find more reviews at teeth home.

The issue with individual dental insurance results from the difficulty to find it with a good coverage rate. More generally speaking, an insurance company generates profit out of the monthly fee paid by the customers, and the system extends to cars, homes, and all the other valuables. In case of dental health, insurance companies could often lose money if they fully pay for the yearly cleaning, checkups and eventual interventions of their clients. This is actually the reason why the coverage of many types of individual dental insurance is often faulty or insufficient. Find more information about this at teeth home.

Individual dental insurance is most often provided to employees, because large companies get tax deductions and attract well trained work force with such packages. Many companies have adopted this practice in the attempt to attract valuable work force. Besides the employment offer, people can contract individual dental insurance independently by using all sorts of referral plans. With the payment of a yearly or monthly fee, the client can benefit from discounts and regular dental rates practiced from the oral health providers in the network. The discount is provided based on the insurance card and should there be any remaining sum uncovered, you’ll have to pay it. If discounts make the only alternative when you don’t qualify for traditional dental insurance, and this could be your opportunity of reducing dental expenses and staying healthy too.

The fact that an employer will always get better dental benefits plans as compared to individual dental insurance is explained by the higher premiums businesses can offer to the insurance company. The company covers the largest part of the premium, while the employee pays for a very small part of it. Profit is thus explained by pure mathematics: multiply the monthly contributions with thousands of employers and you can understand the amount of money insurers make. Normally referred to as the group dental plan, the alternative insurance package will bring lots of numerous advantages to users other than the discounts too.

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