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Extra Oil 2009 Health Recap + SHOCKING 2010 News

March 8, 2010 · No Comments

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Foreign Films Reign Supreme… Top Ten Movies of 2009

March 8, 2010 · No Comments

This list is accurate as of post-date. So many films and not enough time to see them all, the potential for future change is inevitable, but as of today here are the best …

Another year gone, another 100+ releases down. 2009 was one that included a lot of good directors and some great ensemble pieces. Out of all the inclusions to my top ten, plus honorable mentions, only three really contained a central figure worthy of mention above the work itself; the others truly were complete packages consisting of group success. Not only that, but for the first time in a while, the foreign language pieces proved that the Hollywood machine is far from telling great stories, relying instead on blockbuster special effects and scantily clad models. I enjoy a good Transformers 2, Fired Up, and Zombieland like the next guy, but it’s the indies like Lymelife, Two Lovers, and Sunshine Cleaning that show what cinema should be. No one knows that more than the excellent directors abroad, whether it be Spain, France, Korea, and even Australia this year. I hope that one day soon the studios take a page from their book rather than try to import them over to make work here with their hands cuffed behind their backs. If staying home and crafting tales that hit hard emotionally mean we Americans must read subtitles, then so be it. Next year sees even more famous auteurs returning to the big screen and no moneymen should be allowed to hinder their artistic visions, especially for such a bigoted reason as their films not being in English. We shouldn’t underestimate our own country’s ability to appreciate high art, no matter how much people prove time and time again that we should.

Films not seen yet that have potential of creeping into the top 10:
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans; Black Dynamite; Coco avant Chanel [Coco Before Chanel]; Crazy Heart; Julia; The Last Station; Le silence de Lorna [Lorna’s Silence]; Chi bi xia: Jue zhan tian xia [Red Cliff 2]; Sugar; Tyson

Honorable Mention (in reverse order):
The Hurt Locker, review: All the press and acclaim is deserved for Kathryn Bigelow’s new film. It takes an impartial stance on the war and instead relies on showing the psyche of the soldiers sent to disarm bombs. Authentic, gritty, funny, and dramatic, The Hurt Locker could be the best war film to come out in quite some time, leaving all the politics and agendas behind.

Los abrazos rotos [Broken Embraces], review: Pedro shows once more that he is like a fine wine. One would think he could only do the handicapped artist embroiled in a unique love triangle melodrama so often without becoming tired, but this Spanish wizard will hear nothing of it. Penélope Cruz is fantastic as always, but it’s Lluís Homar’s portrayal that makes this film great.

Where the Wild Things Are, review: It is not easy to turn a beloved children’s tale full of nostalgia and happy memories into a good film, let alone a great one. Spike Jonze and Dave Eggers did just that and brought Maurice Sendak’s world to life. Darker than most Americans might want to expose their sheltered children to, Where the Wild Things Are expresses the isolation and strong emotions every young kid experiences as they deal with issues parents feel are too adult to fully explain to them.

A Serious Man, review: It may not have the blatant humor or the pitch black drama that a great Coen Brothers film usually excels in, but A Serious Man does have the intrigue needed to keep you riveted to your seat. With an intelligent screenplay, great performances from a mostly unknown cast, and exposure of the mystical secrets and traditions of Jewish religion and culture, the black humor leaves you slightly off-kilter, never knowing what tragedies could possibly occur to Larry Gopnik next.

35 Rhums [35 Shots of Rum], review: On the top of so many lists I’ve read this awards season, Claire Denis’s French film lives up to the praise. Love is a central theme, showing how important it is to survival while also how it can hinder your own evolution by trapping you in the past. We try so hard to please the ones who love us that sometimes we don’t allow for the time to be happy ourselves. Stellar acting and gorgeous cinematography complement the dramatic story, showing its audience that being selfish in order to be happy can be okay.

The Top Ten of 2009 (in reverse order):

10. (500) Days of Summer, review: The romantic comedy for guys and girls alike. Marc Webb’s film brought in audiences with its quirky, inventive setup, making it one of the year’s surprise hits. It has comedy, heartbreak, impeccable taste in music, and even a musical number complete with animated bird. Told out of linear order to let character emotion drive the plot, Zooey Deschanel and Joseph Gordon-Levitt are relatable and perfect stand-ins for ourselves, showing us the highs and lows of every relationship we’ve ever been in.

9. Inglourious Basterds, review: I think I have to watch it again to hail it as a masterpiece like so many others do—Pulp Fiction is still my favorite Tarantino—but it doesn’t take a second viewing to realize its greatness. The scale is the largest he’s ever tackled with multiple locales and plot threads, numerous languages and subtitles, as well as his own absurd take on history, changing everything we’ve learned about the end of WWII. All you know and love about Quentin is here from the witty dialogue to the use of constant visual homage, but it does appear that he has grown as a filmmaker it each aspect, further entrenching this former video store clerk as one of the best filmmakers of his generation.

8. Up in the Air, review: George Clooney may have outdone himself with this film. Never have I said, “Wow, Clooney really knocked that one out of the park,” but Reitman has gotten that type of performance out of him here. Full of heart and really funny, Up in the Air was a huge surprise when I saw it at the Toronto Film Festival, especially having walked in knowing the talent but not the plot. This sets the bar for where adult cinema should be—honest and raw in how people interact and converse in the business world, giving even a man who excels at firing people the room to redeem his life and for once find happiness.

7. The Limits of Control, review: Built like a David Lynch film, Jarmusch has amped up the surrealism and crafted a film so dreamlike that the true meaning he attempts to get across is unnecessary. I’m sure The Limits of Control has a different effect on each of its viewers, making all decipher the puzzle based on their own life experiences. Isaach de Bankolé is stoic perfection, wandering through the landscape of his mind as he works towards destroying what it is that has been undermining mankind’s ability to stay creative and use their imaginations.

6. Avatar, review: Sometimes the extreme spectacle of new technology can live up to expectations. Cameron’s Avatar risked overexposure through advertising and hype, very easily having the possibility of complete and utter failure, but once again he delivered on his word. The new 3D tech is mind-blowing in comparison to anything that came before it and the motion capture computer graphics have never been better. So many look to the weak story in order to dismiss it as pretty but devoid of a soul. That reaction is simple and convenient, though, because if you’ve ever wanted to be transported away into another world when seated at the movie theatre, Avatar makes it happen.

5. Moon, review: Sam Rockwell and director Duncan Jones are Moon. Science fiction deserves to be this stark and sterile, showing the dehumanization of technology and isolation space holds. Rockwell gives the performance of his career as cabin fever sets in and the existence of another version of his character arrives in the spaceship. The answer to this wrinkle comes quickly, leaving the rest of the film to keep you on the edge of your seat, wondering what it is actually going on miles and miles from Earth.

4. Up, review: Pixar has made its best feature in Up. The only animation studio that relies on the intellect of its audience, they are never afraid to put story in front, whether it means a lack of dialogue or fantastical worlds of talking animals. With an opening scrapbook representation of Carl and Ellie’s lifetime together that will have you in tears before the film’s actual plot even begins, Up’s journey is vast and full of detail. For kids and adults alike, no other animated movie has ever resonated so strong emotionally—equal parts goofy humor and heart-warming companionship.

3. Sin Nombre, review: A harsh representation of gang lifestyle taking place in South America, Sin Nombre gets everything right. Combining the storyline of a young man standing up to his superiors in the brotherhood with a girl escaping to America that he crosses paths with allows this film to be more than just a crime drama. No matter how much evil you’ve done, an opportunity to turn things around and try to do good will always exist. Once you get in bed with the devil, though, your fate is all but sealed; it becomes what you do before you die that creates the legacy you leave behind.

2. Das weisse band [The White Ribbon], review: It took a little while afterwards to officially realize how great Haneke’s new film was, but it hit hard when it did. A sprawling epic of a seemingly quiet town in Austria, the movie will leave you with more questions than answers. The mysteries occurring could be answered in many ways depending on you own outlook on humanity. Murder and abuse occurs, religion is used to punish, and war breaks out across Europe, leaving the kids at hand here to soon inherit their parents’ mistakes in the years leading up to Hitler’s reign of terror. Haneke loves to make art that begs its audience to think, using their own preconceptions and feelings of persecution to create answers. He challenges us to see how maybe we aren’t as righteous as we may believe, making us complicit in the tragedies he puts on screen.

1. A Single Man, review: Visually stunning and powerfully acted, Tom Ford’s debut is a wonderful piece of art. Colin Firth is a revelation playing a three-dimensional soul in pain—a far cry than his usual British love interest in romantic comedies. Speaking about issues such as life and death, giving visuals to psychological pain, and portraying the way in which we all are taken over by memories of happier times, A Single Man is a masterpiece, bringing the interior workings of a desperately distraught human being to life through the marriage of intense close-ups and haunting melodies. I seriously wanted to see it again as soon as the end credits began to roll.

Some films to keep on the radar in 2010 are listed here.

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How To Find The One Best Home Based Business Opportunity For You?

March 6, 2010 · No Comments

imageA business that would suit your tastes is what is most difficult to find in the when you are looking out for a work at home based business opportunity that is available in plenty on the internet. Here are a few tips that will help you find the one right home based business opportunity for you.

1) You would first have to do a bit of research on the work at home based business opportunities; you could try researching through search engines on the internet. Once you have found a list of best home business opportunities that suit your taste then you got to compare each other to decide which the best home based business opportunity is for you.

2) You would also need to research on the various different ways in which you could make money on the internet like affiliate programs, online auctions, network marketing and all the other possibilities. This will help you decide in which way you would want to start own home business and will also help you narrow down the opportunities that you are presented with.

3) You should list down all the home based business opportunities that interest you. This gives you a chance to actually go back and investigate an opportunity that might have interested you earlier. That means you are going back to the first point where you are actually comparing the different opportunities.

4) You should also join a few forums on work at home business opportunities; here you would get a lot of information on home based business opportunities. People involved in the business will tell you about the business opportunities that you are researching on. They would tell you which business they are having success with, which one are not worth starting and which are scams. Here you also good reviews on various businesses and this are a real good way to find which one is the best. But you always need to remember that the choice of two different people are mostly different and so what someone likes need not be something you like.

It gets really easy for you to select an apt work at home based business opportunity if you follow the 4 points mentioned above. Don’t ever join an opportunity without checking it completely and thoroughly. Many people don’t check the opportunity completely and then later get disappointed when things turn out to be something else.

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XHTML

March 5, 2010 · No Comments

What is XHTML?
XHTML is a more formal, stricter version of HTML. XHTML is defined by an XML dtd which makes it much easier to handle.
* XHTML stands for eXtensible Hyper Text Markup Language.
* It is aimed to replace HTML.
* It is almost identical to HTML 4.01
* It is the reformulation of HTML 4.01 as an application of XML.
* It is a stricter, tidier version of HTML.

XHTML 1.0 is the next level of coding as specified by the W3C.

XHTML is a transition / combination of HTML and XML. To change from HTML to XHTML requires just a few changes in your coding styles. The main page to check out is CONVERTING but all the others provide valuable information about this coding technique as well.

XHTML provides the framework for future extensions of HTML and aims to replace HTML in the future. Some resources refer to XHTML as HTML5.

XHTML 1.0 became an official W3C recommendation on January 26, 2000. A W3C recommendation means that the specification is stable, that it has been reviewed by the W3C membership, and that the specification is now a Web standard.

XHTML 1.0 is the first step toward a modular and extensible web environment based on XML (eXtensible Markup Language). It provides the bridge for web designers to use a future based coding and still be able to maintain compatibility with today’s browsers.

XHTML is a stricter and cleaner version of HTML.
Answer:
* XHTML stands for EXtensible HyperText Markup Language
* XHTML is aimed to replace HTML
* XHTML is almost identical to HTML 4.01
* XHTML is a stricter and cleaner version of HTML
* XHTML is HTML defined as an XML application
* XHTML is a W3C Recommendation
XHTML is a combination of HTML and XML (EXtensible Markup Language).

XHTML consists of all the elements in HTML 4.01 combined with the syntax of XML.

Advantages of using XHTML instead of HTML
1. Documents can be validated much easier
2. Documents can be transformed via tools like XSLT into other documents for consumption by devices like handhelds
3. Fragments of documents can be retrieved faster
4. Text can be stored more effieciently in object oriented databases
Answer:
The great thing about XHTML, though, is that it is almost the same as HTML, although it is much more important that you create your code correctly. You cannot make badly formed code to be XHTML compatible. Unlike with HTML (where simple errors (like missing out a closing tag) are ignored by the browser), XHTML code must be exactly how it is specified to be. This is due to the fact that browsers in handheld devices etc. don’t have the power to show badly formatted pages so XHTML makes sure that the code is correct so that it can be used on any type of browser.
Answer:
XHTML combines XML and HTML 4 to provide developers with a language that conforms to the XML format, as opposed to HTML which is based on SGML. XML is much simpler to parse than SGML, and standards exist such as XSLT, XPath, and XQuery for manipulating XML documents. Unfortunately, support for XHTML in browsers is poor, with the leading browser, Microsoft Internet Explorer, not supporting the XHTML mime type ‘application/xhtml+xml’.

Why XHTML?
XHTML pages can be read by all XML enabled devices AND while waiting for the rest of the world to upgrade to XML supported browsers, XHTML gives you the opportunity to write “well-formed” documents now, that work in all browsers and that are backward browser compatible
Since 1990, HTML (or Hyper Text Markup Language) has been the language recommended for creating Web pages. And it has been very successful . But HTML has its problems. Without going into specifics, as it’s not the subject of this article, HTML has become a mess. To sort this mess out, in 1999 the World Wide Web Consortium came up with XHTML. XHTML stands for eXtended Hyper Text Markup Language, and is written in a language called XML or eXtended Markup Language.

As the name implies, XHTML has the capability to be extended. You can use extra modules to do things with your pages that weren’t possible with HTML. The long-term goal is that your Web pages will be able to be understood by computers as well as humans. How does this work? Allow me to explain.

You may be thinking that computers already understand Web pages because you use a computer to view them. This is true. But computers only understand how to display your pages, not what they mean. Imagine if computers did understand what Web pages meant! You could tell your computer to go and visit all of your local supermarket’s Websites and report back to you on which store is the cheapest for this week’s shopping. Your computer could visit the news sites around the world and bring back the latest headlines that relate to things you’re interested in. The possibilities are endless.

Differences between XML and HTML
Since XML and HTML are derived from SGML they are similar, but have the following differences:
1. XML is case-sensitive
2. XML must have quotes (single or double) around attributes
3. Most interpreters of HTML are very forgiving about missing end tags – XML parses are not.
4. Comments start with . Inside a comment, “–” may not appear. Although this is fine in html, it confuses xml parsers.
How is XHTML better than HTML? Why would you want to use XHTML?
* to be able to take advantage of new coding techniques
* problems with the earlier versions have been fixed.

XHTML is a fairly close copy of HTML 4.01.

Extensibility : Under HTML, the addition of a new group of elements requires alteration of the entire DTD. XML greatly eases the integration of new element collections as it is a subset of SGML itself and specifies it’s own DTD.
Portability : By the year 2002 as much as 75% of Internet access could be carried out on non-PC platforms such as palm computers, televisions, fridges, automobiles, telephones, etc. In most cases these devices will not have the computing power of a desktop computer, and will not be designed to accommodate ill-formed HTML as do current browsers.

Currently, the Netscape browser helps greatly for testing web pages by displaying blank or broken pages when it comes across sloppy coding. IE is the most forgiving browser and will show almost any page no matter the extent of coding errors.
While HTML itself isn’t completely lacking in extensibility or portability but the evolution of it has been extremely slow compared to the pace of Internet development. This fuels the problems encountered trying to make your pages work on a wide range of browsers and platforms. XHTML will help to remedy those problems.

How To Get Ready For XHTML?
XHTML is not very different from HTML 4.01, so bringing your code up to the 4.01 standard is a good start. In addition, you should start NOW to write your HTML code in lowercase letters.
.
The Most Important Differences:

* XHTML elements must be properly nested
* XHTML documents must be well-formed
* Tag names must be in lowercase
* All XHTML elements must be closed

Why Code Your Own XHTML?
Programs that produce HTML for you often do so badly, often producing Web pages that do things the long way. When you code your pages by hand you have an intimate understanding of what you’re doing, and can make the actual size of the Web page file as small as possible. This decreases download times, so your pages load faster and your users are happier.

When you use a program to generate HTML for you, you don’t get the chance to understand how your page is built internally because it’s all done for you. This is not a problem as long as everything works… but what if it doesn’t? If you find that your Web page doesn’t display properly in Internet Explorer 4, and many of your users use that browser, you’re going to have to sort it out. This means forgetting about the program and looking at the code yourself. Will you see the problem? If you’ve been using the program to code the page for you, when problems occur you probably won’t have the knowledge you need to fix them.

The Internet is no longer limited to people with computers viewing Websites through one or two different Web browsers. Everything has a Web browser in it these days: mobile phones, televisions, personal digital assistants, cars… even fridges! Blind users “view” Websites using speech synthesis or Braille devices. There is no way you can test each page you produce in all the possible devices on which it may be used.

But there is a way to ensure you have the best chance your site will work in most scenarios: to produce pages using the standards laid out by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the people who work on XHTML and other Internet standards. The W3C provide a validation service to check that your page meets the standards, and if it does, it therefore has the best chance of being used on any device.

How to build a “Hello World” page. With XHTML ?
“Hello World” Web page code looks like this:

Hello World

My first Web page.

Why XHTML Modularization?
The XHTML modularization model defines the modules of XHTML.
XHTML is a simple, but large language. XHTML contains most of the functionality a web developer will need.

For some purposes XHTML is too large and complex, and for other purposes it is much too simple.

By splitting XHTML into modules, the W3C (World Wide web Consortium) has created small and well-defined sets of XHTML elements that can be used separately for simple devices as well as combined with other XML standards into larger and more complex applications.

With modular XHTML, product and application designers can:
* Choose the elements to be supported by a device using standard XHTML building blocks.
* Add extensions to XHTML, using XML, without breaking the XHTML standard.
* Simplify XHTML for devices like hand held computers, mobile phones, TV, and home appliances.
* Extend XHTML for complex applications by adding new XML functionality (like MathML, SVG, Voice and Multimedia).
* Define XHTML profiles like XHTML Basic (a subset of XHTML for mobile devices).

What about elements that don’t have a close tag, such as and


?
There are two solutions. You could use a close tag (e.g. ). However the best solution is to simply include a forward slash in the element:
Will this work?
As long as you include a space before the slash it will cause no problems in most Web browsers – although there have been reports of problems with some embedded HTML viewers such as Java’s Swing HTML editor.

Why do we need modular DTDs?
An application may wish to support only a subset of XHTML. For example a mobile phone, an Internet TV or even a Web-aware cooker may only require a subset of XHTML. Also modularity makes it easier to deploy new developments.

Any other important new developments?
Yes: XSLT provides a transformation language which can be used to transform XML documents into other formats. XSLT can be used to transform documents from one XML DTD to another, or even to transform an XML document to an alternative format such as RTF or PDF.

Why is this XSLT important?
You’ve heard all the hype about mobile phones and WAP haven’t you? How do you think the WAP world, which expects documents to be in WML format, to be populated? Rather than manually creating WML markup, XSLT will enable XHTML documents to be automatically converted to WML.
What’s XHTML Validation?
An XHTML document is validated against a Document Type Definition.
Validate XHTML With A DTD

An XHTML document is validated against a Document Type Definition (DTD). Before an XHTML file can be properly validated, a correct DTD must be added as the first line of the file.

The Strict DTD includes elements and attributes that have not been deprecated or do not appear in framesets:

!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC
“-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN”
“http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd”

The Transitional DTD includes everything in the strict DTD plus deprecated elements and attributes:

!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC
“-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN”
“http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd”

The Frameset DTD includes everything in the transitional DTD plus frames as well:

!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC
“-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Frameset//EN”
“http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-frameset.dtd”

This is a simple XHTML document:

simple document

a simple paragraph

Ampersands in hrefs must convert “&” to “&” in the URI
Sample List

becomes
Sample List

# The attribute “name” becomes “id” when used for a locator inside a document

For example, to reference a section within a document with a URI, we usually do something like
Meerkats

Inside the referenced section,

Meerkats of Africa

becomes

Meerkats of Africa


or better yet for backwards compatibility:

Meerkats of Africa


# Tidy
tidy is a tool to automatically convert HTML to XHTML. You can find it at http://www.w3.org/People/Raggett/tidy/.

What’s about an assumption with XHTML?
Serving XHTML with a MIME type of text/html is wrong. The whole point of XHTML is that it’s XML so that you can benefit from namespaces and the like. If you serve it as text/html, you can’t:
In particular, ‘text/html’ is NOT suitable for XHTML Family document types that adds elements and attributes from foreign namespaces, such as XHTML+MathML [XHTML+MathML].
Source: http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml-media-types/#text-html
Two choices:
1. XHTML 1.0 served as application/xhtml+xml to conforming UAs, and text/html to Internet Explorer
2. HTML 4.01, served as text/html
XHTML 1.1 is not an option because it mandates a MIME type of application/xhtml+xml which is incompatible with Internet Explorer
How to writing XHTML demands a clean HTML syntax?
Some More XHTML Syntax Rules:

* Attribute names must be in lower case
* Attribute values must be quoted
* Attribute minimization is forbidden
* The id attribute replaces the name attribute
* The XHTML DTD defines mandatory elements

1. Attribute Names Must Be In Lower Case:
This is wrong:

This is correct:

2. Attribute Values Must Be Quoted:

This is wrong:

This is correct:

3. Attribute Minimization Is Forbidden:

This is wrong:

This is correct:

Here is a list of the minimized attributes in HTML and how they should be written in XHTML:
HTML XHTML
compact compact=”compact”
checked checked=”checked”
declare declare=”declare”
readonly readonly=”readonly”
disabled disabled=”disabled”
selected selected=”selected”
defer defer=”defer”
ismap ismap=”ismap”
nohref nohref=”nohref”
noshade noshade=”noshade”
nowrap nowrap=”nowrap”
multiple multiple=”multiple”
noresize noresize=”noresize”

4. The id Attribute Replaces The name Attribute: HTML 4.01 defines a name attribute for the elements a, applet, frame, iframe, img, and map. In XHTML the name attribute is deprecated. Use id instead.

This is wrong:

This is correct:

Note: To interoperate with older browsers for a while, you should use both name and id, with identical attribute values, like this:

IMPORTANT Compatibility Note:
To make your XHTML compatible with today’s browsers, you should add an extra space before the “/” symbol. The Lang Attribute
The lang attribute applies to almost every XHTML element. It specifies the language of the content within an element.
If you use the lang attribute in an element, you must add the xml:lang attribute, like this:

Heia Norge!

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Fw: VPPNews: January Issue

March 5, 2010 · No Comments

“When you do the common things in life in an uncommon way, you will command the attention of the world.” George Washington Carver

What is Social Entrepreneurship?

Statement of Faith
You can find other “Market with Meaning” but you definitely want to see “Profit with Purpose”.
I personally “Believe in Kingdom Transformation” because I know there is only ONE “Life for Significant”.

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Home Based Business Opportunity Seeker?

March 4, 2010 · No Comments

imageAre you a home based business opportunity seeker who is trying to find the right network marketing company? If so, this article is for you. In this brief article, I’m going to go over some of the more important things to look for in an MLM opportunity and hopefully by the time you’ve finished reading it, you’ll have learned a few things that you can apply in your search.

The first thing that you should take into consideration when evaluating MLM home based businesses is the compensation plan. Are you going to be well compensated for your efforts? Are uplines rewarded for supporting their downline? These are important questions to ask when you’re evaluating any network marketing compensation plan.

Secondly, is the business model simple enough for the average person to duplicate? Many network marketing programs are extremely difficult to build and require quite a bit from brand new members. Finding an MLM opportunity that is easily duplicated and keeps things simple will allow you to build a larger organization in less time.

Last but not least, will you have access to others who are already successful? Having a mentor to guide you as you’re developing your business is priceless and can save you thousands of dollars and quite a bit of frustration. Be sure that mentorship is something that will be available in the home based business that you’re considering.

Hopefully this short article has given you some ideas on what to look for in a network marketing company if you’re a home based business opportunity seeker. With so many business opportunities out there today, it’s important that you know what to look for in one and make the right decision. Remember, even the best home based business opportunity will ultimately require work on your part in order to become successful.

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What is the Right Home Based Business Opportunities for You?

March 4, 2010 · No Comments

imageBefore starting a home based business, you need to discover whether it is the right one for you. Some people see attractive home based business opportunities, jump to one of them right away after being seduced by an outstanding sales letter and find themselves in credit card debts few months later. Your choice of home based business opportunities is right for you if it…

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Do You Want To Be A Home Based Business Entrepreneur?

March 4, 2010 · No Comments

www.FollowMyFormula.com Do You Want To Be A Home Based Business Entrepreneur? Our team is developing very successful home based business entrepreneurs. Why? We have a proven success path to follow. To find out how we market for free online, visit www.FollowMyFormula.com then call LR today to get started! Keywords: LR Hand, fire your boss, based business home incredible opportunity, best at home businesses, home based business entrepreneur, home based business for stay at home moms, home …

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How to advertise online for a home based business opportunity to the US Market?

March 1, 2010 · 3 Comments

I’ve got a great programme that I’ve joined that’s making me about $2,500 a week.

However I’d like to increase my income by advertising in the US market as well to my site. I’m currently travelling on business and as such don’t have much time do check up on this.

For further details, you can check out the website at:

http://www.247moneytree.com/chirag.html

Any of you got any ideas how I can go about advertising for my online home based business?

Any ideas would be good such as online or other channels but please give me links to which avenues I can use.

Thank you Very Much!

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Home Based Business Opportunity: There’s No Such Thing as a ‘free Lunch’!

March 1, 2010 · No Comments

imageLook, I know it’s tough out there making ends meet and finding time for the family and for all the things you want to do. It’s a struggle for most people. And to escape their unpleasant situation, many people are looking on the Internet for the Holy Grail of home based businesses that will magically set them free.

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