Archive for the ‘Word Press’ Category

How to install profile pic plugin in wordpress blogs – Video


How to install profile pic plugin in wordpress blogs
through this video you can learn how to upload profile pic in your word press blogs as author or Admin or any other access. more video you can check http://www.techaaka.com/videos

By: deka jyoti

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How to install profile pic plugin in wordpress blogs - Video

Optimizepress Review — Create "KILLER" Squeeze Pages… FAST! – Video


Optimizepress Review -- Create "KILLER" Squeeze Pages... FAST!
Optimizepress Review -- Create Landing Pages In An Instant?OptimizePress review You are about to discover the fastest way to generate sales, boost your conversions rate and build your list faster than lance Armstrong on steroids!!! What every good Internet marketer Knows is that the only real way to create true success on the Internet is to build a list. The only way to create a list is to have high converting lead sucking landing page at the start of a high converting sales funnel. No matter what you are selling or promoting on the Internet if you do not have a sales funnel in place you may as well pack up shop and head home. What optimizepress have geniously done is to create a word-press plugin/theme that is so easy to use, it #39;s Child #39;s play! Far too many affiliate /network marketers neglect this side of their business, most depend on company or generic lead capture pages yet can never understand why conversion rates are so low. Sure company lead capture pages do work (in most cases!) but what you must understand is that after a companies launch or product launch, those capture pages do the rounds (if you will) and buyers and readers get blinded by seeing the same page over and over again. Does It Not Make Sense To Be Different? Does it not make sense to add your personal touch? And then does it not make sense to stand out from amongst the crowd? If you are an affiliate or network marketer and you are using lead capture pages that are being used by thousands of other ...

By: Tony Mcstravick

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Optimizepress Review -- Create "KILLER" Squeeze Pages... FAST! - Video

The Last Word: Problems of surviving the end game

The cryogenic chamber was set at -150F. A familiar bare-chested figure, wearing two pairs of white gloves, polyester shorts, skin-tight medical socks, clogs and a headband, was doing press-ups and squat thrusts in the centre of the room.

No one at the health club in Home Counties Hertfordshire thought to ask why he put himself through the ordeal three times each week, just as no one sought to question his daily ritual of running on the treadmill with 12kg weights in each hand.

When he heard two professional footballers had broken his 10-minute endurance record in the chamber, he returned, and stayed there for 13 minutes. Nearly 17 years after his final fight, a three-round knockout by Mike Tyson at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Frank Bruno remains a competitor.

He is 51 now, and seeks to fill his days with reminders of the physical purging which once defined him. Retirement from boxing, blighted by severe mental-health issues, has been a glimpse into the heart of darkness.

The black dog of depression savages athletes in decline or in their dotage. The list of victims Ricky Hatton, Marcus Trescothick, Tony Adams, Neil Lennon, Vicky Pendleton, Freddie Flintoff, Kelly Holmes and Ronnie O'Sullivan, to name a random group will grow exponentially.

Jamie Carragher is one of the lucky ones, a warrior king carried out on his shield and into a television studio. Rebecca Adlington, at 23, may be terrifyingly young to enter athletic afterlife, but she has enough cachet in a small sport like swimming to use her Olympic medals as a down-payment on normality.

All athletes are unable to escape who they were. Most are unable to reinvent themselves so they can become who they want to be. Their problems transcend sport and nationalities, but compassion fatigue is setting in. How many of us looked away from the grim, grainy photograph of Paul Gascoigne stealing a last sip at the poisoned chalice of a pint in an airport bar? The generosity of those who got him into the Meadows rehabilitation centre in Phoenix, Arizona is admirable, but his plight is overfamiliar.

If football really cared about the welfare of its former players it would impose a fractional levy on its TV income and divert it into a holistic programme of post-retirement support. Giving back 0.5 per cent of that revenue would realise in excess of 25 million. A similar imposition on parasitic bookmakers would also be principled and profitable.

The PFA, the players' union, produce self-help guides and direct troubled members to 14 organisations, including Anxiety UK, the Depression Alliance and the National Problem Gambling Clinic. It is a start, but ultimately as insubstantial as a Pray for Gazza hashtag.

Footballers' divorce rates in the five years following retirement are thought to be in excess of 60 per cent. There are justifiable fears that the current generation of Premier League players will take an unwitting lead from similarly rewarded athletes in the United States.

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The Last Word: Problems of surviving the end game

The Diary of Anne Frank Multimedia Projects-EVSC 8th Grade ELA Mrs. Yates – Video


The Diary of Anne Frank Multimedia Projects-EVSC 8th Grade ELA Mrs. Yates
EVSC CODE member, Kara Yates, discusses her 8th Grade ELA class projects. Mrs. Yates runs her class through her website on Word Press.

By: EVSC ICATS

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The Diary of Anne Frank Multimedia Projects-EVSC 8th Grade ELA Mrs. Yates - Video

About Books: Recollections of veterans paint word picture of Korean War

Jamie Farr who played the character of cross-dressing Klinger on televisions M*A*S*H show is respectful in his review of the new University of Toledo Press book 30 Below on Christmas Eve: Interviews with Northwest Ohio Veterans of the Korean War.

I only fought in Korea on a TV sound stage and in a dress at that but I have great respect for the guys who were actually there, said Farr through the publisher. These interviews tell it all ... from suffering with frostbitten feet to charging up Heartbreak Hill, from being tortured as POWs to being flown in to MASH units. Thirty Below on Christmas Eve shows the real Korean War and the real valor our boys brought to the fight and then some.

Andrew Bud Fisher edits the interviews in 30 Below on Christmas Eve, as he did its previously published companion book, What A Time It Was: Interviews with Northwest Ohio Veterans of World War II. The new book includes almost four dozen interviews of Korean War veterans.

Though not stated explicitly by the editor, the interviews in both books seem to be excerpts from longer sessions, said Larry A. Grant of The Citadel Oral History Program in a review of the book.

Interviews were conducted in the Ward M. Canaday Center of the University of Toledo Carlson Library

Interviews in 30 Below are arranged according to service: Air Force, Army, and Marine Corps, Grant explains. Another section, Active Reserves, contains stories of veterans who also served in World War II. The remaining section, Other Participants, contains stories of service during the Korean War period, mostly in other theaters, and also introduces two Koreans who later settled in the U.S.

The book includes a glossary of terms, explanations of acronyms and place names, a listing of personalities introduced by the recollections, biographical sketches of key individuals in the war, essays on the history of the era, and statistics of the war.

Grant notes that the text includes few annotations. Instead, the veterans recollections speak for themselves.

One recollection that reoccurs is the memory of how unprepared American forces were when they got to Korea.

This condition comes out repeatedly in the interviews, writes Grant. Leo D. Barlows comments are typical when the subject turns to the winter weather. Asked how he was equipped, Barlow, a Marine who landed at Inchon and fought at Chosin Reservoir, answers, It could get down to 40 degrees below zero and we didnt have the proper gear. We lost more people to the weather than to enemy action.

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About Books: Recollections of veterans paint word picture of Korean War