The PT Savvy Center

October 7th, 2008

Women and Men Revel in Sexual Toys this Summer

Posted by admin in Virtual Shopping Malls

With Easter coming the guys and girls might be thinking about what to buy their partner and sex toys are consistently on the list. Last Christmas found the marital aid business explode with sales beyond three billion pounds. The biggest selling marital toys were vibrators. The vibrator is the greatest selling sexy toy as it is so well known, practically any adult dvd features vibrators as well as TV programmes like Lipstick Jungle. Never spend an evening alone with Sex Dolls.

The 2nd biggest selling sexy toy is of course the dildo, males and women across Britain love dildos due to the size and shapes sex toys come in. You can often get a six inch white dildo for your bedside drawer or a twelve inch glass dildo for underneath your bed. Sex toys are incredible sex aids make sex more interesting and give your other half a wonderful time.

Sexy toys might often be bought from online retailers which get delivered next day and in discreet packaging, or you will probably even go down to your local marital aids shop and pick one up. The price for marital aids start from around nine quid. The mass availability and cost of marital aids is excellent and that is why dudes and females appreciate sex aids.

October 7th, 2008

Here Comes the SPAM…

Posted by admin in University of Networking

———————————————————– TITLE: Here Comes the SPAM… AUTHOR: Irina LENGTH: 703 words FORMAT: 59 characters per line CONTACT: irbonness@ureach.com ————————–CUT HERE————————-

Here Comes the SPAM…

By Irina

=========================================================== The author grants permission to publish this article, in its entirety, electronically or in print, as long as the bylines are included. A courtesy copy of your publication (or, at least, an e-mail notification) sent to irbonness@ureach.com will be appreciated. ===========================================================

I exercise regularly and follow a healthy diet. My weight is right on the money. So every invitation “to loose 30 pounds in 20 days” insults more than just my intelligence and literary taste. Yet until now I managed to treat Unsolicited Commercial Email (UCE) or simply SPAM as a nuisance that wastes my time and resources, but does not represent a serious problem. Not any more!

The message that changed my attitude looked rather innocent: “Hello [fname], I am so-and-so. You are receiving this message because I saw your online business site…” The next day I got another similar message from different so-and-so. Soon, the number escalated to a dozen a day. Very disturbing was also the fact that the messages were arriving to my “strictly business” email addresses reserved exclusively for my customers and business partners. A little research quickly revealed the name of my new enemy - Spam Bot.

Spam Bot is much like a search engine spider. Twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week it crawls from page to page looking for email addresses. Even single Spam Bot is able to quickly produce huge list of addresses (only addresses - that’s why they called me [fname]!) which are used to send SPAM. Unfortunately, there are many of them… Another problem is that being extremely easy to generate and thus very cheap, these lists are sold and re-sold over and over again to nave (obtuse?) “netrepreneurs”.

Looks like a serious self-perpetuating problem for anyone with business email address posted on the Internet. Is there a solution? Well, yes - you can completely eliminate this type of SPAM by making your email address unrecognizable for Spam Bots. Here are several possible approaches:

1. Use the FORM MAIL whenever possible. This not only conceals your email address, but also makes it easier for real visitors to contact you. Here is a working example: http://www.megaone.com/hbb/savemoney/ Anyone can email me a question by typing it in the window right on my page and hitting the “Submit Query” button. Yet the address itself is hidden from my human visitors as well as Spam Bots.

2. Replace your “mailto:” link with an IMAGE of your email address. To see an example go to http://www.pcpages.com rafficy/links.html Feel free to examine the HTML code of the page by right- clicking anywhere in the window and then scrolling to “View source” in the drop-down menu. Instead of my email address you (and Uncle Spam Bot as well!) will only see a link to “emaddress.gif”. In this case additional security brings about some inconvenience - the address is not “clickable” and thus one has to memorize it or write it down. This slight disadvantage is circumvented in the next approach.

3. Replace several REAL characters in your email address with so-called SPECIAL characters. These special characters always begin with “&” and end with “;”. Whatever is in between determines how the browser will interpret that particular special character. For example, typing “&” “#” “6″ “4″ “;” (without quotation marks and spaces) is equivalent to using the real character “@”.

If you are skeptical that this replacement alone is enough to fool the Spam Bot (that, by the way, makes two of us) - proceed with replacing other characters in your email address. Here is your cheat-sheet to substitute all vowels: a=#97, e=#101, i=#105, o=#111 and u=#117. Remember to start every special character with “&” and end with “;”. You can see how it works by going to http://www.megaone.com/hbb/savemoney/links.html

My human visitors can see and click on my email address by using “Click here to get my email address” link. When viewing the code of the little window, you will not find the address in an explicit form - just a long string of special characters with some letters in between. This (hopefully!) is enough to confuse Spam Bots visiting my site.

We will never be able to totally eliminate SPAM that seems to come with the cyberspace “territory”. Yet I should feel just a little better if the above suggestions at least partially shield your inbox from unwelcome (and often very badly phrased) offers to consolidate the debts you don’t have or safely enlarge a part of your body that… well, you do not have either.

Copyright (C) by Irina 2003.

=========================================================== About the Author: Irina helps people save on healthcare and create steady stream of residual income working from home http://www.megaone.com/hbb/savemoney/ http://www.megaone.com/hbb/makemoney/ ===========================================================

October 7th, 2008

The Anti-Spam Zealots who went to the FTC Spam Forum

Posted by admin in University of Networking

On the three days from April 30 through Friday, May 2, 2003, the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) held a “Spam Forum” in Washington, D.C.

According to the FTC website, the purpose of this forum was “to address the proliferation of unsolicited commercial e-mail and to explore the technical, legal, and financial issues associated with it.”

While the FTC and other government entities try to figure out how they can legally address the Spam issue, they are doing so without consulting with those of us who run small businesses online. Of the 97 people who spoke at the forum, the majority was technicians and lawyers who represent the ISP’s and Anti-Spam companies. A few of the people even represented large bulk email companies.

Forum participants could not even agree on a proper definition of “spam” — yet they propose that they are the best qualified to help write the laws that will eliminate spam?

My question is this, who represented the small business owner and the small publishers at the FTC spam forum? No one really. It was not because the small business segment did not have representatives willing to speak on their behalf. In fact, both I-Cop.org and OMPUAC.org — both of whom represent small online businesses — had petitioned to have their representatives speak at the forum, but both were turned down.

You can read the list of the people who DID speak at the FTC “Spam Forum” at:

http://www.theezine.net/ftc_spam_forum.shtml

Should you honestly believe the anti-spam profiteers had your interests in mind when they had the opportunity to speak to the FTC?

Here are some of the anti-spam profiteers who found representation at the FTC “Spam Forum”:

Mail Abuse Prevention System (MAPS) SpamCon Foundation SpamCop The Spamhaus Project Habeas

Even in the hallowed lists of the anti-spam zealots, the profiteers aren’t taken very seriously sometimes. When addressing Anne P. Mitchell, Esq., CEO of Habeas, Inc., a member of the SPAM-L list suggested:

“What makes you think that ‘we’ trust Habeas any more than any other organisation whose business model depends on spam continuing to exist in order to stay in business.”

Good point.

William Waggoner, founder of AAW Marketing LLC in Las Vegas, Nevada, did actually support my own point of view. He suggested at the “Spam Forum” that technology techniques like spam filtering hurts even legitimate email marketers!

You know whom Mr. Waggoner was talking about. He was talking about those e-mail marketers who have actually acquired permission from the email recipient to send them commercial email.

When someone in the forum audience laughed at his comment, Waggoner fired back, “You think that’s funny?”

So why did they laugh? This gets to the heart of why the FTC Spam Forum was bad news for the legitimate email marketer. Many anti-spam zealots do not believe that there is such a thing as “legitimate commercial email!”

TERM: Double Opt-in - Requires a subscriber to request a subscription and then to verify the intention to subscribe by following a defined procedure.

Even if publishers who now require “double opt-in” subscriptions were to ask for and keep records of “quadruple opt-in” verifications from their subscribers, a lot of anti-spam zealots would still cry foul!

Why else would the terms *s*u*b*s*c*r*i*b*e* and *u*n*s*u*b- *s*c*r*i*b*e* be included in many spam filters with the implied suggestion that email that carries this terminology MUST be spam?

It does no good to be able to prove double opt-in to the ISP’s and the anti-spam zealots. Most presuppose that any commercial email is likely to be spam.

The ISP’s are honestly concerned with the cost of bandwidth in association with email. Estimates have put the monthly cost of spam to be $3 per month per email account. Thus, if ISP’s can reduce or eliminate spam, they can reduce their costs and improve their profits.

ISP’s who oppose all commercial email — you know, the kind who laugh at the suggestion that spam filters hurt “legitimate email marketers” — think one step further. They believe that if they can eliminate all commercial email, then they can significantly reduce their costs and significantly improve their profits!

At every level of the Internet food-chain, people are concerned with their own profits. The anti-spam zealots, who had the most pronounced representation at the FTC spam forum, will profit handsomely from the loss of commercial email… Or will they?

Without commercial enterprise on the Internet, will people still be flocking to the web in the numbers they are today?

Recognizing the fact that the filtering industry is destroying email commerce, people like Anne P. Mitchell of Habeas, Inc. have come running to the assistance of online commercial businesses. For a price, Habeas will “whitelist” your publication or email — or should I say for a hefty price, Habeas will “whitelist” your email!

TERM: Whitelist - This is a kind of filter that suggests that any email that meets the whitelist definitions will be pre-verified (under the terms of the whitelist company) as legitimate commercial email.

Habeas purports to offer a “value-added service” that will help your outgoing email reach its destination unobstructed. Habeas also purports its fees to be very reasonable — up to $500 per mailing list per year. Is $500 really a “reasonable” price? I don’t think so.

As consumers, we always think of the “spam war” as something that addresses the unsolicited email from the p*o*r*n industry, the nutritional products industry, and other fly-by-night scammers.

Yet, when the people who are speaking on our behalf in the halls of government think of the “spam war”, they are thinking of something else entirely. In fact, they are attempting to remove the cash from the pockets of not only the spammers, but also the small business people who employ legitimate email marketing techniques.

Why do so many anti-spam zealots target all commercial email? Simple, they want to put the cash where THEY think it belongs — into their own pockets!

October 2nd, 2008

What You Have to Know Touching World Wide Web Sport Gaming

Posted by admin in Great Gambling Stuff, Misc Infos

Learn the strategies, practice the tricks: Best WWW bet gambling sports gambling here!

Hook up two of people’s main pursuits and what you’ll get is something that’s generally titled a web based sportsbook. Really now - what could be more imaginative? Envisage a gathering of fanatics cheering to support a preferred local players, and regularly antes will be fixed complementing the racket. So very keen to get their piece of the delights, onlookers repeatedly aspire to conjecture who will win the forthcoming game. In the end, this all is set to turn into a matey little game called web based sportsbook.

If you want to place a bet, you’ll want to search out a web based sportsbook, i.e. a setup that takes in web based sportsbook. In the USA, you have four states where to go for sportsbook wagering lawfully, but informally you can go for it wherever if you find a bookie and happen to be a legal adult. Among the sports competitions you can choose to risk your money on are professional plus, to boot, college class basketball + college league football, professional hockey, professional hockey, plus, to boot, bets on both horse and dog racing. You’ll be able to bet on the general combined score of a contest, at which point one of the contesting parties will go under, and even if a coin toss in a contest will come out either heads or tails.

You’ll get multifarious forms of bets: straight bets, where you merely pinpoint the competitor you believe is the likeliest to win or lose, parlay wagers, teasers, including, naturally, over/unders, the straight bets being the most typical in sportsbook wagering.

So, why not experiment with it, and enjoy yourself as well? Simply ensure that you won’t get too enthused and fritter your entire retirement income on a vagary… Because else you’re bound to end up contrite all your life…

October 1st, 2008

SPAM: A Nutrious Food or a Waste of Time?

Posted by admin in University of Networking

Unless the filters on your computer are really good, you’re getting at least an occasional SPAM message in your email Inbox. For most of us, we spend more time sorting through and deleting the SPAM than we care to. In fact, my husband told me tonight that of 30 messages he receives each day on our home computer 29 of them are SPAM.

Sometimes SPAM messages are easily identifiable by their subject lines. Sometimes the senders disguise the messages by using what appear to be either business-related subjects or subjects that imply a personal relationship has already been established. Either way, we know it’s risky to open these messages-because of their content and because of potential viruses.

We’re in the business of doing business. To maintain solid relationships with our clients and peers, writing an accurate and descriptive subject line for each email we send is critical to making our readers’ lives easier and their work more efficient. Accurate subject lines not only reflect the content of the message; they also serve as a focus statement so the reader can begin gathering information right away.

I was reminded recently of the importance of the accurate subject line. I’d contacted a company regarding cell phone service and asked that a sales representative contact me. I received an email some days later from a sales rep that had in the subject line just this one word: “hello.” Normally I wouldn’t open this message. But for some reason I did and found that it was from the person I was eagerly awaiting a response.

All readers, you and me included, approach each email we read with the same question in mind: “What’s this about?” We want that question answered immediately. When the writer of the email or document fails to anticipate our question and postpones the answer, most of us become impatient. Our time is precious and each moment valuable. We don’t want to waste it searching for the answer to that question. Nor do we want to run the risk of opening an email that will infect our computers.

When we give an accurate subject line, we begin to answer the question “What’s this about?” Our readers appreciate knowing how to focus their reading and also feel more confident opening emails presented this way.

Help yourself and your readers by being very descriptive in your email subject lines. This is particularly important if you don’t have a previous relationship established with the reader. Even if you do, you have probably already experienced how clever and deceptive SPAMers can be.

For an idea of how you can begin to tailor your subject lines to meet your readers’ needs,

Instead of a subject line that just says “Report”

Try: “Report on (title of report) dated (insert date) for (client)”

Instead of a subject line that says “Hello”

Try: (Your company name)… (specific reason for writing)

Instead of: “Following up”

Try: Our meeting at X company on …

In other words, be as descriptive as possible, making as many connections as you can to previous contact or work you’ve done with the reader. If the sales person that contacted me had put in the subject line: “your request for XYZ Company phone service upgrades” I’d not have had ANY questions whatsoever about opening his email.

We can’t afford to be cavalier, coy, or questionable in our emails. Giving our readers an accurate, descriptive, and informative subject line helps our readers feel more confident in opening our messages, more receptive to our content, and more willing to respond when we answer the question “What’s this about.”

EzineArticles Expert Author Tracy Peterson Turner, PhD

About the Author:

Dr. Tracy Peterson Turner works with organizations that want to turn their managers into leaders and with leaders who want to get their messages heard. She is an expert in both written and verbal communication and conducts presentations and workshops to help individuals and corporations meet their communication goals.

Visit Tracy on the web at http://www.Mgr-Impact.com. Email her at Tracy@Mgr-Impact.com

Next Entries »