Posts Tagged ‘Photos’

Nice Franchise Business photos

Saturday, April 9th, 2011

Some cool franchise business images:

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (130)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (93)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (180)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

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Nice Franchise Business photos

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

Some cool franchise business images:

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (97)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (88)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (122)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

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Nice Business Goals photos

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

A few nice Business Goals images I found:

Solitude
Business Goals
Image by PaDumBumPsh

Evil Businessman Business Planning Workshop
Business Goals
Image by groop_lab
So now that you have developed your “Life Brand” at our Life Branding Workshop (or worked on it at the Evil Businessman Seminar) it is time to start or continue building the vehicle(s) to get to your destination. One of these vehicles is having your own business. That can be a freelance practice, non-profit, product business or service business.

The Goal of the Business Planning workshop is to define your business, non-profit or freelance practice. It is designed to give you a tangible, easy to execute, visual guide to building and growing your business. You will use it to share with your business partners, staff, potential investors and others.

During this workshop we will work together in both small and large groups to define:

Why should I plan?
What will the plan do for me?
Your business mission
Your business opportunity
The size of business
Your competition
How your business makes money
How do you exit your business
How do you market your business
Your financial goals

Evil Businessman Business Planning Workshop
Business Goals
Image by groop_lab
So now that you have developed your “Life Brand” at our Life Branding Workshop (or worked on it at the Evil Businessman Seminar) it is time to start or continue building the vehicle(s) to get to your destination. One of these vehicles is having your own business. That can be a freelance practice, non-profit, product business or service business.

The Goal of the Business Planning workshop is to define your business, non-profit or freelance practice. It is designed to give you a tangible, easy to execute, visual guide to building and growing your business. You will use it to share with your business partners, staff, potential investors and others.

During this workshop we will work together in both small and large groups to define:

Why should I plan?
What will the plan do for me?
Your business mission
Your business opportunity
The size of business
Your competition
How your business makes money
How do you exit your business
How do you market your business
Your financial goals

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Nice Blogging For Money photos

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

A few nice blogging for money images I found:

10/8 am: WSJ
blogging for money
Image by MyEyeSees
Things Get Serious.
Pre-opening – Fed cut rates, generates big impact on futures, up 100 points after being down 150 points and other markets followed suit in world coordination- Does this help stabilize? Billion bailout in UK enacted — Bank of England announces 0 pool of money for banks to borrow from – intrabank lending… First emergency rate cut by England, last time did this was on 9/11

Market Opens… Dow down 206.13 points
US consumers paying down debt forthe first time in a decade – MarketWatch
Dow down more than 1400 points over past five sessions
Day Ended: The Dow closed down 189.01 to 9,258.10
Henry Paulson, warned that financial "turmoil" will not end soon and that more banks are likely to bite the dust. Stocks close, stock indexes suffer sixth straight day of losses

Part I: Sept. U.S. Economic Crisis Media Study —
www.flickr.com/photos/myeye/sets/72157607584362826/
Blogging on the subject starts with
Bigge$ st Cri$ i$ and Media–
motherpie.typepad.com/motherpie/2008/09/bigget-crii-and.html

Google Trends: Economy, Bailout
blogging for money
Image by MyEyeSees
Things Get Serious.
Pre-opening – Fed cut rates, generates big impact on futures, up 100 points after being down 150 points and other markets followed suit in world coordination- Does this help stabilize? Billion bailout in UK enacted — Bank of England announces 0 pool of money for banks to borrow from – intrabank lending… First emergency rate cut by England, last time did this was on 9/11

Market Opens… Dow down 206.13 points
US consumers paying down debt forthe first time in a decade – MarketWatch
Dow down more than 1400 points over past five sessions
Day Ended: The Dow closed down 189.01 to 9,258.10
Henry Paulson, warned that financial "turmoil" will not end soon and that more banks are likely to bite the dust. Stocks close, stock indexes suffer sixth straight day of losses

Part I: Sept. U.S. Economic Crisis Media Study —
www.flickr.com/photos/myeye/sets/72157607584362826/
Blogging on the subject starts with
Bigge$ st Cri$ i$ and Media–
motherpie.typepad.com/motherpie/2008/09/bigget-crii-and.html

10/8 am: WaPo
blogging for money
Image by MyEyeSees
Things Get Serious.
Pre-opening – Fed cut rates, generates big impact on futures, up 100 points after being down 150 points and other markets followed suit in world coordination- Does this help stabilize? Billion bailout in UK enacted — Bank of England announces 0 pool of money for banks to borrow from – intrabank lending… First emergency rate cut by England, last time did this was on 9/11

Market Opens… Dow down 206.13 points
US consumers paying down debt forthe first time in a decade – MarketWatch
Dow down more than 1400 points over past five sessions
Day Ended: The Dow closed down 189.01 to 9,258.10
Henry Paulson, warned that financial "turmoil" will not end soon and that more banks are likely to bite the dust. Stocks close, stock indexes suffer sixth straight day of losses

Part I: Sept. U.S. Economic Crisis Media Study —
www.flickr.com/photos/myeye/sets/72157607584362826/
Blogging on the subject starts with
Bigge$ st Cri$ i$ and Media–
motherpie.typepad.com/motherpie/2008/09/bigget-crii-and.html

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Nice Blogging For Money photos

Friday, February 25th, 2011

Check out these blogging for money images:

First_Adsense_W00T
blogging for money
Image by aaron_anderer
I started blogging informally back in January of 2008. This has never been a money making endeavor, just something for fun. In March of 2008 I setup a Google Adsense account to serve up ads through my website and blog. Google doesn’t pay out until you have reached the 0 USD mark. So, putting ads on my site has reimbursed me for about 50% of my online expenses.. not bad for doing nothing. :)

I’m not quitting my day job, but if the revenue stream negates my online costs, that is great.

How to Write a Book
blogging for money
Image by Chris Pirillo
See the "How to Write a Book" video

live.pirillo.com/ – Lyle in the chatroom is interested in writing a book and wants to know how he can write a technology book without being torn to shred by critics and his peers.Chris’s advice: "write what you and own what you write."If you don’t really understand a subject then you probably shouldn’t write a book about it. Even if you do understand a subject, then you need to consider if you really do want to write a book, because if you’re in it for the money you’ll be sorely disappointed.Instead of writing a book, you may consider blogging about the subject you like: after a year of blogging you may very well have enough content for a book, and all you need to do it is take that content and create a mashup in a book format.Also, consider going the eBook route. You don’t have to deal with a publisher, and it’s possible to create a good stream of income with this method.Do you have any suggestions for Lyle?Want to embed our Book Writing video in your blog? Use this c
ode:http://live.pirillo.com/ / http://chris.pirillo.com/media/This video was originally shared on blip.tv by l0ckergn0me with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs license.

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Nice Niche Marketing photos

Sunday, February 20th, 2011

Some cool niche marketing images:

Denise Wakeman at Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) Workshop 3
niche marketing
Image by rogercarr
Photo of Denise Wakeman was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on January 29-February 1, 2010.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

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Nice Online Business photos

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011

cool images online business:

IMG_0092
Online business
Year peak of Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots of F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on 7 April 2010.

IMG_0063
Online business
Year peak of Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots of F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on 7 April 2010.

IMG_0071
Online business
Year peak of Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots of F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on 7 April 2010.

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Nice Franchise Business photos

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Check out these pictures

franchise company:

2010 RonSombilonGallery Taco Time (174)
franchise business
Picture of Ron Sombilon gallery
Annual Conference 2010 – Photos of Taco Time Ron Sombilon Gallery www.TacoTimeCanada.com www.RonSombilonGallery.com FranchisemogelijkhedenMet plans to expand in Canada, there are numerous opportunities for hardworking and motivated business people to the safety and support from Taco Time ® genieten.Onze mission it to make money with our franchisees, instead of from our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average employment duration of a Taco Time ® franchisee is more than 15 years.

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Nice SEO photos

Friday, January 14th, 2011

A few nice SEO images I found:

Dallas SEO/SEM Meetup – Linkbuilding Tips
SEO
Image by LevelTen_Colin
Licensed under a creative commons share-alike. Use freely but give attribution to LevelTen Interactive and link to www.leveltendesign.com

Please join us July 21st as we get back to our SEO roots with a presentation entitled "Proven Linkbuiding Secrets & Strategies for Better Search Engine Rank". Neil Lemons of www.leveltendesign.com will be sharing his thoughts with our group and chairing a panel discussion after the presentation. Neil is an Internet Marketing Specialist, (SEO/SEM), AdWords PPC Expert and Consultant in the Dallas area. Read Neil’s blog at www.leveltende...

Panel members will also include Colin Alsheimer, also of LevelTen and Jenna Ryan from www.themarketingshop.com.

Licensed under a creative commons share-alike. Use freely but give attribution to LevelTen Interactive and link to www.leveltendesign.com

La Seo de Zaragoza
SEO
Image by Rufino Lasaosa
Naves de la Seo del Salvador, Catedral de Zaragoza

La Catedrla del Salvador fue edificada a partir de la segunda mitad del siglo XII en estilo románico, en tiempos del Obispo Pedro Tarroja.

El nuevo templo de estilo gótico se comenzó a construir entre 1316 y 1319 con yeso y ladrillo.

En 1491, a iniciativa del Arzobispo D. Alonso de Aragón, se añadieron dos naves laterales. Casi sesenta años después, durante el pontificado de D. Hernando de Aragón, se añadieron dos tramos más a los pies, quedando la Catedral como se ve hoy.

Más información en www.cabildodezaragoza.org/

La Seo de Zaragoza
SEO
Image by Rufino Lasaosa
Naves de la Seo del Salvador, Catedral de Zaragoza

La Catedrla del Salvador fue edificada a partir de la segunda mitad del siglo XII en estilo románico, en tiempos del Obispo Pedro Tarroja.

El nuevo templo de estilo gótico se comenzó a construir entre 1316 y 1319 con yeso y ladrillo.

En 1491, a iniciativa del Arzobispo D. Alonso de Aragón, se añadieron dos naves laterales. Casi sesenta años después, durante el pontificado de D. Hernando de Aragón, se añadieron dos tramos más a los pies, quedando la Catedral como se ve hoy.

Más información en www.cabildodezaragoza.org/

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Nice Internet Business photos

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Some cool Internet Business images:

BAIAEvent_July2008-14
Internet Business
Image by BAIA

BAIAEvent_July2008-27
Internet Business
Image by BAIA

BAIAEvent_July2008-26
Internet Business
Image by BAIA

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Nice Franchise Business photos

Monday, January 10th, 2011

A few nice franchise business images I found:

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (177)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

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Nice Business Motivation photos

Saturday, January 8th, 2011

Check out these business motivation images:

The London Frontline Monkey
business motivation
Image by Wootang01
9.4.09
The flight arrived on time; and the twelve hours while on board passed quickly and without incident. To be sure, the quality of the Cathay Pacific service was exemplary once again.

Heathrow reminds me of Newark International. The décor comes straight out of the sterile 80′s and is less an eyesore than an insipid background to the rhythm of human activity, such hustle and bustle, at the fore. There certainly are faces from all races present, creating a rich mosaic of humanity which is refreshing if not completely revitalizing after swimming for so long in a sea of Chinese faces in Hong Kong.

Internet access is sealed in England, it seems. Nothing is free; everything is egregiously monetized from the wireless hotspots down to the desktop terminals. I guess Hong Kong has spoiled me with its abundant, free access to the information superhighway.

11.4.09
Despite staying in a room with five other backpackers, I have been sleeping well. The mattress and pillow are firm; my earplugs keep the noise out; and the sleeping quarters are as dark as a cave when the lights are out, and only as bright as, perhaps, a dreary rainy day when on. All in all, St. Paul’s is a excellent place to stay for the gregarious, adventurous, and penurious city explorer – couchsurfing may be a tenable alternative; I’ll test for next time.

Yesterday Connie and I gorged ourselves at the borough market where there were all sorts of delectable, savory victuals. There was definitely a European flavor to the food fair: simmering sausages were to be found everywhere; and much as the meat was plentiful, and genuine, so were the dairy delicacies, in the form of myriad rounds of cheese, stacked high behind checkered tabletops. Of course, we washed these tasty morsels down with copious amounts of alcohol that flowed from cups as though amber waterfalls. For the first time I tried mulled wine, which tasted like warm, rancid fruit punch – the ideal tonic for a drizzling London day, I suppose. We later killed the afternoon at the pub, shooting the breeze while imbibing several diminutive half-pints in the process. Getting smashed at four in the afternoon doesn’t seem like such a bad thing anymore, especially when you are having fun in the company of friends; I can more appreciate why the English do it so much!

Earlier in the day, we visited the Tate Modern. Its turbine room lived up to its prominent billing what with a giant spider, complete with bulbous egg sac, anchoring the retrospective exhibit. The permanent galleries, too, were a delight upon which to feast one’s eyes. Picasso, Warhol and Pollock ruled the chambers of the upper floors with the products of their lithe wrists; and I ended up becoming a huge fan of cubism, while developing a disdain for abstract art and its vacuous images, which, I feel, are devoid of both motivation and emotion.

My first trip yesterday morning was to Emirates Stadium, home of the Arsenal Gunners. It towers imperiously over the surrounding neighborhood; yet for all its majesty, the place sure was quiet! Business did pick up later, however, once the armory shop opened, and dozens of fans descended on it like bees to a hive. I, too, swooped in on a gift-buying mission, and wound up purchasing a book for Godfrey, a scarf for a student, and a jersey – on sale, of course – for good measure.

I’m sitting in the Westminster Abbey Museum now, resting my weary legs and burdened back. So far, I’ve been verily impressed with what I’ve seen, such a confluence of splendor and history before me that it would require days to absorb it all, when regretfully I can spare only a few hours. My favorite part of the abbey is the poets corner where no less a literary luminary than Samuel Johnson rests in peace – his bust confirms his homely presence, which was so vividly captured in his biography.

For lunch I had a steak and ale pie, served with mash, taken alongside a Guinness, extra cold – 2 degrees centigrade colder, the bartender explained. It went down well, like all the other delicious meals I’ve had in England; and no doubt by now I have grown accustomed to inebriation at half past two. Besides, Liverpool were playing inspired football against Blackburn; and my lunch was complete.

Having had my fill of football, I decided to skip my ticket scalping endeavor at Stamford Bridge and instead wandered over to the British Museum to inspect their extensive collections. Along the way, my eye caught a theater, its doors wide open and admitting customers. With much rapidity, I subsequently checked the show times, saw that a performance was set to begin, and at last rushed to the box office to purchase a discounted ticket – if you call a 40 pound ticket a deal, that is. That’s how I grabbed a seat to watch Hairspray in the West End.

The show was worth forty pounds. The music was addictive; and the stage design and effects were not so much kitschy as delightfully stimulating – the pulsating background lights were at once scintillating and penetrating. The actors as well were vivacious, oozing charisma while they danced and delivered lines dripping in humor. Hairspray is a quality production and most definitely recommended.

12.4.09
At breakfast I sat across from a man who asked me to which country Hong Kong had been returned – China or Japan. That was pretty funny. Then he started spitting on my food as he spoke, completely oblivious to my breakfast becoming the receptacle in which the fruit of his inner churl was being placed. I guess I understand the convention nowadays of covering one’s mouth whilst speaking and masticating at the same time!

We actually conversed on London life in general, and I praised London for its racial integration, the act of which is a prodigious leap of faith for any society, trying to be inclusive, accepting all sorts of people. It wasn’t as though the Brits were trying in vain to be all things to all men, using Spanish with the visitors from Spain, German with the Germans and, even, Hindi with the Indians, regardless of whether or not Hindi was their native language; not even considering the absurd idea of encouraging the international adoption of their language; thereby completely keeping English in English hands and allowing its proud polyglots to "practice" their languages. Indeed, the attempt of the Londoners to avail themselves of the rich mosaic of ethnic knowledge, and to seek a common understanding with a ubiquitous English accent is an exemplar, and the bedrock for any world city.

I celebrated Jesus’ resurrection at the St. Andrew’s Street Church in Cambridge. The parishioners of this Baptist church were warm and affable, and I met several of them, including one visiting (Halliday) linguistics scholar from Zhongshan university in Guangzhou, who in fact had visited my tiny City University of Hong Kong in 2003. The service itself was more traditional and the believers fewer in number than the "progressive" services at any of the charismatic, evangelical churches in HK; yet that’s what makes this part of the body of Christ unique; besides, the message was as brief as a powerpoint slide, and informative no less; the power word which spoke into my life being a question from John 21:22 – what is that to you?

Big trees; exquisite lawns; and old, pointy colleges; that’s Cambridge in a nutshell. Sitting here, sipping on a half-pint of Woodforde’s Wherry, I’ve had a leisurely, if not languorous, day so far; my sole duty consisting of walking around while absorbing the verdant environment as though a sponge, camera in tow.

I am back at the sublime beer, savoring a pint of Sharp’s DoomBar before my fish and chips arrive; the drinking age is 18, but anyone whose visage even hints of youthful brilliance is likely to get carded these days, the bartender told me. The youth drinking culture here is almost as twisted as the university drinking culture in America.

My stay in Cambridge, relaxing and desultory as it may be, is about to end after this late lunch. I an not sure if there is anything left to see, save for the American graveyard which rests an impossible two miles away. I have had a wonderful time in this town; and am thankful for the access into its living history – the residents here must demonstrate remarkable patience and tolerance what with so many tourists ambling on the streets, peering – and photographing – into every nook and cranny.

13.4.09
There are no rubbish bins, yet I’ve seen on the streets many mixed race couples in which the men tend to be white – the women also belonging to a light colored ethnicity, usually some sort of Asian; as well saw some black dudes and Indian dudes with white chicks.

People here hold doors, even at the entrance to the toilet. Sometimes it appears as though they are going out on a limb, just waiting for the one who will take the responsibility for the door from them, at which point I rush out to relieve them of such a fortuitous burden.

I visited the British Museum this morning. The two hours I spent there did neither myself nor the exhibits any justice because there really is too much to survey, enough captivating stuff to last an entire day, I think. The bottomless well of artifacts from antiquity, drawing from sources as diverse as Korea, and Mesopotamia, is a credit to the British empire, without whose looting most of this amazing booty would be unavailable for our purview; better, I think, for these priceless treasures to be open to all in the grandest supermarket of history than away from human eyes, and worst yet, in the hands of unscrupulous collectors or in the rubbish bin, possibly.

Irene and I took in the ballet Giselle at The Royal Opera House in the afternoon. The building is a plush marvel, and a testament to this city’s love for the arts. The ballet itself was satisfying, the first half being superior to the second, in which the nimble dancers demonstrated their phenomenal dexterity in, of all places, a graveyard covered in a cloak of smoke and darkness. I admit, their dance of the dead, in such a gloomy necropolis, did strike me as, strange.

Two amicable ladies from Kent convinced me to visit their hometown tomorrow, where, they told me, the authentic, "working" Leeds Castle and the mighty interesting home of Charles Darwin await.

I’m nursing a pint of Green King Ruddles and wondering about the profusion of British ales and lagers; the British have done a great deed for the world by creating an interminable line of low-alcohol session beers that can be enjoyed at breakfast, lunch, tea and dinner; and their disservice is this: besides this inexhaustible supply of cheap beer ensnaring my inner alcoholic, I feel myself putting on my freshman fifteen, almost ten years after the fact; I am going to have to run a bit harder back in Hong Kong if I want to burn all this malty fuel off.

Irene suggested I stop by the National Art Gallery since we were in the area; and it was an hour well spent. The gallery currently presents a special exhibit on Picasso, the non-ticketed section of which features several seductive renderings, including David spying on Bathsheba – repeated in clever variants – and parodies of other masters’ works. Furthermore, the main gallery houses two fabulous portraits by Joshua Reynolds, who happens to be favorite of mine, he in life being a close friend of Samuel Johnson – I passed by Boswells, where its namesake first met Johnson, on my way to the opera house.

14.4.09
I prayed last night, and went through my list, lifting everyone on it up to the Lord. That felt good; that God is alive now, and ever present in my life and in the lives of my brothers and sisters.

Doubtless, then, I have felt quite wistful, as though a specter in the land of the living, being in a place where religious fervor, it seems, is a thing of the past, a trifling for many, to be hidden away in the opaque corners of centuries-old cathedrals that are more expensive tourist destinations than liberating homes of worship these days. Indeed, I have yet to see anyone pray, outside of the Easter service which I attended in Cambridge – for such an ecstatic moment in verily a grand church, would you believe that it was only attended by at most three dozen spirited ones. The people of England, and Europe in general, have, it is my hope, only locked away the Word, relegating it to the quiet vault of their hearts. May it be taken out in the sudden pause before mealtimes and in the still crisp mornings and cool, silent nights. There is still hope for a revival in this place, for faith to rise like that splendid sun every morning. God would love to rescue them, to deliver them in this day, it is certain.

I wonder what Londoners think, if anything at all, about their police state which, like a vine in the shadows, has taken root in all corners of daily life, from the terrorist notifications in the underground, which implore Londoners to report all things suspicious, to the pair of dogs which eagerly stroll through Euston. What makes this all the more incredible is the fact that even the United States, the indomitable nemesis of the fledgling, rebel order, doesn’t dare bombard its citizens with such fear mongering these days, especially with Obama in office; maybe we’ve grown wise in these past few years to the dubious returns of surrendering civil liberties to the state, of having our bags checked everywhere – London Eye; Hairspray; and The Royal Opera House check bags in London while the museums do not; somehow, that doesn’t add up for me.

I’m in a majestic bookshop on New Street in Birmingham, and certainly to confirm my suspicions, there are just as many books on the death of Christianity in Britain as there are books which attempt to murder Christianity everywhere. I did find, however, a nice biography on John Wesley by Roy Hattersley and The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis. I may pick up the former.

Lunch with Sally was pleasant and mirthful. We dined at a French restaurant nearby New Street – yes, Birmingham is a cultural capitol! Sally and I both tried their omelette, while her boyfriend had the fish, without chips. Conversation was light, the levity was there and so was our reminiscing about those fleeting moments during our first year in Hong Kong; it is amazing how friendships can resume so suddenly with a smile. On their recommendation, I am on my way to Warwick Castle – they also suggested that I visit Cadbury World, but they cannot take on additional visitors at the moment, the tourist office staff informed me, much to my disappointment!

Visiting Warwick Castle really made for a great day out. The castle, parts of which were established by William the Conquerer in 1068, is as much a kitschy tourist trap as a meticulous preservation of history, at times a sillier version of Ocean Park while at others a dignified dedication to a most glorious, inexorably English past. The castle caters to all visitors; and not surprisingly, that which delighted all audiences was a giant trebuchet siege engine, which for the five p.m. performance hurled a fireball high and far into the air – fantastic! Taliban beware!

15.4.09
I’m leaving on a jet plane this evening; don’t know when I’ll be back in England again. I’ll miss this quirky, yet endearing place; and that I shall miss Irene and Tom who so generously welcomed me into their home, fed me, and suffered my use of their toilet and shower goes without saying. I’m grateful for God’s many blessings on this trip.

On the itinerary today is a trip to John Wesley’s home, followed by a visit to the Imperial War Museum. Already this morning I picked up a tube of Oilatum, a week late perhaps, which Teri recommended I use to treat this obstinate, dermal weakness of mine – I’m happy to report that my skin has stopped crying.

John Wesley’s home is alive and well. Services are still held in the chapel everyday; and its crypt, so far from being a cellar for the dead, is a bright, spacious museum in which all things Wesley are on display – I never realized how much of an iconic figure he became in England; at the height of this idol frenzy, ironic in itself, he must have been as popular as the Beatles were at their apex. The house itself is a multi-story edifice with narrow, precipitous staircases and spacious rooms decorated in an 18th century fashion.

I found Samuel Johnson’s house within a maze of red brick hidden alongside Fleet Street. To be in the home of the man who wrote the English dictionary, and whose indefatigable love for obscure words became the inspiration for my own lexical obsession, this, by far, is the climax of my visit to England! The best certainly has been saved for last.

There are a multitude of portraits hanging around the house like ornaments on a tree. Every likeness has its own story, meticulously retold on the crib sheets in each room. Celebrities abound, including David Garrick and Sir Joshua Reynolds, who painted several of the finer images in the house. I have developed a particular affinity for Oliver Goldsmith, of whom Boswell writes, "His person was short, his countenance coarse and vulgar, his deportment that of a scholar awkwardly affecting the easy gentleman. It appears as though I, too, could use a more flattering description of myself!

I regretfully couldn’t stop to try the curry in England; I guess the CityU canteen’s take on the dish will have to do. I did, however, have the opportune task of flirting with the cute Cathay Pacific counter staff who checked me in. She was gorgeous in red, light powder on her cheeks, with real diamond earrings, she said; and her small, delicate face, commanded by a posh British accent rendered her positively irresistible, electrifying. Not only did she grant me an aisle seat but she had the gumption to return my fawning with zest; she must be a pro at this by now.

I saw her again as she was pulling double-duty, collecting tickets prior to boarding. She remembered my quest for curry; and in the fog of infatuation, where nary a man has been made, I fumbled my words like the sloppy kid who has had too much punch. I am just an amateur, alas, an "Oliver Goldsmith" with the ladies – I got no game – booyah!

Some final, consequential bits: because of the chavs, Burberry no longer sells those fashionable baseball caps; because of the IRA, rubbish bins are no longer a commodity on the streets of London, and as a result, the streets and the Underground of the city are a soiled mess; and because of other terrorists from distant, more arid lands, going through a Western airport has taken on the tedium of perfunctory procedure that doesn’t make me feel any safer from my invisible enemies.

At last, I saw so many Indians working at Heathrow that I could have easily mistaken the place for Mumbai. Their presence surprised me because their portion of the general population surely must be less than their portion of Heathrow staff, indicating some mysterious hiring bias. Regardless, they do a superb job with cursory airport checks, and in general are absurdly funny and witty when not tactless.

That’s all for England!

Birmingham Bubbles
business motivation
Image by Wootang01
9.4.09
The flight arrived on time; and the twelve hours while on board passed quickly and without incident. To be sure, the quality of the Cathay Pacific service was exemplary once again.

Heathrow reminds me of Newark International. The décor comes straight out of the sterile 80′s and is less an eyesore than an insipid background to the rhythm of human activity, such hustle and bustle, at the fore. There certainly are faces from all races present, creating a rich mosaic of humanity which is refreshing if not completely revitalizing after swimming for so long in a sea of Chinese faces in Hong Kong.

Internet access is sealed in England, it seems. Nothing is free; everything is egregiously monetized from the wireless hotspots down to the desktop terminals. I guess Hong Kong has spoiled me with its abundant, free access to the information superhighway.

11.4.09
Despite staying in a room with five other backpackers, I have been sleeping well. The mattress and pillow are firm; my earplugs keep the noise out; and the sleeping quarters are as dark as a cave when the lights are out, and only as bright as, perhaps, a dreary rainy day when on. All in all, St. Paul’s is a excellent place to stay for the gregarious, adventurous, and penurious city explorer – couchsurfing may be a tenable alternative; I’ll test for next time.

Yesterday Connie and I gorged ourselves at the borough market where there were all sorts of delectable, savory victuals. There was definitely a European flavor to the food fair: simmering sausages were to be found everywhere; and much as the meat was plentiful, and genuine, so were the dairy delicacies, in the form of myriad rounds of cheese, stacked high behind checkered tabletops. Of course, we washed these tasty morsels down with copious amounts of alcohol that flowed from cups as though amber waterfalls. For the first time I tried mulled wine, which tasted like warm, rancid fruit punch – the ideal tonic for a drizzling London day, I suppose. We later killed the afternoon at the pub, shooting the breeze while imbibing several diminutive half-pints in the process. Getting smashed at four in the afternoon doesn’t seem like such a bad thing anymore, especially when you are having fun in the company of friends; I can more appreciate why the English do it so much!

Earlier in the day, we visited the Tate Modern. Its turbine room lived up to its prominent billing what with a giant spider, complete with bulbous egg sac, anchoring the retrospective exhibit. The permanent galleries, too, were a delight upon which to feast one’s eyes. Picasso, Warhol and Pollock ruled the chambers of the upper floors with the products of their lithe wrists; and I ended up becoming a huge fan of cubism, while developing a disdain for abstract art and its vacuous images, which, I feel, are devoid of both motivation and emotion.

My first trip yesterday morning was to Emirates Stadium, home of the Arsenal Gunners. It towers imperiously over the surrounding neighborhood; yet for all its majesty, the place sure was quiet! Business did pick up later, however, once the armory shop opened, and dozens of fans descended on it like bees to a hive. I, too, swooped in on a gift-buying mission, and wound up purchasing a book for Godfrey, a scarf for a student, and a jersey – on sale, of course – for good measure.

I’m sitting in the Westminster Abbey Museum now, resting my weary legs and burdened back. So far, I’ve been verily impressed with what I’ve seen, such a confluence of splendor and history before me that it would require days to absorb it all, when regretfully I can spare only a few hours. My favorite part of the abbey is the poets corner where no less a literary luminary than Samuel Johnson rests in peace – his bust confirms his homely presence, which was so vividly captured in his biography.

For lunch I had a steak and ale pie, served with mash, taken alongside a Guinness, extra cold – 2 degrees centigrade colder, the bartender explained. It went down well, like all the other delicious meals I’ve had in England; and no doubt by now I have grown accustomed to inebriation at half past two. Besides, Liverpool were playing inspired football against Blackburn; and my lunch was complete.

Having had my fill of football, I decided to skip my ticket scalping endeavor at Stamford Bridge and instead wandered over to the British Museum to inspect their extensive collections. Along the way, my eye caught a theater, its doors wide open and admitting customers. With much rapidity, I subsequently checked the show times, saw that a performance was set to begin, and at last rushed to the box office to purchase a discounted ticket – if you call a 40 pound ticket a deal, that is. That’s how I grabbed a seat to watch Hairspray in the West End.

The show was worth forty pounds. The music was addictive; and the stage design and effects were not so much kitschy as delightfully stimulating – the pulsating background lights were at once scintillating and penetrating. The actors as well were vivacious, oozing charisma while they danced and delivered lines dripping in humor. Hairspray is a quality production and most definitely recommended.

12.4.09
At breakfast I sat across from a man who asked me to which country Hong Kong had been returned – China or Japan. That was pretty funny. Then he started spitting on my food as he spoke, completely oblivious to my breakfast becoming the receptacle in which the fruit of his inner churl was being placed. I guess I understand the convention nowadays of covering one’s mouth whilst speaking and masticating at the same time!

We actually conversed on London life in general, and I praised London for its racial integration, the act of which is a prodigious leap of faith for any society, trying to be inclusive, accepting all sorts of people. It wasn’t as though the Brits were trying in vain to be all things to all men, using Spanish with the visitors from Spain, German with the Germans and, even, Hindi with the Indians, regardless of whether or not Hindi was their native language; not even considering the absurd idea of encouraging the international adoption of their language; thereby completely keeping English in English hands and allowing its proud polyglots to "practice" their languages. Indeed, the attempt of the Londoners to avail themselves of the rich mosaic of ethnic knowledge, and to seek a common understanding with a ubiquitous English accent is an exemplar, and the bedrock for any world city.

I celebrated Jesus’ resurrection at the St. Andrew’s Street Church in Cambridge. The parishioners of this Baptist church were warm and affable, and I met several of them, including one visiting (Halliday) linguistics scholar from Zhongshan university in Guangzhou, who in fact had visited my tiny City University of Hong Kong in 2003. The service itself was more traditional and the believers fewer in number than the "progressive" services at any of the charismatic, evangelical churches in HK; yet that’s what makes this part of the body of Christ unique; besides, the message was as brief as a powerpoint slide, and informative no less; the power word which spoke into my life being a question from John 21:22 – what is that to you?

Big trees; exquisite lawns; and old, pointy colleges; that’s Cambridge in a nutshell. Sitting here, sipping on a half-pint of Woodforde’s Wherry, I’ve had a leisurely, if not languorous, day so far; my sole duty consisting of walking around while absorbing the verdant environment as though a sponge, camera in tow.

I am back at the sublime beer, savoring a pint of Sharp’s DoomBar before my fish and chips arrive; the drinking age is 18, but anyone whose visage even hints of youthful brilliance is likely to get carded these days, the bartender told me. The youth drinking culture here is almost as twisted as the university drinking culture in America.

My stay in Cambridge, relaxing and desultory as it may be, is about to end after this late lunch. I an not sure if there is anything left to see, save for the American graveyard which rests an impossible two miles away. I have had a wonderful time in this town; and am thankful for the access into its living history – the residents here must demonstrate remarkable patience and tolerance what with so many tourists ambling on the streets, peering – and photographing – into every nook and cranny.

13.4.09
There are no rubbish bins, yet I’ve seen on the streets many mixed race couples in which the men tend to be white – the women also belonging to a light colored ethnicity, usually some sort of Asian; as well saw some black dudes and Indian dudes with white chicks.

People here hold doors, even at the entrance to the toilet. Sometimes it appears as though they are going out on a limb, just waiting for the one who will take the responsibility for the door from them, at which point I rush out to relieve them of such a fortuitous burden.

I visited the British Museum this morning. The two hours I spent there did neither myself nor the exhibits any justice because there really is too much to survey, enough captivating stuff to last an entire day, I think. The bottomless well of artifacts from antiquity, drawing from sources as diverse as Korea, and Mesopotamia, is a credit to the British empire, without whose looting most of this amazing booty would be unavailable for our purview; better, I think, for these priceless treasures to be open to all in the grandest supermarket of history than away from human eyes, and worst yet, in the hands of unscrupulous collectors or in the rubbish bin, possibly.

Irene and I took in the ballet Giselle at The Royal Opera House in the afternoon. The building is a plush marvel, and a testament to this city’s love for the arts. The ballet itself was satisfying, the first half being superior to the second, in which the nimble dancers demonstrated their phenomenal dexterity in, of all places, a graveyard covered in a cloak of smoke and darkness. I admit, their dance of the dead, in such a gloomy necropolis, did strike me as, strange.

Two amicable ladies from Kent convinced me to visit their hometown tomorrow, where, they told me, the authentic, "working" Leeds Castle and the mighty interesting home of Charles Darwin await.

I’m nursing a pint of Green King Ruddles and wondering about the profusion of British ales and lagers; the British have done a great deed for the world by creating an interminable line of low-alcohol session beers that can be enjoyed at breakfast, lunch, tea and dinner; and their disservice is this: besides this inexhaustible supply of cheap beer ensnaring my inner alcoholic, I feel myself putting on my freshman fifteen, almost ten years after the fact; I am going to have to run a bit harder back in Hong Kong if I want to burn all this malty fuel off.

Irene suggested I stop by the National Art Gallery since we were in the area; and it was an hour well spent. The gallery currently presents a special exhibit on Picasso, the non-ticketed section of which features several seductive renderings, including David spying on Bathsheba – repeated in clever variants – and parodies of other masters’ works. Furthermore, the main gallery houses two fabulous portraits by Joshua Reynolds, who happens to be favorite of mine, he in life being a close friend of Samuel Johnson – I passed by Boswells, where its namesake first met Johnson, on my way to the opera house.

14.4.09
I prayed last night, and went through my list, lifting everyone on it up to the Lord. That felt good; that God is alive now, and ever present in my life and in the lives of my brothers and sisters.

Doubtless, then, I have felt quite wistful, as though a specter in the land of the living, being in a place where religious fervor, it seems, is a thing of the past, a trifling for many, to be hidden away in the opaque corners of centuries-old cathedrals that are more expensive tourist destinations than liberating homes of worship these days. Indeed, I have yet to see anyone pray, outside of the Easter service which I attended in Cambridge – for such an ecstatic moment in verily a grand church, would you believe that it was only attended by at most three dozen spirited ones. The people of England, and Europe in general, have, it is my hope, only locked away the Word, relegating it to the quiet vault of their hearts. May it be taken out in the sudden pause before mealtimes and in the still crisp mornings and cool, silent nights. There is still hope for a revival in this place, for faith to rise like that splendid sun every morning. God would love to rescue them, to deliver them in this day, it is certain.

I wonder what Londoners think, if anything at all, about their police state which, like a vine in the shadows, has taken root in all corners of daily life, from the terrorist notifications in the underground, which implore Londoners to report all things suspicious, to the pair of dogs which eagerly stroll through Euston. What makes this all the more incredible is the fact that even the United States, the indomitable nemesis of the fledgling, rebel order, doesn’t dare bombard its citizens with such fear mongering these days, especially with Obama in office; maybe we’ve grown wise in these past few years to the dubious returns of surrendering civil liberties to the state, of having our bags checked everywhere – London Eye; Hairspray; and The Royal Opera House check bags in London while the museums do not; somehow, that doesn’t add up for me.

I’m in a majestic bookshop on New Street in Birmingham, and certainly to confirm my suspicions, there are just as many books on the death of Christianity in Britain as there are books which attempt to murder Christianity everywhere. I did find, however, a nice biography on John Wesley by Roy Hattersley and The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis. I may pick up the former.

Lunch with Sally was pleasant and mirthful. We dined at a French restaurant nearby New Street – yes, Birmingham is a cultural capitol! Sally and I both tried their omelette, while her boyfriend had the fish, without chips. Conversation was light, the levity was there and so was our reminiscing about those fleeting moments during our first year in Hong Kong; it is amazing how friendships can resume so suddenly with a smile. On their recommendation, I am on my way to Warwick Castle – they also suggested that I visit Cadbury World, but they cannot take on additional visitors at the moment, the tourist office staff informed me, much to my disappointment!

Visiting Warwick Castle really made for a great day out. The castle, parts of which were established by William the Conquerer in 1068, is as much a kitschy tourist trap as a meticulous preservation of history, at times a sillier version of Ocean Park while at others a dignified dedication to a most glorious, inexorably English past. The castle caters to all visitors; and not surprisingly, that which delighted all audiences was a giant trebuchet siege engine, which for the five p.m. performance hurled a fireball high and far into the air – fantastic! Taliban beware!

15.4.09
I’m leaving on a jet plane this evening; don’t know when I’ll be back in England again. I’ll miss this quirky, yet endearing place; and that I shall miss Irene and Tom who so generously welcomed me into their home, fed me, and suffered my use of their toilet and shower goes without saying. I’m grateful for God’s many blessings on this trip.

On the itinerary today is a trip to John Wesley’s home, followed by a visit to the Imperial War Museum. Already this morning I picked up a tube of Oilatum, a week late perhaps, which Teri recommended I use to treat this obstinate, dermal weakness of mine – I’m happy to report that my skin has stopped crying.

John Wesley’s home is alive and well. Services are still held in the chapel everyday; and its crypt, so far from being a cellar for the dead, is a bright, spacious museum in which all things Wesley are on display – I never realized how much of an iconic figure he became in England; at the height of this idol frenzy, ironic in itself, he must have been as popular as the Beatles were at their apex. The house itself is a multi-story edifice with narrow, precipitous staircases and spacious rooms decorated in an 18th century fashion.

I found Samuel Johnson’s house within a maze of red brick hidden alongside Fleet Street. To be in the home of the man who wrote the English dictionary, and whose indefatigable love for obscure words became the inspiration for my own lexical obsession, this, by far, is the climax of my visit to England! The best certainly has been saved for last.

There are a multitude of portraits hanging around the house like ornaments on a tree. Every likeness has its own story, meticulously retold on the crib sheets in each room. Celebrities abound, including David Garrick and Sir Joshua Reynolds, who painted several of the finer images in the house. I have developed a particular affinity for Oliver Goldsmith, of whom Boswell writes, "His person was short, his countenance coarse and vulgar, his deportment that of a scholar awkwardly affecting the easy gentleman. It appears as though I, too, could use a more flattering description of myself!

I regretfully couldn’t stop to try the curry in England; I guess the CityU canteen’s take on the dish will have to do. I did, however, have the opportune task of flirting with the cute Cathay Pacific counter staff who checked me in. She was gorgeous in red, light powder on her cheeks, with real diamond earrings, she said; and her small, delicate face, commanded by a posh British accent rendered her positively irresistible, electrifying. Not only did she grant me an aisle seat but she had the gumption to return my fawning with zest; she must be a pro at this by now.

I saw her again as she was pulling double-duty, collecting tickets prior to boarding. She remembered my quest for curry; and in the fog of infatuation, where nary a man has been made, I fumbled my words like the sloppy kid who has had too much punch. I am just an amateur, alas, an "Oliver Goldsmith" with the ladies – I got no game – booyah!

Some final, consequential bits: because of the chavs, Burberry no longer sells those fashionable baseball caps; because of the IRA, rubbish bins are no longer a commodity on the streets of London, and as a result, the streets and the Underground of the city are a soiled mess; and because of other terrorists from distant, more arid lands, going through a Western airport has taken on the tedium of perfunctory procedure that doesn’t make me feel any safer from my invisible enemies.

At last, I saw so many Indians working at Heathrow that I could have easily mistaken the place for Mumbai. Their presence surprised me because their portion of the general population surely must be less than their portion of Heathrow staff, indicating some mysterious hiring bias. Regardless, they do a superb job with cursory airport checks, and in general are absurdly funny and witty when not tactless.

That’s all for England!

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Nice Niche Marketing photos

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

Some cool niche marketing images:

Rob Anderson & Karen Ferrante at Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) 2
niche marketing
Image by rogercarr
This photo was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on 13-17 August, 2009.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

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Nice Small Business Ideas photos

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

A few nice small business ideas images I found:

speech
small business ideas
Image by bitmask
this was #9 (persuade). It was on microfinance, and how it’s possible to make a huge difference to someone’s life with as little as through a microcredit organization such as kiva.

Here are my notes for the speech so you can read them:

World bank:
extreme poverty /day
moderate poverty /day

3.8 billion people live on less than a day

these people are poor for a myriad of reasons which are not their fault
deficiencies in public administration
failures of their environment
overpopulation
disease
whatever the reason, they are unable to thrive

what have you done to help?

give money to charities..
and when you do, do you pay attention to what percentage of your donation goes to helping people
when you give to charities do you know who’s life you’ve changed?

aid can do good
but specifically in africa, despite the billions of dollars poured in to the continent, of people in extreme poverty is increasing
increasing aid increases dependency on aid as free goods flood the market and put local merchants out of business
if you’re given everything, how much incentive do you have to become self reliant?

just after the new year, i got an email saying that manuella had finished paying back her loan
manuella enterprising woman who raised money for her current store by giving massages and manicures
now she sells school supplies and she had just paid back a loan to buy a photocopier which will expand her business

I was impressed by how she bootstrapped
and so when I found her profile on kiva, I lent her part of what she was asking for
32 other people also contributed to her loan
which was then distributed by one of kiva’s field partners in ecuador

kiva is a person to person microlending organization
0,000 loaned
to 2026 entrepreurs

i went back to kiva and started looking at other available loans
i lent to
safina in tanzania who works 10 hour days to make /mo expand her business selling cloth
sun chrip, mother of 4 in cambodia build a roof and a sturdy wall so that her house wouldn’t leak.

loans are few hundred to 1000, many people contribute to one loan
small sums would never be lent by a normal bank
and because the borrowers have no credit
because the administrative costs outweigh the interest on the loan

first microfinance bank
Grameen bank started by Muhammad Yunus as a research project to test this method for providing credit and banking services to the rural poor
grameen means ‘of the village’, so this is is a bank of, for and by the people
aim to lend to the poorest of the poor

it was wildly successful
In 2006, Yunus and the Grameen bank were jointly awarded the nobel peace prize
for their efforts to create economic and social development from below.

Lasting peace can not be achieved unless large population groups find ways in which to break out of poverty.

That vision can not be realised by means of micro-credit alone. But Muhammad Yunus and Grameen Bank have shown that, in the continuing efforts to achieve it, micro-credit must play a major part."

why does microlending work so well

targeting women
more likely to spend money on improving their family and children
than to spend it on themselves
raises socio economic status gives them power

2nd innovation
group lending
group not responsible for the loan
but will not receive another loan if any of the members defaults
encourages others to fill in, and to help each other make payments
borrowers have better information about each other than the bank, credit
support group, community, business ideas

traditional aid doesn’t have the power to affect people at this level
loans are small
and have tremendous potential to affect the lives of the recipients

who has become rich from receiving handouts?
prosperity is the result of opportunity and effort
microlending gives the opportunity and allows people to
to provide services and gain esteem in their community
to gain skills
build their own future, to become self reliant

the next time you want to give money, take a minute to consider WHO you are giving it to.

sources

wikipedia
kiva
microplace
www.csa.com/discoveryguides/microfinance/review2.php?SID=…
www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,363663,00.html

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Nice Make Money Online photos

Sunday, December 26th, 2010

Check out these make money online images:

Iblog4
make money online
Image by Dexter Panganiban
See more at our photo blog Photo Gallery and Tech Blog and Make Money Online Blog

Butong Taal Batangas Beach Resort
make money online
Image by Dexter Panganiban
See more at our photo blog Photo Gallery and Tech Blog and Make Money Online Blog | See our site @ www.thebestoftaalbatangas.com/

Butong Taal Batangas Beach Resort
make money online
Image by Dexter Panganiban
See more at our photo blog Photo Gallery and Tech Blog and Make Money Online Blog | See our site @ www.thebestoftaalbatangas.com/

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Nice Internet Business photos

Friday, December 24th, 2010

A few nice Internet Business images I found:

monopoly-e-commerce
Internet Business
Image by danielbroche
Qui veut jouer au e-commerçant ?
Let’s play e-commerce ?

Je suis preneur pour les suggestions de cartes de la pioche Chance et Web2.0

(http://danielbroche.typepad.com/daniel_broche/2008/02/e-commerce-qui.html)

EDIT (08-2009): New dynamic version here
www.danielbroche.com/daniel_broche/2009/08/ecommerce-2009…

ThinkBalm Island
Internet Business
Image by Torley
Immersive Internet insights and expertise (www.thinkbalm.com)

(1) Learning and training
(2) Meetings
(3) Conferences
(4) Collaborative 3D data visualization
(5) Collaborative design & prototyping
(6) Business activity rehearsal
(7) Remote system & facility mgmt.
(8) Human resources mgmt.

Posted by Second Life Resident Torley Linden. Visit ThinkBalm Island.

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Nice Home Based Business photos

Saturday, December 18th, 2010

cool images home based business:

Fanum House
Home base business
Year peak of pixelhut
The home of the AA (Automobile Association), where it’s, Basingstoke, 1970 Hampshire.Out moderism or performance that gradually removed from the landscape.

Fanum House
Home base business
Year peak of pixelhut
The home of the AA (Automobile Association), where it’s, Basingstoke, 1970 Hampshire.Out moderism or performance that gradually removed from the landscape.

Springfield IL – Lyon House, Lincoln Home National Historic Site
Home base business
Year peak of myoldpostcards
The houses near Lincoln owe their name to the holders of record during 1860, Abraham Lincoln’s last full year of residence in Springfield. The following information is from the National Park Service: Alexander Graham this two-storey timber-framed house created by 1853rd In 1856, Graham sold the property, Lemuel Ide, which huis.Volgens the census of 1860, the house was rented Henson Lyon, a farmer hired. Lyons family had to move in the Sangamon County in 1834 and operated a farm two and a half miles east of Springfield. In 1860, Lyon, his son, Thomas, Hulda Burge and her three children and three other people had lived in the structuur.Door 1866, Lyon and Burge moved families. In 1868, the land and the house of Samuel Rosenwald, Julius Rosenwald’s father, who later bought the famous American Clothier, producer, businessman and philanthropist. Julius Rosenwald best as a part-owner and CEO of Sears, Roebuck and Company, and the Rosenwald Fund, won a million pounds for the training of African-Americans known as the other charities in the first half of the 20th Century support. He was also the founder and principal donor to the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, where he spent over $ 5,000,000 and served as chairman until 1927 1932.De Rosenwald family the house remained until 1886. Several owners lived in the tree in the next few years. The exterior of the house was restored in 1970-71 by the City of Springfield and the Rosenwald Foundation, and was at the Lincoln Home National Historic Site recently added na.De photoshop poster edge effect, light is used in the processing of these beeld.Voor more photos of Lincoln sites, visit my “All About Abe” (SET ).################################## # # ############## ########################## You are invited to stay and browse through my Photo Stream. Here is a quick index to my Flickr page: Springfield, Illinois : All my photos of Springfield and Abraham Lincoln sites in this collection. For the city of Springfield, there are separate records for the Capitol Complex, Downtown (including the Old State Capitol), neighborhoods, parks, Illinois State Fairgrounds (and past state fairs), and much more. Photos of Lincoln sites, the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum, Lincoln Home National Historic Site, Lincoln Tomb, and so on. Also in the Lincoln “All About Abe” (set) Lincoln are a few websites that are not in Springfield. Central Illinois based (except Springfield) : Photos with respect to the middle part of the “Land of Lincoln “(with the exception of the capital Springfield) can be found in this collection. Every city and town I’ve photographed in his set included, and rural (as in “counrtyside”) photos are grouped by province. Dan Central Illinois Other locations in the United States and Canada, including New York, Chicago, San Francisco and Seattle.In addition to my location-based devices, here are links to a number of “current” collections and me together: Cars photo collection : This is a very large collection of images, the main, but not focus exclusively on the American car classics. The images are organized by decade, the manufacturer, and> by topic (such as convertibles, estate cars, muscle cars, etc.) : Traditional barbers and hairdressers on the endangered species list. But there is still much to find when you go looking for them. everything. Check It Out !!!: Included topics range from the first man on the moon with small town schools and churches to go, and Soft-Coated Wheaten Terrier (our favorite race) things that have abandoned, neglected, weathered, or roestig.Dank you for visiting my photo stream – myoldpostcards

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Nice Make Money Online photos

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

A few nice make money online images I found:

Iblog4
make money online
Image by Dexter Panganiban
See more at our photo blog Photo Gallery and Tech Blog and Make Money Online Blog

Iblog4
make money online
Image by Dexter Panganiban
See more at our photo blog Photo Gallery and Tech Blog and Make Money Online Blog

Iblog4
make money online
Image by Dexter Panganiban
See more at our photo blog Photo Gallery and Tech Blog and Make Money Online Blog

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Nice Internet Business photos

Sunday, November 14th, 2010

Some cool Internet Business images:

3999
Internet Business
Image by triplexpresso
another 1k milestone. thank you to all in flickr. best photo community out there in the whole of the intarwebs. remember kids; internets, it’s serious business.

Greenway drafting
Internet Business
Image by plakboek
Today I helped a family friend get their business online. In less than an hour we were able to create a blog account and even post a few pages. You may well ask "why a blog?" instead of creating a traditional and generally static website cut with a HTML web editing client then uploaded the pages by FTP. The online tools used to create and maintain a blog are easy to understand and use. Not only can photographs be easily uploaded and embedded into new blog posts, a swag of different functions and attractive themes can be applied.

Use the Internet to find more business for your business
Internet Business
Image by danwtmoon
Posted via email from danwtmoon’s posterous

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Nice Small Business Ideas photos

Sunday, November 7th, 2010

Check out these small business ideas images:

The Risk of Becoming an Expert
small business ideas
Image by Intersection Consulting
The danger of becoming an expert doesn’t lie in the label or how freely others bestow it upon you. “Expert” becomes a risk to your small business when you buy into the hype that you’ve reached the pinnacle of knowledge and it’s okay to stop thinking, learning and embracing new ideas. Note: Inspired by David Armano.

techassist
small business ideas
Image by alexmuse
news.architel.com/2006/11/25/like-minded-company-techassist/

Here at Architel we like to think that we pioneered the idea of flat-fee, all-you-can-eat IT support for small business. We are always on the look out for other companies who have similar models. This week we ran across a company called TechAssist based in Washington DC that looked interesting.

We found them after doing a Google search. They advertise using AdWords (we don’t anymore) and their ad suggests they offer “Unlimited IT Support for a Fixed Fee” as seen below:

After doing a little digging we learned that the company was launched in 2003, has 15 employees and is owned by Nick Vossburg (27 years old). Turns out he likes playing Texas Hold’em too! Their model seems very similar to our own including an initial assessment, plan, support and periodic review ~ all for one monthly fee. Great to see our model taking hold outside of Dallas (good thing not too many folks here in Dallas understand).

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Nice Internet Business photos

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Check out these Internet Business images:

Doing business in Second Life, book presentation
Internet Business
Image by Olando7
(picture by Elisabeth Leysen)
The presentation of the book The Unofficial Guide to Building your Business in the Second Life Virtual World by the authors, Sue Martin Mahar and Jay Mahar, at the Borders bookshop at Powell Street in San Francisco.

Doing business in Second Life, book presentation
Internet Business
Image by Olando7
(picture by Elisabeth Leysen)
The presentation of the book The Unofficial Guide to Building your Business in the Second Life Virtual World by the authors, Sue Martin Mahar and Jay Mahar, at the Borders bookshop at Powell Street in San Francisco.

Doing business in Second Life, book presentation
Internet Business
Image by Olando7
(picture by Elisabeth Leysen)
The presentation of the book The Unofficial Guide to Building your Business in the Second Life Virtual World by the authors, Sue Martin Mahar and Jay Mahar, at the Borders bookshop at Powell Street in San Francisco.

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Nice Internet Business photos

Sunday, October 24th, 2010

Internet Business

cool pictures:

Bill Weye map
Internet Business
Year peak of weye.org
This is my business card (front and back). I designed it.

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Nice Affiliate Marketing photos

Saturday, October 23rd, 2010

Check out these affiliate marketing images:

Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) Workshop 3
affiliate marketing
Image by rogercarr
Photo was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on January 29-February 1, 2010.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

Aileen Bennett at Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) Workshop 3
affiliate marketing
Image by rogercarr
Photo of Aileen Bennett was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on January 29-February 1, 2010.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

Jeff Herring at Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) Workshop 3
affiliate marketing
Image by rogercarr
Photo of Jeff Herring was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on January 29-February 1, 2010.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

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Nice PLR photos

Monday, October 18th, 2010

Some cool PLR images:

1/I/PLR
PLR
Image by Michael Heilemann
T-shirt from my days in the army. Armored Infantry.

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Nice Online Business photos

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

cool images online business:

IMG_0052
Online business
Year peak of Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots of F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on 7 April 2010.

IMG_0123
Online business
Year peak of Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots of F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on 7 April 2010.

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Nice Franchise Business photos

Saturday, October 2nd, 2010

A few nice franchise business images I found:

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (131)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (124)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (202)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

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Nice Affiliate Marketing photos

Saturday, September 25th, 2010

A few nice affiliate marketing images I found:

Lynn Terry at Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) 2
affiliate marketing
Image by rogercarr
This photo was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on 13-17 August, 2009.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

Willie Crawford at Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) 2
affiliate marketing
Image by rogercarr
Willie Crawford kept busy throughout the NAMS workshop.

This photo was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on 13-17 August, 2009.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

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Nice Small Business Ideas photos

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Some cool small business ideas images:

NeighborGoods video Amex OPEN Small Business Rules
small business ideas
Image by Mickipedia
www.openforum.com/idea-hub/topics/technology/video/the-pe…

A is for Access
small business ideas
Image by Ben Zvan
Access: noun,
The right or opportunity to use or benefit from something.

Strobist:
1 540ez inside room on 1/1 into a sheet of white nylon thumb-tacked to the door frame and door.
1 540ez on 1/64 with 3" DIY coroplast grid from camera left.
Triggered with Pocket Wizards.

I’m learning to light at strobist.
In honor of the first annual, International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

Used by:
Die Gefühlskonserve 13 July, 2007
The Good City January 2, 2008
Blogging Without a Blog February 18, 2008
Research Dreams February 23, 2008
Mendrblog March 3, 2008
Healthcare Reform Now March 6, 2008
CBC Radio One April 16, 2008
Robert’s Luxury Real Estate Blog August 22, 2008
May December Home Accessories October 10, 2008
Public Affairs 2.0 October 22, 2008
The Marketing Spot October 27, 2008
neil.lolin.net December 04, 2008
Information Sells January 08, 2009
Enjoying a Healthy and Balanced Life February 15, 2009
National Network of Libraries of Medicine March 10, 2009
Blogging and Education April 16, 2009
The Lewin Report April 22, 2009
Apartment Therapy May 12, 2009
SUNY ENY/ACRL Conference May 2009
Transparency, Participation, Collaboration May 27, 2009
Matador Abroad July 1, 2009
Simple Security Blog July 8, 2009
Cops 2.0 August 17, 2009
Examiner.com September 15, 2009
Moments in Time September 27, 2009
Sunrock Property Management October 18, 2009
TheFinance.sg October 20, 2009
Ordinary Time October 28, 2009
Green Ideas November 20, 2009
Treasures Found November 27, 2009
Rhett Smith November 30, 2009
Social Media Strategery January 27, 2010
Business Insider January 28, 2010
Commercial, Apartment and Residential March 9, 2010
Faster Future March 9, 2010
Inventory System Software Blog May 11, 2010
Roundtrip May 11, 2010

ehow.com Undated
MIB solutions Undated
Digital Tinker 2009
College of the Canyons – Distance Education Captioning and Transcription Undated

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Nice Business Motivation photos

Saturday, August 21st, 2010

Some cool business motivation images:

Father
business motivation
Image by h.koppdelaney
The Balloon

I wonder who will get the balloon.
His daughter? His son?
Maybe he got it from his girlfriend.
I don’t know, but the balloon makes me smile.

HKD

Falls Psychologie interessiert: A3 Motivation
Symbole in der Kunst – Der Luftballon

Die Energie, die ich symbolisch mit dem Ballon ausdrücken möchte ist Leichtigkeit und Freundlichkeit. Auch Flüchtigkeit, Bewegung und Wandel, Luft und Wind. Ich hätte dem Mann auch kleine Flügelchen an seine Fersen malen können, dann wäre die Zuordnung klassisch, denn Hermes, der olympische Götterbote zeichnet sich durch diese aus.
Freundlichkeit, Aufmerksamkeit, Leichtigkeit, Schnelligkeit und Offenheit sind Motivationskräfte, die von A3 motiviert werden. Ideen auf allen Gebieten perlen im Geist wie in einem Sektglas empor. Inspirationen aus der Oberwelt empfange ich durch diese transzendente Funktion in meiner Psyche. Mir fallen spontan Notlösungen zu komplizierten Situationen ein oder grandiose neue Erkenntnisse.
Mit dem Luftballon ermögliche ich bestimmte Projektionen auf den Mann. Er bekommt etwas Leichtes und Spielerisches. Der seriöse Charakter des Bildes wird aufgelockert. Mit dem Ballon bekommt es einen überraschenden und freundlichen Kontrapunkt.
Plötzlich ist ein einem grauen Alltagsbild das Kindliche mit im Spiel und genau das ist die Energieform A3. Sie motiviert zum Spiel auf allen Ebenen.

HKD

d business news
business motivation
Image by dmixo6

SEP122009
business motivation
Image by colemama
Normally Saturday mornings are ideal times to find games going on around town, but the rainy conditions kept some away from play. It looks like the golfers and the basketball players are a much hardier group than those tennis players! ;) Wonder if there’s a universal motivator that keeps some out of the rain and others apathetic towards the weather when pursuing a fun activity?

Daniel Pink (author of highly recommended reading, A Whole New Mind) on TED video describes the value of intrinsic motivation and how business models’ emphasis on extrinsic motivation are outdated and inaccurate. The power of intrinsic motivation is certainly not new – it’s been a long-desired goal for our students in learning. Instead, schools (like businesses), have turned to external motivators (grades, scholarship promises, and other rewards) to guide student education. So, now have we ‘created a monster’? Are students limiting their time and energy to just doing the minimal as tied to the external standard? Just the other day, a 11th grader who admittedly doesn’t read well asked me why our HS Library doesn’t do "Reading Counts" as that is the program that motivated her to read in middle school…Did this incentive model really serve the purpose of learning? Are our teachers losing opportunities for helping students develop a ‘love for learning’ when they must focus on standardized assessments and packaged programmed instruction? Will we find a way to focus on intrinsic, rather than extrinsic, motivating factors in the future?

This photograph compilation is a response to Carol Van Hook’s "Game is On" 365 Flickr Challenge for September 2009 . Naples Beach Hotel and Golf Club & Gulfview Middle School, Naples, FL

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Nice Franchise Business photos

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

Check out these franchise business images:

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (172)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (143)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (118)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

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Nice Internet Business photos

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Some cool Internet Business images:

5 Tips for Personal Branding – Internet Business Plan
Internet Business
Image by Ivan Walsh
5 Tips for Personal Branding – Internet Business Plan

Ivan Walsh Internet Business Plan China
Internet Business
Image by Ivan Walsh
Ivan Walsh Internet Business Plan China

How to Internet Business Plan
Internet Business
Image by Ivan Walsh
How to Internet Business Plan

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Nice SEO photos

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Some cool SEO images:

SEO Book Author, Aaron Wall
SEO
Image by backboneprez
Aaron Wall, Author of The SEO Book. I like the Firefox t-shirt.

Plaza de la Seo de Manresa
SEO
Image by Luciti

La Colegiata Basílica de Santa María, o como se la denomina popularmente La Seu, es el edificio mas emblemático del gótico religioso manresano. Corona el monte Cardener, cuna histórica de la ciudad, desde donde se contempla un magnífico panorama sobre el río, ocupa el espacio de construcciones religiosas y civiles mas antiguas. Es, sin duda, la imagen mas clá¡sica y bonita de la ciudad. El primer nombre hace referencia al capítulo de canonjías que recoge, mientras que la denominación de basí­lica corresponde al título otorgado en 1886 por el Papa León XIII. En 1931 fue declarada monumento histórico. La iglesia de Santa Marí­a de Manresa aparece documentada en el año 890. El 999, las tropas musulmanas de Al-Mansur la devastaron, lo mismo que hicieron con toda la ciudad. Fue en el año 1000 cuando, el conde Berenguer Ramán I, su madre, la condesa Ermesenda de Carcasona y Oliva, obispo de Vic, restituyeron la antigua dotación de la iglesia. Se deduce, por consiguiente que, antes de la construcción románica del siglo XI, precedente del actual edifico gótico, habían existido dos anteriores preromá¡nicas.
Del siglo XI, un conjunto de cuatro arcos apoyados en unas columnas dobles con capiteles ornamentados con elementos geométricos y vegetales, que correspondían a la galería dispuesta en forma de porche. Del siglo XII, el portal, al lado de la puerta norte de la basílica y talla policromada representando a Cristo en la cruz, guardada en el Museo Histórico de la Seu. La Seu se construyó en el mismo lugar en que estaba la antigua iglesia románica de Santa María, que se había quedado pequeña para una ciudad que experimentó un desarrollo extraordinario durante el siglo XIV. Como todas las obras de este tipo los trabajos se prolongaron durante muchos años, con diversas fases de actividad y ralentización de las obras que, globalmente, no se pueden considerar parcialmente acabadas hasta el siglo XVI. En 1322 se inicia su construcción contratando al arquitecto Berenguer de Montagut, maestro mayor de Santa María del Mar (Barcelona), del Carmen y del Puente Nuevo de Manresa, entre otras. En 1328 se pone la primera piedra, empezando a trabajar por la parte del abside con siete capillas radiales y los dos portales. En una segunda fase constructiva (entre 1353 y 1425), se levantaron los tres tramos de la nave con sus capillas laterales. Los últimos años las obras fueron dirigidas por el maestro Arnau de Vallers con un largo período de inactividad en la fase mas crítica del siglo XV. Las obras se reemprendieron en 1480. El maestro Martí dâIbar construyó³ los dos tramos que faltaban y el definitivo muro de poniente, con el gran rosetón. La cripta, construida en 1577 y ampliada recientemente, contiene las reliquias de los Cuerpos Santos de los patronos de la ciudad: San Mauricio, San Fruitós y Santa Inés y está decorada con esculturas de alabastro, obra de Jaume Padró (1781)
El campanario, de sección cuadrangular, data de 1592
La capilla del Santísimo, de estilo renacentista, fue inaugurada en 1657.
El claustro actual es obra barroca, de principios del siglo XVIII
La fachada principal porticada y el baptisterio son de los años 1915-1934, realizadas según los proyectos de Alexandre Soler i March, interpretando una idea de Antonio Gaudí. De planta de salón, dividida internamente por dieciocho pilastras octogonales, coronadas con capiteles ornamentales de tema vegetal, y grandes vidrieras policromadas, es una caso notable de síntesis de estructuras propias de los templos de una y de tres naves en un mismo edificio. Destaca su gran amplitud interior entre columnas, el gran campanario cuadrado de mas de 50 metros de altitud, los contrafuertes que dan solidez a todo el edificio y que permiten una doble hilera de grandes ventanales. Como curiosidad, uno de los contrafuertes, en la parte del abside, tiene la forma de torre hexagonal y es conocida, popularmente, como el caracol de San Pedro. Sus dimensiones son: 68 metros de largo y 33 de ancho total, 18 metros en la nave central que está flanqueada por dos naves mas estrechas (7,5 metros). La estructura del edificio es de una única y amplia nave, sin transepto, con un abside poligonal en la parte de levante y una girola alrededor del presbiterio. Al lado de la gran nave principal hay, a cada lado, unas capillas laterales de gran altura que se comunican entre sí por medio de unas arcadas. Se puede considerar como una de las naves más atrevidas y amplias del gótico, un estilo austero y horizontal, con pocos elementos ornamentales que interrumpan la verticalidad.

SEO Myths
SEO
Image by Search Engine People Blog
SEO Truths Or Should That Be SEEO?

image credit

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Nice Franchise Business photos

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

A few nice franchise business images I found:

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (115)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (182)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

2010 Taco Time-RonSombilonGallery (133)
franchise business
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
ANNUAL CONVENTION 2010 – Taco Time

photos by Ron Sombilon Gallery

www.TacoTimeCanada.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES

With plans to expand all across Canada, there are plenty of opportunities for hard-working and driven business people to enjoy the security and support provided by TacoTime®.

Our mission is to make money with our franchisees rather than off our franchisees. Maybe that’s why the average tenure of a TacoTime® franchisee is more than 15 years.

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Nice SEO photos

Monday, July 12th, 2010

some nice pictures I found SEO:

alt = src = “http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2546/3932250776_3fbfe69df5.jpg” “http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2546/3932250776_3fbfe69df5.jpg” width = “400″
Image of Luciti http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2546/3932250776_3fbfe69df5.jpg
image of Byron Shell ” Beware the Dark Side “provide for the SEO firms that are less than straight, and how nice it would be if they were. We always do our best to make everything we do to keep white hats – we are always honest with our customers not to use in fraudulent practices, and make no secret about how we go about rankings for our clients. This means that not every company is so SEO eerlijk.Bezoek SEO Comic, Best Hard

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Nice Freelance Work photos

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

Some cool freelance work images:

My New Work Space
freelance work
Image by Matt Brett

I Love Working from Home
freelance work
Image by oso

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Nice Niche Blogging photos

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Check out these Niche Blogging images:

Is Obama a Mac and Clinton a PC?
Niche Blogging
Image by nimboo

Le nuage de tags des archives du e-Moleskine d’fxbodin
Niche Blogging
Image by fxbodin.com

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Nice Niche Blogging photos

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

Some cool Niche Blogging images:

@MarkEckenrode and @RailLife Leading A Session on ‘Hyper-Local Blogging’ and Niche Markets
Niche Blogging
Image by PHX Photo

@MarkEckenrode and @RailLife Leading A Session on ‘Hyper-Local Blogging’ and Niche Markets
Niche Blogging
Image by PHX Photo

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Nice Home Based Business photos

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

A few nice home based business images I found:

working girl
home based business
Image by BlogMama

Cleaning service goes by cargo bike-6
home based business
Image by BikePortland.org

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Nice Online Business photos

Friday, May 21st, 2010

A few nice online business images I found:

promote local business online
online business
Image by GrowWear

promote local business online
online business
Image by GrowWear

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Nice SEO photos

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Some cool SEO images:

Claustre de la Catedral de la Seu d’Urgell (“Claustro de la catedral de la Seo d’Urgell”,”Cloister of the cathedral of Seo d’Urgell”)
SEO
Image by Bilbopolit

SEO Expert … Grammarians Shop of Horrors (1 of 2)
SEO
Image by jeffmcneill

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Honeymoon Photos

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

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Image taken on 2008-10-11 22:34:15 by freebird (bobinson|ബോബിന്‍സണ്).

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