- Arts & Entertainment
- Books & Literature (12)
- Fine Arts (16)
- Movies & Television (36)
- Music (18)
- OTHER Arts (13)
- Business
- Advertising & Marketing (39)
- eCommerce (22)
- Economics (1)
- Employment (22)
- Finance (1)
- Small Business (27)
- Taxes & Accounting (2)
- OTHER Business (31)
- Computers
- Hardware (10)
- Internet (11)
- Operating Systems (0)
- Programming (8)
- Software (6)
- OTHER Computer (9)
- Consumer Goods
- Autos & Vehicles (1)
- Cameras & Electronics (3)
- Guarantees & Warranties (0)
- Household Goods & Furniture (2)
- OTHER Consumer (0)
- Education
- Schools & Colleges (1)
- Homework (1)
- Teaching (0)
- OTHER Education (6)
- Health
- Conditions & Diseases (23)
- Medicine (0)
- Nutrition & Exercise (14)
- OTHER Health (12)
- People
- Celebrities (13)
- Family (0)
- Romantic Relationships (2)
- Other People (0)
- Recreation
- Antiques & Collectibles (0)
- Hobbies (2)
- Pets (72)
- Sports (10)
- Travel (0)
- OTHER Recreation (1)
- Reference
- Food & Cooking (8)
- History & Genealogy (1210)
- Legal (5)
- News & Events (0)
- Research (0)
- OTHER Reference (0)
- Science
- Biology, Earth Science & Environment (2)
- Math, Physics, Astronomy & Chemistry (0)
- Social Sciences (1)
- OTHER Science (0)
- Society
- Countries (0)
- Politics (7)
- Religion (9)
- OTHER Society (5)
- Everything Else
- Everything Else... (5)
Page and site © 2008-2012 by Andrew J. Morris All Rights Reserved
all contributed content copyrighted by the contributing author
Notice: While much of the content on this site comes from free reprint sources, not ALL articles are available for re-use. Please contact the author for permission before reprinting any content.
|
|
Use of Bike Racks
You can prevent your bike from getting stolen by using a bike rack. You can securely attach your bike to a bike rack. This rack in turn is fixed to the ground, or to any other solid structure such as a building wall.
Earlier bike racks used to secure only one wheel by pushing the wheel of the bike into a forked piece of metal, but it was not effective enough. A thief could easily take away the bike by simply removing the wheel to free the bike. These kinds of bike racks are known as "wheel benders".
A modern style of bike rack is known as a "Sheffield rack". These racks comprise of a thick metal bar, which is given the shape of a square arch. The top part is equal to the top bar of the bicycle frame and provides security for the frame.
Bike racks are also used on automobiles for the convenience of traveling with your bike. However, you must be aware of the proper method of loading and unloading your bike from the bike rack.
Loading Your Bike
• Get your bike ready to load. Remove bottles, bicycle pumps or other items before loading.
• If you are using a bus, inform the bus driver that you will be using the bike rack. Speedily load your bike while other passengers are getting into the bus.
• Approach the bike rack from the curbside. Squeeze the handle in the center to lower the rack.
• Place your bike into the rack, fitting the wheel into a wheel slot. If you are loading your bike in the first slot then the handlebar should be towards the curb, while in the second slot, they should remain away from the curb.
• Drag the support arm in a straight line and place it over the front tire until the tire is almost covered completely. Be sure that the arm rests on the tire, not on the frame of your bike. It may damage your bike if you load it incorrectly, so you always need to be careful while loading your bike.
Unloading Your Bike
• On reaching the stop, always inform the bus driver that you will be unloading your bike. Always exit from the front door.
• Drag the support arm away from the wheel, drop it downward and pull out your bike.
• If you are the last person to remove a bike, position the rack back to its correct position.
• Move towards the curb while you are moving away from the bus.
Rack Rules
• You should be prepared before the bus arrives.
• No one but you is responsible for the loading and unloading of your bike.
• Do not hold up the bus if you are unable to load your bike properly.
• All bikes are loaded in the same way, speedily and easily. Motorized bikes are not allowed on the racks.
• Bus operators are not responsible for any damage to the bikes while in transit.
So you can now take your bike with you by using bike racks on an automobile, but be sure that you are taking all the safety measures while loading and unloading your bike. Also be sure you are not causing any inconvenience to other passengers.
Article by Stefan Rockhaus. To read more about bike racks visit their web site.
Related Information of Interest:
Conversation In An Age Of Confusion
What do people talk about when they all believe different things and nobody is sure what the other person believes?
Then you add to that the usual courtesy that most people don’t want to offend other people, especially when it comes to the topics people disagree about with the most intensity, such as politics and religion, which all but the most foolhardy consider way off limits, at least, in what is referred to as polite conversation.
Actually, the silence of the times is far wider. In fact, the silken muffler of a feared indiscretion is wrapped around virtually every significant area of human thought, from philosophy to economics.
So what are we left with? Certain relatively safe topics, like poetry, unless you’re among poets whose egos are hair-trigger ready to fire back their own preferences vehemently. History might also be a good bet, since the overall tale has been pretty well agreed on, unless, once again, you’re with historians who may be simmering with their own disagreements.
The result? Conversation generally defaults to entrancing topics like the weather. Many spend entire evenings discussing such substitute content as one trifling entertainment or inconsequential entertainer after another. Things get really exciting when someone happens to mention how someone else may look tonight. Then there’s always the daring raconteur who’s arrayed with an evenings worth of sexual allusions.
Listening to such excited vapidity, one’s mind wanders to the legendary salons of France, at their epiphany, home, we read, to forthright conversation about the headiest topics of the time, generally centered around the new insights and old illusions of The Age of Reason.
At vagrant moments, you cannot help but ask yourself if the human race ever get to another time when it has enough beliefs in common to enliven its social occasions with conversations that really are interesting.
Tom Attea, creator of Newslaugh.com, has had six shows produced Off-Broadway and has written comedy for TV. Critics have called his writing ""delightfully funny" and "witty" with "good, genuine laughs."
Gossip: What People Say About It
We decided, at a reader’s request, to write about gossip and, along the way, to note what others have gossiped about it. We decided, at a reader’s request, to write about gossip and, along the way, to note what others have gossiped about it.
What might one say under the influence of a confessional potion when asked, “Why do you always talk about other people?”
We imagined the reply, “Apparently, because I have nothing much to say about myself.”
Before we turn to the little basket of quotes we picked for you, we can also pass along a couple of our own consolations. One, it’s a lot better to be interesting enough to be talked about than to be the interested party who’s doing the talking. Two, gossip’s empty gambits take place in a playground, actually, on a seesaw. The child who delights to babble sees you way up there – the higher the better – and thinks that by putting you down he or she will put himself or herself up. Tada!
Now, we turn to what others have gossiped about it. It appears, not surprisingly, that brilliance has enlivened the subject only rarely.
“The trouble with her is that she lacks the power of conversation but not the power of speech.” George Bernard Shaw
“I know that’s a secret, for it’s whispered everywhere.” William Congreve
“They come together like the Coroner’s Inquest, to sit upon the murdered reputations of the week.” Congreve
“I hate to spread rumors, but what else can you do with them?” Amanda Lear
“If you haven’t got anything good to say about anyone come and sit by me.” Alice Roosevelt Longworth
“She proceeds to dip her little fountain-pen filler into pots of oily venom and to squirt this mixture at all her friends.” Harold Nicolson
“I’m called away by particular business – but I leave my character behind me.” Richard Brinsley Sheridan
“Here is the whole set! A character dead at every word.” Same Sheridan
“There is only one thing in the world that is worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about.” Oscar Wilde
“A professional athlete – of the tongue.” Aldous Huxley
Social sewage.” George Meredith
“Foul whisperings.” William Shakespeare (Sometimes referrred to in gossip as Billy Wigglestick)
Tom Attea, creator of Newslaugh.com, has had six shows produced Off-Broadway and has written comedy for TV. Critics have called his writing ""delightfully funny" and "witty" with "good, genuine laughs."
Job Interview Mistakes - Part 2
Many people feel that the interview is the single most stressful part of the job search process. Any number of things can go wrong, and a big part of being successful is avoiding simple mistakes. The things you should avoid doing are as below:
1. Trying to wing the interview: Practice! Get a list of general interview questions, a friend, a tape recorder, and a mirror and conduct an interview rehearsal. Practice until your delivery feels comfortable but not canned.
2. Not being yourself: Be yourself and be honest! Don't pretend to understand a question or train of thought if you don't. The interviewer will pick up on this. If you don't know an answer, say so. Relax and be yourself. Remember you're interviewing the company as well as vice versa.
3. Not listening: Focus on the question that is being asked and don't try to anticipate the next one. It's OK to pause and collect your thoughts before answering a question. Pay special attention to technical or work process related subjects that are unique to a given firm or organization. The interviewer may have provided information you will need to answer the question earlier in the conversation. Employers will be looking for your ability to assimilate new information, retain it, and, most importantly, recognize that information as useful to you later in the interview.
4. Not providing enough details: When answering case questions, technical questions or solving technical problems, take the time to "talk through" your thought process. Recruiters are much more interested in seeing how your mind works and how it attacks a given type of problem, than the answer itself. Articulate your problem solving process and verbalize your thinking.
5. Lack of enthusiasm: Maintain eye contact, greet the interviewer with a smile and a firm handshake (not too weak, not too strong), and show common courtesy. Don't be afraid to display your passion for the job/industry and to show confidence.
About the Author:
Hans Hasselfors is the founder of SubmitYourNewArticle.com. Visit our article directory for varied articles about job search.
How You Meet Adwords, Google AdSense’s Fraternal Twin?
They are the fine men and women who are willing to part with some coin of the realm every time a visitor to your web site chooses to click on an AdSense ad. Google grabs the cash from the AdWords' member’s account, keeps some of it for themselves, and gives the rest to you. How much they keep and how much give away is a State secret, but who cares; just as long as we’re getting ours each month.
How AdWords Works
AdWords provides pay-per-click advertising to merchants who are willing to shell out anywhere from a minimum 05 .05 per click all the way up to a maximum of $100 per click. Can you imagine anyone paying $100 just to have someone click on an ad?
Anyway, the advertiser joins the AdWords program and gets a control panel similar to the one that we AdSense users get. They can write their ads, pick their keywords, and establish an advertising budget. They get tools to track performance as well as to help them pick keywords. There are no monthly minimum spends required and they can turn their ads on and off at will.
Once an advertiser is happy with their ad, it gets released to the network and shows up on web sites like yours and mine. That’s if the keywords on your site match the keyword requirements of the brand spanking new ad, of course.
They can’t “buy” their way to the top
Google doesn’t simply push the people with the highest paying ads to the top of the SERP (Search Engine Results Page). They use a rather fair methodology that takes into consideration not only the maximum CPC (cost per click), but also includes a secret recipe for determining an ad’s placement based upon the number of clicks the ad receives. So, at least in theory, an ad paying .05 per click could rise above one paying $5.00 per click if it’s more popular with Google’s audience.
I say “in theory” because if the owner of the $5 ad is paying attention then he or she will see that they are being bested by a lowly nickel ad and do some serious rewriting to get back up to the top where they belong.
Personally, I’m not sure that I have the guts to invest a lot of money into hoping that people who click on my ad will actually buy something, since I still have to pay Google whether I make a sale or not. But, as a dedicated AdSense user, I’m sure glad that my AdWords brothers and sisters have more nerve than I do. And you should be thankful as well.
About the Author:-Please browse for more information at our websites.
www.youradsenseprofits.comwww.reprintarticlesite.com
|
Readers of this page were also interested in:
An Amazing Statistic I was reading a book the other day about hip dysplasia in dogs. Before going further, I should add that this applies to cats as well. The article was written by a veterinarian and it had something very important to say about this painful condition. An incredible 65-70% of young puppies display hip dysplasia when screened with an X-ray.
Does Your Dog Miss You Too Much? Your dog seems to be driving you up the wall lately, exhibiting serious behavior problems -- and no amount of verbal correction seems to work. She chews the furniture, gnaws on shoes, turns over the trash cans, howls and barks when you're not around, or even seems really depressed when you come home.
Bath-Easton in Somerset County England History and Geography
BATH-EASTON, a parish in the hundred of BATH-FORUM, county of SOMERSET, 3 miles (N.E.) from Bath, containing, with the liberty of Easton and Amrill, 1,330 inhabitants. The living is a discharged vicarage, with the curacy of St. Catherine, in the archdeaconry of Bath, and diocese of Bath and Wells, rated in the king's books at £9. 6. 5
Buckenham (New) in Norfolk County England History and Geography
BUCKENHAM (NEW), a market-town and parish, in the hundred of SHROPHAM, county of NORFOLK, 15½ miles (S.W.) from Norwich, and 96 (N.E. by N.) from London, containing 720 inhabitants
Liversedge in York County England History and Geography
LIVERSEDGE, a chapelry in the parish of BIRSTALL, wapentake of MORLEY. West riding of the county of YORK, 6½ miles (N.E.) from Huddersfield, containing 4129 inhabitants. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the archdeaconry and diocese of York, endowed with £2200 parliamentary grant. The Rev. H. Roberson was patron in 1812
Seaford in Sussex County England History and Geography
SEAFORD, a cinque-port, borough, and parish (formerly a market town), locally in the hundred of Flexborough, rape of Pevensey, county of SUSSEX, 42 miles (E. by S.) from Chichester, and 59¼ (S.S.E.) from London, containing 1047 inhabitants
|