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Thursday, 04 February 2010 |
Of late, I met up with a close friend of mine at the cafeteria and we started chatting about healthy ways to loose weight. According to my friend, she told me that most of the diet pills that she consumed over the years, did marginally well in helping her to loose weight. She also confessed that in order to loose weight drastically, you’ll need superior control over your food intake, which is pretty agonizing indeed. Well her advices got me even more curious in the weight loss subject, and I am even more determined to find out on the good methods to loose weight. According to a web resource, it seems that you can loose weight using the lap band method. In fact, this particular method involves a doctor inserting a band into your stomach area, and this particular band will help you loose weight gradually. Also, it seems that this weight loss method is well regulated and most of the health professionals who offer such services are accredited and are constantly screened by the respective health organizations.
Well if you have given up hope on dieting, consuming diet pills, or perhaps exercising, maybe you should take a closer look at how the lap band method can help you loose tons of weight in a short period of time? |
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Thursday, 04 February 2010 |
In a country whose carriers' phone lineups are dominated by domestic giants like NEC, Sony, Sharp, and Fujitsu, you wouldn't necessarily think that the road to 4G would begin elsewhere -- strangely, though, South Korea's LG has garnered the honor of becoming the first company to have an LTE device certified by Japan's TELEC, a necessary, FCC-like step to getting cellular equipment deployed in those parts. NTT DoCoMo, which intends to launch commercial LTE service later this year, is undoubtedly stoked to hear that the LD100 external modem is the lucky recipient of TELEC's seal of approval (following FCC certification last year, coincidentally), meaning the carrier now has the green light to use it in trials. Considering that TeliaSonera's already beaten DoCoMo to the punch with a live, customer-facing LTE network, are the days of being shocked and awed by Japan's mobile tech drawing to a close, or are we just witnessing a little fluke here?
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Thursday, 04 February 2010 |
Although my wife disapproves me riding my huge high powered bike, I do secretly ride my bike into town once in a while, just to meet up with my bike gang. And whenever we meet up, we usually talk about ways to modify our vehicles. Based on our past track records, we can talk about the bike modification subject all night long, and I am particularly enthusiastic whenever we get into such topics. Well if you are searching for good and reliable bike accessories, I am sure you will like to outfit your bike with some of Heavy Duty gears. In fact, Heavy Duty makes some of the most durable bike accessories in the market, and I am sure you will like the toughness of these products. Personally, I am thinking of adding some sissy bars for my bike, whereby I will place these bars at the rear end of my bike. And hopefully, there will be an appropriate web store which is willing to sell me high quality sissy bars at a very affordable rate. Also, I’m thinking of getting these sissy bars chromed as I love shinny stuff fitted on my bike.
So what are your bike riding experiences, and do you modify your existing bike? |
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Thursday, 04 February 2010 |
Look out, Western Digital -- you've got a little competition up there in the rarefied storage air. Samsung just got official with its newest EcoGreen HDD, the 1.5TB and 2TB F3EG. This here drive is the followup unit to last year's F2EG, and aside from sucking down as little power as possible for a capacious internal drive, it also incorporates a 3.0Gbps SATA interface, native command queuing features and 16MB / 32MB of buffer memory. It should be making its way out onto European and US shelves this month starting at $179.99, thus bringing your ultimate archival dreams that much closer to reality.
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Wednesday, 27 January 2010 |
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I notice that business gurus always caution business owners that it is imperative to maintain a healthy working capital margin for any type of businesses in the market. Generally, a comfortable amount of working capital will ensure smooth operation for that particular business. For example, I’m pretty sure that the 2008-2009 recession has left so many companies in the United States high-and-dry, and companies that survived the financial crisis did fairly well in maintaining their working capital. Nevertheless, there are so many ways in which you can use to increase your working capital. For example, you can always opt for something called the invoice factoring service to increase your cash flow. On the other hand, I believe that your business will gain synergy by having higher cash flow. For instance, you can use the additional funds to reduce your debt, as well as to fund your expansion plans. Also, it seems that these factoring services can provide you with faster access to the additional funds, when compared to conventional bank loans. Well if you are seriously thinking of expanding your business, or to reduce your overall debt, make sure you do a comprehensive research on how business factoring services can benefit your organization. |
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Wednesday, 27 January 2010 |
AMD had a little show and tell with Asian journalists to go along with those new Phenom II and Athlon II chips it just released, and it unveiled some of its next-gen plans along the way. In the short term, it seems like the plan is to launch the 45nm Leo platform we've listened about later this year to better compare with Intel's 32nm Clarkdale parts, and then to push ahead to 32nm in 2011 with the Scorpius platform, which will showcase a Bulldozer CPU called Zambezi with up to 8 cores and a "next-generation discrete graphics solution." Mid-performance desktops will get some "next-generation integrated graphics" of their own this year on the Dorado platform, while 2011 will see the Lynx platform release with the long-delayed Fusion chip. (We were first supposed to see Fusion chips in late 2008, remember?) Fusion is also still on vapor-y track for laptops with scheduled 2011 launch of the previously-leaked Sabine architecture, but AMD also tipped the new Brazos Fusion-based platform power-driven by the Ontario APU, which is "optimized for new form factors" -- potentially MID-sized, but we won’t be sure. Phew, that's a lot of codenames -- we'd say we can't hang around, but we're clearly going to have to watch how AMD performs.
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