iPhone and iPad users rejoice! Facebook rebuilt its app from the ground up to address speed issues. Gone is the old web-based code, replaced by native iOS code. Gone are some of the infrequently used features that slowed down the app, others that made it clunky. Timeline is being rolled out for iPad users. Look for Instagram integration with iOS which Facebook recently purchased. Not to be left out, Androids got a speedier new app, too.
Read Wired Magazine's review>>
Saturday, August 25, 2012
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Affinity Marketers Beware: Zeek Rewards Caught in Ponzi Scheme
Affinity marketers and investors were caught up in the latest scandal to hit the news when Zeek Rewards was shut down by the SEC this week.
(Source: CNNMoney)
Federal regulators announced fraud charges Friday against a company they said was operating a $600 million Internet Ponzi scheme "on the verge of collapse."
The Securities and Exchange Commission accused ZeekRewards.com, its parent company, Rex Venture Group, and Rex Venture head Paul Burks of luring more than 1 million investors worldwide into the scheme, which began in early 2011.
Read full article here>>
(Source: CNNMoney)
Federal regulators announced fraud charges Friday against a company they said was operating a $600 million Internet Ponzi scheme "on the verge of collapse."
The Securities and Exchange Commission accused ZeekRewards.com, its parent company, Rex Venture Group, and Rex Venture head Paul Burks of luring more than 1 million investors worldwide into the scheme, which began in early 2011.
Read full article here>>
California's Beach Communities Banning Popular Fire Rings
The controversy has been raging for over a year. From Huntington Beach, to Newport Beach, to Corona del Mar here in Orange County, government meddlers are trying to take away a popular activity at the beach.
Once the sun starts to go down, beach lovers traditionally have kept the party going gathered around a blazing fire. For years recreation departments provided safe, contained fire pits, clearly labeled "hot coals."
Then the controversy started. Huntington Beach decided to remove more than half of the fire pits claiming they cost too much money to maintain! Huh?
Corona del Mar and Newport Beach tried banning them based on pollution concerns. Huh?
I even found a local citizens group trying to save the fire pits in San Diego. http://www.savethefirepits.com
City councils have been debating the issue. Stepping into the fray here comes the California Coastal Commission. Surprise, the commission actually questioned whether there was any validity to banning fire rings based on pollution concerns.
I did a double-take when I read that article in my local newspaper. The Coastal Commission is everyone's nemesis. These "do-gooders" are notorious for interfering with every project along the coast, blocking development, blocking improvements, blocking whatever is proposed.
According to one article in the OC Register, "the Commission wants to know who uses the fire rings and when, what alternatives to removal the city considered, the history of the rings and whether the city (Newport Beach) had conducted any air quality studies about the dangers of smoke from the fires."
Well, finally one glimmer of common sense emminating from the Coastal Commission. Come on, local meddlers. Let's keep the fire rings.
Users are reminded to be respectful of the beach and leave the area clean. Certainly it costs public works plenty to clean up after a beach party when disrespectful groups leave behind trash, drink cans and junk furniture. Don't let that be their excuse to ban the fun.
On that note, I'm getting my beach chair, blanket, and a jacket ready. Countdown, just a few days away from joining a group of friends on the beach for an evening of drumming and singing to the upcoming Blue Moon.
California's Two Radically Different Cultures
There is no California. According to syndicated columnist, Victor Davis Hanson, "the state has two radically different cultures with little in common." I was amazed at the comparisons he made in this article. Hit the nail on the head in every instance. Thought provoking analysis.
(Source: Orange County Register)
Driving across California is like going from Mississippi to Massachusetts without ever crossing a state line. Consider the disconnects: California's combined income and sales taxes are among the nation's highest, but the state's deficit is still about $16 billion.
He concludes with "the drive from Fresno to Palo Alto takes three hours, but you might as well be rocketing from Earth to the moon."
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Man convicted of collecting rainwater on his own property
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My collection of government insanity stories grows larger. Check out this article from Natural News.com. Apparently it is illegal to collect the rainwater on your own property in Oregon. Wonder where else this is against the law? ~ Linda
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(Source: NaturalNews.com) If ever there were a perfect example of government inanity, this is it. Maybe you didn't know - and chances are excellent you didn't - that if you have the audacity to collect rainwater and snow runoff on your own property, for your own consumption, you can and will go to jail for it.
Just ask Eagle Point, Ore., resident Gary Harrington, who recently began serving a 30-day sentence after having been convicted of that very thing, CNSNews.com reported.
In July, Harrington was convicted of violating an obscure, arcane 1925 law because he had what state water managers described as "three illegal reservoirs" on his property. In the end, a court found him guilty of nine misdemeanors, sentenced him to 30 days in jail and levied in excess of $1,500 in fines for doing what any sane human being could never describe as criminal behavior.
According to Oregon Water Resources Department, Harrington violated state water use laws by illegally diverting water running from streams into the Big Butte River.
Read full article>>
My collection of government insanity stories grows larger. Check out this article from Natural News.com. Apparently it is illegal to collect the rainwater on your own property in Oregon. Wonder where else this is against the law? ~ Linda
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(Source: NaturalNews.com) If ever there were a perfect example of government inanity, this is it. Maybe you didn't know - and chances are excellent you didn't - that if you have the audacity to collect rainwater and snow runoff on your own property, for your own consumption, you can and will go to jail for it.
Just ask Eagle Point, Ore., resident Gary Harrington, who recently began serving a 30-day sentence after having been convicted of that very thing, CNSNews.com reported.
In July, Harrington was convicted of violating an obscure, arcane 1925 law because he had what state water managers described as "three illegal reservoirs" on his property. In the end, a court found him guilty of nine misdemeanors, sentenced him to 30 days in jail and levied in excess of $1,500 in fines for doing what any sane human being could never describe as criminal behavior.
According to Oregon Water Resources Department, Harrington violated state water use laws by illegally diverting water running from streams into the Big Butte River.
Read full article>>
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Attracting More Customers Through Facebook
HubSpot has a handy new guide packed with tips and strategy on how to use Facebook to attract more customers. I downloaded the free copy and am taking notes as I read through its well-organized and in-depth content.
(Source: HubSpot) |
The clamour to "get on Facebook" is noisy out there. For businesses reluctant to take the plunge, this guide is an excellent resource that demonstrates with the right strategy you can build and engage viewers on Facebook then convert them to paying customers.
Access 100+ Million Wi-Fi Hotspots on Mobile Phone
Stumbled upon this interesting app today. Eager to try it out. Developer claims it will save data plan gigs. Download the WeFi app for your smart phone. Use to connect to hotspots with your mobile phone for faster internet than cellular service. Connect your laptop to your smartphone for WiFi access.
Bypass expensive hotel access charges. Connect with strongest, most secure, signal nearby. With a database of over 100 Million hotspots, the odds are in your favor that you can use this money saving app to get access.
Pinterest Posting Tips
Tips from Posse Social Media on how to let others pin to your pinterest boards. Pinterest is confusing enough to manage, now Posse shares a way to manage on multiple devices and posting with login for personal vs. business account.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Android Dominates Smartphone Market
(Source: Associated Press & USA Today)
Google's Android phones are steadily gaining market share in the world of smartphone competition. According to the research firm IDC, "there were four Android phones for every iPhone
shipped in the second quarter. That's
up from a ratio of 2.5 to 1 in the same period last year. The success of Samsung's Android phones helped Google's operating system extend its dominance in the smartphone market."
City to Homeless: take your crappy bicycle and get lost
Shame on the cities of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa which have passed
strict bike-parking ordinances in a misguided attempt to rid public property of the homeless.
With nowhere to go and nowhere to store their few belongings, the homeless often pack a bicycle with their worldly goods. Then they have the audacity to park them everywhere. Locked to a tree, locked to a fence, locked to a signpost, locked to a bus stop. Everywhere, except locked to a bike rack.
Apparently that makes people mad. Vocal complainers want the government to do something about it. In a knee-jerk reaction, city officials are wringing their hands and overreaching the bounds of common sense in an attempt to appease complainers, couching their actions in the name of "quality-of-life."
In 30 days, when the ordinances go into effect, the government will not only spend taxpayer money on patrols, but will confiscate the offending bicycles. Why are the bicycles not parked in designated bike racks? Well, there are not enough of them.
Realizing later they should give people a chance to comply with their frivolous rule that bicycles must be parked bike racks, the cities came up with a plan to purchase and install more bike racks.
Spending yet more taxpayer money, a task force was convened to study how many parks and bus stops are being blighted by homeless-owned bicycles. The task force estimates it will cost nearly $40,000 to purchase and install more racks, and is hoping to secure grant money from a local transit authority to cover the cost. How many meals would that amount of money buy for the homeless? Plenty, but apparently that is not the priority of government officials.
Demonstrating the severity of the problem, a staff report revealed there are 30 parks within the city of Costa Mesa with a total of 38 bike parking racks. Gosh, no wonder the homeless don't use the bike racks.....they are full!
A lone councilman voiced his reservations, stating "I have a problem when solving homeless issues limits the liberty of the residents."
Shake that councilman's hand. Someone has to stand up to the absurdity.
Government Insanity: Elderly Couple Forced to Remove Picket Fence
More insanity by local government, forcing an elderly couple to remove
their picket fence because it is suddenly out of code height limit. Built in 2000 as a kept-promise to his lovely wife, now the beautiful fence that the husband installed is declared 4" too high! The local government wants the entire fence removed for code violation.
Caught in the crossfire of neighbors embroiled in a feud, the elderly couple has become victim of the feud, even they don't have a dog in the fight. Nuttier yet, officials are not backing down on their demand to remove the fence.
I'm throwing my support to the elderly couple! Join me in this campaign.
Government's War on Home Gardens
My collection of government oppressive attacks on citizens is growing and growing and growing, pun intended. A Canadian couple was told to demolish the home garden in their front yard.
Too shady in the back yard to grow vegetables, the couple moved their home garden to the front. An abundance of beautiful, healthy veggies are produced in the sunny environment . Added bonus, the man lost 75 pounds by eating healthier.
Despite asking their town's Environmental Services Inspector for permission, before they installed the garden, and given a
verbal affirmative, now the government is forcing the couple to uproot all of the vegetables and install a minimum of 30% grass.
Unbelievable!
Unbelievable!
Contractor Protests Frivolous Fine for Environmental Disaster: Dumped Slurpee Lid
Dear Readers: I'm adding this nonsense action to my collection of government bureaucrats acting absurd. It burns me when I hear about bureaucrats, especially regulatory agencies, doing something so stupid, thinking no one will protest. Well, citizens are not so complacent. Rooting for the contractor who has filed a protest. This kind of nonsense makes infrastructure projects even more expensive for the taxpayer.
Gist of the story reported by the OC Watchdog, contractor completes major bridge construction project. The bridge project wins all kinds of awards, contractor utilizes construction strategies to avoid major environmental impacts, all is well until.........the Regional Water Quality Control Board slaps 290 violations and $2.9 million worth of penalties on the contractor, including a $10,000 fine for a single slurpee lid found in the water.
Fight back, contractor! Read the full article here>>
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Facebook's new targeted market options for posts
If you are a marketing pro, you will love these new customer targeting tools from Facebook. Wondering if you can select multiple categories in the drop down menu. Navigating to my page now to test it out. ~~ Linda
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(Source: Mashable)
Facebook on Friday announced new options for brand Pages to target their posts.
While previously Page admins could only target by language and location, the company has added new options, including:
- Gender
- Interested In
- Relationship Status
- Education
- Workplace
A Facebook rep gave the following example of how a marketer might use
the new option: “Say you want to target an audience for a
back-to-school campaign. You can drill down to college kids 18 to 21, so
your post will be seen more by that age group.”
The new capability comes a few weeks after Twitter made it possible for marketers to send targeted tweets based on location, devices and platform.
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