Archive for April, 2008
April 22, 2008 at 7:09 pm · Filed under Big Medicine
Gastric bypass surgery has many forms and can involve stapling and banding of the stomach as well as bypassing a portion of the small intestine. The most popular method today is a combination-approach that staples the stomach into a small pouch while reattaching the small intestine to the pouch forming a Y-shape so patients lose weight both because they eat less and their bodies absorb less of what they eat.
Mini gastric bypass surgery is less invasive than traditional gastric bypass surgery. By using a laparoscope, the surgeon does not have to make any large incisions in the abdomen thus lowering the risk of large surgical scars or hernia. The procedure also differs from other gastric bypass procedures in significant ways.
As opposed to the popular Roux-en-Y gastric bypass procedure, which staples the stomach to create a small pouch after which a Y-shaped section of the small intestine is then attached to allow food to bypass the lower stomach and first part of the small intestine, the mini gastric bypass is a newer and somewhat simpler procedure. The stomach is similarly stapled but instead of a small pouch, it is formed into a narrow tube, which is then attached directly to the small intestine about six feet from its starting point, thus also bypassing the initial highly absorptive section.
The benefits of Mini gastric bypass surgery are a shorter, less invasive operation and quicker recovery time. Like traditional gastric bypass surgery, mini gastric bypass surgery is only for the morbidly obese who have not been able to lose and maintain weight loss after significant efforts at lifestyle change in the form of diet and exercise.
Gastric Bypass Surgery Info provides comprehensive information on procedure, recovery, cost and complications relating to standard, laparoscopic and mini surgeries. Gastric Bypass Surgery Info is the sister site of Bariatric Surgery Web.
April 22, 2008 at 6:11 pm · Filed under Entertainment Events
Bugatro Gold
http://www.deprice.com/bugatrongold.htm
Bugatron Gold is a well-designed space-shooter game borrows ideas from classics such as Galaga. In Bugatron, you must eradicate the evil alien insects, which swoop and dive at your spaceship in a variety of formations. The polished graphics added to our enjoyment, and the sound effects are blasting cool.
Cosmo Bots
http://www.deprice.com/cosmobots.htm
Cosmo Bots takes its cue from the addictive classics Jezzball and Qix. However, that’s where the similarity ends, because Cosmo Bots has different shapes for each level, 3D rendered graphics, digital sound, new enemies, and tons of power-ups. The free version features a full set of 50 levels to play, and does not require any special hardware.
Bricks Of Egypt
http://www.deprice.com/bricksofegypt.htm
At its core, Bricks of Egypt is an Arkanoid clone, but it goes beyond replicating the frequently imitated art of busting bricks to place a refreshing emphasis on creative level design. Sure, there’s a ball and paddle, but Arcade Labs layers these familiar basics with Egyptian-themed power-ups, bonuses and special challenges (such as hitting the water drops to extinguish fire bricks or striking keys to unlock new areas on the screen).
Dropheads
http://www.deprice.com/dropheads.htm
Meet the Dropheads, hilarious and loveable characters with treasure on their mind. Help these strange little guys navigate the seas by matching them in groups of four or more. Then, watch them bounce off the screen. As you go, collect pieces of a treasure map and assemble them to find the hidden loot. And with two game modes, Arcade for those who like a fast pace and Strategy for those who like a relaxing diversion, there’s something for everyone.
Star Defender
http://www.deprice.com/stardefender.htm
Star Defender is a vertical scrolling space shooter and a spectacular clone of Space Invaders. You are a test pilot flying the Tornado. Your spaceship is controlled by your mouse. The ship is limited to movement in the lower line of the play area. Star Defender possesses all of the classic features of the genre: professional and vibrant graphics, breathtaking gameplay and an original soundtrack.
Alpha Ball
http://www.deprice.com/alphaball.htm
Alpha Ball is a totally 3D entry into the Arkanoid/Breakout genre, featuring simple controls and addictive gameplay. Each level has built-in, completely 3D backward and upward functionality, with great graphics and effects. The application also features the new Suspend Game feature that lets you quit a game and return to it later. The program has 100 levels, with random level matching.
About the Author
David has long been a fan of 80s style games. His fine collection for retro games is available to public at
http://www.deprice.com/games.htm
April 22, 2008 at 3:47 am · Filed under Finance Resources
Thanks to the complexity of the United States tax codes, the
system itself, and the variations of tax codes from state to
state, completing your personal tax return and maximizing your
deductions and exemptions to their fullest potential, is like
trying to complete a mind-twisting maze. The average individual
required to file a personal tax return has no grasp of the US
tax system, and must therefore rely on one of the many tax
professionals to complete their return. Quite often, deductions
and exemptions are overlooked simply because of a lack of
communication. The following article will discuss the medical
deductions available to the individual tax payer, and the fact
that qualifying for these deductions must be communicated to the
tax preparer.
The medical deduction allowable on your personal federal income
tax return is 7.5% of your adjusted gross income. The expenses
you’re allowed to deduct include medical, dental and eye care
expense for anyone who qualifies as a dependent for your return.
If you are self-employed, the premium deductions you can take at
a rate of 100%, and if it happens to be a better benefit, and if
you’re self-employed, take the insurance premium deduction under
your Schedule C deduction.
Who qualifies as your dependent, and what medical expenses
incurred by that individual are deductible? Let’s take a moment
to clarify. A person will generally qualify as your dependent if
they lived in your home for the entire year, you provided over
half their support, and they meet the relationship test. And, oh
yes, they must be a U.S. Citizen. What medical expenses are
deductible? I think an easier question might be what is not
deductible? You can’t deduct expenses for which you are
reimbursed, you can’t deduct cosmetic surgery for which there is
no valid medical reason for the procedure, and you can’t deduct
nonprescription medicine. That approach makes the list much
smaller.
What information should you provide to your tax preparer?
Information such as medical expenses you paid for yourself or
your children the past year, any medical insurance premiums you
may have paid; dental work, eye exams, laboratory expenses,
overnight expense to travel for medical treatment and hearing
exams to name the most common. Now I’m going to list a few
things you might not have though about.
If you have trouble with your vision, and you require a Seeing
Eye dog, the expense for the purchase and upkeep of the animal
is a medical expense deduction. Your transportation expense to
and from the doctor is deductible. Legal fees you incur in
obtaining the necessary authority to treat someone for mental
illness is a medical deduction. The use of artificial implants,
such as teeth and limbs are deductible. Ambulance service is
you’re charged is a medical expense. Even having the lead paint
removed from your home is a deductible medical expense, since
many children are at risk for lead poisoning. There are some of
the nontraditional treatment therapies available as medical
deductions, acupuncture and Christian Science Practitioner fees
are two of the more common, however, you should check with your
service provider. Quite often, they will know if their services
qualify as deductible. As you can see, there are many items that
are considered medically deductible that would not readily seem
to be classified as a medical expense. There as also ways to
maximize the items that are normally included in medical
deductions, in order to get the most bang for your buck.
If you’re receiving medical care that will be extended over the
end of one tax year, and into the beginning of the next tax
year, schedule as much of the expense during the last couple of
months of the current tax year, that way you stand a better
chance of including more of those dollars that are above the
7.5% mark of your adjusted gross income. If you are
self-employed and must provide your family with health
insurance, insure them as a part of your business; generally all
members of the family will participate in a family business,
therefore, you can enroll them as employees of the business and
this makes the entire premium deductible.
April 22, 2008 at 3:41 am · Filed under School of Investment
QUESTION
I would like know about ratio back-spreads. Is it possible to make a living using these? I like the protection offered on the wrong side.
Thanks,
Milton
ANSWER
Milton,
There are many good strategies out there. What you need to realize is that there is no right strategy that works for all situations.
Depending on the situation, any of the strategies will be or could be the right one. They are all good strategies when used properly and at the right time. There is a right time and a right place for a ratio backspread.
My only fear with ratio spreads is that people like yourself get on the wrong side of the ratio. As a retail investor, I do not recommend being net short options so I would not be in favor of you selling more than you buy. I am okay if you are going to buy more than you sell but not vice-versa.
The one thing I do want you to be aware of is that we do not look for strategies then fit opportunities into them. By doing this, you are putting the cart before the horse. When you start looking for strategies to force opportunities into, you set yourself up for consistent problems because suddenly, every opportunity looks to be a perfect fit for your strategy, even when you have to force. Forced trades very infrequently turn out to be winners.
What you should be doing is finding opportunities, THEN applying the proper strategy best suited to take advantage of the opportunity you have just identified. In this way, you will always have the right position on at the right time. Having the right position on at the right time makes that position a good position right then and right there.
Hope this helps.
Ron Ianieri, 15-year Floor Trader & Market Maker http://www.options-university.com/trading-secrets
How Would You, Too, Like to Peek Into the Mind of a Former Floor Trader, Market Maker, and Specialist in DELL Computer Who Has Over 120K Career Trades Under His Belt — and Finally Discover the Virtually Unknown, ‘Insider’ Trading Techniques and Strategies Proven to Make Millions for Traders Across the Globe?
Get your hands on this potent information at:
http://www.options-university.com/trading-secrets
April 21, 2008 at 7:12 pm · Filed under Better Commerce
First, let’s define what a CRM is: The term Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software is a system that connects different parts of a company through the thread of customer relationships. Sales, Marketing, Accounting and Customer Service can all be tied together with a powerful, centralized CRM software made to retain customer loyalty, increase revenue, deliver consistent and efficient customer service, and finally, evaluate which customers to focus on.
Basically, every company has customers, and every company should maintain some basic information about those customers such as names, addresses, purchases, contracts, invoices, etc. Therefore every company should have at least some basic “CRM Technology” to track and serve their customers. Even small businesses use Outlook, Quicken or other applications for this purpose. If you use Microsoft Outlook for your daily communications, calendaring, tasks and appointments and need a way to track sales leads and opportunities, to share data across sales representatives, to improve the understanding of your sales process, to communicate with a broad groups of people on a one to one basis, to improve your business process in the most important area - sales, and need a reporting system that beats multiple excel spreadsheets, then you need a complete CRM solution.
Why ? Because a CRM software can increase profitability for your business by reducing current operating costs, usually in the call center or distribution system, and by increasing customer value through smarter marketing using customer data to increase customer profitability.
Can you do it without a CRM ? Probably, but not as efficiently because only a CRM is built to take care of Customer personal needs “centrally”, meaning that by using a single software, all the employees of the same company can access an organised database via Internet, where sales, customer service and management have access to the same customer data using tools such as “Sales Force Automation” (provides Lead Management, Opportunity Management, Account and Contact Management, Reports and Dashboards specifically useful for your organization’s sales team), “Customer Support and Services” (provides Ticket Management, Knowledge Base, E-mail Notifications specifically useful for your organization’s customer support team.), “Marketing Automation” (provides Lead Management, Mailing Lists, E-mail/Mail Merge templates, Product Management, specifically useful for your organization’s marketing team.), “Inventory Management” (provides Products, Price Books, Vendors, Quotes, Purchase Orders, Sales Orders, and Invoices specifically useful for integrating your organization’s sales, inventory, and accounting processes and enhance the sales effectiveness.) , providing a complete integration between pre-sales, post-sales, procurement, fulfillment, and other business processes within your organization.
In other words, a good CRM software will help you build customer relationships by setting mutually satisfying goals between organization and customers, establishing and maintaining customer rapport and producing positive feelings in your organization and for the customers.
Organizations that implement CRM and turn their business into e-businesses will find their competitors’ customers ready to welcome them with a “smile”. According to a study by IT Consulting firm Aberdeen - “The winners in this new economy will be those companies that can effectively leverage the Internet to redesign, automate and integrate all business operations”.
Take the plunge!
Either jump on board with CRM and invest, knowing you need it, or get out the calculator and pencil and start adding up what you’re going to lose!
One thing is for certain - a few short months after implementing your CRM solution, you’ll wonder how on earth you ever got by without it!
http://www.momentustech.ca
Dr. Sylvain Desforges is the director of Research and development for Momentus Technologies.
April 19, 2008 at 1:12 am · Filed under Big Medicine
Cancer is a process that has always effected animals, it is just as common in domestic and farm animals, birds and fishes as it is in humans. Western scientific medicine has been effective in minimising infectious diseases. Many of us are living longer and cancer has almost been accepted as a normal feature of the ageing process. But statistics do not bear this out. The incidence of cancer is increasing in all age groups.
Because cancer cells take some time to grow to a stage where they are a large enough mass to be identifiable, it might be 18 months to 3 years, even 30 years before the disease is diagnosed by a doctor. By then we can be more than half-way down the path to a terminal illness. Due to our psychological make-up we are often immobilised by the news.
We tend to minimise it or deny that it has happened to us. We get depressed. ‘Why me?’ A cycle of immobilisation - minimisation - depression often occurs. Those who do break out of it and manage to accept the reality start testing for options, often ‘against the clock’ find out that cancer is an awesome and complex subject providing a great example of opening a ‘whole can of worms’. Information overload, specialist language, ignorance of alternatives, vested interest, lack of co-operation, paradigm gaps, lack of access to specific information or treatment and a host of barriers such as language translation exist that prevent understanding the problem let alone the latest research.
Since an allopathic doctor (Western surgical doctor) is generally the first point of contact for this dis-ease, cancer is mostly treated only with chemotherapy, radiotherapy, surgery and more recent biological breakthroughs in hormone treatment. Despite billions spent on research these are basically the same options we had fifty years ago. Essentially the basic treatment of cancer has not changed for many years.
Orthodox treatments for cancer can be brutal and expensive but in the face of scientific medical evidence are the best we have. Solid information on alternatives is confusing, contradictory, unproved and unsupported by current medical models. Many medical doctors view alternatives or complementary approaches with doubt. Those that do endorse them do so mainly because they might enhance the patients quality of life or contribute to palliative care (palliative: ‘relieving pain or alleviating a problem without dealing with the cause’).
Many complementary and alternative practitioners point out that allopathic cancer treatments are only palliative because they treat effects without looking at causes. An example is using pain killers to take away a headache. Although it is highly useful and very convenient it is no guarantee that the headache won’t re-occur. Similarly the orthodox treatment of cancer is more concerned with treating the dis-ease than the patient.
How does it start?
In cancer, a cell, or group of cells, loses touch with where it is in the scheme of things, its ’synergy’, and starts replicating for itself. The word synergy comes from the Greek ’sunergos’, meaning ‘working together’. Synergy is the interaction of two or more agents, that produces an combined effect greater than the sum of their separate effects, in this case - us. All the cells in a healthy body work together to give us life. They exist as unique individual cells in their own right but also have a higher function, contributing to the life-form of which they are part. Every one of the two thousand billion cells in our bodies has as many working parts as a passenger airliner so it is quite usual for some of these cells to suffer damage.
We all have the potential for cancer. Even a healthy body carries about 10,000 malignant cells and a fully functioning immune system will remove them. But what do cells ‘get’ that change them, click them out of the whole system of our body to become selfish and self-replicating?
Some doctors refer to this simply as ‘insult’. What happens when you insult a cell so often it gets upset? Just like you or I might do - it gives up on the host and sets out for itself. Our consumer culture is presently rich in ways for us to insult our cells and stress them without us even realising.
The growth begins when oncogenes (controlling cell growth and multiplication) in a cell or group of cells are ‘transformed’ by carcinogens. Cell insult often starts with ‘free radicals’, which are unstable atoms or molecules produced by the body as part of its natural defence against disease. Sometimes the body over-reacts in its production of these and produces more than it needs. Recognised stressors that can spark overproduction include cigarette smoke, smog or pollution, too much ultraviolet light, illness or even too much exercise!
Free radicals contain a negative charge that makes them highly reactive. As soon as they are produced they start looking for other molecules with positively charged particles. The reaction they have on meeting is called oxidisation, and this reaction can have a harmful effect, damaging the D.N.A. inside cells or cell membranes and opening the door for cancer.
When a cell is changed into a tumour-forming type, the change in its oncogenes is passed onto all offspring cells. Hence a small group can become established and then start dividing rapidly. Usually these cells ‘give up’ on their normal specialised task in the body and escape from normal controls such as bodily hormones and nerves.
Cancer has no regard for the condition of its host only the success of its own growth, it is ‘anti-synergistic’ and a parasite to the body, consuming nutrients and contributing nothing. It converts the energies around it to its own use and blocks any attacks by suppressing the body’s own immunity. This immunity self-attack is an emerging pattern in modern diseases.
Cancer cells interact with each other and cells around them. They affect the growth of cells nearby and elsewhere in the body, they change the immune system to benefit themselves, they can avoid or destroy normal body defences such as lymphocytes. They can even persuade the body to grow new blood vessels to feed a tumour.
Cancer cells move seemingly ‘at will’ around the body, dissolving the glue of healthy cell walls to pass through and set-up camp elsewhere, creating metastases (secondary growths) seemingly anywhere. It is a highly complex disease with over a hundred definable types and many variables within each.
Cancer is a form of chaos that grows inside us. It is no wonder this most frightening and mysterious of diseases is immortalised in the ‘dreaming mechanisms’ of our media. Movies such as the Alien series capitalise on our fears of something unknown and unwanted growing inside us.
Cell insult happens in a number of ways and if the right conditions for cancer exist it will start to grow through cell multiplication. Once the cancer growth gets going, and the conditions that engendered it are still present, the growth continues at various rates, depending on the host and what they provide. Cancer grows best in an P.H. acid body with lots of glucose, oxygen and easily accessible nutrients.
Even with immortal cell replication it can take many years before a cancer becomes noticeable. A million cells together create only a small growth. Diagnosis is still difficult at this stage as there may not be any visible evidence of cancer.
This is an extract from ‘Don’t Get Cancer’a new ebook available only at: http://www.simonthescribe.co.uk/don’tget1.html
April 18, 2008 at 8:51 pm · Filed under School of Investment
A correction is a beautiful thing, simply the flip side of a
rally, big or small. Theoretically, even technically I’m told,
corrections adjust equity prices to their actual value or
“support levels”. In reality, it’s much easier than that. Prices
go down because of speculator reactions to expectations of news,
speculator reactions to actual news, and investor profit taking.
The two former “becauses” are more potent than ever before
because there is more “self directed” money out there than ever
before. And therein lies the core of correctional beauty! Mutual
Fund unit holders rarely take profits but often take losses.
Opportunities abound!
Here’s a list of ten things to do and/or to think about doing
during corrections of any magnitude:
1. Your present Asset Allocation should have been tuned in to
your goals and objectives. Resist the urge to decrease your
Equity allocation because you expect a further fall in stock
prices. That would be an attempt to time the market, which is
(rather obviously) impossible. Proper Asset Allocation has
nothing to do with market expectations.
2. Take a look at the past. There has never been a correction
that has not proven to be a buying opportunity, so start
collecting a diverse group of high quality, dividend paying,
NYSE companies as they move lower in price. I start shopping at
20% below the 52-week high water mark, and the shelves are full.
3. Don’t hoard that “smart cash” you accumulated during the
last rally, and don’t look back and get yourself agitated
because you might buy some issues too soon. There are no crystal
balls, and no place for hindsight in an investment strategy.
4. Take a look at the future. Nope, you can’t tell when the
rally will come or how long it will last. If you are buying
quality equities now (as you certainly could be) you will be
able to love the rally even more than you did the last time…
as you take yet another round of profits. Smiles broaden with
each new realized gain, especially when most folk are still head
scratchin’.
5. As (or if) the correction continues, buy more slowly as
opposed to more quickly, and establish new positions
incompletely. Hope for a short and steep decline, but prepare
for a long one. There’s more to Shop at The Gap than meets the
eye.
6. Your understanding and use of the Smart Cash concept has
proven the wisdom of The Investor’s Creed. You should be out of
cash while the market is still correcting. [It gets less and
less scary each time.] As long your cash flow continues
unabated, the change in market value is merely a perceptual
issue.
7. Note that your Working Capital is still growing, in spite of
falling prices, and examine your holdings for opportunities to
average down on cost per share or to increase yield (on fixed
income securities). Examine both fundamentals and price, lean
hard on your experience, and don’t force the issue.
8. Identify new buying opportunities using a consistent set of
rules, rally or correction. That way you will always know which
of the two you are dealing with in spite of what the Wall Street
propaganda mill spits out. Focus on value stocks; it’s just
easier, as well as being less risky, and better for your peace
of mind. Just think where you would be today had you heeded this
advice years ago…
9. Examine your portfolio’s performance: with your asset
allocation and investment objectives clearly in focus; in terms
of market and interest rate cycles as opposed to calendar
Quarters (never do that) and Years; and only with the use of the
Working Capital Model, because it allows for your personal asset
allocation. Remember, there is really no single index number to
use for comparison purposes with a properly designed value
portfolio.
10. Finally, ask your broker/advisor why your portfolio has not
yet surpassed the levels it boasted five years ago. If it has,
say thank you and continue with what you’ve been doing. This one
is like golf, if you claim a better score than the reality,
you’ll eventually lose money.
11. One more thought to consider. So long as everything is
down, there is nothing to worry about.
Corrections (of all types) will vary in depth and duration, and
both characteristics are clearly visible only in institutional
grade rear view mirrors. The short and deep ones are most
lovable (kind of like men, I’m told); the long and slow ones are
more difficult to deal with. Most corrections are “45s” (August
and September, ‘05), and difficult to take advantage of with
Mutual Funds. But amid all of this uncertainty, there is one
indisputable fact: there has never been a correction that has
not succumbed to the next rally… its more popular flip side.
So smile through the hum drum Everydays of the correction, you
just might meet Peggy Sue tomorrow.
April 18, 2008 at 4:30 pm · Filed under Fine Fare
Christmas recipe makes: 24 pies
calories per serving: 105
preparation time: 30 minutes
cooking time: 25 minutes
suitable for freezing
Christmas recipe ingredients:
* butter, 125 g (4 oz)
* white flour, plain 225 g (8 oz)
* mincemeat, 225 g (8 oz)
* egg, lightly beaten 1
* caster sugar
* cream
Fruity Mincemeat:
* lemon, grated rind and juice from 1
* raisins/sultanas, 125 g (4 oz) of each
* currants & dried peaches (or apricots, pears),125 g (4 oz) of
each
* mixed spice, 1.25 ml (quarter tsp)
* sugar, light brown 100 g (3.5 oz)
* brandy, 100 ml (4 fl oz)
* eating apples, 200 g (7 oz)
* white grapes, seedless 125 g (4 oz)
Christmas recipe instructions:
1. Mincemeat: Combine the brandy, brown sugar, mixed spice,
dried fruit, and lemon rind with juice. Add cubed apple and
halved grapes. Mix and keep at about 5 degrees centigrade for a
minimum of a day.
2. Make a dough with water (60 ml, 4 tbsp), the butter and
flour. Knead until smooth and roll out a layer of thin pastry.
Cut out 48 round pieces of pastry using a cutter (5.5 cm, 2.25
inch).
3. Place some mincemeat in the middle of each and seal with
another round piece wetting the edges before closing. Pierce the
top for ventilation purposes.
4. Bake the mincepies until set but not browned at gas mark 6
(200 degrees centigrade, 400 F).
5. When ready, remove from the oven, brush with beaten egg white
and sprinkle withg caster sugar. Bake again for an additional 10
minutes or until well browned.
6. Serve warm with cream.
April 18, 2008 at 11:22 am · Filed under House Of Travel
England?s electrifying and time and again horrible history is almost certainly best represented in its historic constructions and nowhere is this better obvious than in those buildings attached to the Royal Family & their rituals For a great day out, why not visit Buckingham Palace with Enjoy England.
For an extensive occasion now the English Monarchy has been judged to be decisive to the achievement of the United Kingdom. They have mesmerised overseas holiday-makers for years and continue to stimulate the curiosity of overseas visitors of all ages. Buckingham Place has been categorised the London home of the British monarchy since Queen Victoria became sworn in as queen in eighteen thirty seven. its one of a tiny number of operating royal palaces enduring in in Britain these days.
Buckingham Palace is used on the whole as a place of work, but can additionally be converted into a ceremonies venue for the fifty thousand invitees invited to the Palace every year. There are well over six-hundred lodgings, including 19 state bedrooms, 52 royal and guest bedrooms, 78 bathrooms, ninety-two offices, but more extraordinarily an in-house theatre and swimming pool.
Right through the spring & summer, tourists can go around the elegant state bedrooms, that form the heart of the Palace. These fabulous rooms are embellished with a range of the best treasures from the Royal collected works, including sculptures by Canova and also paintings by the many famed painters like that of Rembrandt, Rubens and Canaletto.
April 18, 2008 at 9:25 am · Filed under Publishing Infos
The idea is the most valuable intellectual property. And the interesting idea requires quality protection from the plagiarism. Before we start discussing why it is not worth plagiarizing, let’s clear up what we mean by plagiarism. The word Plagiarism originated from the Latin word Plagio which means steal. The encyclopedias define plagiarism as “misappropriation of someone else’s works: publishing someone else’s works without indicating the source or a usage of the work without the author’s permission”. If the source is not indicated that is plagiarism.
The objects of plagiarism can be literature works, movies, translations as well as term papers essay writings, etc. The law suggests severe penalties for plagiarists. But despite it the unpleasant phenomenon is still flourishing in our society. The present article warns you how not to become the victim of plagiarism. The problem of the net plagiarism is very urgent nowadays. Any student searching an essay or term paper on-line can fall into this trap. Of course you can find a ready made research paper you need. But here you encounter RISK 1. No one can guarantee you that this paper is used for the first time. Moreover, it could be downloaded by the student from your college and submitted to the same tutor. RISK 2: Now all the tutors are aware of the existence of such free on -line collections. Your tutor could have seen this work on the net. In this case he would have the right to demand your rewriting the paper. Risk 3: Now many universities have acquired the special anti - plagiarism software for detecting the plagiarised works.
Such systems compare the text of your term paper research with the Internet resources base, with other students’ works and also printed issues and italicize the places with the repetition of the texts from other sources. Then it counts up the percentage of such duplications in the text. Risk 4. Downloading a paper from one of the on-line writing services is also a guaranteed way to get a plagiarized writing. Such services offer the students’ works that had already been submitted. So, if you finally have made up your mind to download a ready work, at least paraphrase it, add some chapters and change their order. If you have no time to reconstruct the completed version, the best way out for you is to order a unique writing from a professional custom writing service. This way you will get 100% original paper.
Tyler Benson is a senior writer of www.BestEssays.com. He has 17 years of experience as the professor at several universities. Tyler Benson has been providing competent assistance to students in composing their as term papers essay writings, during all his remarkable teaching experience. Currently he is working on creating his term paper research guide for university students.
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