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  • Benefits of Apple Cider Vinegar – by manju
    By bluetooth marketing on April 30th, 2008 | No Comments Comments

    Apple cider vinegar has a lot of benefits for your health. It’s no surprise why Oprah, 20/20 and CBS, to mention a few, all rave about apple cider vinegar and its benefits.

    There are also many books written about apple cider vinegar describing how excellent it is for your health. The best-selling books on the subject include Apple Cider Vinegar Miracle Health System by Patricia Bragg, Amazing Apple Cider Vinegar by Earl Mindell, Apple Cider Vinegar for Weight Loss and Good Health by Cynthia Holzapfel and Dr. Karkar’s Apple Cider Vinegar Cures and Treats by Dr. Karkar.

    Proponents believe that apple cider vinegar can cure or help with a myriad of diseases and health problems such as arthritis, osteoporosis, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, cancer, infection, indigestion, memory and aging. Also, the most talked-about benefit of apple cider vinegar apparently is its help with weight loss.

    Here are some of the major benefits of apple cider vinegar:

    1. apple cider vinegar and weight loss

    2. apple cider vinegar and acid reflux

    3. apple cider vinegar and acne

    4. apple cider vinegar and wart

    5. apple cider vinegar and heartburn

    6. apple cider vinegar and yeast infection

    7. apple cider vinegar and arthritis

    8. apple cider vinegar for skin

    9. apple cider vinegar and cholesterol

    10. apple cider vinegar for hair

    11. apple cider vinegar and blood pressure

    12. apple cider vinegar for sinus infection

    13. apple cider vinegar and candida

    14. apple cider vinegar and gout

    15. apple cider vinegar and detox

    16. apple cider vinegar and dandruff

    17. apple cider vinegar and gerd

    18. apple cider vinegar and hair loss

    19. apple cider vinegar and constipation

    15. apple cider vinegar and diabetes

    Apple cider vinegar is great for you. With its so many benefits, it’s no wonder why a lot of people are talking about apple cider vinegar and what it can do for your health.

    If you find the idea of drinking full tablespoons of apple cider vinegar too difficult, taking apple cider vinegar pills may be a good alternative for you.

    Visit our sites: green tea information and health solution

    Copyright. You may reprint this article only if you keep all links live and unedited.

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  • Bluetooth: Voice and data connections made easy ̵...
    By bluetooth marketing on April 29th, 2008 | No Comments Comments

    There are many diverse uses of bluetooth devices, and with many novel and emerging technologies enabling users to connect with various devices with the help of Bluetooth technology the market for such products is growing rapidly, worldwide. A person could have Bluetooth headsets, earphones, USB dongles, and USB dongles with built-in antennas as well as Bluetooth GPS receivers. Bluetooth wireless technology is primarily a short-range communications technology developed to replace the cable connecting many devices in use today, and maintain high levels of security that is a hallmark of wired technology.

    Inexpensive devices requiring low power with robust performance

    Bluetooth devices are usually robust, consume very little power and are relatively inexpensive due to the technology used. To connect as well as communicate with one another using a Bluetooth device, there is a stack of protocols comprising Bluetooth specification that encompasses a wide range of such devices.

    Bluetooth devices are rapidly being adopted by customers and they being used in many parts of the world. They can be connected to other Bluetooth enabled devices in close proximity. Such devices are able to connect as well as communicate without the need of wires through short-range, ad hoc networks that are called Pico nets. Each such device can simultaneously communicate with a maximum of seven other devices with just one Pico net, and a device may also be a part of several Pico nets simultaneously.

    The advantage of using Bluetooth devices is that they enable a person to use both data as well as voice transmissions, and thusly users can employ many different and innovative solutions like hands-free handsets for voice calls, printing and faxing. The Bluetooth device also enables users to work with synchronized PDAs, laptops, as well as mobile phone applications.

    With so many companies producing many different Bluetooth devices, the user has many choices on which Bluetooth device to use. Many big name players are offering low cost as well as high-tech enabled items such headsets, mobile phone accessories, office equipment, input devices, handhelds, and many audio and visual products to pick and choose from. Major players include Plantronics Inc., Tom Tom, Nokia Corporation, Hewlett-Packard Company and more.

    Most manufacturers provide device pairing instructions for connecting Bluetooth devices, and these include Bluetooth personal computer to a mouse or keyboard, Bluetooth stereo headphones to Bluetooth mobile phone, and Bluetooth mobile phone to Bluetooth personal computers. For Bluetooth devices that are not among the more common pairings, there are usually generic instructions for the user to follow.

    Do you kow what bluetooth is? Find out everything about it at http://www.bitsonbytes.com

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  • Integrated Online Marketing Leader Oneupweb Joins Mob...
    By bluetooth marketing on April 29th, 2008 | No Comments Comments

    Oneupweb continues to lead the way in mobile marketing with its addition to the action-oriented Mobile Marketing Association (MMA) — Oneupweb, the trusted leader in search engine optimization (SEO) and marketing (SEM), today announced that it has joined the Mobile Marketing Association (MMA). The MMA is a global organization with members dedicated to advancing the mobile marketing industry through establishing best practices. Lake Leelanau, MI (PRWEB) March 1, 2006 — Oneupweb, the trusted leader in search engine optimization (SEO) and marketing (SEM), today announced that it has joined the Mobile Marketing Association (MMA). The MMA is a global organization with members dedicated to advancing the mobile marketing industry through establishing best practices. “With our extended mobile services it was appropriate that we join the MMA,” explains Oneupweb founder and CEO Lisa Wehr. “This is an exciting time for Oneupweb, using the wireless medium to further connect our clients with their direct markets.” Oneupweb has been working in the mobile search marketing space since spring of last year. In August the company released the first white paper to speak to marketers about how mobile search would affect them. In the paper, Oneupweb coined the monikers used to describe two types of mobile search users, Need-It-Now Shoppers and Killing-Time Shoppers in its white paper, Mobile Search & Its Implication for Search Engine Marketing. The two mobile search audiences are either shopping for something they need immediately or they are doing research for a future need during downtime. Mobile audiences falling into the need-it-now group are less likely to be price shopping. The primary difference between killing-time shoppers and the need-it-now shopper is the longer length of the purchase cycle and the ability to leave their current location. Killing-time shoppers are generally stuck where they are. For additional information on Oneupweb’s mobile services please visit our Mobile-i-zation services page. With representation in more than sixteen countries, MMA members include agencies, advertisers, hand-held device manufacturers, carriers and operators, retailers, software providers and service providers focused on the potential of marketing via mobile devices. “Oneupweb joins a dynamic group of leaders who are working to define and shape the mobile marketing industry,” said Laura Marriott, executive director, Mobile Marketing Association. “We look forward to Oneupweb’s active participation in working with fellow MMA members to further influence and develop the guidelines for mobile marketing across the globe.” For more information on the MMA, please visit mmaglobal.com. About Oneupweb Oneupweb creates integrated online marketing plans that include natural search engine optimization, paid search marketing, mobile search marketing, online marketing research, marketing analytics, online advertising creative and online media services. Clients include Unisys, Maritz, Schwan’s, Silkflowers.com and Imagistics, among others. Oneupweb is the only two-time winner of the prestigious ClickZ Best Search Engine Marketing Vendor Award. And company founder and CEO, Lisa Wehr, an Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year, has been named to BtoB Magazine’s Who’s Who List twice and recognized as a Leader & Innovator by Lawrence Technological University. The company publishes an SEO / SEM blog StraightUpSearch. Oneupweb is a privately held company located in Michigan. For more information on Oneupweb, please contact 231.256.9811 or visit Oneupweb.com.

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  • Bluetooth: Personal Wireless Networking – by Le...
    By bluetooth marketing on April 29th, 2008 | No Comments Comments

    If you’ve got a wireless network for your computers already, well, you might get a bit excited about what I’m going to say next. How would you feel if your PDA, your mobile phone, your mp3 player and almost everything else you connect to your computer could be wireless too? You’d like that? Well, it’s already a reality and has been for some time now.

    Bluetooth is wireless and automatic, and has a number of interesting features that can simplify our daily lives. Bluetooth is a standard developed by a group of electronics manufacturers that allows any sort of electronic equipment — from computers and cell phones to keyboards and headphones — to make its own connections, without wires, cables or any direct action from a user. Read on…

    Personal Area Network

    Using wireless networking with your personal gadgets is often called PAN, which stands for Personal Area Network. The idea is that, in the future, we’ll all have laptop computers with their batteries charged and no more need to connect any wires to them at all — you just place your Bluetooth device near the computer, and the computer sees it and can use it straightaway.

    Bluetooth has been around and in-use since 1999, and it’s only getting more popular. It was designed to be secure, low cost, and easy to use from day one.

    There are two classes of Bluetooth that are in popular use: class 1 and class 2. Class 2 is the most common and cheaper standard, allowing you to use a device that is up to 10 metres (32 feet) away. Class 1 is rarer, but you can still find devices that use it easily enough, and it has ten times the range: 100 metres or 320 feet.

    How Does It Work?

    Bluetooth is more flexible than 802.11 wireless networking, in exchange for the shorter range. Essentially, a Bluetooth-enabled computer has one Bluetooth receiver installed in it, and this receiver can then be used with up to 7 nearby Bluetooth devices. On the other end, wireless devices do not need to have Bluetooth installed if they support it — it is already integrated.

    Like 802.11, Bluetooth works by using radio signals to create bandwidth. It is not, though, the same thing as an old-style wireless mouse or keyboard, which required a receiver to be plugged into one of your computers’ ports, and didn’t have range or stability anywhere near that of Bluetooth.

    Many computers now come with built in Bluetooth, especially Apple Macs. If you want to add Bluetooth to a computer that doesn’t come with it pre-installed, you should probably use a USB to Bluetooth adapter, although internal Bluetooth devices to install in your computer are available. If you have a laptop and a spare PCMCIA slot, you can get Bluetooth cards for that too.

    What Can You Do With Bluetooth?

    Mobile phones with Bluetooth are very popular, and so are PDAs — the instant synchronisation of addresses and calendars to a computer is a useful feature. Other than that, almost anything that would usually use USB can be done using Bluetooth, including digital cameras, mp3 players, printers, and even mice and keyboards. If you take a look through the comprehensive list of Bluetooth ‘profiles’ (kinds of devices that could, in theory, be Bluetooth enabled), it includes cordless phones, faxes, headsets, and even video.

    Basically, more than anything, Bluetooth is a replacement for USB: some say that while 802.11 wireless networking is wireless Ethernet, Bluetooth is wireless USB.

    Not Just for Computers

    Part of the power of Bluetooth is that it isn’t just used to connect things to computers — it can be used to connect almost anything to anything else, if both things are Bluetooth-enabled and recognise each other.

    Mobile phones, in particular, take advantage of this. Hands-free headsets often use Bluetooth to communicate with the phone. Some cars, for example, now have on-board computers that will connect with a Bluetooth phone and allow you to make hands-free calls, regardless of where the phone is in the car (even if you’ve left it in your bag in the trunk!)

    On top of that, of course, Bluetooth devices can communicate with each other. This has led to some people sending messages from their Bluetooth PDAs to others in close range — not an especially useful feature, but quite fun. This is called ‘bluejacking’, and the first recorded instance of it was a man who sent a Bluetooth message to another man’s Nokia phone while they were in a bank together. What did the message say? ‘Buy Ericsson’.

    Since then, it has become possible to send images by bluejacking, and it is widely believed to be the newest advertising medium — yes, it lets billboards send messages to your phone, a practice known as ‘bluecasting’. Whether you think that’s cool or annoying, of course, is your choice.

    Original Source: Articles-Galore.com

     

    Information supplied and written by Lee Asher of
    CyberTech SoftShop

    Suppliers of
    SuperLinker
    – Hyperlinking Technology for the 21st Century.

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  • BackBeat Media Expansion Continues – by David P...
    By bluetooth marketing on April 28th, 2008 | No Comments Comments

    Adds Apple Matters to Growing Network of Community and News Web Sites (PRWEB) April 19, 2005 — The World Wide Web – BackBeat Media – http://www.backbeatmedia.com, the Internet advertising network, today announced that Apple Matters – http://www.applematters.com – is joining other leading community and news web sites in the BackBeat Media Network. Apple Matters is joining notable Apple community and news web sites like The Mac Observer, Think Secret, The Apple Blog and others in BackBeat Media’s growing network of community and news web sites targeting Apple and consumer technology enthusiasts. “BackBeat Media understands what it takes to publish a small web site,” said Hadley Stern, founder, editor and publisher of Apple Matters. “They have the experience and expertise to help the independent web publisher create great content, nurture their communities while still growing their bottom line.” Apple Matters was started in 2002 by Stern who had enjoyed various Apple related publications and websites for many years but felt there was a niche that could be filled with high-quality and original writing about everything Apple. The site’s launch was a success, and as it grew he brought on additional writers who now include, Gregory Ng, Chris Seibold, and C.K. Sample III. Stern, a designer and writer, is also the author of “iPod and iTunes Hacks,” published by O’Reilly Media. “BackBeat Media exists solely to support and nurture the vitality of independent voices like Apple Matters,” said Dave Hamilton, co-founder of BackBeat Media. “We’re pleased to be adding Apple Matters to our growing network of independent web communities and news and information sites,” added Greg Snyder, also a co-founder of BackBeat Media. About BackBeat Media Founded in 2000 by Dave Hamilton and Greg Snyder, BackBeat Media provides primary site representation for the premier Mac and consumer electronics destinations on the Web. Building on the skills of its founders, BackBeat Media has grown into a news and information network effective at providing focused editorial expertise to its varied readerships, business growth for its affiliates, and optimized marketing communications channels for its many advertising partners. BackBeat Media works closely with advertisers like Apple, Microsoft, Alias Software, Shure and others to help them reach demographically desirable web communities. Sites are hand selected for quality of content, professionalism, network appropriateness, the ability to service a particular community niche and credibility. For more information, visit BackBeat Media’s web site at http://www.backbeatmedia.com.

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