Archive for December, 2007

Eco-Friendly Products

Monday, December 24th, 2007

Looking for a new way to make your flower bloom? Ready to cut down your energy bill? Wondering where you can find eco-friendly home furnishings? Have you thought about redecoration on a budget?

Stop searching and answer your questions at Composters.com, Eco-lights.com, Eco-furniture.com and GCRugs.com. These four sites promote environmentally beneficial products that allow you to improve your home, whether it’s creating a compost pile or changing the lighting fixtures in your home. Information, articles, and tips and advice are also on the site so you can figure out where to place an area rug or what the difference between Mission style and French Country bedroom furniture.

Composters.com features the best compost producing products, from compost bins and compost tumblers to worms all the accessories that make the composting process that much easier. Not just limited to compost equipment, this site also has season extenders, chipper shredders, green lawn mowers, and other gardening tools to help you out around the yard. Visit Eco-lights.com for its incredible inventory of lighting choices, from wall sconces to pendant lighting to solar lighting and everything in between. Check out the ever-expanding section of energy efficient lighting to help reduce your carbon footprint.

At Eco-furniture.com, contemporary bedroom furniture, dining room furniture, living room furniture and more is available, with an eco-friendly twist. Check out the bedroom sets made of sustainably harvested wood or the patio furniture made from recycled materials. And GCRugs.com has an amazing variety of area rugs, from jute area rugs to sisal to wool and all kinds of styles, shapes, colors and more. With so many options to choose from, every room in your home can be instantly updated with an area rug!

Find out how to start a compost pile, how to hang an area rug on a wall, what color palette is needed for a contemporary interior, and how you can illuminate your backyard at these great websites: Composters.com, GCRugs.com, Eco-furniture.com, and Eco-lights.com!

What is a Blog Template?

Monday, December 24th, 2007

A blog refers to a private webpage, which is published by either an individual or a group of individuals. Blogs are usually personal journals or diaries and are used to comment on all sorts of topics depending on the interests of the blogger (author). Usually the look and feel of a blog is besed upon a template. Templates change the look and feel of a blog to your liking. There are thousands of blog templates to choose from on the net and you can always find one you might like.

A blog is usually updated frequently, maybe monthly, weekly or even daily, it all depends on the blogger. Most blogs enable the visitors to post comments and/or suggestions allowing interactivity between the blogger and the visitors.

Now that we have determined what a blog is, why would one want to blog? There are actually many different reasons to blog. Some reasons may be to draw traffic to a site. Posting a blog on a regular basis using specific fraises or words can draw traffic to a site. In the eyes of the owner of the site, this is definitely a good thing.

Another reason may be just simply to get your opinion or the opinions of others out in the open. A blog would always be an open forum communication. I suppose it could be therapeutic for some.

One other very important reason for blogging is the search engines will see your site as active. This will only enhance the page rank that you have on your site. When your site has the appearance of active, more people come to your site. That is what we all ultimately want, as many people as possible to visit your site.

So, research on the net. Than start your blog. Have fun with your opinion and let others voice there’s as well. You never know were it could lead you.

You can blog in a template if you do not like the humdrum of plain old text. What this would do is give you a prettier or jazzier look to the blog site. Just about any Blog template can be found on the internet for free or you can pay for them. Just do some research on the internet and you will be ready to start your own blog in now time.

What is a Surety bond?

Monday, December 24th, 2007

Surety bonds are three-party agreements where the issuer of the bond (the surety) joins with the second party (the principal) in guaranteeing to a third party (the obligee) the fulfillment of an obligation on the part of the principal.

Obligee: The party (person, corporation, or government agency) to whom a bond is given. The obligee is also the party protected by the bond against loss.

Principal: The individual who is required to be bonded by the obligee.

Surety: A person or institution that guarantees the acts of another person or institution.

A commonly asked question about Surety Bonds is the cost.  This is a difficult question to answer because surety bond premiums vary from one surety to another.  A surety bond premium can range from half of one percent to two percent of the contract amount.  This is based on size, type, credit, and duration of the project.

Some bonds consist of several different bonds put together.  A performance bond can include payment bonds and maintenance bonds. Typically, these bonds are priced based on the value of the contract being bonded, and not the size of the bond. If the contract amount changes, the premium adjusts to reflect the change.

It is the contractor’s responsibility to obtain the bond when the bonds are specified in a contract. The contractor usually figures the bond premium into the bid amount. This premium is typically payable upon execution of the bond.

Commercial bonds have a greater range of pricing, and high-risk bonds require 10% collateral along with a higher premium.

There could be a waiting period to obtain a surety bond. There are a variety of factors, such as the underwriters at the bonding company; they can bog down this process. So doing your research will help to improve this period.  While some bonds are approved immediately, others can take from one to four business days. After approval, the bonds issuance typically occurs about one to two days after receipt of payment (and any other documents required by the surety for release of bond).

How would one obtain a Surety Bond?  This is actually the easiest part of understanding a surety bond.  There are so many sites on the internet that will give you more information on the different kinds of bonds as well as were and how to purchase one.  So do the research and learn about this product before you commit your self.  You will be glad you did.

Restore Deleted Files

Monday, December 10th, 2007

When you create a file, it has its first bite at existence, an existence which continues until you, in your casual god-like manner, delete it. Deleting the file isn’t the end, though. All you need to do is open up the Recycle Bin on your desktop, select the file and drag it onto the desktop or into an Explorer window to recover it. Or simply double-click to open the Recycle Bin, select the file, and choose Restore from the pop-up menu to restore it to its original folder. Voila! Witness the file’s second coming.

Now, what happens if you empty the Recycle Bin? Surely that’s the end of the file’s existence? To all appearances, yes. The file will appear to have been completely annihilated. But that’s only because Microsoft reckons once you’ve deleted a file and emptied the Recycle Bin, you and the file have both had enough chances. But with an undelete utility there’s a good chance you can resurrect the file yet again for its third go at life – good news for those of us whose fingers work faster than our brains.

When a file is deleted from your computer, its contents aren’t immediately destroyed. Windows simply marks the hard drive space as being available for use by changing one character in the file table so that the file entry won’t be displayed in My Computer or a commandline DIR command, etc. If you manage to start an undeletion process before Windows uses that part of the hard drive to write a new file, all you have to do is set that flag back to “on” and you get the file.

Obviously, the sooner you try to restore a deleted file, the more successful you’ll be. But stop a moment and think about the other things that could cause this part of the hard drive to be overwritten. If your hard drive is pretty full, the odds are much greater that Windows will grab your precious unallocated space for its next write. Or, if you defrag the hard drive, you run the risk of unused parts of the drive being overwritten! (This also means that if you are running silent background defrag services like Diskeeper, or if you have defrag utilities scheduled to defrag automatically, you might get blindsided - lose your chance at data recovery - if you don’t halt them until you have your deleted file recovered.


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