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Make Money selling on Ebay for Beginners

Posted on April 28th, 2007 in Internet Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing




Make Money selling on Ebay for Beginners

Ebay has been around for almost 12 years now (9 years mainstream). Every day people sign up and expect to make a lot of money on ebay as beginners selling their items online. 90% fail, because they don’t have a startup plan. The biggest problem is not having enough positive feedback. Once a potential buyer sees that you do not have a high ebay feedback rating, they will immediately think that you are a beginner or even worse a scam artist. Here is a tip for you to make money as an eBay beginner :

“It is not necessary to have an ebay feedback of 50+ to start selling, even if you are a beginner in auctions.
I would suggest that you buy 10 ebooks on ebay for around $2 each (from a DIFFERENT seller each time) and once they have emailed you the eBooks, you immediately leave a positive feedback for them.
After that, you email each and every one of the ebay sellers and ask them to also exchange a positive feedback for you. That should give you a +10 Feedback within 2 days. Not bad for a beginner.
Then you start selling some cheap items for around $3 each … That way you are sure that ebay buyers will bid on your items, even though you have a low positive feedback and are a beginner. After selling the 10 smaller items, you should have a +20 feedback within 10 days, depending on shipping time. Again, not bad for a beginner ;-)
Now if a potential buyer checks your feedback, they will see a +20 feedback (100%) and they will also notice that NOT all of your feedback are from sellers. The potential buyer/bidder will read positive feedback comments from previous buyers and be more comfortable. They can trust you. Trust is the most important factor on ebay. Remember that the buyer is not able to see you or the item face-to-face, so reading positive reviews from other people will make them feel at ease and they won’t even care that you are an eBay beginner.
Now you can start increasing the quality of the items you are selling and be assured that there will be more bids on your items. When you started out a couple of weeks ago as a new ebay beginner, there was the same amount of potential buyers looking at your eBay auctions, but they were not comfortable enough to bid on your items. But now you have given them reason to trust you as an eBay seller (remember the +20 100% feedback ?)”

By Robert Sharman

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Vessel Registration in Panama

Posted on April 28th, 2007 in Business Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing



Vessel Registration in Panama

If you own a merchant shipping company, you may find it beneficial to look into registering your sea-going vessel with Panama. Panama, one of the world’s largest financial centers, also offers a lot of benefits for maritime companies.

The most obvious and the most significant benefit is the tax break that you will enjoy under Panama’s laws. Panama taxation is territorial. Panama specifically does not levy taxes on income of vessels derived from international trade. Asset protection has never been easier if you register your maritime vessels under the Panama flag.
And Panama does not discriminate on the basis of residence, citizenship and nationality. Anyone who wishes to register their vessels under the Panamanian flag can do so. Panama is open to dual registration, where the vessel can be registered in both Panama and another country. This greatly facilitates vessel registration in Panama and removes the most prohibitive barriers to offshore vessel registration. Aside from that, Panama has no minimum tonnage requirement for vessel registration. For these and other reasons, Panama’s open ship registry is touted as the most popular ship registry in the world.
Taking advantage of the Panama’s open ship registry does not come with an expensive price tag. Your financial obligations include a one-time registration and government fee for which you can get a discount if your vessel is registered under a Panamanian-registered corporation. And you can easily apply to have your very own offshore corporation in Panama.

You also pay for your bill of sale’s registration at around $0.20 per registered ton then an additional 20% surtax. You will have to pay taxes annually based on your tonnage and other factors. Taken altogether, the cost of registering and maintaining your vessel under the Panamanian flag is cheaper than other countries’ ship registration costs. Looking at the big picture and taking into account the amount you save on taxes, Panama’s vessel registration fees are more than reasonable.
When you register your vessel under a Panamanian corporation, revealing who owns the vessel is not necessary. Panamanian corporations are built on principles of confidentiality and privacy protection, so corporations can change ownership secretly and without fuss. You can then own a corporation in Panama anonymously and register your vessels as part of that corporation. This is one other means by which Panama can help you in your asset protection efforts.
To register under Panama’s ship registry, you have to present the documents required depending on your particular situation. Generally, you will be required to present the original bill of sale of your vessel or your vessel’s builder certificate if it is newly built. You must also have a Power of Attorney to execute the vessel registration and a certification that proves your vessel does not currently belong to another registry and is free of any tax duties. Of course, if you are currently registered in another ship registry but would still like to register under Panama, you just have to present a certification of consent from your current registry.

By JP Landry

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Long Beach California The Queen Mary

Posted on April 28th, 2007 in Travel Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing

Long Beach California, The Queen Mary

Long Beach California has always been a vacation getaway favorite for those looking to find original attractions that are not available anywhere else. One of Long Beach’s tourist favorites is the Queen Mary. This massive shipped docked just off the coast of Long Beach was once a world war II troop ship and ocean liner that has been retired and now serves as a vacationer dream. http://juble.com/

Most assume that the Queen Mary is nothing more or less than a simple opportunity to walk around this historic ship, see the interior, and leave. Actually, you can spend your entire vacation based upon this ship as three decks have been renovated and have become a grand hotel! This majestic ship offers 365 rooms, each one with a unique design and aura about it. You will feel as if you have embarked upon an amazing cruise adventure.

Dining Onboard

You may possibly be wondering about the local fine dining establishments and if you would need to bring food onboard with you. You don’t have to leave the ship or pack a lunch for this, or even phone room service for a snack. There are actually six full-scale award-winning restaurants onboard with a wide variety of cuisine to choose from. There is Sir Winston’s Restaurant (Continental Cuisine), The Chelsea Restaurant (Seafood), The Promenade Caf’ (Various ethnicities), The Observation Bar (Drinks and Snacks), The Champagne Sunday Brunch (Buffet’), and Tibbies Cabaret (Various ethnicities).

Spy-Fi

As far as attractions go, once again, you don’t even have to leave the Queen Mary. There are many wonderful attractions onboard that will thrill the whole family. One such attraction is the Spy-Fi. This is a museum type exhibit of spy gadgets that have been used on many spy movies, such as the James Bond series. This will be a fun time for the young children of your family. http://juble.com/

Spooked on the Sea

Next, for the paranormal lovers, there is the Ghost and Legends tour. The Queen Mary has had many ghost sightings in the past and now has a popular tour filled with shows and special effects that accent the legends of the ship. You will get to go to parts of the ship that have been closed off to the public otherwise, watch as wet footprints mysteriously appear around an empty swimming pool, see specters swimming in water that isn’t even there, and so much more. If the unknown is your cup of tea, you definitely need to take this tour.

Ride the Scorpion

this point you will have no doubt noticed that there is a submarine docked just off the side of the Queen Mary. This is just another in an endless line of attractions and events. You can take a tour of the Russian Submarine, Scorpion, and see exactly what life was like for the soldiers that lived onboard this cramped uncomfortable atmosphere. This ship was actually used during the Cold War, so this also serves a great experience for the history buffs among you. http://juble.com/

The lists of things to do and sights to see go on indefinitely. Who would have thought that there could be a vacation spot where you could enjoy your entire vacation getaway and never once leave the hotel? If, however, you do plan on spending some time in Long Beach, there are thousands of other events and attractions to partake of there also. Either way, you can bet that your best vacation will be spent in Long Beach California.

http://juble.com/a113-long-beach-california-the-queen-mary.aspx) Juble.com

Long Beach California, The Queen Mary / Author: Juble.com

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Tourist city guide to Birmingham

Posted on April 28th, 2007 in Travel Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing

Tourist city guide to Birmingham

Birmingham’s history stretches back to the sixth century, but is currently Europe’s newest city. The second largest city in England, Birmingham is home to more than a million people and continues to expand on its success.

The city has much to offer visitors seeking quiet evenings out, lively nightlife, breathtaking history and cultural entertainment, and is located close enough to picturesque countryside to offer the best of city and rural life.
Birmingham has been dubbed ‘the shopping capital’ of the country, and with over 1000 retailers in the city centre alone, this title is certainly deserved. There are more than a dozen shopping centres in the city, demonstrating the city’s continued growth and power to attract visitors.

History
Birmingham’s history is documented back to the sixth century, when a supply of water, coal and iron were discovered in the area. Birmingham developed rapidly, and was already regarded as one of the important manufacturing areas in England by the start of the Industrial Revolution.
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery is home to an incredible collection of art works and artefacts, documenting 400,000 years of history. The city’s other museums include Blakesley Hall, a converted sixteenth century manor house.
Other important historical buildings include Weoley Castle, a thirteenth century manor house; The Old Crown, a fifteenth century pub; the thirteenth century St Martin’s Church; and the Grade I listed nineteenth century Town Hall.

Art Galleries
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery is home to the largest collection of Pre-Raphaelite works in the world, as well as fine and applied art works by the Old Masters and Impressionists. A free bus links the gallery to the city centre.
Birmingham’s arts and media quarter is named after the factories that once occupied the five-acre site: The Custard Factory. As well as numerous other media companies, creative enterprises and cafes, The Custard Factory is home to a number of small art galleries showcasing a variety of works.
The Ikon Gallery is a unique collection of multimedia art works, comprising sound, film, photography and art installations.

Theatres
Of Birmingham’s twelve theatres, Birmingham Hippodrome is the largest and the theatre with the greatest regular attendance of any theatre outside of London. Large-scale productions, including drama, comedy and dance, are regularly staged here.
The Alexandra Theatre is based in an impressive Victorian building, and stages a variety of large-scale productions. The theatre has been particularly praised for its musicals and concerts.
The Old Rep Theatre is located on the same street, and presents small-scale performances. Other small venues include The Crescent Theatre, Birmingham Library Theatre, and Midlands Art Centre.

Restaurants
Brasserie Blanc is one of eleven restaurants recommended in Good Food Guide, and serves traditional French cuisine in stylish surroundings with seating for 160 people. Jessica’s serves French-influenced modern British dishes, and has a Michelin star and AA recommendation.
Birmingham is famous for it’s curry houses and has been dubbed ‘the capital of balti’, owing to its array of Balti houses and Indian restaurants, and one corner of the city centre is known as ‘the Balti Triangle’. Al Faisals is a popular Kashmiri restaurant in the Balti Triangle, with seating for 600 people. The Diwan restaurant is another highly regarded establishment in the area.
Good Food Guide also recommends the Cantonese, AA rosette holding, Chung Ying Garden. The menu comprises 400 dishes, and there is seating for 400 people.

Pubs/Bars
Birmingham CAMRA recommends 16 pubs in the city, and voted The Wellington ‘Pub of the Year’ in 2005 and 2006 for its selection of 2500 different ales.
The Old Inn is a fourteenth century, Grade II listed pub, located in the city centre and reputed to have once been owned by King Henry VIII.
Popular cocktail bars include The Living Room, with a relaxed and yet prestigious ambience and live music, and Zinc Bar, with waitress service and a DJ area downstairs.
The S’oak is a pre-club bar; offering pub quizzes, live acoustic and jazz nights and all the pay-per-view football matches. Located close to the university campus, this bar is very popular with students.

Nightclubs
Subway City comprises 7 rooms, 5 bars, 3 dancefloors and a snack bar, and presents the best in underground dance music. The club is open seven days a week, and licensed until 8am on Saturdays.
Air nightclub is regarded as one of the most technologically advanced in the country, presents trance, techno, hard dance and house, and regularly hosts Godskitchen. The club comprises 3 rooms, with a total capacity of 1650.
Carling Academy is the city’s most successful alternative club and music venue, presenting music from break beats and hip-hop to Northern Soul and indie. The club hosts Subculture on Saturdays, the rock night voted second best in the country by Kerrang! readers.
Birmingham has a vibrant gay party scene, and The Nightingale is one of the most popular venues. The club is open six nights a week, with a varied programme of music, comedy and karaoke.

Shopping
Europe’s largest city centre shopping development is the Bullring in Birmingham. The centre comprises more than 150 shops and 25 restaurants over three floors. The Selfridges building that stands at the centre, beside the medieval St Martin’s Church, has won an award for its impressive design.
The shopping development also comprises markets of 235 stalls and units. Other markets in the city include the Open Market, the Rag Market, the Indoor Market, the Antiques Market and the Farmers Market.
Star City is a shopping and entertainment development, comprising a 37-screen cinema, the UK’s largest casino, a Megabowl, 3000 free parking spaces and hundreds of shops and retail outlets.

Sports
Of the city’s forty leisure centres, Wyndley Leisure Centre is the largest. The centre comprises a 33-metre pool, a teaching pool and a range of diving boards, as well as a 400-metre athletics track, squash and badminton courts, and more. The centre is currently closed for refurbishment and will reopen in June 2007.
The Ackers is a 70-acre outdoor activities centre, offering snowboarding, climbing, canoeing and archery, alongside a variety of courses and special events for companies, individuals and families. Many use the centre for sponsored abseiling.
Birmingham is home to half a dozen golf courses, managed by Birmingham Golf Link Circuit.
Harborne Church Farm is the largest; a notoriously difficult 9-hole course, with a shop, cafe and parking for 50. Boldmere Golf Course comprises 18 holes, but makes for a much more relaxing game.

By Leisha

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Tourist guide to Barnsley Yorkshire

Posted on April 28th, 2007 in Travel Information by Global Marketing - Internet Marketing

Tourist guide to Barnsley, Yorkshire

Barnsley is South Yorkshire town with a population of just over 70,000 people. Despite a reputation as a run-down area, Barnsley’s town centre is home to an impressive array of boutiques and quality restaurants. The shopping facilities are unusually good for a town of this size, and the large town centre market is busy and popular and has been standing since the thirteenth-century. The town centre is said to have more bars and pubs per square mile than almost any other region in the UK, so it goes without saying that Barnsley has plenty to offer in terms of nightlife!

Barnsley might not be first choice for a relaxing break in the countryside, but historical parkland and ancient villages surround the town, and there is a wealth of historical monuments and buildings, some dating back to the twelfth-century.
The town interchange is relatively small, but Barnsley is well connected by transport links and there are major redevelopments planned for the interchange later this year.

History
Barnsley’s history is documented back to 1249, when a Royal Charter was granted to allow a weekly market to be held in the area. Over the next five hundred years, Barnsley developed into a manufacturing centre, producing vast quantities of linen and glass, and attracting thousands of visitors. The area’s economic importance declined with the collapse of the mining industry – an important employer in the area – in the mid 80s. Since then, Barnsley has begun rebranding itself as a sporting and leisure town, and funding has flooded in to aid this development.
Important and exciting historical monuments and buildings are plentiful in Barnsley; and these include the pinnacle tower of St Mary’s church and the Monk Bretton Priory, both built in the twelfth-century and free to visit. Cannon Hall was once an eighteenth-century family home but has now been converted into a museum and gallery, exploring local history up to the Victorian period. The Elsecar Heritage Centre is housed within a former ironworks and colliery workshop, and comprises exhibitions of historical artefacts and craft works.

Art Galleries
There is only one permanent art gallery in Barnsley, and that is The Cooper Gallery on Church Street, opposite the town hall. The gallery features exhibitions of paintings, drawings and watercolours dating from the seventeenth- to the twentieth-century. The gallery is frequently home to temporary exhibitions of art and craft works by local and national artists. Admission to the gallery is free.
The Cannon Hall Museum has a small, permanent display of historical art works, including paintings and crafts.
For other temporary exhibitions around Barnsley, J+K Wood is a framing shop with a small space dedicated to exhibiting works of art, and the Barnsley College of Creative Arts host an annual Celebration of Excellence, showcasing the work of its students.

Theatres
The Barnsley Lamproom Theatre complex is located in an old Methodist Chapel on Westgate, and comprises three theatre groups: the Lamproom Theatre Company, the Lamproom Musical Theatre Company, and the youth theatre. The Lamproom showcases a range of large-scale productions, including amateur performances, musical theatre, one-man shows and the ever-popular Christmas pantomime.
Barnsley is also home to a number of independent theatre companies, specialising in non-mainstream drama and performance. These include Mark Mark Productions, with slapstick comedies and magic tricks, The Faceless Co and The Theatre.

Restaurants
Barnsley town centre has much to offer for eating-out. Alongside a large selection of takeaways and fast food restaurants, Barnsley boasts a number of the contemporary restaurants and live music venues that are springing up around the country and combining the dining experience with a more lively night out.
The Citrus Rooms is one example. This complex comprises a bar, cafe and music venue, with an extensive menu and in-house chef. The Lucorum is another popular choice, comprising a caf?, bar, Mediterranean restaurant, beauty salon and hairdressers.
Barnsley is an idea destination for fans of Chinese cuisine. China Moon and New Jade Palace are popular Chinese restaurants and takeaways, and the China Court Restaurant serves high quality Chinese food, with warm service and a stylish ambience.

Pubs/Bars
Local legend has it that Barnsley is home to more pubs per square mile than almost any other region in the UK. Whether this is literally the case or not, there are certainly more than 120 bars in the town centre, catering to a wide range of tastes and wallets.
There are stylish and up-market venues, such as The Citrus Rooms complex comprising a bar, cafe and live music venue, as well as popular workingmen’s clubs, such as The Farm Road Social Club, that are building new followings amongst a younger generation raised on bar franchises and chain pubs. Tempo is a pre-club bar, open until 4am on Saturdays and presenting house music DJs, and the Arches is rock pub. There are a dozen real ale pubs in the town recommended by the local branch of CAMRA.

Nightclubs
Barnsley’s vast selection of pubs and bars generate a vibrant nightlife in the town, but there are only three dedicated nightclubs in Barnsley.
Club Hedonism has a large, out-of-town following and presents R’n'b, chart, club classics and rock music four nights a week. Drinks are cheap and the club is located above the Chicago Rock Caf?.
Heaven and Hell has branches in other towns and cities around the UK, and presents a variety of electro house, hardstyle, hard trance, funky and electro techno in its large, town centre venue.
Livingstones Club opens three nights each week and presents party anthems, hip-hop and r’n'b in its two rooms.
Other venues playing host to club nights include The Citrus Rooms, with alternative, indie and rock, and The Lucorum, recently voted Best Club Night in the North by Galaxy 105.

Shopping
Barnsley town centre market is ideal for bargain-hunters. The Market Hall comprises more than three hundred stalls and opens five days a week. There are also Meat and Fish Markets, Antiques and Collectors Markets and a car boot sale.
Major redevelopments of the shopping facilities are planned, but currently, the main shopping streets in Barnsley town centre are Queen Street, Cheapside, May Day Green and the Arcade. The Arcade is the place to find designer boutiques and independent retailers.
The Alhambra shopping centre is based a short drive from the town centre and houses around thirty stores, including most of the major retailers. The Alhambra is open seven days a week.

Sports
As a result of a governmental objective to encourage sports and athletics, Barnsley (and many other regions) are now home to a wealth of sporting facilities.
There are numerous leisure centres in Barnsley. The Barnsley Metrodome is a huge leisure complex, comprising four swimming pools, squash courts, bowls facilities, a gym, dance studio and health suite. Athersley Leisure Centre offers gymnastics and athletics facilities, as well as football coaching on astro-turf pitches. The Dorothy Hyman Stadium boasts state of the art athletics facilities and coaching. Other leisure centres include Hoyland Leisure Centre, Royston Leisure Centre and Penistone Leisure Centre.
There are a number of golf courses to be found in the rolling countryside that surrounds Barnsley. Wombwell Hillies is one example of a nine-hole course, open to the public.

By Leisha

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