GSM Handsets
Can anyone edit or give advice on my resume?!?!PLEASE!!!?
Objective
My objective is to obtain a job in the fashion industry as a buyer or visual merchandiser from which I can evolve into a career.
Education
-Main Campus
Bachelor of Science
Consumer Science and Merchandising Houston, TX
Expected Graduation December 2008
§Courses pertaining to my degree aside from core curriculum
§Fall 2007: Merchandising Systems, Consumer Science and Merchandising, Consumer Science
§Summer 2007: Visual Merchandising, Entrepreneurship, Research Concepts
§Spring 2007: Leadership and Supervision
-Central
Associates
Fashion Merchandising
Graduated December 2006Houston, TX
§Fall 2006: Visual Merchandising, Internship as assistant stylist for fashion shows, photo shots, etc.
§Spring 2006: Fashion Production, Fashion Imaging/Styling
§Fall 2005: Fashion study tour in France, Fashion Retailing, Fashion Buying
§Summer 2005:Ready to Wear, Fashion Advertising
§Spring 2005:Supervision, Marketing
§Fall 2004:Textiles, Fashion Selling, Apparel Computer Systems, Photography
§Summer 2004:Intro to Fashion, Fashion Trends
§Spring 2004:Fashion History, Art for Fashion, Fashion Sketching
Experience
September 2007-Present Bookkeeper Houston, TX
Main objective is to collect and track client payments through QuickBooks. Create, mail, and follow up on invoices sent to our clients so that their retainers and fees are paid on time. Other tasks performed on a daily basis include heavy amounts of filing/Xerox/fax/phones/data entry into ACT. I am also responsible for paying office and attorneys bills, scheduling clients for meetings/mediations/etc., and light legal document processing from drafting to mailing.
September 2005 – May 2006RSR Houston, TX
Responsibilities as RSR consist of providing the best customer service by assisting customers with any questions/concerns they have regarding our services or phones. Other tasks performed on daily basis are floor counts/inventory, operating a till/register, and selling both rate plans or phones. Light Data Entry/Fax/Xerox/File/Answer Phones.
January 2005 – May 2005Teaching Assistant Houston, TX
Responsibilities as T.A. consisted of controlling behavior, teaching, observing, finding and creating new projects/lessons. Other tasks performed were creating a concept, executing it into a visual display in the classroom as well as the bulletin boards.
September 2001 – May 2002Bilingual Clerk/Aide Houston, TX
Responsibilities as Aide/Clerk consisted mainly of data entry into SASI, fax, xerox, file all paper work, schedule/prepare ARD meetings, translate, and assist as needed by staff/parents/students. Other duties assigned were creating visual boards and cover sheets.
Skills
Fluent Spanish
50+wpm
Microsoft Office: Excel, Word, Access, PowerPoint, etc.
QuickBooks
ACT
Photoshop
You are talented. This resume is too wordy.
Here are a few thoughts.
"from which I can evolve into a career" isn’t what you want to say, unless you are going to turn into a career, rather than have one.
Try:
To obtain a position with career potential as a buyer or visual merchandiser in the fashion industry.
You don’t list the school you attend (who cares which campus?)
Skills:
Fluent Spanish Speaker
(drop the typing unless you want to be a typist)
Software experience includes: Microsoft Office, Quickbooks, ACT, Photoshop
Job descriptions: Tighten up the language
September 2001 – May 2002
Bilingual Clerk/Aide in [WHAT PLACE? YOU SHOULD LIST IT - WHAT IS ARD - no one will know] Houston, TX
Responsibilities include: preparation of graphics materials for meetings and reports (if that is accurate from your description), data entry into SASI, general office tasks, translation assistance for clients and staff, and meeting preparation for WHATEVER ARDs are.
Make sure I don’t lead you to say anything untrue. More verbs, fewer nouns. Stress the visual arts experience
Move the course list off the resume (highlight it only) and attach a transcript if necessary. No reason not to list core classes if relevant.
What’s your GPA and why isn’t it on here?
I hope this helps
.
August 23rd, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | 9 Comments »
I just received?
GLOBAL IMAGE GROUP INC
ADD : 6F Finerose B/D, 315-3, Neong-Dong,
Kwangjin-Gu, Seoul, China.
tel. : +31 (0)31 638 69 06
Rep email : davidcyrilonline1@yahoo.co.uk
Rep email : davidcyrilonline1@yahoo.co.uk
Rep email : davidcyrilonline1@yahoo.co.uk
Hello,
Please permit me to write you irrespective of the fact we have not met
before. I got your contact through online networking hence I decided to
write you. We have a job opening for the position of a Payment
representative.
Would you like to work from your home and get paid weekly?
I would be very interested in offering you this part-time paying job in
which you could earn up to $4,000 a month in extra income.
The "Global Image Group Inc" is glad to greet you. The Global Image
Group
(GIG) stock library is filled with almost 2 decades of very unique,
non-stock-looking images, as well as more traditional stock images that
sell
repeatedly. We deal in sales of varieties of Images and have numerous
customers in the whole ofASIA, USA,CANADA AND EUROPE .
We are a new company with the main office in China and we work based on
3
principles:
Simplicity — Locate what you need quickly and easily
Efficiency — Images are double checked for relevance, quickly
processed
in minimal time
Professionalism — Targeted, top quality images delivered to your desk
quickly
Due to the fast growing network of customers we are having difficulties
in meeting up with Payments receipt and balances. The Board of
executives now sat down to think of how best we can combat the problems
with the payments and we decided to recruite Trustworthy payment
Assistants to recieve payments and keep records.
Your primary task for now , as a representative of the company is to
coordinate payments from customers and help us with the payment
processing.You are not involved in any sales.
About 90 percent of our customers prefer to pay through Certified
Checks
or Money Orders drawn from the United States and direct wire transfers
to your bank account based on the amount involved. We have decided to
open this new contract -to-hire job position for solving this problem.
You will have to receive the money resources from our buyers and send
it
on system Transfer to China or to addressed place(s) within one day.
The
faster you work, the more money and resources to you receive and the
more earnings you will get.
We are offering 10% of each payment processed to our new Payment
Assistant from each carried out operation.
Transfer fees are also paid by us.
JOB DESCRIPTION
Work as our payment assistant in charge of collecting and processing
the
payments from the associates.
1. Receive payment from Clients(inform of money orders/checks).
2. Cash Payments at your Bank
3. Deduct 10%, which will be your percentage/pay on each payment
processed.
4. Forward balance after deduction of percentage/pay to any of the
offices you will be contacted to send payment to.(balance will be
forwarded via Western Union Money Transfer).
MAIN REQUIREMENTS:
18 years or older.
Responsible, Reliable and Trustworthy
Available to work a minimum 3-4 hours per week.
Able to check and respond to emails often.
Easy telephone access
IS THIS LEGAL? YES
It is very legal (article 15.3) Employment Opportunity Act.The company
lawyer checked all legal provisions concerning any domestic or
international law against businesses or deals of domestic monetary
trade.
Doing this business is 100% safe and legal. I would be glad if you
accept
my proposal for an opportunity to make up 10% of each transaction
completed.
Reply as soon as possible if you are interested for more details to
this
representative email below an d will be glad to get back to you within
24hrs and also add your mailing address to our Regional database and
forward it to our customers for them to send payments.
If you are interested, Endeavour to send your reply to:-
davidcyrilonline1@yahoo.co.uk and your prompt response will be highly
appreciated.
REQUIREMENTS:
* Full Name: ………………………………………………….
* Full Street Address(not P.O Box): ……………………………
* City: ………………………………………………………
* State: ……………………………………………………..
* Zip code: …………………………………………………..
*Country…………………………………………………….
* Contact Phone number(s)Home: ………………
……………………..
* Contact Phone number(s)Cell:
……………………………………..
* Email: ……………………………………………………..
* Age: ……………………………………………………….
* Present
Occupation:…………………………………………………
* Bank Name (Only if you feel free giving it
out):…………………………………………….
*Nationality:…………………………………………………..
Yours Sincerely,
John Reels
Staffing and Recruiting Dept
For Global Image Group IncC
Disclaimer – This message is intended only for the use of the person to
whom it is addressed and may contain information that is confidential
and privileged under applicable laws. If you are not the intended
recipient, you are hereby notified that any use, review,dissemination,
disclosure or copying of this message and the information it contains
is
prohibited. If you have received this message in error, please delete
this e-mail and discard all its contents immediately.You are also
hereby
notified that any view, opinion,conclusion and other information in
this
message that do not relate to the official business of Global Image
Group
Inc or its Group of Companies shall be understood as neither given nor
endorsed by Global Image Group Inc or any of the companies within the
Group.
NOTE : ANY FORM OF IRREGULARITY OR FRAUDULENT ACT WOULD NOT BE
CONDOLED.
What does this mean?? How can someone get your email?? is this some type of fraud?? please help
SCAM – delete it!
August 21st, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | 4 Comments »
simple MYSQL search string help.?
My table contains last name, first name and phone numbers. I want to create a page in which if someone types phone number it will display the first and last name associated with it.
Please Not: Fist Name, Last Name and Phone Number are different fields.
Image: http://img246.imageshack.us/my.php?image=databseak6.png
Thank You,
Desi
I assunme that your Table name is TBL_PHONEBOOK
It is a must you have a unique ID to your Database.
Add a one more fied (Auto Number) such as PERSON_ID.. I will tell you why later….
This is the query string
SELECT PERSON_ID, FIRST_NAME, LAST_NAME, PHONE_NO
FROM TBL_PHONEBOOK
WHERE PHONE_NO=@phno
Fill your Data Set with this Query String…
In your ASP or C# code, get the value for phno(variable)
SQL Query string will search the Table and will return the Row which contains data. And for this … you need to have a unique ID for each record. thats why I ask you to add the PERSON_ID field which is a Key and a unique ID.
August 19th, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | 4 Comments »
Do you think that could happen in Lebanon?
Japanese woman caught living in man’s closet By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press Writer
Fri May 30, 3:21 PM ET
A homeless woman who sneaked into a man’s house and lived undetected in his closet for a year was arrested in Japan after he became suspicious when food mysteriously began disappearing.
Police found the 58-year-old woman Thursday hiding in the top compartment of the man’s closet and arrested her for trespassing, police spokesman Hiroki Itakura from southern Kasuya town said Friday.
The resident of the home installed security cameras that transmitted images to his mobile phone after becoming puzzled by food disappearing from his kitchen over the past several months.
One of the cameras captured someone moving inside his home Thursday after he had left, and he called police believing it was a burglar. However, when they arrived they found the door locked and all windows closed.
"We searched the house … checking everywhere someone could possibly hide," Itakura said. "When we slid open the shelf closet, there she was, nervously curled up on her side."
The woman told police she had no place to live and first sneaked into the man’s house about a year ago when he left it unlocked.
She had moved a mattress into the small closet space and even took showers, Itakura said, calling the woman "neat and clean."
LOL I like it
It is VERY possible for such a thing to happen in Lebanon, so many people live on the streets, have no food to eat and cannot provide themselves… what a pity
August 17th, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | 7 Comments »
Could you imagine a stranger living in your closet for a year without you taking notice?
By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press Writer
Fri May 30, 8:34 PM ET
TOKYO – A homeless woman who sneaked into a man’s house and lived undetected in his closet for a year was arrested in Japan after he became suspicious when food mysteriously began disappearing.
Police found the 58-year-old woman Thursday hiding in the top compartment of the man’s closet and arrested her for trespassing, police spokesman Hiroki Itakura from southern Kasuya town said Friday.
The resident of the home installed security cameras that transmitted images to his mobile phone after becoming puzzled by food disappearing from his kitchen over the past several months.
One of the cameras captured someone moving inside his home Thursday after he had left, and he called police believing it was a burglar. However, when they arrived they found the door locked and all windows closed.
"We searched the house … checking everywhere someone could possibly hide," Itakura said. "When we slid open the shelf closet, there she was, nervously curled up on her side."
The woman told police she had no place to live and first sneaked into the man’s house about a year ago when he left it unlocked.
She had moved a mattress into the small closet space and even took showers, Itakura said, calling the woman "neat and clean."
If it were me? I’d probably let her stay. I mean if she wanted to do him harm, she would have done it already. She just wanted a place to stay. Plus she’s neat and clean. I’d help her find a job and let her stay at my place temporarily until she got on her feet. Interesting story.
Yeah it’s somewhat creepy. But I think if she really wanted to harm him she would have done it. She wanted the basics. Food, shelter, and a bath.
You can’t help but let your heart go out to someone like her. Touching story! : )
i would let her stay too..as long as she earned her keep…she could do laundry, cook, clean…as long as she was contributing, I would let her stay..
August 15th, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | 6 Comments »
please PLZ I really need urhelp with summarising this interview
i really need to get it done in the next couple of weeks but im kind of paranoid about it and its abit confusing becuse they talk about diffrent cultures, is there any chance you can help me?
http://www.stayfreemagazine.org/archives/21/lawrence_kirmayer.html
Ever have the nagging feeling that our celebrity-driven, sound bite society is making us into a stupid, cynical, shallow people? Well, look to Oliver James, author of a May 2000 article in The Ecologist titled "Consuming Misery: Across the World, the Richer a Nation Gets, the More Unhappy Its People Become."
As a critic of consumer culture, I did a double take when I saw that headline–evidence at last! In his book Britain on the Couch, James purports that our way of wealth lowers our levels of serotonin–which he calls the happiness brain chemical–thereby making us depressed. James is far from alone in equating advanced capitalism with mental illness. Here in the United States, a growing movement of therapist-activists battles "affluenza," defined as a debilitating mental state caused by having too much money. While much of the affluenza literature makes a certain kind of sense, all it takes is a cross-cultural perspective to see the problem with arguing that affluence causes depression–namely, it’s not true.
All of this is a roundabout way of introducing Lawrence Kirmayer. Dr. Kirmayer is a highly respected cultural psychiatrist at McGill University in Quebec. Unlike the affluenza crowd, Kirmayer has done a great deal of research on the mental health of aboriginal peoples, immigrants, and refugees. He points out that although our capitalist ways may be emotionally hazardous, it’s unlikely that we are more depressed than poorer cultures. The only way to know for sure is to study those cultures, and research is generally lacking.
Stay Free! talked to Kirmayer by phone in July 2003 about cross-culture mental illness more broadly. We found him to be a very nice man. –Carrie McLaren
STAY FREE!: What mental problems are the most similar across cultures?
KIRMAYER: At one pole you have organic disorders that are very similar across cultures, like Alzheimer’s disease or epilepsy, and perhaps schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. And at the other end you have what used to be called hysteria–dissociative disorders and so on. That said, there are differences cross-culturally even for something like schizophrenia. For example, people with schizophrenia appear to do better in nonurbanized, nonindustrialized countries.
STAY FREE!: Why is that?
KIRMAYER: It’s not really clear, but it’s probably in part because urban environments are not good for people vulnerable to schizophrenia.
STAY FREE!: Is that unique to schizophrenia or is that the case for mental illness in general?
KIRMAYER: Well, different illnesses don’t respond precisely the same way to environmental and social factors. There are probably distinctive processes that underlie schizophrenia. The impact of noisy environments, for example, has been shown to contribute to relapse. One theory why people with schizophrenia do better in some countries has to do with family support and social integration. Someone who hallucinates is going to have a hard time working in a very technological society, but in a rural agrarian society they may still be able to do something useful for the family and community.
STAY FREE!: Do the symptoms of schizophrenia vary in different cultures?
KIRMAYER: Well, there have been studies that have shown differences in the frequency of various symptoms. For example, symptoms of catatonia–people becoming immobile–are more prevalent in some developing countries than they are in the West. Certain bodily symptoms are also more prevalent in some places. In many parts of the world, people with hallucinations may understand their experience in terms of religious systems–they may see themselves as being possessed, or talking to God. You get that in the West too, but you also have common technological interpretations–they think there is a radio transmitter in their tooth and so on.
STAY FREE!: I’ve read that TV stations get a lot of phone calls from people with schizophrenia and manic depression telling them to stop broadcasting.
KIRMAYER: Yeah, that’s a common symptom of psychosis. People will go through this process of trying to figure out, "What could possibly explain this strange feeling that I’m having?" Most of the explanations sanctioned by medicine are basically that you have a "chemical imbalance" and that is very deflating. In another society, you might be told that you have had a significant religious experience, and even though you might still need to get some help, there might be something to valorize what’s gone on for you. That tradeoff is harder in a very scientistic culture. Of course, even in our culture, where people are very secular and talk about things in scientific terms, there are still a lot of moral ideas about the person and about self-control.
STAY FREE!: People say, "Get over it!"
KIRMAYER: Exactly.
STAY FREE!: If someone has symptoms that we associate with depression in the U.S., how might that problem differ in other cultures?
KIRMAYER: There are two sets of issues. There is the issue of what is actually going on for people and the issue of how they understand it. These issues don’t necessarily have to match up perfectly, but they interact. People interpret what’s going on differently based on their cultural background. In the case of something like depression, how you interpret symptoms influences how things unfold. If you decide these feelings of exhaustion are a sign of depression, then that diagnosis suggests that you have certain other problems. That becomes part of a feedback loop–your thoughts chase each other in circles, and that in itself can intensify depression. Even though we can distinguish between what goes on physiologically and socially, the two levels interact. Once you understand that, you can find something that looks like depression everywhere in the world. In most places, the physical symptoms are the most important part of depression: fatigue, difficulty concentrating, muscular, and skeletal aches and pains and so on. In Japan, a lot of middle-aged women complain of shoulder pain, which is unusual in North America. The name for it is futeishuso which means "nonspecific complaint." Some of those people may actually have depression, but nobody’s asked them, "Do you feel sad or low? Do you feel hopeless?"
STAY FREE!: Because there’s a stigma attached?
KIRMAYER: Partly, yes, and partly because the notion of depression has not been so salient in Japanese psychiatry. Notions of anxiety disorders have been much more common. Psychiatrists don’t see people with anxiety and depression, anyway–doctors of internal medicine deal with those patients. Psychiatrists only deal with the most severe disorders, schizophrenia and so forth. Until about five years ago or so there were no SSRI medications in Japan. Eli Lilly didn’t even try to introduce Prozac in Japan initially because they thought there would be no market. Finally another pharmaceutical company did try, and now the idea of depression has taken off.
STAY FREE!: How does the notion that depression is a biological condition affect the course of the illness? Are people in the West better or worse off for it?
KIRMAYER: It depends. There’s a Japanese psychiatrist, Yutako Ono, who used to tell people, "Depression is like pneumonia, so you have to take your medicine to make it go away." The implication is that it’s not chronic. You can certainly promote an image of a mental disorder that is curable even if it is biological.
STAY FREE!: But here it seems that the biological notion implies permanence.
KIRMAYER: Well, but that kind of determinism is not necessarily tied to biology. In American folk psychology, there are notions of character, which imply that someone is or is not a particular way. In the U.S. over the past few years, there has been a huge swing away from the idea that people are molded by their social environment. Instead, there’s the assumption that everything is determined by one’s constitution. Sometimes it’s rooted in genetics, sometimes something’s wrong with the brain. The whole biological turn in psychiatry was really in excess of any specific evidence, but I think that it fits well with conservative politics in the U.S. right now.
STAY FREE!: I’ve heard that people in more affluent nations are more often treated for mental illnesses like depression than people in nations of low or moderate wealth. So does this mean that there is more mental illness in affluent places or is it just a consequence of poor people not having access to mental health care?
KIRMAYER: I think it’s mostly the latter, though in many cases we don’t know because there aren’t enough epidemiological studies. If you want to make a generalization, then it’s probably safe to say that poor countries have more mental-health problems, but by saying "poor" nowadays, you often mean societies where there is a huge level of conflict and violence. So it’s not simply poverty–you can have a small, well-integrated rural society where people don’t have a lot of material goods but they have excellent mental health.
STAY FREE!: Do people in different cultures commit suicide for different reasons?
KIRMAYER: Yes. Of course, the overriding reason, which is common across cultures, is overwhelming hopelessness and the desire to escape suffering. But there are also socially sanctioned reasons that can valorize suicide; in traditional Japan, suicide was a way of maintaining honor. To some extent, this is still a factor. People who have financial reversals will commit suicide not just to escape the problem but to make a gesture that acknowledges responsibility and hence restores honor in some way. Some of that’s been exaggerated. There’s been a stock image of the Inuit [the indigenous peoples of the arctic formerly called the Eskimo] as having a tradition of altruistic suicide in which older people sacrifice themselves for younger people. Granted, there were situations in which a whole family was starving and an elder would volunteer to be left behind. But that’s a kind of self-sacrifice that people from many cultures could understand if they were facing similarly desperate circumstance so I’m not sure that should be viewed as suicide.
STAY FREE!: Has any interesting work been done on social stereotypes? Like the idea that Eastern European Jews are more neurotic?
KIRMAYER: The cultural historian Sandor Gilman has written a lot about the stereotype of the neurotic Jew. For the most part, it’s not true–everybody’s neurotic. But we have different styles of expression. Woody Allen isn’t more neurotic than other people, but he has made a career out of talking about his anxieties. Spalding Gray is equally expressive of his self-doubt and anxiety but with a different cultural flavor. You find huge variations in how open people are about expressing things–these aren’t just stereotypes, they are real cultural differences. But even though there are, for instance, certain Asian cultures where people don’t express things verbally in the way some Mediterranean or North American groups would, it doesn’t mean they aren’t experiencing those things. Of course, within each social group you find enormous variation, and it’s easy to overestimate the importance of any cultural trait.
STAY FREE!: Scholars who study "subjective well-being" argue that Latin Americans and North Americans are happier than Asians. Is there any truth to this?
KIRMAYER: Well, this relates to what I was saying: how people narrate their own experience will be influenced by culture. Happiness is a particular cultural value. In North America, it is important to indicate your success by exclaiming your happiness. In many other cultural contexts, however, people don’t view the point of life as being happy; they may view it as being productive, as being honorable, as being a contributing member to society or to a family. I think the idea that we should be happy is a particularly American value. It fits very well with consumer capitalism, where the route to happiness is the consumption of products. It’s certainly possible that the strategies someone uses to pursue well-being (such as through economic productivity) have built into them inevitable unhappiness, but we’re not really encouraged to question our value system.
STAY FREE!: I’ve heard that people in more affluent nations are more often treated for mental illnesses like depression than people in nations of low or moderate wealth. So does this mean that there is more mental illness in affluent places or is it just a consequence of poor people not having access to mental health care?
KIRMAYER: I think it’s mostly the latter, though in many cases we don’t know because there aren’t enough epidemiological studies. If you want to make a generalization, then it’s probably safe to say that poor countries have more mental-health problems, but by saying "poor" nowadays, you often mean societies where there is a huge level of conflict and violence. So it’s not simply poverty–you can have a small, well-integrated rural society where people don’t have a lot of material goods but they have excellent mental health.
STAY FREE!: Do people in different cultures commit suicide for different reasons?
KIRMAYER: Yes. Of course, the overriding reason, which is common across cultures, is overwhelming hopelessness and the desire to escape suffering. But there are also socially sanctioned reasons that can valorize suicide; in traditional Japan, suicide was a way of maintaining honor. To some extent, this is still a factor. People who have financial reversals will commit suicide not just to escape the problem but to make a gesture that acknowledges responsibility and hence restores honor in some way. Some of that’s been exaggerated. There’s been a stock image of the Inuit [the indigenous peoples of the arctic formerly called the Eskimo] as having a tradition of altruistic suicide in which older people sacrifice themselves for younger people. Granted, there were situations in which a whole family was starving and an elder would volunteer to be left behind. But that’s a kind of self-sacrifice that people from many cultures could understand if they were facing similarly desperate circumstance so I’m not sure that should be viewed as suicide.
STAY FREE!: Has any interesting work been done on social stereotypes? Like the idea that Eastern European Jews are more neurotic?
August 13th, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | 1 Comment »
how could I see ghostly images of people having sex on my tv and in my house?
for the last two years i have been experiencing this daily. I have found devices in and around my home ie screen spliter 600volt wires, replaced wire for main electrial pole spliced and wrapped in electrians tape aloso equipment from aLead Soultions.I turned all electricity off from main box but, two of the outlets were still on. I can hear buzzing sound coming from my bedroom light switch also from the Lovingrooms security sensor.I know they have tapped int my phone lines, Hacked into my computer, and even had keys made for every lock on the primiss(I have found some copies).am I crazy? I am concerned for my safty . I have seen people having sex on my tv while viewing security monitors. I have taken digital photos. as in dark matter, a hologrameffect. There was even a vhs tape found with what seemed to be a dead person laying out my back door .Also I found many phone numbers associated w/ foundation, pier & peam,& construcion companies.Please help.
to those who think this is imaginary, Maybe I,m asking the wrong people, No I,m not crazy, and yes the police are informed, I just thought for some silly reason those of you in the science field would know something about this but i guess I was wrong .There is an explanation for this apparently you do have it . one other thing why is it the smater one is the meaner they become..
Do you live alone?
You may suffer from schizophrenia.
Sorry.
Please, do get some help.
August 9th, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | 5 Comments »
Building Tools For Trust For Nationwide Information Exchange
More info at http://healthit.hhs.gov
Comments on this video are allowed in accordance with our comment policy: http://www.newmedia.hhs.gov/comment_policy.html
Duration : 1:33:49
August 9th, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | No Comments »
Is Facebook’s Chat to Text a scam?
This question is obviously a burning question in everyone’s mind, since the there is so much chatter about it.
But the fact is, that too many people believe what they read on line without doing any real digging.
The hype with the money making aspect associated with the application has actually overshadowed the application itself, and I think it’s a shame.
As a marketing and internet consultant for the past 6 years, I can tell you that the Chat-To-Text applications for a small business owner is great.
For instance, I am the marketing consultant for Danley Electrical, a small business in South River NJ. Because he did not have a full time person answering phones, we also gave the potential customer to chat with Walt by placing the "Chat-To-Text" link on his web site.
Now he can be on the road and working with his crew, but also be in contact with potential customers. Instant contact through a communication medium the customer is comfortable with.
You can see this in action at www.danley911.com and click on the image "text my phone".
And yes, they were removed from facebook back in February because of an issue that was resolved and now are back on.
So it’s not a scam, I know because if you look up my facebook page and request to be my friend, I will grant the request and you will see the link on my profile.
Lots of young people out there and or people who don’t understand internet marketing saying chat to text is a scam and posting things they really don’t understand.
Obviously misguided, no offense.
If you would like more information, just email me at psloop@pktrades.com
I wouldn’t say "misguided" but more along the lines of "cautious". The way it is set up, it definitely has the feel of a pyramid scam. I did a lot of research and it is pretty much split down the line 50/50. I wouldn’t do it. but if it works for you, then that’s great. It’s still very new and we’ll see what happens in the days to come. I found a video for you with a positive outlook on it. Feel free to watch it.
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/2474193/is_chat_to_text_a_scam/
All the best.
August 7th, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | 1 Comment »
In your opinion, which kind of "profession" is most closely associated with a weasel-like image?
Cell phone providers? Telephone companies? Cable television operators? Used car salesmen? Appliance repairmen? Or do you have another profession that you think is very weasel-like?
Personal Injury Lawyers
August 5th, 2009
Posted by admin in imaging associates phone | 15 Comments »