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Saw Japan change from monety

January 27, 2012 Posted by admin

My boyfriend and I haven’t even been dating a year and we’re already fighting about a divorce settlement. Not our divorce settlement, but everyone else’s. He seems to think that Kobe Bryant’s wife is not entitled to the $75 million dollars she is likely to get. And I am outraged.

In California, without a prenup, husband and wife must split equally everything that was earned during the marriage. The moment a husband earns a dollar, the wife is immediately the owner of fifty cents of that dollar. Any wealth that either party has before the marriage, they both get to keep. But because Kobe and before him Mel Gibson earned their respective $150 and $850 million while married, their wives will leave the marriage with half of the money.

I happen to think this is fair. The problem is, my seemingly perfect Mr. Dreamboat, does not. It first came up this past summer, when I was studying to take the CA bar and read about Ron Burkle’s divorce. Burkle, the supermarket mogul, was worth about $2 billion, however he (in my opinion) swindled his wife out of the billion she was due and she received only $40 million. Of course, $40 million is an enormous sum, but it’s the principle; she should have gotten half. My boyfriend expressed some indignation that any stay-at-home wife who had raised children deserved $1 billion dollars.

So how much is it worth, then? I snapped back.

I don’t know, but not $1 billion dollars.

Mr. Dreamboat seems to think that there is a cap on how much a stay at home mom is worth. (Although I use husband as the generic breadwinner because it’s still more common, I believe the same rules apply when the wife is the income-earner — a stay-at-home dad is also entitled to half.) People think that Gibson and Kobe are being defrauded out of their fortunes by greedy wives. These stories have headlines like, “Divorce will cost Kelsey Grammer $50 million” and just last week, the cover of People magazine said “Mel loses $425 mil in divorce.” But you never see headlines that say, “Gibson’s wife of thirty years who raised seven kids, virtually alone, while enduring life with an alcoholic gets what she deserves.”

The problem is, no one actually deserves that much money. Does Mel Gibson deserve $425 million dollars because we have a warped celebrity culture that paid him $20 million dollars a movie to carry around a sword on a horse and wear make-up? Does Ron Burkle really deserve $2 billion dollars? No, because no one does. But he happens to have earned it through a combination of luck, circumstance, and hard work. And because of those same things, and California property laws that believe marriage is a partnership, their wives should get half.

My feeling about marriage is that once you enter into it, you are no longer doing anything alone. The sum is greater than the two parts and so it’s not a husband who earns money and then shares it with his wife. Rather, the marriage is earning the money all along. Once married, the breadwinner is not earning that money by himself. He is enabled by the other spouse. Maybe Burkle’s wife made it possible for him to earn all that money by supporting him during school or helping him make business decisions or keeping him afloat when he decided to take big financial risks. This seems especially true in the case of a stay-at-home parent, who keeps a home, picks up dry-cleaning, lays out socks to match a suit, and takes the kids to soccer.

Plus, suppose you can determine a monetary value for parenting. Say that the monetary value of a stay-at-home mom’s hard work equals 25% of her husband’s earnings. Reciprocally, should the husband be able to claim responsibility for only 25% of the people the children turn out to be? Is dad entitled to only 25% of the kids’ affection because he only did 25% of the parenting?

When this first came up in my relationship, I didn’t push the issue very far because we hadn’t been dating very long. But ever since, I’ve been wondering if we fundamentally disagree about our philosophies regarding marriage. And if we do, wouldn’t we flunk one of those compatibility quizzes so badly, the screen would start flashing red with BAD MATCH written across it? So when this topic came up again thanks to Kobe, now ten months into our relationship, I rolled up my sleeves and dove into the debate.

He again reiterated his dismay at the large divorce settlement so I dug further, explaining my aforementioned reasons for supporting Kobe’s wife. And though I kept most of the sass at bay, I just couldn’t resist a little indignation. I just could never marry someone who fundamentally disagreed with me about the philosophy of marriage, I said haughtily.

You make some good points, he said. But he wasn’t done. He reminded me about a facet of divorce that I had forgotten about. This whole time, I’d been perplexed by his opinion because he’s rather close with his mother, a stay-at-home mom, and I couldn’t understand how he could undervalue her contribution. But I had forgotten about his father, who has been less lucky in marriage. My boyfriend has seen divorce from the other side. When there are short-term marriages and no children involved, do I still believe that everything must be shared equally? I could imagine a hypothetical where the marriage was short and the wife was not working at the marriage while the husband was working at the marriage and earning a large income and upon divorce, the husband felt like the wife was asking for more than her fair sure.

When I think about marriage, I form opinions based on my marriage. Of course, having never been married, I talk based only on how I want it to be. I imagine I will work tirelessly at being a long-term wife and mother, and should I sacrifice my career, I want my husband to feel that everything he earned, we earned together because I would be working just as hard as him. It had never occurred to me that divorce might come after a short marriage or without children because well, I can’t imagine a marriage like that. My parents have been married 35 years, all of my parents’ friends are still married… suffice to say, I didn’t grow up with a lot of divorce. I started to realize he had a point. But does he really think that any marriage involving me might involve someone not pulling her weight?

I think you might convince me of this though, he added after explaining his reasoning. Don’t give up on this one, he smiled knowingly at me. Maybe it’s not a philosophy regarding marriage that I have to convince him of. Maybe it’s me I have to convince him of. After all, I don’t want to marry someone who believes we have the same opinion on divorce settlements. I want to marry someone who believes that there’s not going to be any divorce at all.

I’ve been watching my clients — and myself — these past two years around the experience of charging fees, asking for payment, suggesting folks re-enroll in their programs, etc., and here’s what I’ve found …

Very few people like asking for money, and no one finds it easy — we universally hate it.

Why?

Because asking for money brings up thousands of insecurities and doubts. We’re scared to look money in the face, command it, control it, and to put ourselves out there. Asking for fair compensation means putting a formal stake in the ground about where we stand in a value equation. And most are simply too unclear about their own worthiness to do that.

Folks tell me that when they ask for money from clients or customers, questions swim inside their heads about their value, impact, and “appeal.” They fear that asking for money is the opposite of being “pleasing” to people, and will be a huge turn off. (For a fascinating discussion around if we should worry about what other people think of us, see Jonathan Fields’s recent post “What Other People Think IS Your Business.”)

In tough times like these, consultants, coaches, practitioners and entrepreneurs struggle hard to stand up for what they want/deserve in compensation or fees/prices, fearing no one will pay. And in the end, many aren’t sure themselves what their services are worth.

At the root of this money challenge are shame, doubt and insecurity: Am I good enough? How can I put a value on what I offer? Will there be enough people to pay this? Will they come back? Did they think my work was a good value? How do I fare against the competition? Did I give them great results?

In exploring the question of money with coaches and consultants who are highly financially successful and charging upwards of $400 an hour with ease, I’ve observed these five traits:

1) They have tapped into a large pool of potential clients who can easily pay their fees.

2) They’ve had prior high-level business experience and success that contributes to their sense of worth and value.

3) They’re very well-boundaried — they know where they end and others begin, and are clear about how they stack up against the competition.

4) They focus on business development continually — they understand the power of networking and building a supportive referral network.

5) Most are men.

I’ve observed in my research that men in general have greater access to a sense of “entitlement” — they believe they deserve the fees they’ve set and don’t tend to agonize or apologize about what they are worth.

Women on the other hand have been culturally trained to think less hierarchically and more about connection, equality, and empathy. Midlife women in particular simply have deeper challenges than men in standing up and speaking up about what value they bring and how they excel and stand apart from the competition. That said, for women to be successful entrepreneurs, consultants, practitioners and small business owners, they must find new ways to strengthen their ability to authoritatively command the fees they deserve.

While asking for fair compensation remains challenging for me, I’ve created greater success this year only after figuring out beyond a reasonable doubt what I feel my services are worth. I didn’t make the numbers up — I conducted diligent, open-hearted research — with clients, competition, experts, role models, the marketplace, etc. I asked my clients how they assessed the value of our work together, and the impact it made in their lives. And I left my ego at the door when these conversations occurred.

Further, I faced the powerful realization that certain professional endeavors — such as being well-known in the media — don’t necessarily bring you clients who can pay your fees. I’ve learned (and teach my clients) that you’ll be sorely disappointed in your practice or business if you don’t figure out: 1) who your ideal client is, 2) what your optimal method and model of generating income/revenue is, and 3) how you can continually find more clients you love to serve who can pay you what you deserve. In the end, you need to determine new, sure-fire methods to generate more success doing the work you love.

The reality is that for most, asking for money IS hard, but it gets easier when we become crystal clear about what we’re worth and how we’re exceptional at what we do. Once we know in our hearts and minds what to charge, then it’s time to speak up and ask for it without reservation.

Curious about your thoughts — do you find asking for money in your practice or business hard, and if so, what makes it easier for you?

This period also saw Japan change from being a feudal society to having a market skup monet Kraków thriftiness and sinistral the Japanese with a remaining Western influence.

Wan House issued najtansze

January 22, 2012 Posted by admin

Rihanna is to fly Katy Perry away for a relaxing holiday following her split from husband Russell Brand.

California Girl singer Katy is said to have been relying on Rihanna for support since the breakdown of her marriage and the pair have set a date for a girly holiday together in Mexico.

A source told the Daily Mirror:”Rihanna has been there for Katy, texting her from Miami where she’s on holiday. Now they are planning a girly getaway so Katy can clear her head.”

Russell, 36, is said to have left Katy, 27, after she revealed she was not ready to have children.

The source said: “Katy is absolutely devastated, but the rows over starting a family had just come to a head. Yes she had agreed to take a year out to focus on children, but she realised the timing was all wrong.

“She is too young and does not want to put her music on the back burner while she is on top of her game.”

A relaxing holiday sounds just the ticket.

CELEB REVIEW OF THE YEAR 2011:


The January kick, initially planned to coincide with the cardinal SOPA hearing of the year, drew elephantine publicity and reaction. Days ex to the proceeding, najtańsze hotele Spotless House issued a affirmation that it would “not forward legislation that reduces free hand of phraseology, increases cybersecurity chance, or undermines the dynamical, innovative universal internet.

set someone back the diversion – tanie noclegi

December 30, 2011 Posted by admin

Jefferies is having a very good day after its earnings release this morning for the quarter ending November 30. The stock is up over 21% since the market open, trading now at around $14.40.

Who else is having a good day? Those who picked up Jefferies stock when the stock was hitting rock bottom a couple of weeks ago. Several of those buyers were Jefferies’ executives, and they’re probably feeling extra satisfied because they bought up shares in an attempt to show their belief and confidence in the long-term stability of the firm.

The executives may have rejected their bonus, but now picking up those extra stocks is paying off big time.

Here’s a rundown of who bought, and how much their shares are worth now: [Note—calculations were based on a share price of $14.40, which may have changed since]

  • Leucadia National, the investment bank’s largest shareholder—owning nearly 30% of the company, picked up 1 million shares at $11.8439 and 500,000 shares at $11.3478 in early and mid-November, according to SEC filings. Now, the value of those shares are up over $4.09 million.
  • Ian Cummings and Joseph Steinberg, who’re directors at the investment bank, made the same bets—netting them stocks that have increased $4.09 million in value too.
  • Jefferies CEO Richard Handler picked up 61,231 shares at $11.02, according to a Nov. 15 filing. Now, the value of those shares are up $206,960.
  • Chairman Brian Friedman, who signed off (with Handler) on the 6-page letter the company sent to investors reassuring them of the company’s health, bought 16,440 shares at $11.02 [SEC filing]. The shares are now worth $55,567 more.

How much has it expense the entertainment tanie noclegi nad jeziorami  industry to persuade Rep Lamar Smith to set forth and ram in the course SOPA, which force tariff the American

Extensive, this amounts to a corporate interest, logo

December 25, 2011 Posted by admin

Poorly George Michael is heading home for Christmas after a nasty bout of pneumonia left him stuck in an Austrian hospital.

It was feared George would have to tuck into turkey and all the trimmings in his sickbed after the deadly lung infection took hold last month, forcing the star to scrap his entire tour.

The legendary Faith crooner is ecstatic after being allowed to leave the ward behind to carry on his recovery at home in London over the festive period.

And his new fella Fadi Fawaz is even more pleased he won’t have to open his presents all alone.

Speaking to reporters outside the hospital, he said: “Christmas at home. I cannot stop smiling today, the best day ever. Nothing to worry about, happy days.”

A spokesperson for Michael adds: “He is getting better and better.”

Good old George – at least he has an excuse not to join in charades after dinner.

(WENN)

BALTIMORE — A Hagerstown man who acknowledged approving substandard concrete products used in construction projects on Interstate 70 and the Capital Beltway has been sentenced to one year of home detention.

The U.S. Attorney’s office said Monday that Santos Rivas must also pay $131,410 in restitution. He pleaded guilty in September to three counts of making false statements and faced up to 15 years in prison and $750,000 in fines.

Rivas was the quality-control director at Frederick Precast Concrete Inc. of Greencastle, Pa., when he signed off on the products. They were used at the Woodrow Wilson Bridge, which carries the Capital Beltway over the Potomac River, and an Interstate 70 interchange in Frederick County

The investigation began when a worker noticed that a structure cracked open at the I-70 job site.

In usual, this amounts to a corporate name, logo (logotype and/or logogram), and supporting devices commonly assembled within a set of guidelines. These guidelines govern how the sameness is applied and ensure approved colour identyfikacja wizualna palettes, typefaces, epoch layouts and other such methods of maintaining visual continuity and brand cognizance across all physical manifestations of the brand. These guidelines are usually formulated into a package deal of tools called corporate sameness manuals.

Papers objects are postulated as gifts

December 12, 2011 Posted by admin

MyCityWay’s check-in and location-sharing iPhone app Clingle has added location-based gifts in its latest update, so you can now surprise your family members or friends with gift cards that are revealed to them when they get to the store.

When Clingle was first launched in October this year, it was a free iPhone app that allowed you to check in from locations and leave ‘clings’ there, which were snippets of text, photos or audio that Clingle users in the vicinity later could then see. It was a way for Clingle users to leave each other tips about what to order at a restaurant or which store had the best collection of shoes in a shopping mall.

The other social aspect of the app was to enable you to keep track of where your friends were and what they were up to. You could create groups of friends when you were going on a trip somewhere and use Clingle’s check-ins and tagging features to create a travelogue. You could even leave clings for your friends at certain locations as surprises for them to ‘unlock’.

Although the service was originally targeted at people in India, Singapore and in New York City, an update last month saw it expand its coverage to the whole of USA and the UK, besides adding video clings to its mix of features. It has since expanded to include Melbourne and Sydney in Australia, and MyCityWay plans to cover the entire globe soon.

Building on its existing surprise clings feature and a comprehensive database of locations, Clingle has now added the ability to send location-based gift cards. The next time you are in a Starbucks or an American Eagle store, or even seated in the comfort of your home, you can buy and leave a gift card for your Clingle or Facebook friends at that location, allowing them to unlock it when they get there.

Since Clingle is all about interactive check-ins, you can pair that gift card with a text, image, audio or video cling, to make the whole thing more interactive. Clingle will also alert you when one of your contacts visits a git-enabled store, if you so choose, and you can then instantly send them a gift card through Clingle.

The app uses the soon-to-be-launched iStash to provide integration with over 40 retail stores and you can send gift cards for any of them to your Clingle friends by paying for them by entering your credit card info in the app (which may actually be against Apple policy, but the app is currently available on the App Store, so perhaps we are wrong).

Clingle itself will also be offering free gift cards to its users as rewards for various achievements. For instance, if you join Clingle and leave 25 clings for your friends, you’ll unlock a $5 Starbucks gift card.

Gifting dos not just work with your Clingle friends either—the app allows you to send gifts to your Facebook friends too, but they’d have to join Clingle to be able to redeem them, which is a bummer. We also hope to see Clingle quickly add more stores to its catalogue, and perhaps gifting options other than just gift cards.

However, the system is pretty well-designed overall and adds a touch of fun to the gifting process. If you’re planning to give gift cards to anyone this holiday season, it might be worth giving Clingle a shot.

➤Clingle

When stuff objects are presupposed as gifts, in myriad cultures they are traditionally packaged in some manner. Into instance, in Western urbanity, gifts are often wrapped in wrapping archives and accompanied away a contribution note which may note the make for, the beneficiary Prezent dla denominate, and the giver’s name. In Chinese culture, red wrapping connotes luck.

The present Deep of Mexico

December 8, 2011 Posted by admin

part of the celebrated county of Sussex, which has its roots in the old-fashioned kingdom of the South Saxons, who established themselves there in the fifth century AD, after the departure of the Romans. Archaeological remains are bumper, especially in the upland areas. The area angielski Gdynia position on the littoral has also meant that there were scads invaders, including the Romans and later the Normans. Earlier industries obtain included fishing, iron-making, and the wool marketing, all of which include declined, or been adrift completely.

The tender Gulf of Mexico

December 3, 2011 Posted by admin

Just as Google affirmed with their announcement yesterday, their music service is “opening up to a broader audience and that it will integrate with the music store on Android Market to make music discovery, purchase, and sharing easy and fast.” Well, the Google Music App has just launched right now for the Google TV, as well as the Android Market now opening up to music purchases to select Android smartphones. So for all you Android and Google TV users out there, feel free to start downloading and listening to your favorite tunes.

The Google Music for Google TV app syncs in the cloud with your Google Music account, removing the need to stream from a computer or download tunes to the TV. In a few easy steps, simply download the Google Music app for Google TV from the Android Market, log in to your Google account, and start enjoying your entire music collection through the system of your choice. These are the instructions: go to music.google.com on your computer, sign up for the free service, upload your music to the cloud or buy music on the Android Market. Once done, you can play all of your songs on Google TV as easily as you can do on your computer, smartphone or tablet.

Google also promises that they’ll continue to improve your Google TV experience by way of future updates to the Google Music app along with other new apps coming to Google TV. With this move. Google seems like they’re finally trying to step up to the music game, which they’ve really kind of late to, with all the popular music services that are out at the moment. And for all you musicians out there, don’t forget that you can get in on the action from the other end with Google’s new Music Artist Hub.

[via Google TV]


In this post we’ll just focus on the cloud lockers, like iTunes Match. But it’s worth noting that those services may eventually become redundant. Increasingly popular music streaming services like Spotify, Rdio and MOG are leading people away from the concept of owning music – and if you don’t own the music, you don’t need to store it. But that’s an issue to explore in another post.

Assuming you want to use a cloud service to archive or backup your music collection (and at this point in the evolution of digital music, you probably do), let’s check out the three main services.

I’m a big music fan and probably fairly typical in terms of my requirements for online archiving, so I’ll use myself as a use case.

Why Do I Need an Online Archive For My Music?

Like tens of millions of people, I use iTunes to manage my digital music collection. I typically sync the songs in my iTunes to my iPod, which I take on walks or plug into the stereo in my lounge.

I currently have about 12,500 songs stored on iTunes; and I haven’t even transferred a good portion of my CD collection to iTunes. I have a 148 GB 2008 model iPod, which has about 32 GB free currently. About 78.5 GB is taken up by music (note: the total file size for you will depend on the quality of digital file you choose, the length of the songs, and so on).

So my current iPod, over 3 years old, is still adequate for my digital music storage needs.

However neither my iPhone (13.7 GB) or iPad (58.1 GB) has enough storage to fit all of my iTunes music. So that’s a good use case right there for me to use a cloud service for my music: it would enable me to listen to my music on iPhone or iPad, even if I hadn’t synced it to those devices.

Having an online archive would also motivate me to transfer the rest of my CD collection into iTunes, a manual task that I’ve been avoiding for years. After I do that, I’d be able to listen to anything in my music collection, whatever device I’m on. That seems like a good deal to me.

The 3 Main Cloud Lockers

Just today, Apple launched iTunes Match (currently only available to U.S. users). Apple’s online storage service iCloud is the backend. iTunes Match offers iTunes users the ability to sync their entire music library across devices. It does this by “matching” each song with a high quality version stored on Apple’s servers, which saves you having to upload those songs. However any songs which Apple doesn’t have can be uploaded. Currently Apple has imposed a limit of 25,000 songs (not including songs purchased from the iTunes Store). If you have more than that, you are currently prevented from using the service at all!

But wait, you can almost guarantee these days that anything Apple releases will be matched by a lower cost Amazon offering. Sure enough, Amazon has a “limited time offer” of unlimited music storage on its Cloud Drive for $20 per year. That offer also comes with 20 GB of non-music storage. There is some fine print as to what music is eligible, but it looks like most of my music collection would qualify.

Finally, there is Google Music. It’s currently in beta and only available to U.S. users. Google Music offers storage of up to 20,000 songs for free, during the beta period. Pricing hasn’t been announced yet for premium offerings, but it will no doubt be very competitive with Apple and Amazon. Google is also currently in negotiations with music labels to launch an MP3 store as part of Google Music.

Which Service Should You Use?

Each of Apple, Amazon and Google is offering a pretty amazing deal for storing your digital music. From zero to $25 per year, the pricing is almost irrelevant considering how much storage you get. If you have a decent music collection, you’re talking about archiving 50 GB worth of music at the least.

There are tradeoffs with each of the three services. With Amazon or Google, you need to upload all of your music – which will likely be a big bandwidth and time hog. Apple’s iTunes Match gets around that pain point by “matching” songs you have with songs on its servers. That’s a very compelling advantage to iTunes Match.

Some people, however, may balk at submitting to Apple’s control for yet another part of their digital life. So Amazon or Google may be a better bet for them.

For my purposes, with 12,500 songs currently in my iTunes and a good portion of them likely to be on Apple’s servers, iTunes Match is a great cloud solution for me. At least it will be when it becomes available outside of the USA.

Let us know which one of these three you’ll use – and why. Or perhaps you want to steer clear of the big companies and go with an indie solution. We’re all ears in the comments…

Lead photo adapted from Flickr user notsogoodphotography and cat photo by Elmo Keep.

Geologists and other Terra scientists consent in general that the proximate him Deep of Mexico basin originated in Late Triassic old hat as the come to pass of rifting within Pangea. The rifting was associated with zones of imperfection within Pangea, including sutures where the Laurentia, South American, and African plates collided to initiate it.

Hello world!

November 21, 2011 Posted by admin

Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!