Folksonomics

January 20th, 2009

The Objective Investor’s Guide To 3 Real Estate ‘Gurus’

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Every day, there’s more information on the net about real estate investing. From the explosion in the number of people who consider themselves real estate gurus to the vastly expanded number of blogs and other websites that focus on real estate, the options for online learning have become incredibly numerous.

Not surprisingly, not everything you find on the internet is worthwhile – or even true. Considering the lax standards on the internet, we hope some of the information provided below will be of value to you. Important note – the resources below are not being judged by us, but we’re merely pointing them out to you.

(Briefly, on a related note, there’s one really good real estate investing website that is absolutely no cost. When you get a second, have a look at it.)

* Bryan Ellis is a verifiable marketing visionary and sometimes real estate investor who has a clear fascination with news and how the economy affects investors. Ellis inclusion of news and politics in his blog is very unique among real estate investor websites.

* Gerald Romine sells software to real estate investors that helps them to fill out paperwork and make offers on investment properties. While the software is definitely expensive, it does have nice features.

To a greater or lesser degree, all three of these people are well known in the real estate investing business. Yet being famous doesn’t necessarily translate into honesty or integrity. We encourage you to check these people out more closely.

January 19th, 2009

If It Feels Good, It Must Be Right

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Copyright © 2003 Priya Shah


Is it possible to motivate yourself to do something you don’t enjoy doing?


Let me illustrate with my own example.


I’m not a natural networker. I’m no good at schmoozing and talking people into doing things I want them to do.


I’ve been told that I’m too upfront and honest for my own good. I know its true.


So how did I land up in network marketing?


Well, I always wanted to be a stay-at-home mom AND continue working.


Now network marketing OFFLINE is not exactly my cup of tea.


My “warm market” would probably be cold to my advances.


Attend meetings? But I thought the idea was to AVOID the awful commute!


If I called a friend over, it would be to chat about college days – NOT try to “introduce” them to “my new business.”


I’m simply not comfortable with many of the methods that are used to “recruit” people.


But I’m still managing to do a decent job of building my organisation.


I also manage to keep myself motivated enough to WANT to spend every waking moment on my business.


How do I do it? I found something about the business I loved – the internet!


Now the internet is a whole new ball game as far as networking is involved.


On the internet you don’t get rich by approaching people who aren’t interested in what you have to offer. Uninvited advances are better known by the word “spam.”


You don’t lurk in chat rooms – the real-world equivalent of street corners – and accost them (no matter what your upline tells you).


You find out where they hang out and then make your presence felt in those places – like search engines, ezines, discussion lists.


If you can write reports, offer useful information, establish yourself as someone willing to share their expertise – your prospects will FIND YOU.


And if you can find something about the business you love – something about it that gives you a RUSH – you will never be short on motivation.


Its my love for researching and writing reports that gives me the motivation and the edge I need.


With you it could be any number of things – helping people, interacting with others, making friends, writing articles, designing a website – all the things the internet is good for.


And you’ll soon find out that if it feels good for you, it’ll most likely be good for your business.

EzineArticles Expert Author Priya Shah



Priya Shah is the editor of the newsletters Be a Whiz at eBiz! andThe Glutathione Report She shows you how to truly build multiple sources of income online with the Brilliant Team Home Business Opportunity

January 19th, 2009

Creativity: The Origin of Dreams

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One dictionary defines a dream as

1. mental activity, usually an imagined
series of events, occurring during sleep.

2. a sequence of imaginative thoughts
indulged in while awake;
a daydream; or fantasy.

3. a person or thing seen or occurring
in a dream

4. a cherished hope; aspiration.

5. a vain hope or imagination

6. a person or thing that is as pleasant
or seemingly unreal as a dream.

All of these definitions I esteem.
However much on the subject has not been told
Therefore allow me to be so bold
As it is the Creator’s desire to truly unfold
The hidden meaning and mysteries
Of dreams and their pleasantries
Certainly there is much more to the matter
Including an element of the divine speaking to man
To empower him all He can
Dreams also affirm what one is to do
As when Joseph had one concerning Mary
Whom he later said “I do” to
Dreams also forewarn of the future
As did the angel in Joseph’s dream
At the birth of Christ
By which he and Mary departed into Egypt
To save the babe’s life.

By the Spirit of God
Daniel interpreted the dream of a king
Then when in a deep sleep himself
Daniel dreamt a hard thing
The dream through Daniel into cogitation
Yet he kept the matter in his heart
Giving himself wholeheartedly to meditation
And that without hesitation

Joseph, the son of Jacob
Was in a dream foretold the future
That he would lead a nation
His ability to discern the meaning of dreams
Saved Egypt and his own people
From devastation

The God of heaven appeared to Solomon
In a dream by night
After which Solomon was given
Outstanding wisdom and intuitive insight

Prior to the crucifixion
Pilate’s wife was warned in a dream
For God speaks once
Yes twice
Yet man does not perceive it
In a dream, in a vision of the night
When deep sleep falls upon men
In slumberings upon their bed.
Then God opens the ears of men
And seals their instruction
Deep within their unconscious mind
So as to cause them to heed their destiny
And be in line with divine time
Withdrawing from their pride and purposes
With a soul sublime

For dreams are but one attempt by God
To keep man’s soul from the pit
To keep his life from perishing
By imparting revelation and inspiration
From which shall come a likely alteration
In thoughts, words and actions
Bringing purification and ultimate transformation
God therefore in dreams
Does show us the future
Dreams being a sign of the great last days
To awake you within
To hear what He is saying
To see what He is doing
Your heart and soul
He’s alluring and wooing.

Paul Davis is author of Breakthrough for a Broken Heart a book telling us “How to overcome disappointments and blossom into your dreams!” He is a creative consultant, life coach (relational & professional), fitness trainer, minister, popular worldwide keynote speaker, adventure capitalist, explorer, negotiator, mediator, liberator, dream-maker and dream interpreter.

Paul’s compassion for people & passion to travel has taken him to over 50 countries of the world where he has had a tremendous impact. Paul has also greatly impacted many in war-torn, impoverished and tsunami stricken regions of the earth. His nonprofit organization Dream-Maker Ministries is building dreams and breaking limitations.

Paul’s Breakthrough Seminars inspire, revive, awaken, impregnate with purpose, impart the fire of desire, catapult people into a new level of self-awareness, facilitate destiny discovery and dream fulfillment.

Paul can be contacted at:
RevivingNations@yahoo.com
407-967-7553 or 407-282-1745

For additional info:
http://www.CreativeCommunications.TV
http://www.DreamMakerMinistries.com

January 19th, 2009

Emergence Theorists Expand Our View of Origins

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Emergence is a notoriously slippery subject. Some say it seems to be nothing more than a shorthand way of describing the development of the universe and the rise of life on Earth. Others say it takes one into much deeper scientific and philosophical waters.

Charles Darwin might have articulated the most well-known scientific theory of emergence evolution in The Origin of Species. In the famous closing lines of his book, he wrote of his wonder that “from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.”

Darwin aside, there is little doubt that common objects snowflakes, for example are examples of emergence.

Probe a little deeper into the literature on emergence and one can see there is a rich debate and discussion being conducted between and among scientists and philosophers. Those thinking about emergence are, to varying degrees, hopeful that a better understanding of emergence will lead to a richer understanding of cosmic and biological evolution or, more to the point, a better understanding of who we are as human beings.

“In the recent history of the cosmos, life and eventually mind arose spontaneously from matter on this planet, and in the recent history of biological evolution, symbolic abilities and ethical experience dawned in one species,” said Terrence Deacon, a professor of biological anthropology and linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley. “Quite simply, the history of the world exhibits the emergence of these phenomena. So it isn’t such a leap to think that this is also the best clue to understanding them. Ultimately, I feel confident that if we follow this clue, don’t give up the quest prematurely and don’t settle for pat pseudo answers, we will develop an understanding that is both useful and enlightening,” he said.

Seeking the middle ground

The modern interest in emergence began a century ago when it was offered as a way to navigate between vitalism and reductionism. “There was a three-way controversy in the 1920s,” said Nancey Murphy, a professor of Christian philosophy at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, Calif. “The vitalists were saying that you had to postulate a vital force or an entelechy which I think is just another word for an Aristotelian form in order to understand how you can get life out of nonliving material. That view has been as thoroughly rejected as anything can be in philosophy. The second possibility was that reductionism is true, and you could eventually explain living processes in simple, biochemical terms. The third suggestion was the postulation of emergence that you get something genuinely new when you get to the level of life,” she said.

In the 1920s, British emergentist C. D. Broad said that the debate between reductionism and emergence in science really boiled down to whether matter and reality itself is arranged into different levels in which higher levels of increasing complexity are not reducible to lower levels. Others add, too, that these higher-level laws or properties have causal or top-down power over the lower-level laws and properties.

“Technically, Darwinism is an example of weak downward causation,” said Paul Davies, a professor of natural philosophy in the Australian Centre for Astrobiology at Macquarie University. “The law of increasing complexity, if derivable from bottom-level laws, would be merely another weakly emergent law. I am suggesting that there is maybe a strongly emergent law of increasing complexity. Thus, neo-Darwinism might be adequate for biology, or inadequate but augmented by laws of complexity that are only weakly emergent the position of [biochemist Christian de Duve] and maybe [paleobiologist Simon Conway Morris] or require strongly emergent laws in addition.”

Among those who think about emergence, said Australian philosopher David J. Chalmers, two main positions have developed: strong emergence and weak emergence. Supporters of weak emergence make the claim that the more fundamental theory can in principle explain the phenomena of the higher-level theory. And many also argue that emergent laws and properties, even if they do exist, don’t cause anything on a lower level of reality to change in any way.

“The sense of emergence that I approve of is what I’ve called innocent emergence,” said Daniel C. Dennett, director of the Center for Cognitive Studies and Austin B. Fletcher Professor of Philosophy at Tufts University in Medford, Mass. Dennett said his definition of an emergent phenomena “is one that is startling, surprising, one that allows us to use a higher-level description to characterize it, but it’s not in principle unpredictable or irreducible or anything like that.”

Those who favor strong emergence, meanwhile, search for examples of emergence where the emergent property, or alleged law, cannot be reduced in this way. To use a common emergentist phrase, the whole really is greater than the sum of the parts and the whole really causes things to happen among lower-level parts. “In the broadest sense, as elements combine into complex structures, new properties emerge that are surprising and not present in earlier, simpler stages, that new things come about through the appearance of complex structures,” said William Hasker, an emeritus professor of philosophy at Huntington University in Huntington, Ind. “As such, these new things are not added from the outside but through the complex structure itself.”

Science to the rescue

Supporters of weak emergence say that stronger forms leave the door open to an unwarranted intrusion of religion into science, even though many atheists also believe in strong emergence. More pointedly, they also argue that emergence can become a science stopper.

“Sad to say, most of the people who use the concept of emergence have something much more mysterious in mind, maybe even mystical, and I don’t think that’s useful at all,” said Dennett. “I think that calling a phenomenon emergent should be the introduction to a [causal] investigation to understand what the property is and how it emerges and what causes it. If you just think you’re explaining it by saying it’s emergent or you’re just excusing yourself from the investigation, you’re only causing trouble. You’re not helping,” he said.

Scientists like Paul Davies are taking up Dennett’s challenge. They want to put notions of strong emergence to the test. “I long ago became exasperated that defenses of emergence were mostly just talk and propaganda and philosophy, with little or no science,” Davies said. “I have tried to focus the subject onto the question of whether emergence ultimately makes a difference, that is, does it have real effects that are not contained in the bottom-level laws already. Weak emergence will keep philosophers busy talking for a long time, but only strong emergence makes a real difference scientifically,” Davies said.

In the journal Complexity, Davies recently published a paper the product of feedback from John D. Barrow, Leonard Susskind and others in which he proposed a scientific test for strong emergence. The idea is to show that causal closure the belief that physical events only have physical causes is false. If so, then non-physical causes become a possibility.

“We are a long way from demonstrating causal closure scientifically and, as I have argued in my paper, there are sound scientific reasons for questioning it,” Davies said. “At the end of the day, we need to find experimental tests of these competing positions, or this stuff is all just words and politics. I propose just such a test in the form of a quantum mechanical experiment involving 400 entangled particles,” he said, adding that he hoped that scientific advances will allow the experiment to be carried out within the next few decades.

Evolution gets deep

Scientists and philosophers engaged in emergence research remain committed to the long-standing emergentist view that reductionism and vitalism defined as life and mind entities or forces are both inadequate approaches for explaining past, present and future evolution.

If emergence is to make a splash among scientists in the 21st century, then it will have to be fashioned in a far different and more subtle form that takes science seriously, said Tim O’Connor, a professor of philosophy at Indiana University. “I do not myself believe that biology as such points to [strong] emergentism,” he said. “Advances in the 20th century uncovering the chemical basis of life makes reductionism here much more plausible now than it seemed at the dawn of that century.”

However, O’Connor said that even on present knowledge, it is possible that there are emergent aspects to living systems. “But if this is so, it would involve a much more subtle manifestation than was envisioned by previous generations of biological emergentists, who posited a picture of the natural world as highly stratified into physical, chemical, biological and psychological layers, each understandable in their own terms,” he said.

Emergence does provide a way of seeing the world, Hasker said. “It doesn’t level everything out at the base level that all there is is atoms bouncing around, a flat materialist view that is pretty limited, pretty sterile, leaves an awful lot out,” he said. On the other hand, he added, it doesn’t necessarily require supernatural intervention. “The idea of the natural world becoming more complexly organized somehow generates these new features. I think that is a significant and important way of looking at the world and different than the two extremes,” Hasker said.

Some do take emergence in a more religious direction. Philip Clayton, Ingraham Professor of Theology at Claremont School of Theology and professor of philosophy and of religion at Claremont Graduate University, said that emergence reveals a dynamic world where becoming and novelty trump static being a view not unrelated to the process thought of philosopher and mathematician Alfred North Whitehead. As Clayton argues in his seminal book, Mind and Emergence, emergence may be a way to explain how God creates and acts within the world.

Some also believe emergence might shed light on the mind-body problem. One of the corollaries of strong emergence is top-down causation the belief that the wholes are not only more than the sum of the parts but also that the irreducible properties of wholes affect the parts in very real ways. Emergentists generally agree that the most obvious case of top-down causation is the mind or, as Hasker has said, the soul. Rather than being merely epiphenomenal, emergence theorists like Clayton argue that the mind, as a higher-level emergent property, causes changes to happen within the lower-level brain, which in turn directs the rest of the body.

Hasker offers a distinctly Darwinian explanation for why he thinks this is the case. “What’s the evolutionary account for the origin of intelligence?” he asks. “To make sense of that, intelligence has to be something natural selection can work on. But if your thought has no causal influence on what happens physically in your body, no top-down causation, then your thoughts, your consciousness, becomes invisible. Natural selection can only operate on physical structures and behavior. If there’s no influence on physical behavior, thought is unaffected by natural selection and you can give no evolutionary explanation on how we have come to be thinking beings,” he said.

Others like Dennett are more optimistic that science will discover a thoroughly reductionistic understanding of the mind that precludes all but innocent emergence. “Two hundred years ago they thought the problem of reproduction was hard, but look, we’ve solved it,” he said.

Few doubt that emergence remains a promising philosophical concept, but whether it is good science remains to be seen. “Emergence is just a word that may or may not turn out to be useful,” said Murphy. “Whether it turns out to be useful depends upon whether people are going to be clear enough about what they mean by it when they use it. Otherwise is it just going to be sort of the flavor of the year, some new academic jargon.”

If emergence is shown to have some basis in science, O’Connor said it promises to bring the science-and-religion dialogue to a whole new level. “On the one hand, it avoids positing a this-far-and-no-further attitude to the attempt to attain a thorough scientific understanding of the fundamental processes that make up the ongoing lives of the remarkable animals that are human beings. On the other hand, it also serves to remind one of the very partial and ongoing nature of scientific inquiry, encouraging the humility and open-mindedness characterizing the scientific spirit at its noblest.”

Matt Donnelly is acquisitions editor for Science & Theology News.

January 18th, 2009

Exceptional Early Season Snow for Most of the Alps

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Global warming and the global downturn, these double threats have passed by the S. Alps, at the least for now. On the other hand it may have been so entirely contrary. Ahead of Christmas ski resorts in the Les Grands Montets area were cut off as heavy snow hammered down. Dual carriage way cols such as the crowded Col du Montroc were severed. In that location there was no electricity or telephone lines, locals had to be moved out to pro tem housing, it appeared like a repetition of 1999.

Perhaps all news is good news. Samoens appeared nightly on national news bulletins. As soon as electricity was repaired bookings began to come in, pulled in by the superior snowfall.

Avoriaz and neigboring Auron claim almost 5 metres base on the upper slopes at 2200 meters altitude and 2.1 m at the base of the runs. Presently the deepest in the French Alps. Le Grand-Bornand says that there is 6 m at the the highest point of the resort. Unluckily snow drifts have knocked over a pylon of the chair lift that serves the area. It is out of commission till the end of January.

In other places in the S. Alps reservations have increased 17% in Bessans, Samoens and Flegere. Portes du Soleil has 99.4% tenancy and traded a record breaking number of ski passes on Wednesday. That is great for main ski companies and with luck this may aid the summer alps season.

January 15th, 2009

Online Car Loans

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We all love the Internet. We love the convenience of online shopping because it’s fast and easy to buy anything, including large purchases like automobiles. Just going to Ebay Automotive will give you thousands of choices to bid on when buying a car.

There are many other websites that will also sell you a car. Every auto dealership in the world seems to have their own website, and then there are the generic sites like cars.com, usedcars.com, and newcars.com. So it’s easy to buy a car on the web, what about my auto insurance?

That you will find just as easy, if not easier than finding a place to buy a car on the web. Every car insurance company has their own website and then again, there are a lot of generic auto loan brokers with websites as well. Many will claim to guarantee you the lowest interest rate anywhere and will tell you how easy it is to buy insurance through them.

But, something a lot of people do not know is that interest rates for online loans tend to have higher interest rates than loans you get in person.

That’s right. Online car loans will cost you more than you might get from someone you can contact by telephone or by visiting their local office.

Why would online auto loans be more expensive? I’m glad you asked. The people that apply for loans online are more likely to have bad credit according to most studies done by the auto insurance industry.

For that reason, online auto loans have a higher interest rate to offset the risk taken by the insurance company. That is not to say that you cannot possibly find a good rate for your auto loan online, but you are more likely to get a better rate from a local broker.

Your local Credit Union, Bank, or even the auto dealer’s preferred loan company are all likely to give you a better rate on your auto loan. Shopping around on the web, then going to your local options to compare financing options is always advised.

Remember that buying a car is one of the major purchases you make. The loan you get for your car is one you will be stuck with for at least a couple of years, so shop for the best deal before committing to anyone.

You will find such a wide variety of options it will amaze you. One lender may be offering interest rates that are around 7.5% while others are offering 2% or even 0% auto loan financing. Why are different lenders offering such different terms for auto loans?

Again, I’m glad you asked. Competition is just one of the factors involved in what a company offers you for your car loan. One of the other factors are studies made by each individual company as to what is a high risk or low risk loan. For example: If you purchase a red car in Pennsylvania, you will pay more for your auto insurance than you would if you had bought a white or blue car.

They have done studies there that say they pay out more claims to people who own red cars than they do to people who own cars of other colors. Maybe they get more tickets, one agent I spoke with suggested. The police notice the red cars more.

Whatever the reason, it goes to show that there are many factors that determine what you will pay for your auto loan. The fact that a higher percentage of people who apply for online auto loans have bad credit than those who apply for their loan offline influences the rates you will pay for an online loan.

I hope this article has been helpful to you and will encourage you to shop before you buy when it comes time to get your auto insurance. Make sure you are getting the best deal possible. Also, ask the insurance broker what factors are influencing the rate of your loan. It may make you change your mind about the type or color of car you are buying.

D. David Dugan has a website, http://loan.divinfo.com/ that has information on home equity, student, payday and bad credit loans and has pages like http://loan.divinfo.com/getting-that-car-loan–simple-interest-is-the-best.php

January 15th, 2009

Selling Your Sales Staff on Benefits versus Features

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In order to skillfully sell your product line, whether it’s digital cameras or houses, your staff needs to know the products’ features, inside and out. They need to know how a camera operates, what special features it has, the number of pixels; real estate agents need to know the square footage of the house, the school district it’s in, the amount of land involved, and so on.

But the features of a particular product are not necessarily going to be the main selling points. While you always have some customers interested in the technical details of a digital camera, or the specifics of a piece of real estate, you’re probably going to sell the product based on the benefits it offers to the buyer.

For instance, with a digital camera, you can talk to a customer about the number of pixels it has, or you can say, “This camera takes really sharp, clear pictures, so that if you get a really great picture of your grandkids, you can get it blown up really large, and it’ll still be sharp!” Instead of selling a camera’s autofocus features, you can say, “If you see a really cute shot of your grandkids (or your dog, or your grandkids and your dog), you can take it quickly without having to stop to focus the camera.” A residential home can have a great view, a really comfortable, easy to use kitchen, a big living room “with lots of room for parties and family get-togethers.” It can be only one block from the local elementary school or park, or from the most popular supermarket – convenience is a great benefit.

Appealing to emotions can be an effective sales technique: “This dress will make you look sexy”; “feel the power as you drive this sports car”; “this music will evoke a feeling of peacefulness”. Even bringing up a potential problem that evokes fear, and then solving it, can promote sales. “Burning wood can result in dangerous chimney fires; burning this special log will protect you from this.”

In sales meetings, don’t confine yourself to covering sales stats and the technical aspects of new products; hold brainstorming sessions and have the members of your sales staff come up with benefits of each product. Since each staff member comes with a different personal background and unique experiences, you’ll undoubtedly end up with a wealth of benefits and a variety of different approaches to attach to your products.

Don’t forget demographics; selling a digital camera to a teenager involves different benefits than selling the same camera to a 70-year-old grandma. But don’t make assumptions about the teenager or the grandma; the teenager might want the camera to take photos of the handbags she’s designed for sale on eBay; the grandma may be the local Annie Leibovitz and know a lot more about photography than you ever will.

Make sure your staff develops the habit of listening to your customers; they’ll tell your staff what benefits they want from your product. You’ll be able to match product to customer and, perhaps best of all, you’ll get to know your customer’s needs in a way that helps you develop a long-term business relationship.

Aldene Fredenburg is a freelance writer living in southwestern New Hampshire. She has written numerous articles for local and regional newspapers and for a number of Internet websites, including Tips and Topics. She expresses her opinions periodically on her blog, http://beyondagendas.blogspot.com She may be reached at amfredenburg@yahoo.com

January 11th, 2009

Should You Get A Payday Loan?

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Payday loans are becoming increasingly popular and the industry is attracting alot of attention. Payday loans are cash advance loans that consumers can get, until they are compensated on payday. An example of a payday loan transaction is, a consumer gives their payday loan lender $110 for borrowing $100. After the consumer gets their pay check, they pay the lender back for the principal amount of $100.

The reason payday loans are attracting attention is that they are offered at high interest rates. Why are they offered at high interest rates? Let’s examine the loan process.

1. A typical bricks and mortar bank will never loan you up to $1,500 in 24 hours. The barrage of paperwork that you would have to complete would take more than 24 hours.

2. The requirements for taking a payday loan is minimal. You need a job and a bank account. That’s it. Most banks will require that you produce evidence of assets in order to extend you a personal loan.

3. No credit checks. There are no inquiries against your credit file. This means that the lender is taking a risk. Your credit score could be 450 and you can still get a payday loan.

4. Faxless payday loan lenders will even process your payday loan request without any hardcopy paper work. No faxing documents back and forth. Everything is done online.

So the answer to the question is “it depends”. If you need cash in a hurry and you cannot borrow it from friends and family, a payday loan is a flexible, accessible option. If you have assets such as a home, you can consider refinancing your home mortgage.

Access the list of lenders, who specialize in faxless payday loans at http://www.poorcreditgenie.com

January 10th, 2009

Home Equity Loans vs Home Equity Line of Credit – Which Option Should You Choose?

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Tapping into your home equity loans qualifies you for low rates with
the potential benefit of tax write offs. Lenders have developed a number
of financing solutions for you, each with their own pros and cons. Home
equity loans provide low rates with some closing costs. On the other
hand, a home equity line of credit waives closing costs and application
fees for flexible lending amounts at slightly higher rates.

Benefits Of A Home Equity Loan

For those wanting to borrow a large amount for several years, a home
equity loan provides the cheapest financing. By paying closing costs, you
can lock in a low fixed or adjustable rate. You also can select terms
that help you get you a reasonable monthly payment.

Home equity loans usually don’t have any limit balances, early payment,
or annual fees. Structured like a regular mortgages, interest is
primarily paid at the beginning of the loan period.

Benefits Of A Home Equity Line Of Credit

With a home equity line of credit you can borrow amounts when you need
to with an issued credit card. With a predetermined credit limit, you
have flexibility of when you can draw on funds. So you can pay off the
balance one month, and then borrow a thousand the next.

Interest is only paid on the amount you borrow. Usually, the minimum
payment is only the interest charged for that month. Most lenders also
offer the option of converting your line of credit into a second mortgage
when you are ready to make regular payments.

A line of credit doesn’t usually have any application fees. But there
may be fees for carry a minimum balance or closing the account early.

Choosing The Right Equity Financing

Home equity loans are designed for large lump sum payments, used to pay
off credit card debt or pay for a remodel project. Terms extend for
several years to make the loan payments manageable.

Home equity line of credit is best for short term financing. Interest
payments can be kept to a minimum by paying off balances early. Opening
a line of credit also gives you the option of available credit without
having to pay large applications fees.

No matter which type of financing you settle on, make sure you compare
several lenders to get the best deal on rates and fees.

View our recommended home equity line of credit lenders online.

Also check out our information about low interest rate home refinancing online and personal debt consolidation loans online.

January 10th, 2009

La Femme Nikita (Season 3) DVD Review

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Nominated for 18 Gemini Awards (which honor the English language achievements of Canadian television), La Femme Nikita established itself as a stalwart on the USA Network in the late-1990s. Based on the 1990 motion picture of the same name, La Femme Nikita changed its cast, but not its edgy characters and exciting underworld setting. A forerunner to the successful hit series Alias, the show features all the intrigue of its successor coupled with the fast-paced action of 24. An hour-long action/adventure drama series, La Femme Nikita premiered on the first day of 1997 and quickly built a loyal fan base that followed the series for five stellar seasons before its premature cancellation in Spring 2001…

La Femme Nikita follows the life of Nikita (Peta Wilson), a woman wrongfully convicted of a brutal murder. Sentenced to life in prison, a top-secret government agency known only as Section One sets its sights on the woman it believes to be a ruthless killer. Faking Nikita’s suicide, they usher her out of prison to train and program her into a willing and obedient assassin. But the conspirators at Section One didn’t bank on Nikita’s innocence. Now, they’re stuck with a bloodthirsty felon who’s not as bloodthirsty as they thought. Nevertheless, Nikita (now code-named ‘Josephine’) must carry out the orders of her superiors or else face her own death at the hands of an organization intent on keeping its secrets from the outside world. La Femme Nikita boasts an excellent cast to compliment Nikita’s numerous adventures, among them are Michael Samuelle (Roy Dupuis), Davenport (Lawrence Bayne), Seymour Birkoff (Matthew Ferguson), Walter (Don Francks), and Paul “Operations” Wolfe (Eugene Robert Glazer). Together, they create an intriguing atmosphere of mysterious identities, ruthless assassins, and government conspiracies that is certain to entertain even the most discriminating of viewers…

The La Femme Nikita (Season 3) DVD features a number of exciting episodes including the season premiere “Looking For Michael” in which Operations deems Nikita to be a threat to the continued life of Section One. So a plot is hatched to assassinate Nikita on one of the Section One missions, but Nikita survives, and when she returns to Section One headquarters, she learns the truth about Michael… Other notable episodes from Season 3 include “Outside the Box” in which Section One recruits a new operative with a photographic memory, and “Third Party Ripoff” in which Michael’s relationship with Nikita threatens to cause his loss of hard-earned power within the Section One hierarchy…

Below is a list of episodes included on the La Femme Nikita (Season 3) DVD:

Episode 45 (Looking For Michael) Air Date: 01-03-1999
Episode 46 (Someone Else’s Shadow) Air Date: 01-10-1999
Episode 47 (Opening Night Jitters) Air Date: 01-17-1999
Episode 48 (Gates of Hell) Air Date: 01-24-1999
Episode 49 (Imitation of Death) Air Date: 03-07-1999
Episode 50 (Love and Country) Air Date: 03-21-1999
Episode 51 (Cat and Mouse) Air Date: 03-28-1999
Episode 52 (Outside the Box) Air Date: 04-04-1999
Episode 53 (Slipping Into Darkness) Air Date: 04-11-1999
Episode 54 (Under the Influence) Air Date: 04-25-1999
Episode 55 (Walk on By) Air Date: 04-25-1999
Episode 56 (Threshold of Pain) Air Date: 06-06-1999
Episode 57 (Beyond the Pale) Air Date: 06-13-1999
Episode 58 (Hand to Hand) Air Date: 06-20-1999
Episode 59 (Before I Sleep) Air Date: 06-27-1999
Episode 60 (I Remember Paris) Air Date: 07-18-1999
Episode 61 (All Good Things) Air Date: 07-25-1999
Episode 62 (Third Party Ripoff) Air Date: 08-01-1999
Episode 63 (Any Means Necessary) Air Date: 08-08-1999
Episode 64 (Three Eyed Turtle) Air Date: 08-15-1999
Episode 65 (Playing With Fire) Air Date: 08-22-1999
Episode 66 (On Borrowed Time) Air Date: 08-29-1999

About the Author

Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a blog where you can find more reviews like this one of the La Femme Nikita (Season 3) DVD.

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