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Atricle Dump - Tsunami Elimination
Traffic Avalanche -- Take Advantage Of Your Long Tail llow water-which provides a slowing group of devices such as reefs, man made subjects left in the water [vehicles, sunk boats, etc] and finally, on-land built objects of civilization.Yes, you have a long tail. You just don't know you do. If you're in a niche, then you have a long tail that you may not have been aware of. And the interesting part of the whole long tail issue is that that is where you will get the most for your efforts.You must have heard of keywords, haven't you? If you have done serious keyword research on a theme, you'll discover that there are keywords that have very huge search volumes, those could be called the head. The head refers to the main keyword for a niche.Now, for every main keyword, there are many (hundreds and perhaps, thousands) small keywords that trail the main keyword. Those key phrases that trail the main keyword are the tail. This is a rather empirical definition but it should put you on the same plate with me.They usually have more laser-focused traffic and usually have less competition than the main keywords. Inexperienced folks don't go for them because of their low search volumes.Apart from the fact that you'll have far less competition with these laser-targetted keywords, you'll experience better conversion.But imagine r The tsunami, therefore, has no "reason" or "causability" to slow down. We need to give it a reason/way. We need to give it a barrier. Many barriers. In the ocean, water barriers come in many forms. Anything that disrupts a unit of water's normal flow is a barrier-be it a fixed or temporary barrier. When a scuba diver is exploring the water's depth, the diver's regulator purges carbon dioxide bubbles. For a split second, these bubbles disrupt each unit of water in the bubbles path. Also, when a person dives into water, [or a rock is thrown into the water], for a moment, several things occur; water is displaced equaling the weight of the person hitting it and depending on the angle of the entry, the water may be deflected great [er] distances. This is why kids do cannon balls off diving boards-to create great splashes--for the opposite reason that Olympic divers try to keep totally strai How to Pull in Clients Like a Magnet I just read a book entitled Daring Visionaries, by Ray Smilor. One "story" within this book caught my eye-a group of fire fighters were climbing along bases of some large hills when they sighted a fire coming right at them. As the group deduced where to run to for greatest safety, they ran as fast as their equipment would allow them. They raced for a few minutes until it become obvious to them that their options were being reduced quickly.Your marketing could be pulling in clients and profits like a magnet. Think about how many people could benefit from your products and services. Even if only a fraction of them bought from you, you'd be amazingly successful.It doesn't matter if the economy is headed up or down, there are plenty of people looking to spend money to solve their problems and meet their needs. People are happy to spend money on things they want, whether it's a five thousand dollar painting, five-dollar cup of coffee, a golf lesson, a new computer or a new web site.With all these prospects searching for products and services to buy, how can you attract more of them and increase your profits?Makes sense that the best way to get people to spend money is to give them what they want. But, and here's the amazing thing, most small businesses don't market to what their prospects want. Too much small business marketing is about the business owner and what he or she wants, not what the client wants.Typically, ads or web site pages begin with;- The name of the business - A picture of the product, the owner, or t One senior fire fighter felt that he ought to use what his group had been practicing over several years --to not try to out-run this oncoming fire but instead, cut its immediate fuel supply where he stood, giving him a life-saving chance. He began creating a fire circle-realizing that once the immediate vegetation around him was burned, it could not burn again. At least were he stood, the fire would be less intense. For some reason, this solution seemed -to several of the others- "only workable -out there- but not for us when our lives depended on a different solution." Thus, only one other fire fighter chose to stay and work with the veteran while the rest kept running to the top of the hill-the only place still not burned-with the fire being too wide to run around. The results were that the burned out area immediately around the two "circle of fire builders" provided no fuel for the raging, approaching fire to enable the raging fire to continue burning-- so the wild fire went around the two fire fighters, leaving them hot--but alive. Before the others could reach the top of the hill, they were burned alive. The idea of this article in this book was to think out of the box-or "fight fire with fire." Regarding Tsunamis, I have tried to do exactly that. Firstly, what is a tsunami? It is understood to be a wall of water. What causes a tsunami? It is understood to be caused by at least a movement of tectonic plates. A tectonic plate is an edge of earth. According to geologists, all the earth is made of overlapping plates. Where these over lap, that area experiences the most number of earthquakes since movement is inherent within the [characteristics] of the earth. We have such plates in California, with one known as the San Andreas Fault, perhaps the world's best known fault-being the focus of countless earthquakes since time began--and the grist of numerous research studies and newspaper articles. When the earth shifts at two plates, if these plates are underwater--depending on the amount of the movement-be it inches or feet, one consequence must be displacement of water. If the movement is slight, it can cause a mild hiccup underseas. If, however, the movement is major [not sure what amount of movement is considered slight or major], a monstrous amount of water is moved. As the law of physics shows us, a subject in motion will stay in motion until it runs out of energy or something else disrupts that motion. As of now, beaches, people, buildings and all the things in civilizations near water, become things that inevitably stop tsunamis. When civilization is the stopper, untold loss of things and countless deaths occur. Indonesia just experienced a tsunami a year ago-with the end of the tsunami wiping out entire villages. I have pondered in my research I do have extensive knowledge about actions that can solve problems. Most "environmental problems are either not even considered as solvable or suggestions for cures are grist for governmental committee meetings [with people who have no vision-and who have both political and social power circles and positions to protect]. I have no such limitations. What we have, with this tsunami, is a wall of water, initially miles wide, perhaps hundreds of feet "tall", a few dozen feet wide and with a speed of 60-600 miles an hour. I am curious how a single jerk in a fault can generate a consequence of 600 miles an hour water, but I will work with those numbers regardless. [The faster a moving object, often, the more difficult to deal with.] We have, initially, a wall of water heading out in many directions at once. A wall of water pushing at other water that may be dormant and/or water that may be going in any number of other directions Other than "because of strong tangent currents", this tsunami-created wave has no barrier to surmount till it reaches shallow water-which provides a slowing group of devices such as reefs, man made subjects left in the water [vehicles, sunk boats, etc] and finally, on-land built objects of civilization. The tsunami, therefore, has no "reason" or "causability" to slow down. We need to give it a reason/way. We need to give it a barrier. Many barriers. In the ocean, water barriers come in many forms. Anything that disrupts a unit of water's normal flow is a barrier-be it a fixed or temporary barrier. When a scuba diver is exploring the water's depth, the diver's regulator purges carbon dioxide bubbles. For a split second, these bubbles disrupt each unit of water in the bubbles path. Also, when a person dives into water, [or a rock is thrown into the water], for a moment, several things occur; water is displaced equaling the weight of the person hitting it and depending on the angle of the entry, the water may be deflected great [er] distances. This is why kids do cannon balls off diving boards-to create great splashes--for the opposite reason that Olympic divers try to keep totally straig Investing Psychology the veteran while the rest kept running to the top of the hill-the only place still not burned-with the fire being too wide to run around.Let me share an inspirational story with you, a metaphor which was the catalyst of my personal growth financially and my very own paradigm shift.Busy working or being financially productive!Once upon a time a very strong woodcutter asked for a job in a timber mill, and he got it. The pay was really good and so were the work conditions. For that reason, the woodcutter was determined to do his best. His boss gave him an axe and showed him the area where he was supposed to work. The first week, the woodcutter cut down 18 trees. "Congratulations," the boss said. "Continue going that way!"Very motivated to hear the boss' words, the woodcutter tried harder the next week, but he only could bring 15 trees. The third week he tried even harder, but he can only cut down 10 trees. Week after week he was cutting down less and less trees."I must be losing my strength", the woodcutter thought. He went to the boss and apologized, saying that he could not understand what was going on. "When was the last time you took time out to sharpen your axe?" the wise boss asked."Sharpen my axe? I had no time to The results were that the burned out area immediately around the two "circle of fire builders" provided no fuel for the raging, approaching fire to enable the raging fire to continue burning-- so the wild fire went around the two fire fighters, leaving them hot--but alive. Before the others could reach the top of the hill, they were burned alive. The idea of this article in this book was to think out of the box-or "fight fire with fire." Regarding Tsunamis, I have tried to do exactly that. Firstly, what is a tsunami? It is understood to be a wall of water. What causes a tsunami? It is understood to be caused by at least a movement of tectonic plates. A tectonic plate is an edge of earth. According to geologists, all the earth is made of overlapping plates. Where these over lap, that area experiences the most number of earthquakes since movement is inherent within the [characteristics] of the earth. We have such plates in California, with one known as the San Andreas Fault, perhaps the world's best known fault-being the focus of countless earthquakes since time began--and the grist of numerous research studies and newspaper articles. When the earth shifts at two plates, if these plates are underwater--depending on the amount of the movement-be it inches or feet, one consequence must be displacement of water. If the movement is slight, it can cause a mild hiccup underseas. If, however, the movement is major [not sure what amount of movement is considered slight or major], a monstrous amount of water is moved. As the law of physics shows us, a subject in motion will stay in motion until it runs out of energy or something else disrupts that motion. As of now, beaches, people, buildings and all the things in civilizations near water, become things that inevitably stop tsunamis. When civilization is the stopper, untold loss of things and countless deaths occur. Indonesia just experienced a tsunami a year ago-with the end of the tsunami wiping out entire villages. I have pondered in my research I do have extensive knowledge about actions that can solve problems. Most "environmental problems are either not even considered as solvable or suggestions for cures are grist for governmental committee meetings [with people who have no vision-and who have both political and social power circles and positions to protect]. I have no such limitations. What we have, with this tsunami, is a wall of water, initially miles wide, perhaps hundreds of feet "tall", a few dozen feet wide and with a speed of 60-600 miles an hour. I am curious how a single jerk in a fault can generate a consequence of 600 miles an hour water, but I will work with those numbers regardless. [The faster a moving object, often, the more difficult to deal with.] We have, initially, a wall of water heading out in many directions at once. A wall of water pushing at other water that may be dormant and/or water that may be going in any number of other directions Other than "because of strong tangent currents", this tsunami-created wave has no barrier to surmount till it reaches shallow water-which provides a slowing group of devices such as reefs, man made subjects left in the water [vehicles, sunk boats, etc] and finally, on-land built objects of civilization. The tsunami, therefore, has no "reason" or "causability" to slow down. We need to give it a reason/way. We need to give it a barrier. Many barriers. In the ocean, water barriers come in many forms. Anything that disrupts a unit of water's normal flow is a barrier-be it a fixed or temporary barrier. When a scuba diver is exploring the water's depth, the diver's regulator purges carbon dioxide bubbles. For a split second, these bubbles disrupt each unit of water in the bubbles path. Also, when a person dives into water, [or a rock is thrown into the water], for a moment, several things occur; water is displaced equaling the weight of the person hitting it and depending on the angle of the entry, the water may be deflected great [er] distances. This is why kids do cannon balls off diving boards-to create great splashes--for the opposite reason that Olympic divers try to keep totally strai Fast Domain Names - Your Name Is The Game plates in California, with one known as the San Andreas Fault, perhaps the world's best known fault-being the focus of countless earthquakes since time began--and the grist of numerous research studies and newspaper articles.Domain names are an integral part of marketing your website. It is important that people would recognize your domain name in order for your website to generate traffic. So here are some tips that can help you decide on what domain name for your website.Be Creative. There are millions of domain names in the Internet. So you should be able to find one of your own that hasn’t been used yet. People often use names very similar to popular websites. This is actually a good technique. For example, a person would like to visit www.google.com but mistyped it and entered www.goggle.com, if you’re the person you own the second website, you can easily benefit from the typo error and generate a traffic from that.Make it Easy to Remember. Remember that there are a lot of websites out there so it would help you a lot if your domain name is simple and easy to recall. People would be able to go back to your website over and over again if they memorize your domain name.Be Visible. To generate a lot of traffic into your website, your domain name should have a high PR in search engines. Most people prefer to use sear When the earth shifts at two plates, if these plates are underwater--depending on the amount of the movement-be it inches or feet, one consequence must be displacement of water. If the movement is slight, it can cause a mild hiccup underseas. If, however, the movement is major [not sure what amount of movement is considered slight or major], a monstrous amount of water is moved. As the law of physics shows us, a subject in motion will stay in motion until it runs out of energy or something else disrupts that motion. As of now, beaches, people, buildings and all the things in civilizations near water, become things that inevitably stop tsunamis. When civilization is the stopper, untold loss of things and countless deaths occur. Indonesia just experienced a tsunami a year ago-with the end of the tsunami wiping out entire villages. I have pondered in my research I do have extensive knowledge about actions that can solve problems. Most "environmental problems are either not even considered as solvable or suggestions for cures are grist for governmental committee meetings [with people who have no vision-and who have both political and social power circles and positions to protect]. I have no such limitations. What we have, with this tsunami, is a wall of water, initially miles wide, perhaps hundreds of feet "tall", a few dozen feet wide and with a speed of 60-600 miles an hour. I am curious how a single jerk in a fault can generate a consequence of 600 miles an hour water, but I will work with those numbers regardless. [The faster a moving object, often, the more difficult to deal with.] We have, initially, a wall of water heading out in many directions at once. A wall of water pushing at other water that may be dormant and/or water that may be going in any number of other directions Other than "because of strong tangent currents", this tsunami-created wave has no barrier to surmount till it reaches shallow water-which provides a slowing group of devices such as reefs, man made subjects left in the water [vehicles, sunk boats, etc] and finally, on-land built objects of civilization. The tsunami, therefore, has no "reason" or "causability" to slow down. We need to give it a reason/way. We need to give it a barrier. Many barriers. In the ocean, water barriers come in many forms. Anything that disrupts a unit of water's normal flow is a barrier-be it a fixed or temporary barrier. When a scuba diver is exploring the water's depth, the diver's regulator purges carbon dioxide bubbles. For a split second, these bubbles disrupt each unit of water in the bubbles path. Also, when a person dives into water, [or a rock is thrown into the water], for a moment, several things occur; water is displaced equaling the weight of the person hitting it and depending on the angle of the entry, the water may be deflected great [er] distances. This is why kids do cannon balls off diving boards-to create great splashes--for the opposite reason that Olympic divers try to keep totally strai How Expansion Joint Systems Work d in my research I do have extensive knowledge about actions that can solve problems. Most "environmental problems are either not even considered as solvable or suggestions for cures are grist for governmental committee meetings [with people who have no vision-and who have both political and social power circles and positions to protect]. I have no such limitations.Expansion joint systems are an innovative alternative for pipes and pipelines. These joints can be used in the oil, paper, and petrochemical industries and in many others fields.The diversity of expansion joints available for application is great. They are usually manufactured at standard dimensions and can reach from 1 to 200 inches in diameter; can withstand temperatures from minus 300 degrees F up to 4000 degrees F and can resist at full vacuum or 2000 psig.The introduction of fabric expansion joints on the market completely revolutionized the way that engineers solve thermal expansion, corrosive and abrasive problems. These fabric joints can be used in different applications for turbines. With different fabric membranes and designs, extensions joints can easily be used for turbine exhaust applications (GTX). GTX are rather problematic applications that pose distinctive challenges concerning performance and resistance through time but which can now be more easily solved with the help of fabric joints.Metal bellows are generally used in pipeline systems that connect pumps and vessels. The design What we have, with this tsunami, is a wall of water, initially miles wide, perhaps hundreds of feet "tall", a few dozen feet wide and with a speed of 60-600 miles an hour. I am curious how a single jerk in a fault can generate a consequence of 600 miles an hour water, but I will work with those numbers regardless. [The faster a moving object, often, the more difficult to deal with.] We have, initially, a wall of water heading out in many directions at once. A wall of water pushing at other water that may be dormant and/or water that may be going in any number of other directions Other than "because of strong tangent currents", this tsunami-created wave has no barrier to surmount till it reaches shallow water-which provides a slowing group of devices such as reefs, man made subjects left in the water [vehicles, sunk boats, etc] and finally, on-land built objects of civilization. The tsunami, therefore, has no "reason" or "causability" to slow down. We need to give it a reason/way. We need to give it a barrier. Many barriers. In the ocean, water barriers come in many forms. Anything that disrupts a unit of water's normal flow is a barrier-be it a fixed or temporary barrier. When a scuba diver is exploring the water's depth, the diver's regulator purges carbon dioxide bubbles. For a split second, these bubbles disrupt each unit of water in the bubbles path. Also, when a person dives into water, [or a rock is thrown into the water], for a moment, several things occur; water is displaced equaling the weight of the person hitting it and depending on the angle of the entry, the water may be deflected great [er] distances. This is why kids do cannon balls off diving boards-to create great splashes--for the opposite reason that Olympic divers try to keep totally strai Doing Business With China llow water-which provides a slowing group of devices such as reefs, man made subjects left in the water [vehicles, sunk boats, etc] and finally, on-land built objects of civilization.The two most over-used buzzwords in business of the last ten to fifteen years are “China's Coming” and “The internet will change everything”. Curiously, it's not very often that you hear both buzzwords used together - but why not ? Using the internet to do business with China has to be one of the smartest ideas around.First of all, China has some incredible advantages in terms of trade. It has easy access to raw materials and cheap labour. Its economic base is growing and there is very little that China can't produce. Secondly, it is a massive and growing market for all sorts of products and services and with an increasing taste for western brands. These facts alone make doing business with China a very interesting proposition, let alone the fact that your competitors are already thinking about how they can lower costs and/or expand sales by doing business with China.But there are a number of drawbacks to doing face to face business with Chinese companies. China is a long way from the West, with a different business culture and a limited number of English speakers. If you want to travel to China to do bu The tsunami, therefore, has no "reason" or "causability" to slow down. We need to give it a reason/way. We need to give it a barrier. Many barriers. In the ocean, water barriers come in many forms. Anything that disrupts a unit of water's normal flow is a barrier-be it a fixed or temporary barrier. When a scuba diver is exploring the water's depth, the diver's regulator purges carbon dioxide bubbles. For a split second, these bubbles disrupt each unit of water in the bubbles path. Also, when a person dives into water, [or a rock is thrown into the water], for a moment, several things occur; water is displaced equaling the weight of the person hitting it and depending on the angle of the entry, the water may be deflected great [er] distances. This is why kids do cannon balls off diving boards-to create great splashes--for the opposite reason that Olympic divers try to keep totally straight as they enter water-to create the least displacement of water. Regardless the speed of water, [or air or anything] any disruption to its flow will slow it down. How much the water is slowed down is based on many things; the amount of water in the wave, the number of waves behind the first wave that are not diffused and other things. It is my hypothesis that if several things occur both concurrently and sequentially, that any size or amount of waves can be stunted/slowed or even stopped. My methods would be a combination of these: Air lines and air bags My further hypothesis is that with "attacks" on this wild wave-[set of waves if you prefer] that within a half hour or hour after the creation of the tsunami, it will die in the ocean far from land. We know that regular ocean waves need to exist-and those reasons are not covered here. We can get tsunami waves to be reduced to less than their disaster potency size and strength. While my approaches sound "fantastical" to some, they are logical and will work to some positive degree. We know that water, by itself, has no force of movement; it is a chemical consequence. H 2 O with living organisms within it. Regardless the fact that historically, a tsunami, UNRESTRICTED [DIRECTED], like a forest fire, or flood, can be disastrous at the end of a directional wave[s]. With the diffusing systems suggested, its power is immediately, to some degree, reduced. I do not know that science has ever examined the power of a unit of water as it moves. Power-- meaning horse power-- like an engine. A 600 mile an hour anything or even 60 mile an hour speeding anything is not automatically dangerous. It depends on what this body of speeding material hits and what the body itself is made of. We know, from grammar school, that trees are easily uprooted during hurricanes and yet, fields of wheat often survive horrible winds because the wheat bends. It diffuses the wind potency focused on it. Our bubbles, bombs and other things we can put into the water will diffuse the water. The water does not need to disappear [remember, matter cannot be eliminated or created, but only its form changed. We only need to slow it and it is automatically slowed when we disrupt and diffuse it. I am guessing no scientist has ever created a model [with computer software or otherwise] that would depict what would happen if x amount of concussion or diffusion would be "introduced" 'y' number of times, at 'c' depth of such waves. Other things to think about for slowing such waves- large things like junked vehicles and boats sunk in the direction of wave-to slow the normal direction of a wave; huge turbines or other motors underwater forcing water in the direction of the on-coming wave. The only aim is to place disruption in the direction of the waves. My bubbles and bombs and water streams under water may need to be INJECTED or created along a multi-hundred miles of the waves' movement. Like in a war, the enemy is spread out. This wave must be hit many times in a "short" period of time. As long as a "speed of the wave" sensor is available, the success or failure [effectiveness or ineffectiveness] of any of these systems could be monitored well in advance of landfall so that the more effective systems can be continued and increased as applicable and the ones that "affect" negatively can be discontinued. I hope some "resource bodies" and "governments in need" work with me to put these systems together so that no tsunami ever need harm anyone again!
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