Archive for the ‘Interesting snippets’ Category

Make a Million on the Internet

Saturday, August 14th, 2010

If you are one of those idiots that that likes scamming other people blogs with stupid remarks and nonsense, then have a read of this.

Instead of wasting your time and effort writing rubbish take a leaf out of this young lads book. 

He is sixteen years old and he has just made his first million on the internet. He bagan saving his pocket money and at the age of fourteen bought his first website. The Mac Box Bundle.  This has brought him in £700.000 in its first twelve months.

The following year he launched the advertising Pay Per Click Company “Branchr” he worked on this weekends and after school. “Branchr” was a hit straight away and Internet sites flocked to it. He has made £500.000 in its first year by attracting clients like William Hill.

He employs eight staff around the world as technical and sales assisants. His aim is to make £100 million and he says he won’t stop untill he reaches that figure. 

You might say Oh hes just one of the lucky ones!  But no he was determined and dedicated to what he was doing. Remember he was still at school and just fourteen when he first set his sights on making a fortune. It just shows that it can be done, and you can still  build your future with the internet.

By the way he is a real person his name is Christian and he lives in Corby, Northamptonshire.

Surviving Hard Economic Times

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

In these hard economic times shops and businesses everywhere are struggling to survive.  One enterprising fellow who owns a restaurant in Barcelona was hit just as badly due to the recession, plus the winter season and he was struggling to survive.

He hit on an idea which could either make, or break him but he went ahead and did it.  He put on a daily special where customers could simply name their own price.

The owner Eledino Garcia introduced this pay what you want menu three weeks ago to encourage back his customers , many who had lost their jobs as Spains unemployment soared.

He claims the idea is working and his takings have gone up, which means with the holiday season on the brink of starting he will survive this hard winter and remain open for business.

Does this give you any ideas about your own business ?  maybe with times so bad you should reduce fees or find equally interesting ways to encourage your own clientel to carry on.

Free Information

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

Here is a link to some free information that I found on the internet it might interest you. this information is currently being sold on Ebay.

http://www.reviewtrust.co.uk/roulette.php

Teenagers and Hoodies

Saturday, December 6th, 2008

I just want to talk about what is going on the news today about teenagers and the hoodies they wear.

I am seventy years of age, and the hoody regime is is no different to the clothes regiment when I was a youngster. It was then the teddy boys with their long jackets and DA hairstyles.

Some of them got up to all sorts of trouble but others were just following the fads and fashion of that age.

Of course the trouble they got up to was mainly amongst themselves, drugs were unheard of so muggins and burglaries were not so widespread, and if they happened the teddy boys were not usually the culprits.

We had the same problems then, as they have now as far as past times were concerned. We had nothing to do in the evenings and would all meet in groups trying to find some thing to do.

We would moan about how dead the place was and long to live somewhere more exciting.

I must say we were always respectful to our elders, even though they would shove you out of the way to get on the bus or tram first. I hope I’m not like that!

Youngsters are always looking for something new or different to do, and when they grow old it will be just the same. They will be moaning about the youngsters today like we do.

Who knows, the teenagers today may have even more problems to contend with when they grow old, than we do now.

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Christmas is almost with us once again and the list of top toys for this Christmas is out. Do you remember last year searching for those longed for gifts for the children it was almost impossible to find them especially if you are a late shopper.

Have you noticed how the top list of toys is always high prices, but still we rush out to buy regardless of whether we can afford them or not.

I went shopping this week and saw some of the top most wanted toys last year at half their original price, are we being fleeced?  Of course people are passing them by now, their kids don’t want what little Johnnie next door had last year.

 So mom has to pass them by thinking of the money she could have saved if she just had the courage to buy them and say Santa must have got mixed up. or made some other excuse.

Its no use you can’t fob the kids off, they know what they want and if Johnnie next door is having one he wants one too even if you have to walk for miles to every shop before you find it.

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

I thought you might be interested in this scam, there is always something new coming up. This is from Google news.

Yolande Lehmkuh, 24, is devastated.

She was recently duped out of R7 000 after advertising her Nikon D40 digital camera on an electronic classifieds database.

Lehmkuhl says she placed an advert on Junk Mail on September 30. Two days later she received an SMS from a man we’ll call K, who indicated his interest in the camera and offered to make an electronic bank transfer.

She gave him the banking details and later that day he faxed through proof of payment.

Since he was using an FNB account and her mother an Absa account, they were advised that it would take three working days for the money to reflect, but she refused to release the camera until the money had cleared.

When the money had still not cleared by October 7, Lehmkuhl says she realised that she had been scammed.

“I tried to call Mr K on his cell and there was no answer. I left a message on his cell to say that we assume that he is no longer interested in the camera (because) there was no money transferred,” she said.

While conducting business with K, Lehmkuhl had received an e-mail from another person, whom we will call D, who had inquired about the camera. When the transaction with K failed, she contacted D, who said he was still interested.

Via e-mail correspondence, he told Lehmkuhl that he’d be using a bank-guaranteed cheque to make the payment.

She asked him what that meant and he explained saying: “A bank-guaranteed cheque is a means of payment which is convenient to use and easy to carry since it is a substitute for cash. It is just as good as cash because you can cash it over the counter at any bank.”

“So I replied to him saying that I will accept the bank-guaranteed cheque (because) a lot of people told me this is a pretty safe way,” she said.

She asked for a copy of his ID and work and cellphone number.

They arranged that D would meet Lehmkuhl’s dad at his dance studio in Meyersdal to make the exchange. But on the day, he sent someone else to fetch the camera with a letter explaining he could not make the meeting personally as he had “work commitments”.

“This person had all the documents with a letter from D apologising for not being able to make it. My father looked at everything and it seemed above board, so he handed over the camera,” she says.

She went to cash the cheque at an FNB branch in Krugersdorp, but to her dismay, she was told that the cheque was a fake.

She wants to alert people doing business through the classifieds to be cautious with their deals.

“Go with these guys to the bank and have them draw the money from the bank there and then. If you have a gut feeling and you feel that something is not right, rather take an extra day or week to decide on the sale,” she advises.

Eblockwatch founder Andre Snyman says fraudsters prey on people advertising items for sale in classifieds, usually contacting the victim on a Wednesday, promising a deposit by Friday.

“You see a payment into your bank account so you make the exchange thinking the money has cleared, but by Monday you realise that the money has been reversed and that you’ve been duped,” he says.

He relays a story about a woman in Kempton Park who had wanted to redo her kitchen. She found a man who came to her house and gave her a very good quote.

“He told her she’d have to put down a deposit and the balance of 50 percent when the goods were delivered and the other 50 percent on completion,” he says.

The men arrived at her house and they agreed upon a day, took out her old kitchen and brought in a truck full of wood.

They never returned and got away with her old kitchen and half of the total amount of the job. It was later found that the wood they had dropped off were offcuts.

“If it sounds too good to be true, then it probably is,” he said.

Is the Credit Crunch Affecting You

Sunday, October 19th, 2008

Is the credit crunch affecting you? If so its time to change the way you do your shopping.  Walking around the supermarket and picking up anything you fancy including all the top brands is plain crazy the way the prices are shooting up. 

Its time to take a look at the stores own brand, most of them are just as good as those you pay top prices for. If your wary of trying them then just buy one at a time when you shop and try it out.

I have switched over to many of these stores own brand and although the labels don’t look so nice the product inside are fine. One big switch I have made is the stores own toilet rolls, it has made a big saving and they are great. They are just as soft and I have been surprised at how long they last.

Where I used to pay over £4.00 for a pack I now pay £1.49 for a pack of 12 and they last twice as long as my old type of toilet rolls.

The stores own frozen vegetables are just as good including many of canned goods.  Sauces that you add to bolognaise and various other dishes are over £1.00 but the store has their own brand for just 29p, just add a few spices and the taste is no different to those expensive sauces.

Give them a try and save pounds off your shopping bill, every penny counts in this day and age.