December 12, 2010

Overview of Corporate Speed Reading

The written word is everywhere. In this days fast-paced, get-it-done-yesterday world, being able to speed read “and remember what you read” is nearly a matter of professional life or death. If your reading speed is more tortoise than hare, perhaps its time to look into a new way of reading.

Learn to speed read actually involves teaching your brain to read in a new way.

But wait! you say. It took years to learn how to read before. I just don’t have that kind of time.

Never fear! With the amazing Speed Read Complete Corporate edition, you will be able to double your reading speed in just an hour in the privacy of your own home or office! This time-tested method of teaching your brain to speed read has been taught in live seminars for decades all around the US and the ebooks have been translated into five languages.

Still unsure about signing up for an online speed reading course and they charge a fortune? Have you handed over hundreds of dollars before, only to read a few words a minute faster? With Speed Read Complete course “includes three ebooks as well as supplementary MP3 audio files which you can take anywhere” and it is guaranteed that you will be reading noticeably faster and comprehending more or every penny of your money comes back to you.

Start our Speed Read Complete Corporate course (a minimum of a sixth grade reading level is necessary) with the book Speed Reading in Only One Hour. Move on to your Complete Speed Reading Program: Corporate Version. In our course you will learn not only how to speed read, but also how to learn to control subvocalization, vary your reading speed, batch process, and important methods for positive thinking.

Not only will you learn to increase your reading speed, using our time-tested Speed Read Complete course, you’ll be able to improve your memory, recall, concentration, note taking, and more.

The Speed Read Complete was written based on a 3-day lecture course by Dr. Jay Polmar, an accomplished author and university and community college professor who has written more than 100 books. Dr. Polmar has helped hundreds of thousands all around the world read faster and get ahead. Let him help you improve your life!

You can be the best you can be in College and in the Business World. Be sure to check out Dr. Jay Polmar’s most excellent course: The Complete Speed Reading Program — there are family and business editions. The Complete Speed Reading program , and be the best you can be in College and business- be powerful!

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11 Comments on Overview of Corporate Speed Reading »

March 30, 2011

James Oakley @ 11:09 pm:

Agree with Mark – font is much better. And I prefer this layout to the old one on blog.co.uk as well. Thanks for taking the trouble to lay things out nicely for us readers!

By the way, who brought skim-reading into it? I mentioned speed reading which is a different animal altogether?

“… but for those on the outside, everything is in RSS headlines…”

April 28, 2011

Twitter @ 4:44 pm:

EuroDroid

Amazon Makes Kindle Version for Android Tablet
Gotta Be Mobile
Ahead of the launch of the much hyped and speculated Amazon-branded Android tablet hardware, the online retail giant has announced the availability of a new Android tablet-specific app of its Kindle e-reading software for Android 3.0 Honeycomb tablets. …
Beyond Kindle: Is Amazon Readying an Android Tablet?PC Magazine
Kindle for Android now optimized for Honeycomb tabletsZDNet (blog)
Rumor: Samsung to build an Android tablet for AmazonTechSpot
The Business Insider -Digitaltrends.com -RTT News
all 59 news articles »

May 13, 2011

Secret Simon @ 8:30 pm:

Hi Sue Ann – I just came across your news. I hope all goes well at the hospital! I don't suppose you will read this before you go, but at least you will get the imaginary flowers I'm sending!
Speak to you next week. – Simon
(By the way, I just listened to your post through my text-reading software. I bet you didn't know you sound like Stephen Hawking!)

May 20, 2011

redunicorn @ 8:32 pm:

No, it is different. You're right when you say some people don't retain the information. But there are people who can even with the briefest glance.
It's like a mild form of photographic memory.

May 26, 2011

jen @ 8:28 pm:

Sure tablets are convenient it really just depends on how much you use them… i have had a wacom tablet for years love it, but mine is a bit out dated but i still use it. the bamboo are great but as a beginner you may be able to find cheaper ones through amazon. but that's your decision. i am a graphic designer but use the tablet to do alot of work on photographs retouching. but i do recommend using a tablet its so much easier to use than the mouse… which im not saying its impossible.. i would say go for it.

May 28, 2011

Alkivar @ 3:50 am:

Well, there is AKAI sample reading software for PC/MAC, if you could get the files off the disks there must be some way to read them. I take it they are in AKAI format?

This for example:

Only for PC, but will read S3000 format AKAI disks.

Gallery Software in the UK used to sell a program called interpreter which allowed a Mac to read AKAI disks. Their website is email them, maybe they still have a copy floating around.

June 26, 2011

Mark @ 9:16 pm:

Back up all your important data first! Put the reinstallation CD for XP in your CD drive. Turn your computer off, then turn it back on. When the Dell loading screen appears press F12 repeatedly. Then choose your CD drive. Follow the instructions and reinstall Windows. Make sure you delete the old partitions and install XP on a clean partition. You might be missing drivers, so you'll need to put the drivers CD in. Install the missing drivers that have a yellow question mark next to them. Control Panel -> System -> Hardware -> Device Manager. Then go to the Windows update website and get ALL of the updates. Then get Avast! 5 for your Anti-Virus program.

Maybe the free version of Malwarebytes as a on demand scanner too?
http://www.malwarebytes.org

July 11, 2011

Find Free Articles - ArticlesBase @ 9:24 pm:

How You Can Learn to Speak English –

July 16, 2011

Berkshire Jobs @ 5:33 am:

Software Developer, Software Engineer, Programmer (C#, C++) –

July 26, 2011

Pink Jeans @ 8:29 pm:

Read the Kite Runner, but A Thousand Splendid Suns is still sitting next to my bed, next in line once I finish light-read The Secret Life of a Slummy Mummy, which will only get done once I've finished reading the prerequisite number of Continuing Education articles to renew my pharmacist registration. Also awaiting my attention is The Russian Concubine, and some classics which I don't promise I'll actually get around to reading.

August 7, 2011

Empire539 @ 9:40 pm:

It would help if you told us what the software you have was. But, let's assume TI-Connect.

If you want to transfer programs or files to/from your calculator, just open TI-Connect, then select TI-DeviceManager.

From there, go to Tools, then there should be an option "Explorer" or "Windows Explorer". Click that, and it will open up Windows Explorer. Navigate to where you downloaded the file.

If the file is compressed (if the name is Ion.zip) then you have to extract it first using WinZip, 7zip, or other decompression utilities. Windows XP and Vista already have a unzipper built-in (just right-click on the file > Extract).

The result should be a .8x* file. This can be .8xk, .8xp, .8xg, .83p, etc… For Ion, it should be .8xk. Now, just drag that file into the TI-DeviceManager window, and it should begin to transfer.

That's all there is to it.

PS If you're interested in Ion, take a look at MirageOS; it's another assembly shell, but is capable of running MirageOS, Ion, TI-Basic, and general Assembly programs, and in my opinion, better than Ion:
http://www.detachedsolutions.com/mirageos/

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