I have seen and down­loaded more than my fair share of wall­pa­pers for my Mac & Win­dows desk­tops, as well as my iPads, Android phones, iPhones, and Win­dows Phone 7 mobile devices.

I found a few neat, trans­par­ent WP7 wall­pa­pers and wanted to share them here. The site also has some non-transparent WP7 wall­pa­pers that are the same in every­way, except the back­grounds are NOT trans­par­ent. They are here.

There is also a pretty com­pre­hen­sive list of WP7 spe­cific wall­pa­pers at the always awe­some: http://wpwalls.wordpress.com/. (Note that some of the images are NSFW — Not Safe For Work).

Any who…I tried a few of them out and they weren’t work­ing for me. Soooooo…I “bor­rowed” this I LOVE WP7 wall­pa­per from ozymandias.com, made some mods, and have this lit­tle gem as a result:

 

my_HD7_wallpaper

 If you like it, down­load it for your phone and share it. Just make sure you give credit to the folks who made it like I did above.

Here’s my high res (480*800) ver­sion for you. Just right click and Save As.…

Peace,

Shawn

I_Love_WP7_HD7_wallpaper

wall­pa­per for HD7

 

I play around with Word­Press all the time. I use my own per­sonal blog as a test bed for new plu­g­ins and to improve on my own under­stand­ing of HTML, CSS, & PHP. I am by no means an expert, but I can hack away at any­thing for hours. That being the case, I recently took a Pre­mium Theme that I got from the Stu­dio­Press Mar­ket­place called, “Polit­ica.”  You’re see­ing it as you read this post. I could go on and on about why I like this theme, but you can read about that here, (insert post link).

I opted to use SlideDeck’s Word­Press Plu­gin to slide dif­fer­ent con­tent across my home­page in the same area. You can read all about the ben­e­fits of Slid­eDeck and why I like it by going to their web­site. This post is all about the Word­Press Plu­gin ver­sion of Slid­eDeck and not the JQuery version.

One of the things that I did not like with SlideDeck’s Smart Slid­eDeck fea­ture is the inabil­ity to remove the title of the Smart Slid­eDeck that shows up in the con­tent area of the slider. The option is there for reg­u­lar Slid­eDecks, but the option doesn’t exist for Smart Slid­eDecks. If you try to leave it blank, the plu­gin will put the default “Recent Posts” title back in for you automatically.

Why do you care? For me, I don’t need to have, “Recent Posts,” in the con­tent area of the slider. It’s mean­ing­less to me (and to view­ers as well). Add to that the fact that the title of the post is already there, and you can see that it’s just too much title in one area.  ;-)  I’ll end up with a cleaner look, and can reduce the amount of space I need and more con­tent above the fold.

You can see what I am talk­ing about  in the before and after images in the slider below.  For visual learn­ers, there’s a quick 5 minute screen­cast video to walk you through, step by step, what I did to make the change described above on the 3rd panel.

Before

Before with Recent Post title

After

After - SmartDeck title removed

Screen­cast on YouTube

 

If you want to know how to set up your first Slid­eDeck, SlideDeck’s Sup­port Site and forums pro­vide alot of good info. They have a ded­i­cated Tuto­r­ial Page as well. You can also go visit the fine folks at MakeUseOf.com. They always have good stuff, and break things down really well so that even Novice users can get started quickly. Here’s the MakeUseOf.com Slid­eDeck tuto­r­ial.

If you want the writ­ten steps, here they are:

Step 1 — Login to Word­Press and open up the Slid­eDeck Set­tings page. Deter­mine which Smart­Deck theme you want to use or are already using. (i.e. light, dark, ver­ti­cal, etc.)

Step 2 — FTP/SSH to your hosted Word­Press Instance and find the Plu­g­ins folder under wp-content.

Step 3 — Open the Slid­eDeck Pro for Word­Press Plu­gin folder, open the skins folder, and then open the folder that is named after your theme.

Step 4 — Copy the theme tem­plate file to your desk­top. It will have a .thtml extension.

Step 5 — Make a copy of the orig­i­nal .thtml file you just down­loaded. You want to have 2 copies of the same file. The orig­i­nal, and one you will modify.

Step 6 — Rename the the copied file so it has a dif­fer­ent file name.

Step 7 — Open the orig­i­nal file (not the renamed one) and look for some­thing like this: <div class=“sd-node sd-node-type sd-node-type-<?php echo $type; ?>”><?php echo $title; ?></div> (in the Light theme, it is around line 30 or 31)

Step 8 — com­ment out the entire line in step 7. It should look like this when done:

<!– <div class=“sd-node sd-node-type sd-node-type-<?php echo $type; ?>”><?php echo $title; ?></div> –>

Step 9 — Save the file.

Step 10 — Upload the mod­i­fied and orig­i­nal file back to your web­server in the same folder ref­er­enced in steps 2–4.

Step 11 — If you get a prompt to rename or over­write, choose over­write (you have the orig­i­nal on your desktop.)

Step 12 — Reload the page after upload is successful.

Step 13 — Ver­ify that that the “Recent Posts” title is now gone.

Note: Dif­fer­ent themes may look dif­fer­ent. Look for the “<?php echo $title; ?>” in any theme tem­plate folder and com­ment it out.

If this helps you, please leave a com­ment, fol­low me on Twit­ter, friend me on Face­book, or sub­scribe to my YouTube Channel.

Thanks,

Shawn

P.S. Here are a cou­ple of bonus videos for you about Stan­dard Slid­eDeck for Word­Press Options for stan­dard Slid­eDeck, and a sec­ond one for Smart Slid­eDeck for Word­Press Options. This slide deck scrolls ver­ti­cally, so check it out.

Walk-through: Slid­eDeck for Word­Press Options
Walk-through: Slid­eDeck for Word­Press Options

 

Walk-through: Smart Slid­eDeck for Word­Press Options

 

I took a quick video (less than 20 sec­onds) of these awe­some look­ing moon jel­ly­fish (Aure­lia Aurita) when I was at the Kuwait Sci­en­tific Cen­ter Aquar­ium yes­ter­day.  I put a still image that I also took on my Face­book wall and a few folks liked it (you can see it here on Instagr.am).  Since I got some likes, I thought I would also add the video I took as well.

For those who know me, I don’t just do things for the sake of doing them. Every­thing is an exper­i­ment and I wanted to see what the dif­fer­ence was between upload­ing a video with no audio, and then adding an audio track over the top of the video as well.

How the heck did this idea even come to me? Good ques­tion. As it turns out, when I was tak­ing the video with my iPhone at the aquar­ium, a bunch of kids rolled through and made a ton of noise that I ended up record­ing.  These jel­lies are so peace­ful and awe­some, and I didn’t want to post the raw video with all the noise as it would have ruined your view­ing expe­ri­ence.  I HAD NO CHOICE but to remove the offend­ing audio.  When I did that, the idea of adding another track on top of the silent one came to me and I went with it.

The audio free ver­sion is below. Check it out and then check out the one below that.

I also know that everyone’s musi­cal tastes dif­fer and I’m sen­si­tive to that.  So I searched through my music col­lec­tion for some really great ambi­ent sounds that I felt would match the tone and vibra­tion of these beau­ti­ful crea­tures.  I hope it came out alright, and I’d love to hear your thoughts. (HINTHINT…)

Do you like the video with no audio bet­ter? Or did you like how the music added another intan­gi­ble dimen­sion in the second?

 If you LIKE the post, please use the share icons down below.

Mucho Maha­los, (That’s Spanish-Hawaiian, aka: Spa-Waiian for “Many Thanks”)

Shawn

P.S. If you liked the music, you can get Origen’s stuff on iTunes here: http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/era-of-aquarius/id6247961. Or if you like stick­ing it to “da man” and want to get a great deal on all of Origen’s music, you can go here: http://www.origenmusic.com/background-music.html.

If you go halfway down the page, you will see a spe­cial offer and a Pay­Pal but­ton to buy direct. Nice.

P.P.S. I am mak­ing no money by men­tion­ing Origen’s great music. I like it alot, and just want to share the goodness.

 

You know, I find it “inter­est­ing” how the Uni­verse con­spires to give you mes­sages and reminders when you are on the “right” path. I use “right” know­ing full well that there is no right or wrong. I use “right” in the con­text of being able to take feed­back that tell you that you are where you are sup­posed to be, doing what you are sup­posed to be doing. I have this on my iPad and my desk­top to remind me every day. I hope it works as well for you as it has for me.

Here’s the image and quote:

The Best Fortune Cookie Ever!!!

The Best For­tune Cookie Ever!!!

 

If you can’t read the text it says, “Be willling to give the extra effort that sep­a­rates the win­ner from the one in sec­ond place.”

What a great reminder and acknowl­edge­ment that I am doing what I need to be doing, when I need to be doing it, and how I need to be doing it.

Thanks, Uni­verse! Mes­sage received, AND ACTED UPON!

Shawn

This isn’t some­thing that I have ever seen before, so I thought I would and it to the site and see what you think.

This is the Al Hamra Tower in Kuwait City. It is the tallest build­ing in Kuwait and has over 70 floors of awe­some. It has a unique fea­ture that really shines at night (pun intended…You’ll see). The lights actu­ally vary and will dis­play dif­fer­ent pat­terns over time. this is a 20 sec­ond clip and just shows what the build­ing looks like at night.

The engi­neer­ing capac­ity of Man is indeed impres­sive, when you con­sider all the engi­neer­ing it took to cre­ate this mas­sive build­ing that rises almost 1400 feet  from the ground. Is there any­thing that we can’t do when we put our col­lec­tive minds, hearts and ener­gies into some­thing like this together?

The video is a bit low qual­ity, but I will upload another one later when I have more time.  I took this from the 17th floor  of my hotel, which explains why it doesn’t look so tall. Trust me, it’s freakin’ huge!

One more thing: THERE IS NO AUDIO. I hate hav­ing to lis­ten to other people’s mashups when watch­ing a video, and decided that noth­ing would be bet­ter than some­thing. :-)

 

Make it a great day!

Shawn

I have wanted to have a per­sonal Face­book Fan Page for a long time. Finally got it done with the help of Brian Car­son at CustomTwit.com. He’s a pro on every level, and a good per­son to boot. I have searched and searched for about two years for some­one who was rep­utable, and will­ing to teach oth­ers to fish. Brian fit the bill per­fectly, and I will rec­om­mend him EVERY time, and work with him on any future project. He’s that good.

So to kick off  my social media exper­i­ment, I cre­ated a graphic and have attached it here. It is also on my fb page, but I believe that I will be tran­si­tion­ing to my FB Fan page full time. I have a few (400) fol­low­ers and there’s no time like to now to cut over.

I am ask­ing any­one who vis­its this site, fol­lows  me on Twit­ter, is my friend on Face­book, or is some­one I have con­nected with on LinkedIn to please go to my new fan page that is here: MY NEW FB FAN PAGE. I have a self­ish rea­son for ask­ing this of you, and it is a bit vain.

Here is the what the cur­rent URL looks like for my fan page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Shawn-Hank/164840633570056.

<Moans> <Groans> I know! It’s ugly, it’s way too long, and it lacks a cer­tain…je ne sais quoi (read more about what that means at Dictionary.com)

I’d like my fan page to have the min­i­mum required fans to cus­tomize the URL. Cur­rently that min­i­mum num­ber of fans is 25. So between my 400 FB friends, my 160 Twit­ter fol­low­ers, and my 500 or so  LinkedIn con­tacts, I have a fairly good chance to get 25 peo­ple to at least like the page. (I Hope <fin­gers crossed>) so that I can cus­tomize the URL. Yes folks, there is a rea­son it’s called a VANITY TAG!

So here’s the deal. I am not giv­ing away a prize. I am not offer­ing a free­bie. I am not doing any kind of incen­tiviz­ing at all. I am sim­ply ask­ing you, from my  cen­ter, to please like my fan page. And there in lies the social media exper­i­ment. I have just over 1000 com­bined fol­low­ers on the major social net­works. Many of whom I don’t even know or com­mu­ni­cate with reg­u­larly. So out of the 1000, I may have 150 or so who I actu­ally engage with and talk to via Social Media. My odds are still pretty good, I think, as I would rather have qual­ity rela­tion­ships over quan­tity any day.

And it helps that Brian and me already liked my own page, so I only need 23 more likes to get a cus­tom URLLOL!!!!!

In all seri­ous­ness though, I am curi­ous to know how many peo­ple will:

1) Go to this link: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Shawn-Hank/164840633570056,

2) Watch the 2 minute video that is there,

3) Click the like but­ton, or

4) Sub­scribe to get updates via email.

I am giv­ing it a week, and I will have a fol­low on post with some met­rics to see how it all shakes out.

Have a great day!

Shawn

 

I love Feed­dler­Pro. It’s an RSS reader for iOS devices, and was devel­oped by Chebin­liu. Some might con­sider it pricey for $4.99, but it is well worth it. I have bought and paid for close to 20 dif­fer­ent RSS read­ers, and tried dozens of free ones.  Feed­dler­PRO is tops in my book. It is eas­ily the #1 app on my iPhone & iPad right behind Ever­note and ahead of GoodReader for iPhone and GoodReader for iPad.

This order of pref­er­ence has noth­ing to do with func­tion­al­ity of these apps, but the fre­quency of which I open and use them. Try­ing to com­pare these apps would be like com­par­ing apples and oranges, their func­tions and rea­sons for exis­tence are so far apart, that to com­pare them to each other would be ludi­crous.  And since there can’t be two num­ber ones (thanks Ricky Bobby), I had to coose.

There isn’t an hour of my day that goes by where I don’t open up the app and check for new posts that have been added to my Google Reader feed.  Sun­days suck for me because there is never enough news for me to read.

I read some­where not too long ago that RSS was dead.  Who­ever said that didn’t have Feed­dler.  Or want to be able to cat­e­go­rize con­tent from var­i­ous web pages in ways that make it eas­ier for them to consume.

The con­text of that pre­vi­ous com­ment had to do with the explo­sion of social media as a means of spread­ing news and attract­ing traf­fic to your site.  Sites like Face­book, Twit­ter, LinkedIn and more are all great gen­er­a­tors of traf­fic that can bring users to your site.  Post a tweet with a short link on Twit­ter and fol­low­ers will click on it to see the con­tent. Not a bad way to gen­er­ate traf­fic for sure.  I per­son­ally don’t like con­sum­ing infor­ma­tion that way.  Why?  Too many clicks to get to the data and info I want.

Imag­ine this: You’re on Twit­ter, you see a link from a friend, you open it in a new page or win­dow, you check it out, you close it, you go back to twit­ter, find another link, rinse; repeat. Now add Face­book . Google+ or any other social news feed and you have really strong rea­son why we are so ADD in this country.

Because you have to click a link, and theñ a new browser win­dow opens up I know you can fol­low the same sites on Twit­ter and Face­Book and Google+ (and now Google+ Pages) but it’s a bit incon­ve­nient to have to use what ever your client is and click a link to have that con­tent open in a new win­dow, read it, close it, and then move to the next item.

Feed­dler cap­tures the arti­cles and posts on sites form the sites’s RSS feeds and put it in a really nice, ele­gant for­mat for users to con­sume. A sin­gle list of arti­cles that i can nav­i­gate with no dis­trac­tions and no need to click all over the place to get my read­ing on.

It inte­grates with Google Reader, and you can add other feeds directly to the app.  Sync­ing your favorite arti­cles and shar­ing is easy with Feed­dler. What you star and share in Feed­dler, shows up in Google Reader. NICE!

Shar­ing couldn’t be any eas­ier as Feed­dler can inte­grate with Email, Face­book, Twit­ter,  Deli­cious, Tum­blr and other social media chan­nels like pin­board, Rea­d­it­Later, Instapa­per and Evernote.

Nav­i­gat­ing, sav­ing, shar­ing, and favorit­ing arti­cles from your favorite sites couldn’t be any eas­ier either  just con­fig­ure the sup­ported accounts in the Feed­dler app, and whey of want to share, tap the for­ward­ing icon and select your chan­nel of choice.

And while the app is intu­itive, friendly, and easy to use, I still think there’s room for improvement.

Shar­ing an arti­cle in Feed­dler can only be done with one ser­vice at a time. Mean­ing that if you of want to share with Face­book and Twit­ter, you have to tap each ser­vice sep­a­rately. So after shar­ing on Twit­ter, you have to go through the process again and share on Face­book. Com­bin­ing these tasks so that I get a menu to select from would means that I could post to mul­ti­ple Channel’s at the same time.

Inte­gra­tion with social aggre­ga­tors like Hoot­Suite and Ping.fm doesn’t exist either.  You can send an email to the ser­vice, but that’s not as tight an inte­gra­tion as it is with Twit­ter or Face­book.  What would be really cool if (and a great time saver) if these ser­vices could be added to the mix. Per­haps then we wouldn’t needed add another layer of com­plex­ity to this really great app as we could use those ser­vices to broad­cast. This will be espe­cially inter­est­ing now that Hoot­Suite can inte­grates with 3rd party ser­vices like Tum­blr. Click here for more on that.

More than any­thing else, I use Feedler to save arti­cles and feeds to Ever­note. Ever­note is great because it allows me to save any kind of data (text, files, pic­tures, PDFs, and many more) to the cloud. It also allows me to save dif­fer­ent types of con­tent to dif­fer­ent note­books so that I can keep my infor­ma­tion organized.

Exam­ple: I am writ­ing this post in Ever­note, and I have cap­tured all ref­er­enced links and images in same note in my note­book called blog posts.

What I would really like to see is the abil­ity to extend the Ever­note inte­gra­tion a bit fur­ther. Cur­rently, Feed­dler saves all arti­cles you for­ward to Ever­note into your default Ever­note note­book. This is okay, but en I have to open Ever­note, and then move my con­tent to the appro­pri­ate note­book or stack of note­books. It’s an extra step, and one that I think Feed­dler could elim­i­nate for me by giv­ing me the option to select the note­book I want to save the arti­cle into. Then I don’t have to go back and orga­nize, and more impor­tantly, I won’t have to leave the app. +1 for that idea.

Of course, this could also be a lim­i­ta­tion in the Ever­note API. Other apps that inte­grate with Ever­note only dump con­tent to the default Ever­note note­book, so I don’t think this is a Feed­dler issue. In fact, based on the developer’s his­tory, if Ever­note makes this a real­ity, I am sure he’d add the fea­ture to Feeddler.

Since iOS 5, there have been some instances where the app has crashed, or has had issues with reync­ing data. I am spec­u­lat­ing that it might have  some­thing to do with the changes in iOS 5 that Marco Arma­ment (cre­ator of InstaPa­per) wrote about recently. You can find that arti­cle on IOS Cache Clear­ing here.  I will fur­ther spec­u­late that the com­ments in Feeddler’s release notes on the App Store will address that.

The last item I’ll bring up is a big one. There is no search func­tion in the app itself. I have over 3000 starred arti­cles in my Google Reader Starred items. For me to find any­thing, I have to open up the web app and search there. I really don’t like doing that as the web  inter­face for Reader on mobile devices isn’t great.  Why not let me search my saved/starred arti­cles right inside the Feed­dler app? Per­haps there’s no way to lever­age the reader API to do such a thing. After all, there is no pub­licly avail­able API for reader, and what inte­gra­tion has been done has been dri­ven by trial and error, dis­cov­ery (oh wow look at that!) and com­mu­nity sup­port. I don’t fault the devel­oper of Feed­dler here at all. He’s doing the best he can with what he knows, and by his prod­uct, he knows alot.

All in all Feed­dler is a very respectable app, and the sup­port and response from the devel­oper has always been top notch. And they have always been recep­tive to feed­back. The app itself is pol­ished and well thought out and I do enthu­si­as­ti­cally rec­om­mend it to any­one who is look­ing for a solid Rss reader for your iOS device.

4.8 out of 5 stars for me. The .2 deduc­tion is or the rea­sons I stated above, if it inte­grated with Hoot­Suite, offered the abil­ity to post to mul­ti­ple ser­vices at once, and allowed me to pick what note­book I could post an arti­cle to (more of an Ever­note issue), and had built in search I’d give it a 6 out of 5 stars. :-)

3d figure with red envelope

This is the first of a series of posts ded­i­cated to a tech­nol­ogy called autore­spon­ders. The idea here is to help you become famil­iar with what an autore­spon­der is, how they work, and how they make your life eas­ier. On to the first post.

Before I go any fur­ther you may see autore­spon­der spelled dif­fer­ently on dif­fer­ent sites. It can be two words (i.e., auto respon­der); it can be hyphen­ated (i.e., auto-responder); or it can be a sin­gle, com­pound word (i.e., autore­spon­der). Search Wikipedia.com for autore­spon­der and you will see it as a sin­gle word. Search Dictionary.com for autore­spon­der as as sin­gle word and you won’t get a result at all. Nei­ther will you for auto-responder or auto respon­der. Regard­less of how you see it spelled, we are talk­ing about the same tech­nol­ogy. Fur­ther­more, I will be using it as a sin­gle com­pound word, because that is how most peo­ple (and com­pa­nies) use it. Take a look at these Google results and you will see what I mean.

What is an auto-responder, and why should I care?

By def­i­n­i­tion, (see Wikipedia link here) an autore­spon­der might seem like the
eas­i­est online tech­nol­ogy to use. I mean, it does just what it says: responds auto­mat­i­cally (to emails).

Besides email, autore­spon­ders are being incor­po­rated into web­sites
so web­site own­ers can eas­ily man­age sub­scrip­tions, posts, online orders, inquiries and elec­tronic mail­ing lists (aka “lists” or “your list”.)

The biggest claim to fame for the autore­spon­der is its abil­ity improve and increase online sales and make online mar­ket­ing efforts eas­ier to man­age on many dif­fer­ent levels.

The Autoresponder’s Early Days

Whether or not you real­ize it, you have encoun­tered an autore­spon­der at some point. Orig­i­nally, it was a sys­tem that sent noti­fi­ca­tions when an email couldn’t be sent to the elec­tronic address spec­i­fied, even after many attempts. In these early cases, the
autore­spon­der send a mes­sage (email) back the sender that his or her orig­i­nal mes­sage was not deliv­ered. This mes­sage also included a few dif­fer­ent rea­sons for the error.

Have you ever received a “kick back” error because you sent and email to a wrong email address? Then you have encoun­tered an autore­spon­der message.

The Many Uses for the Autoresponder

At it’s core, the autore­spon­der helps tackle sev­eral tasks that used to be done man­u­ally. No one sits in front of their com­puter all the time (except me! lol!). So you can’t answer mes­sages as quickly or as often as you want. Even with smart­phones and our always con­nected nature, it’s not pos­si­ble to han­dle all of this elec­tronic com­mu­ni­ca­tion man­u­ally. The autore­spon­der helps build and main­tain your rela­tion­ships with exist­ing clients and poten­tial clients (aka: prospects) who are inter­ested in your com­pany, prod­uct, or service.

Autore­spon­ders also help answer repet­i­tive ques­tions. We tend to get tired quickly of answer­ing the same ques­tion over and over. Want proof? Think about any 3 to 5 year old child that is told no to the request for ice cream or a puppy. They keep ask­ing until they get the answer they want. Another clas­sic exam­ple that every­one knows is, “Are we there yet?” Fol­low­ing where I am going with this?

An autore­spon­der can pro­vide answers auto­mat­i­cally, with­out you hav­ing to answer from scratch every time. It makes you more effi­cient. Would you rather focus on income pro­duc­ing activ­i­ties or respond­ing to email ques­tions about the var­i­ous col­ors of your widgets?

Sim­ple and Com­plex Autoresponders

Some autore­spon­ders offer emails stat­ing that the recip­i­ent can­not answer your email (out of office responses) and will get back to you as soon as they can. This type of autore­sponse is also used acknowl­edge that your email or mes­sage was received, though not yet answered.

Nowa­days, autore­spon­ders are much more intel­li­gent. Timed responses time can be set and sent out at spe­cific inter­vals.
It can send one mes­sage or a hun­dred mes­sages in a day, week, or month after the pre-written mes­sages are added to the queue. In fact, autore­spon­ders can be con­fig­ured with years and years worth of mes­sages that can be sent when­ever you wish.

With this level of intel­li­gence com­pa­nies can orga­nize newslet­ters, responses, sales let­ters, and many other events far in advance and then sched­ule the mes­sages to be sent at a spe­cific time.

Many com­pa­nies now offer autore­spon­der ser­vices. Many busi­ness own­ers sub­scribe to such a ser­vice because they are flex­i­ble and offer month to month con­tracts that can eas­ily be ter­mi­nated if they are not needed any more.

It’s always wise to check out a few dif­fer­ent ser­vices before decid­ing on one for your needs.

Some of the more pop­u­lar ser­vices are:

- Getresponse.com

- AWeber.com

- iContact.com

- ConstantContact.com

- MailChimp

These are just a few of the ser­vices that I have per­son­ally tried over the years. I have finally set­tled on MailChimp and AWe­ber for my sites, lists, and cam­paigns. There are many that you can choose
from, depend­ing upon your needs. All of the above, with the excep­tion of MailChimp are paid ser­vices that you can sub­scribe to. MailChimp doesn’t charge if you have no more than 2000 peo­ple on a list and are not send­ing more than 12,000 emails to them.

Before join­ing any ser­vice, make sure you try out the ser­vice and ensure that the com­pany is cred­i­ble. Be smart out there and don’t go with just any autore­spon­der ser­vice because there is a very real dan­ger that they are send­ing out spam mes­sages or even worse, sell­ing your email list to other com­pa­nies. So do some research, call up these com­pa­nies and ask them questions.

If you have any ques­tions about today’s les­son or need any other assis­tance, please feel free to con­tact me at any­time using my con­tact info below. I’m always happy to be of assistance.

There will be more to go over in the next few days about how to use your selected autore­spon­der effec­tively for your busi­ness. Scan your inbox or RSS feed in the next few days so you can start your next les­son soon. The next topic will be focused on how to choose the right type of autore­spon­der ser­vice for your needs.

Until then, Keep your Light shin­ing Bright,

Shawn

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Some­times, we have an oppor­tu­nity to expe­ri­ence some­thing so pow­er­fully won­der­ful that it has an imme­di­ate impact on us, and oth­ers around us. I just hap­pened to have the priv­i­lege of wit­ness­ing and expe­ri­enc­ing such a very spe­cial moment while wait­ing to board my flight to Las Vegas. (Why Vegas? Check this post).

I was in the US Air­ways Lounge at Rea­gan National in Wash­ing­ton, DC. The lounge has an open air lobby that allows for all the sounds in the ter­mi­nal below to be heard quite eas­ily. I men­tion this because I was doing some work and all of a sud­den the entire ter­mi­nal burst in to applause, whis­tles, yelling and clap­ping. I felt like I was at a col­lege foot­ball game. It was SO LOUD that I had to stop what I was doing and check it out.

Before I go on, Wash­ing­ton DC has a few incred­i­ble tra­di­tions on Vet­er­ans Day. Like many other cities, there are for­mal cer­e­monies mark­ing the sac­ri­fice and ded­i­ca­tion of all Vet­er­ans who have served the USA in pro­tect­ing and defend­ing the free­doms and lib­er­ties of not just us Amer­i­cans, but for other cit­i­zens in other coun­tries the world over.  It is well deserved recog­ni­tion, in my hum­ble opin­ion, and the least that a grate­ful nation can do.

Vet­er­ans’ Day is spe­cial in DC because there are so many mon­u­ments that are ded­i­cated to the var­i­ous con­flicts that we have been part of. The Viet­nam War Memo­r­ial, the World War II Memo­r­ial, and my per­sonal favorite, the Korean War Memo­r­ial are all here within walk­ing dis­tance to the White House and the Capi­tol Build­ing. Every Novem­ber 11th, these hal­lowed places offer a sanc­tu­ary to remem­ber the ser­vice that our brave men and women pro­vided in all these bat­tles. It goes with­out say­ing that the cer­e­monies here are pretty intense and emotional.

Back to the air­port and the thun­der­ous uproar. I got out of my seat to see what was hap­pen­ing, and what I saw brought tons of emo­tion out of me as I started tear­ing up. Why? World War II Vet­er­ans were deplan­ing and mak­ing their way out of the ter­mi­nal and out to cars wait­ing to take them to Arling­ton National Ceme­tery and the World War II Memo­r­ial for cer­e­monies that were tak­ing place through­out the day.

Every­one, and I mean EVERYONE was cheer­ing for them and show­er­ing them with Grat­i­tude and Appre­ci­a­tion for their ser­vice and sac­ri­fice. Man what a priv­i­lege it was to wit­ness this. There aren’t many WWII vet­er­ans still alive, so to wit­ness this event was very spe­cial to me. These men, with their phys­i­cal bod­ies so old and frail that many had to be rolled around in wheel chairs, had such light and spirit in them that they filled the ter­mi­nal with it. The energy changed so quickly and was absolutely pal­pa­ble. So much so that it lifted up every­one that was near them as they moved through the air­port, cheers, whis­tles and clap­ping fol­low­ing them all the way. Too bad I left my phone on the table!

After 10 min­utes, the cheers died down, and I had a moment to pause and reflect on my time in the ser­vice and my dad’s time as well. My ser­vice in the Marines was unevent­ful (thank­fully). But Dad has served for 20 years had done unac­com­pa­nied tours in Oki­nawa (over a year), and then another 18 months in Iraq & Kuwait dur­ing Oper­a­tion Desert Shield.

While I stood there, a stream of thoughts about Mom came flood­ing into my memory. When Dad was gone, we all had to step up, and Mom did the most. I dis­tinctly remem­ber work­ing while going to high school and spend­ing my pay­check on a Christ­mas tree and presents for my sis­ters and my mom. I wanted to be as nor­mal for them as pos­si­ble, but with­out Dad, it just wasn’t the same.

I thought about how she was always glued to the TV and watch­ing all that bad stuff on the news chan­nesl for hours and hours on end, hop­ing to get some detail on how or what Dad was doing over there. I thought about how she woke up early to feed us hot break­fasts before we left for school; about how she, after work­ing a full day, cooked us din­ner, hung out with us, and then after we went to bed, worked her fin­gers to the bone into the wee hours of the early morn­ing. She slept so lit­tle back then, all while tak­ing care of me, and my two sis­ters. As the tears started to roll down my face, I remem­bered how she had given up so much to take care of us, to make things we lived as nor­mal of a life as pos­si­ble dur­ing this very try­ing time. And the flood gates went to full open as I remem­bered how she recorded mes­sages to Dad with a tape recorder to send to Dad via snail mail. (VoIP, email, online video and social net­work­ing weren’t around back then.)  Mom would fill both sides of a cas­sette tape or two, by talk­ing about what was going on back home, and would sing love songs to Dad by Bobby Vin­ton, Barry Manilow, John Den­ver and many, many more. I guess you could say that is where I learned about devo­tion. Like I said, a flood of memories.

I tried to regain my com­po­sure and went back to my where my bags were. As soon as my butt hit the chair, there was another round of cheer­ing. I quickly grabbed my iPhone this time and went to find the source of the cheers and cap­ture some of the energy these folks car­ried with them. I was behind a glass wall in a dif­fer­ent part of the lounge this time and it kept most of the noise out. What you do here in the first half of the video is me breath­ing a bit to hold back the tears as I watched the scene unfold below.

I am really grate­ful to have wit­nessed the love, respect, admi­ra­tion and appre­ci­a­tion that was shown to these gal­lant souls. I am also grate­ful for the reminder that Free­dom is not Free, and we, as Amer­i­cans are very for­tu­nate, despite the eco­nomic and geopo­lit­i­cal upheavals, to live in this coun­try: to have what we have, to do what we do, and live how we live.

So to all Vet­er­ans, I salute you! Thank you for your sac­ri­fice and your ser­vice. And to the fam­i­lies of these Vet­er­ans, Thank You for all that you have done to keep things in order on the home front while they con­tinue, in far away lands, to pro­tect and defend the free­doms and lib­er­ties of those who aren’t able to do so them­selves. If you know some­one who has served or is serv­ing in the Armed Forces today, please be sure to stop, acknowl­edge them, shake their hand, or give them a hug. The deserve the recog­ni­tion and appre­ci­a­tion, and today is just as good as any other to show them.

Lastly, to all my Marine Corps broth­ers & sis­ters, I’d like to offer a spe­cial (albeit belated) Happy Birth­day to you. Yes­ter­day, marked the 236th Birth­day of the Corps (10 Novem­ber 1775) in Tun Tav­ern, Philadelphia.

Sem­per Fi,

Shawn

 

So back in July, right after the hol­i­day week­end, I was dri­ving back home and looked at my odome­ter. To my sur­prise, I saw that  I was 5 miles from hit­ting the 100K mark. I was pretty excited since this was the first time that I ever had a car that lasted this long. (Let’s just say that the cars I’ve had in the past have had an early demise.) You’ll hear about one of them in the video. :-)  Any­way, I had a flash of thoughts come into my brain as I saw the odome­ter and didn’t have the time or abil­ity to write them down. I didn’t the next best thing and recorded an impromptu video with my iPhone to record my thoughts and share.

Yes, I know it is now Novem­ber, but the ideas and thoughts in the video are valid regard­less of when they were posted. Of course I will do bet­ter at get­ting my con­tent up online for you to read, share, & comment.

It gets a lit­tle bumpy dur­ing the video, be care­ful. :-)

Take Care,

Shawn