Archive for May, 2014

Pokemon Glazed | Part 3: Gym Leader Sparky! – Video


Pokemon Glazed | Part 3: Gym Leader Sparky!
Hello, and welcome to Pokemon glazed! Social Networking: http://www.twitter.com/ThePokeCinema http://www.facebook.com/PokeCinema http://twitch.tv/PokeCinema http://instagram.com/pokecinema...

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Pokemon Glazed | Part 3: Gym Leader Sparky! - Video

Increase your ranking on social networking sites with Social SEO Pro – Video


Increase your ranking on social networking sites with Social SEO Pro
Click the following link to watch the demo: http://www.klikks.com/socialseopro Increase your ranking on social networking sites with Social SEO Pro http://yo...

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Increase your ranking on social networking sites with Social SEO Pro - Video

Liz Ryan: How's your LinkedIn etiquette?

LinkedIn is the 800-pound gorilla in the business-oriented social networking arena. If you're working, job-hunting or in school, a LinkedIn profile and presence is a must. It only takes a few minutes to create a LinkedIn profile, and the basic functions of LinkedIn are free and powerful. When you use LinkedIn for business networking, here are good-networking etiquette tips to keep in mind.

Invitations: LinkedIn is a connected network of professional people who "link in" with one another to grow their own networks and make introductions among their friends and contacts. When you meet a new acquaintance in your travels, it's polite to ask, "May I send you a LinkedIn invitation?"

Some people happily connect to anyone and everyone they meet whether there's a strong relationship already in place or not. There's even a subgroup on LinkedIn of free networkers known as LIONS, or LinkedIn Open Networkers, whose credo is "If you're on LinkedIn, how 'bout you and me connect?" You can spot a LION by the acronym LION in the "name" field on his or her LinkedIn profile.

Other LinkedIn users are more cautious about making new connections. We can't blame them, because the LinkedIn site is full of cautionary notes advising users only to connect to people they know well and trust. So it's good manners to ask a new contact "May I send you a LinkedIn invitation?" before blasting the invitation out and potentially putting your new acquaintance in an awkward spot.

Introductions: LinkedIn is a powerful engine for introductions, but it's prudent to use the "Get Introduced" feature wisely. When you search the LinkedIn database and find another LinkedIn member you'd like to get to know, you can request an introduction to him or her via an intermediary friend by clicking on the pull-down menu next to your target networker's profile photo and choosing the action step "Get Introduced." (You won't see this option unless you and your target person are connected by one or two levels of intermediate connections on LinkedIn.)

It is always polite to ask for an introduction rather than to assume you're entitled to one. Here's an example: "Wilma, I saw that you're connected to Betty Rubble on LinkedIn and I'd like to talk with Betty about getting involved with our upcoming event. Would you be comfortable forwarding my message to her?"

You have to give your friend an out, because you won't know in advance how close or distant Wilma's and Betty's relationship may be.

Spam: Like other social networking sites, LinkedIn has its share of unwanted communication. There are LinkedIn spammers who set up fake LinkedIn profiles just to entice other people to connect with them and then to spam them. I believe there is a special place in hell for those people, but it's good to spot the spam invitation when it arrives rather than learning the hard way that your new LinkedIn connection is as fake as a $3 bill.

Even if you're LION-like in your connecting preferences, check out each new prospective LinkedIn contact's profile carefully. If you're not sure a profile is legit, mouse over the profile photo, right-click on it and choose "Search for this image on Google." LinkedIn scammers will crop other people's photos (often international celebrities) from almost anywhere online to make a fake-but-appealing LinkedIn profile that people will be likely to respond to. Don't link to those fakers!

Groups: LinkedIn has hundreds of thousands of lively groups that allow like-minded LinkedIn users to share ideas. LinkedIn lets you join up to 50 groups at one time. When you join a new group, stay on the sidelines for a few weeks to see how the group works. Don't join a new group and immediately start posting messages about your 2-for-1 special or your business news. Take the time to understand the group's tone and flavor before diving into the conversation.

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Liz Ryan: How's your LinkedIn etiquette?

Motorists sue Aurora, police in 2012 traffic stop after bank robbery

Motorists who were detained at an Aurora intersection nearly two years ago while officers attempted to locate and apprehend an on-the-run bank robber have sued the city for violating their Fourth Amendment right against unlawful search and seizure.

The suit was filed Friday in federal district court on behalf of 14 plaintiffs, some of whom were approached at gunpoint by police at the intersection of Iliff Avenue and Buckley Road, handcuffed and made to wait for two hours while the scene was cleared.

"They had no probable cause to pat my clients down and then handcuff them when they found that they had no weapons," said David Lane, the attorney representing the group. "This was overreaching."

He said police should have used more precise location tracking technology to pinpoint the location of Christian Paetsch, the man eventually convicted and imprisoned in the robbery of a Wells Fargo branch June 2, 2012. Hidden in the stolen money was a GPS tracking device that brought officers to the busy intersection but was unable to provide vehicle-by-vehicle location information.

To surround 19 cars stopped at a light and detain 28 occupants in those vehicles in an attempt to find a robbery suspect violated the motorists' Fourth Amendment protections against unlawful search and seizure and excessive force, Lane said.

"(Police) brandished ballistic shields and pointed assault rifles directly at innocent citizens, including children under 10 years old," the lawsuit reads. "Officers with police dogs were at the ready. No one was free to leave."

Outgoing Police Chief Dan Oates said Saturday that U.S. District Judge William J. Martinez had already ruled that prosecutors could use evidence that officers gathered during the massive traffic stop, even though the judge acknowledged that "invasiveness" was the "most troubling" aspect of the officers' actions.

"My officers took a very dangerous person off the street, and he's in jail today," Oates said. "And nobody got hurt."

The chief, who will leave May 30 to head the Miami Beach, Fla., police force, said the court to date has held that his officers acted reasonably given the circumstances.

Oates and several Aurora police officers are also named in the suit.

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Motorists sue Aurora, police in 2012 traffic stop after bank robbery

Channel Optimization Part 4 Local Keyword Research Custom URL Connecting Social – Video


Channel Optimization Part 4 Local Keyword Research Custom URL Connecting Social
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By: Anthony Hayes

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Channel Optimization Part 4 Local Keyword Research Custom URL Connecting Social - Video