Wednesday, September 26, 2012

MoneyCamel.com offers debt management advise to UAE residents ...

While the UAE federal government is helping UAE nationals who are struggling with debt, a UAE based personal finance website - moneycamel.com - has found a unique way to give back to the society. They have established two online channels - "Ask our Expert" and "Debt Management" - that UAE residents can use to seek expert advise on their personal finances.

"Ask our Expert" is an online Q&A service where any user can ask questions related to personal finance and an expert answers these questions within a short period of time. This is a simple yet personal route for UAE resident who are unable to discuss financial issues they are worried about with their friends and family. These questions range from "how they can reduce their debt and monthly payments", "where can they get a loan with their salary" to "the best way to manage their budgets".

"Debt Management" is another channel where users can leave the details of their current debt and an expert advises them on how they can consolidate or reduce their current debt obligations by smartly managing them.

"We see these two channels as our way of giving back to the society that has given a lot to us. We ensure that we dedicate time to our responses every day and try to get the best possible answers for our users. So far we have been able to help more than 10,000 people in UAE," said Preeti H Bhambri, Founder & MD, MoneyCamel FZ LLE.

Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/moneycamelcom-offers-debt-management-advise-uae-312801

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YouTube for Android update brings preloading to Froyo and Gingerbread, YouTube TV queuing

YouTube's Android app brings preloading to Froyo and Gingerbread, YouTube TV queuing

Just because your Android hardware hasn't been upgraded to the most recent (or, next to the most recent) version of the OS doesn't mean you have to miss new features. Google has shipped a new version of its YouTube app that brings the preloading feature we saw arrive on ICS and above devices back in June to Gingerbread and Froyo. You'll still have to be online to watch preloaded videos from your subscriptions or watch later list, but they precache while you're on WiFi and plugged in so you don't have to wait through buffering to show someone Gangnam Style at the bus stop. Otherwise, the initial Watch page has changed slightly, there are more channels in the Channel Store and you can also queue up videos to play later on any YouTube-enabled TV device you've paired with your mobile.

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Dollar Store Customer service and Service | Exact Article

If you really find this article helpful Give it a PLUS from below and help us to spread it.

There is fantastic competition out there. With regards to dollar store corporations, you better be prepared. Effortlessly these competitors each and every customer must be sought after; especially once you have started off your own business and therefore are thinking about expansion. For nearly all business owners the first assumed when the impact from the competition hits home to fall back on the basics. They consider doing improvements to their stores and products. Nonetheless one key advancement most over look is the possibility of enhancing one?s way of handling customer needs and specifically how to provide better dollar store services.

Many overlook the strength this aspect in their particular business can provide. In truth many dollar shop business owners brush that off as a feature that should only be aimed at and prioritized in service dependent businesses.
What a miscalculation this thought process is really! Do not be fooled! It really doesn?t matter what the industry or business you?re in. Customer care and service stay a very essential section of the recipe for success that a dollar store must achieve. So let?s look at dollar store services in more detail.
Start with the basics. One of the basic components of brilliant customer care is supporting customers. This modest effort makes your shoppers feel they?re valued, and can additional successfully complete the shopping duties much more your store. Bear in mind to maintain a balance within the amount and technique you offer help along with help. Simply present help, but never ever impose. Many purchasers will find it hard to accomplish their shopping every time a staff member is growing over them. It puts a damper on their a sense freedom. As a result they?re going to rush through your retail store. The result ? you get rid of sales. But purchasers do appreciate a package of help and the willingness to stop along with chat for a moment once they come to your shop.
Special offers and offers are always a searching highlight for many customers. Consider offering a complimentary item when buyers reach a certain entire amount of buys. You can also consider other offers such as free gift wrap during special getaways. These will surely draw in customers. At the same time these offering may desire these same customers to buy more than they originally intended.
Aside from the genuine products you carry and the way they are presented, setting up and growing a superb working relationship with your customers should always be a highly regarded priority. Do this and also your shoppers will be more content, and so will you as sales continue to go upward.

For more information about dollar store services visit our website.

Source: http://www.exactarticle.com/dollar-store-customer-service-and-service.htm

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Romney, Obama focus on US posture abroad

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks at Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum in Pueblo, Colo., Monday, Sept. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Bryan Oller)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks at Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum in Pueblo, Colo., Monday, Sept. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Bryan Oller)

President Barack Obama reaches over to greet a supporters on the tarmac upon his arrival on Air Force One, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012, at JFK airport in New York. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney are sparring over how best to address U.S. challenges abroad in nearly back-to-back addresses at the Clinton Global Initiative's annual meeting.

Following deadly anti-American protests in Muslim countries over the past two weeks, Romney was to outline plans Tuesday to rework the U.S. foreign aid system, tying development money to requirements that countries allow U.S. investment and remove trade barriers. Obama also was to address top foreign leaders, CEOs and nongovernmental organizations at the gathering spearheaded by former President Bill Clinton.

The event puts the two presidential contenders in front of the same audience on the day Obama also was delivering a major address to the United Nations General Assembly. Both men were drawing contrasts in a presidential contest in which the state of the U.S. economy has been paramount, but which shifted focus this month to foreign policy after attacks in Libya killed four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador there.

In interviews and at campaign events Monday, Romney assailed Obama's leadership abroad, leading a chorus of Republicans in criticizing the president for what they said was minimizing the death of the Ambassador Chris Stevens. Obama, in an interview with CBS' "60 Minutes," said recent violence in the Mideast was due to "bumps in the road" on the way to democracy. Romney on Monday also suggested Obama was leaving American foreign policy at the mercy of events instead of working to shape global politics in America's interest.

At the United Nations, Obama planned a sweeping defense of his policy of engagement overseas. The president planned to "send a clear message that the United States will never retreat from the world, will bring justice to those who harm Americans and will stand strongly for our democratic values abroad," National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor said in an email.

Romney's focus on foreign aid was likely to draw attention to the situation in Egypt, a U.S. ally and the recipient of billions of dollars in American assistance each year. That aid has come under new scrutiny in the wake of protests that saw Egyptians scaling the walls of the U.S. Embassy in Cairo. Romney has said he would put stricter conditions on U.S. aid to Egypt's newly installed government, now headed by an Islamist president. The Obama administration reinstated military aid to Egypt earlier this year despite concerns about abuse as the country transitions to democratic rule.

Romney's campaign said Monday that the current system of foreign aid "reflects an outdated way of thinking about the world."

Both Romney and Obama will appear on a stage at the gathering led by Clinton, who just a few weeks earlier was offering a forceful defense of Obama's economic record and plans for the future at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C.

"I think the president's plan is better than the Romney plan, because the Romney plan fails the first test of fiscal responsibility: The numbers don't add up," Clinton said in that speech, one of several jabs at the Republican nominee.

During the last presidential election, both Obama and 2008 Republican nominee John McCain spoke at Clinton's annual meeting. That year, the former president had warm words for both men. He praised McCain's stance on global warming and complimented Obama's approach to a meeting the two had held earlier in the month at Clinton's Harlem office.

After his speech to the Clinton meeting, Romney planned to discuss education policy at a forum sponsored by NBC News. He also planned to join running mate Paul Ryan at a campaign rally in Ohio.

___

Associated Press writers Ben Feller and Philip Elliott in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-09-25-Presidential%20Campaign/id-6a13fa70c42442d2915428f549969b55

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Dot Earth Blog: Around One Park, a Fight to Blunt the Great Elephant Slaughter

Nick Brandt is an extraordinary photographer, as you can see by exploring this haunting portrait of Igor, an elephant he encountered in Kenya?s Amboseli National Park in 2007. I learned of Brandt?s work through this interview with the excellent Safari Talk blog.

But Brandt is far more than an image maker. Igor was slaughtered by poachers in 2009, giving extra resonance to a photograph that already speaks of the magnificence of an ancient and wise mammal species. That killing and so many others ? driven by the explosive growth in demand for ivory in Asia ? led Brandt in 2010 to co-found Big Life Foundation, a nonprofit doing its small part ? by raising funds for anti-poaching patrols around the Amboseli ecosystem ? to conserve elephants and other targeted wildlife. Here?s a useful new map of the activities. Here?s Brandt?s moving description of what drove him to move beyond documenting the region?s living resources.

Now Big Life has produced a short film about the situation in and around Amboseli, a vast area that includes the Kenyan park but straddles the Tanzania-Kenya border and spreads south to Mount Kilimanjaro:

In an e-mail exchange, I pointed Brandt to a recent National Geographic cover story and a New York Times Op-Ed article by the anthropologist Louisa Lombard, both of which concluded that the continuing slaughter of elephants cannot be stemmed without cutting insatiable ivory demand. I asked, ?Do you feel you?re fighting a losing war??

Here?s Brandt?s reply:

Yes the only way to blunt losses is to cut demand. It?s unlikely that we would ever even have needed to start Big Life had it not been for the explosion in demand for ivory and other animal parts from China and the Far East.

Do I feel like we?re fighting a losing war?

At least here in the Amboseli ecosystem, currently, no I do not. The poaching here in 2010 before we established such a significant presence was way worse than what it is now. This is thanks to the 250 rangers we now have on the ground across the trans-border ecosystem. For example, an elephant was shot and killed last week, but due to informer information, we know who the killer is and our rangers are in pursuit of him.

However, we are lucky, in a manner of speaking, that so far, due to our geographic location, we have not been subjected to raiding gangs of heavily armed military rebel groups like being experienced through Cameroon, Chad, CAR, DRC, etc, etc.

With insufficient funding and lack of necessary anti-poaching infrastructure, an awful kind of Sophie/s Choice is having to be made ? entire herds, entire populations of elephant herds are just being lost fast, significantly because very finite resources are being used to save other populations elsewhere.

So until demand for ivory and other animal parts from China and the Far East is radically reduced, there are many many other areas, indeed most areas of Africa, where, yes, tragically, the war will be lost. And shockingly quickly.

Please read the 2011 Safari Talk interview for a lot more from Brandt on his wildlife photography and activism.

Source: http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/09/24/around-one-park-a-fight-to-blunt-the-great-elephant-slaughter/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Notre Dame exercises 3-year out in Michigan deal

Michigan's Denard Robinson runs out of the tackle of Notre Dame's Manti Te'o (5) during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

Michigan's Denard Robinson runs out of the tackle of Notre Dame's Manti Te'o (5) during the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012, in South Bend, Ind. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick speaks during a news conference at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, N.C., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2012. Notre Dame is moving to the Atlantic Coast Conference _ yet keeping its football independence. The school will play five football games annually against the league's programs, but will be a full member in all other sports. The Irish will have access to the ACC's non-BCS bowl tie-ins. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

(AP) ? Notre Dame is opting out of its series with Michigan, meaning the last scheduled game between college football's winningest programs will take place in 2014.

A letter from Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick to Michigan athletic director Dave Brandon cancelling games in 2015-2017 was obtained by The Associated Press on Tuesday through a Freedom of Information Act request.

Brandon told the AP he was handed the letter on the field in South Bend, Ind., about an hour before Saturday night's game.

"I put the letter in my pocket and didn't bother to read it right away because I was focused on the game we were about to play," Brandon said. "I read it on the way home Sunday morning."

The Fighting Irish recently decided to move to the Atlantic Coast Conference in every sport except football and hockey, though the football team will play five games a year against league opponents, starting no later than 2015.

"While this move is a necessary precaution as we begin the process of meeting our new scheduling commitment to the ACC," Swarbrick wrote in his letter to Brandon, "please know that Notre Dame very much values its relationship with Michigan and we look forward to working with you to ensure that our great football rivalry can continue."

Brandon said he hopes to work with Swarbrick on another contract to extend the series.

"The ball is in their court because they've triggered the three-game notice," he said. "We'll play them next year at Michigan Stadium for the last time in a while ? it appears ? and we'll make our last scheduled trip to South Bend in 2014. There will likely be nothing on the board for five years after that. Beyond that, I don't know what will happen."

The Irish beat the Wolverines 13-6 over the weekend in the latest game of a storied series that dates to 1887. They've played every year since 2002 and regularly since 1978 after not meeting from 1944-77 or 1910-41. Michigan and Notre Dame were scheduled to take a hiatus during the 2018-19 seasons.

Swarbrick's letter is dated a day before the schools met on the field and cites last year's contract.

"Because I am providing you with this notice prior to the commencement of this year's football game on September, 22, 2012," Swarbrick wrote, "there is no liability to Notre Dame for cancelling those games."

The contract has an automatic rollover provision with a year being added each time a game is played, according to Notre Dame senior associate athletics director John Heisler.

"We needed to avoid the automatic addition of additional games until we can get a better understanding of our available inventory in those years," Heisler said in a released statement, "an understanding that will develop as we implement our five-game scheduling commitment to the Atlantic Coast Conference."

By opting out of the contract now, the Irish will host two of the final three years of the deal and will avoid playing at the Big House twice during the final three years.

No. 10 Notre Dame (4-0) is in the top 10 for the first time since 2006. Michigan (2-2) started the season No. 8 and has dropped out of the poll after losses to No. 1 Alabama and then the Irish. Both teams have a bye this week.

The Wolverines have an NCAA-best .735 winning percentage in football and the Irish (.732) are second. Michigan leads all-time series 23-16-1.

"Michigan has always enjoyed and respected our national rivalry with Notre Dame," Brandon said. "We understand there have been periods of times that we've had a hiatus to take a couple years off to play other teams and that was something we expected along the way.

"It's unfortunate that it would appear we're going to go a substantial amount of time between games. But that is a decision Notre Dame has made. Our job is to find opponents that are exciting for our student-athletes as well as our fans to replace Notre Dame."

___

Follow Larry Lage on Twitter: http://twitter.com/larrylage

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-09-25-FBC-T25-Notre-Dame-Michigan-Series/id-68351e68116a4918b6e2db4a70b798cf

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The most educated countries in the world

Graduating students at the University of Michigan commencement ceremony in Ann Arbor.

By Michael B. Sauter & Alexander E.M. Hess, 24/7 Wall St.

College graduation rates continued to improve around the world during the recession, according to a recent international economic study. In more developed countries, the percentage of adults with the equivalent of a college degree rose to more than 30 percent in 2010. In the United States, it was more than 40 percent, which is among the highest percentages in the world.

However, improvements in higher education are harder to achieve in these countries. More developed economies have had the most educated populations for some time. While these countries have steadily increased education rates, the increases have been modest compared to developing economies. At just above 1 percent, the U.S. has had one of the smallest annual growth rates for higher education since 1997. In Poland, an emerging market, the annualized rate was 7.2 percent from 1997 to 2010.

24/7 Wall St.: America's poorest states

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development?s (OECD)?Education at a Glance 2012?report calculated the proportion of residents with a college or college equivalent degree in the group?s 34 member nations and other major economies. Based on the report, 24/7 Wall St. identified the 10 countries with the highest proportion of adults with a college degree.

The majority of countries that spend the most on education have the most educated populations. As in previous years, the best educated countries tend to spend the most on tertiary education as a percentage of gross domestic product. The United States?and Canada, among the most educated countries, spend the first and third most respectively.

In an interview with 24/7 Wall St., OECD?s Chief Media Officer Matthias Rumpf explained that educational funding appears to have a strong relationship to how many residents pursue higher education. Private spending on educational institutions relative to public expenditure is much larger in the countries with the highest rates of college-equivalent education. Among the countries with the highest proportion of residents with a tertiary education, a disproportionate amount of spending comes from private sources, including tuition and donations. The OECD average proportion of private spending is 16 percent. In the U.S., 28 percent of funding comes from private sources. In South Korea, another country in the top 10, it is more than 40 percent.

Having more education helped people all over the world stay employed during the recession, according to the OECD. Between 2008 and 2010, unemployment rates among developed nations jumped from 8.8 percent to 12.5 percent for people with less than a high school education, and from 4.9 percent to 7.6 percent for people with only a high school education. For those with the equivalent of a college degree or more, the jobless rate went from 3.3 percent to just 4.7 percent.

Among the 10 countries with the highest proportion of educated adults, unemployment rates for those with a college equivalent ranged from 2.8 percent in Australia to 5.4 percent in the Canada. In each country, the rate remained lower than that country?s national average.

24/7 Wall St.: Countries that spend the most on health care

The?OECD?provided information on the percentage of residents aged 25 to 64 with a tertiary education for each of its 34 member countries, as well as for eight other nations. 2010 statistics on educational attainment, graduation rates, GDP per capita and unemployment rates also were provided by the OECD. The latest figures covering country-level education expenditure are from 2009.

These are the most educated countries in the world.

1. Canada

  • ?Percent population with tertiary education:?51 percent
  • ?Average annual growth rate (2000-2010):?2.4 percent (5th lowest)
  • ?GDP per capita:?$39,050 (11th highest)

Canada is the only nation where more than half of all adults had a tertiary education in 2010. This was up from 40 percent of the adult population in 2000, when the country also ranked as the world?s most educated. Canada has managed to become a world leader in education without being a leader in education spending, which totaled just 6.1 percent of GDP in 2009, or less than the 6.3 percent average for the OECD. A large amount of its spending went towards tertiary education, on which the country spent 2.5 percent of GDP, trailing only the United States?and South Korea. One of the few areas Canada did not perform well in was attracting international students, who made up just 6.6 percent of all tertiary students -- lower than the OECD?s 8 percent average.

2. Israel

  • ?Percent population with tertiary education:?46 percent
  • ?Average annual growth rate (2000-2010):?N/A
  • ?GDP per capita:?$26,531 (13th lowest)

Israel only joined the OECD in 2010. That year, its GDP per capita was more than $7,000 below the OECD?s average. Despite this, the country?s high school graduation rate was 92 percent in 2010, well above the OECD?s 84 percent average. Some 46 percent of residents had a tertiary education, versus 31 percent for the OECD. Israel spent 7.2 percent of GDP on educational institutions in 2009, the sixth most among all nations. And for the first time, preschool education will become free in 2012 even for children as young as three years old, Haaretz newspaper reported. This should benefit Israel as, according to the OECD, ?early childhood education is associated with better performance later on in school.?

24/7 Wall St.: The world's best (and worst) economies

3. Japan

  • ?Percent population with tertiary education:?45 percent
  • ?Average annual growth rate (2000-2010):?2.9 percent ?(10th lowest)
  • ?GDP per capita:?$33,785 (18th highest)

In 2009, Japan spent 1.6 percent of GDP on college or college equivalent education, on par with the OECD?s average, and just 5.2 percent of GDP on education overall, well below the OECD?s 6.3 percent average. Despite its relatively light spending, the country still had a high school graduation rate of 96 percent, the second best among all nations in 2010, while the percentage of its population with a tertiary education was 14 percentage points higher than the OECD?s average. However, according to The Wall Street Journal, recent university graduates in Japan have struggled to find work, with 15 percent those graduating in the spring of 2012 neither employed nor enrolled in further education as of August.

4. United States

  • ?Percent population with tertiary education:?42 percent
  • ?Average annual growth rate (2000-2010):?1.3 percent (2nd lowest)
  • ?GDP per capita:?$46,548 (4th highest)

Although the U.S. is one of just a few nations where more than 40 percent of people had a tertiary education in 2010, its education system is not without problems. Among the concerns, the graduation rate for upper secondary students in 2010 was 77 percent, well below the average rate of 84 percent for the OECD. Even though graduation rates were relatively low, the U.S. is one of the biggest spenders on education, with related expenditures equaling 7.3 percent of GDP in 2009. The U.S. was also the world?s largest spender on tertiary education in 2009, at 2.6 percent of GDP. The majority of funds for higher education, totaling 1.6 percent of GDP, came from private sources.

5. New Zealand

  • ?Percent population with tertiary education:?41 percent
  • ?Average annual growth rate (2000-2010):?3.5 percent (13th highest)
  • ?GDP per capita:?$29,711 (17th lowest)

The tiny country?s population has grown 13.2 percent between 2000 and 2010, as has the country?s education system. The number of people with a college or college equivalent education rose from 29 percent to 41 percent over the period. The country also has become a destination of choice for international students, who made up 14.2 percent of tertiary students in 2010. New Zealand is also a leader in educating scientists, with 16 percent of students choosing a science for their field of study at the tertiary level -- the highest proportion of any country.

Click here to read the rest of 24/7 Wall St.'s The most educated countries in the world

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Source: http://bottomline.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/24/14012068-the-most-educated-countries-in-the-world?lite

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