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Welcome to Huckleberry Resources
Greetings!
The news is good folks! Housing numbers are getting better, consumer spending is up, the Dow has been rising since the beginning of February and has hit over 11,000. These are all great signs that things have turned the corner! Take that as a sign to work on your business: planning, marketing, budgeting. Cultivating your business! As always, I hope you find this issue entertaining and informational. Your comments and questions are always appreciated and please pass it along to family and friends. Best wishes!  |
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GadgetTrak for Your Computer
Huckleberry Resources is now a reseller of GadgetTrak!  If your computer is lost or stolen, GadgetTrak software installed on your Mac or PC will be able to locate it with WiFi positioning within 10-20 meters. They can also access your web camera to take and upload pictures of the thief to your Flickr account or email you. GadgetTrak only sends the information to your email or Flickr account, never to other locations or themselves. If your laptop or desktop is stolen, you go to the GadgetTrak website, login and click the activate tracking button. The next time your computer is connected to the internet, bam! The software will activate on your computer and will start to send you tracking information and photos. The thief is not aware this is going on! Protect your investment for only $24.95 per year! You can click the buy now button through Huckleberry Resources here.
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Image Resolution: Why should you care?
Do you know those TV shows about cops or spies where they take horribly
out of focus or pixelated images and make them so clear that they can
identify the bad guy? Totally fake, doesn't exist. If it does exist - someone please tell me how!
Image
resolution in the digital world refers to the amount of detail or
information contained in your image file. Higher resolution = more
detail = better quality (and larger file size). That is a pretty basic
and simple explanation. For more visit this wiki article.
Here
are some tips that may help you along your way:
- You can always reduce the size of the image
without sacrificing the quality.
- You can never enlarge the size of the image
without sacrificing the quality.
- For photos, set your camera to
the Large or highest setting to get the best quality prints.
- If
your graphic designer is providing you with a .jpg file of your logo
make sure it is large or have them give you several sizes.
- If
you want to print your images you need at least 300 dpi (dots per inch) at
the size you want it to print. This includes photos, print ads, logos,
etc.
- For web images 72 dpi is fine and all images should be
optimized for the web so that they load quickly.
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What's New?
Cheap and easy online learning!
If you don't want to pay for an expensive class to learn a piece of
software you can pay a subscription fee to lynda.com and get access to
their online library of tutorials for anything from Microsoft Word to
Adobe Dreamweaver. You can watch the easy-to-follow tutorials at your own pace, and even re-watch them if you need to. The low subscription
fee really makes sense if you want to build your computer skills, just
have some fun or need a refresher on more complicated software.
Check
it out at www.lyndia.com
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