Vcr Works
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More Information on Purchasing TimeShares
First, I'm certain you have also heard wonderful tales about timeshares and how you can make a fortune buying and selling timeshares, but there's more to the tales than you have been hearing.
Of course you don't actually "own" a timeshare property; you only "own" it for a period of time; and by "owning" it, it means you have the right to use it as yours during the period of time that the ownership lasts. With a timeshare, you don't have to cram your 6 lovely little children in tiny hotel rooms; they will have the freedom they need to run around the timeshare property, just as they do at home.
Look around before buying any timeshare; ensure you are happy with the location and condition of things in the property before buying. Note that when you resell your timeshare using the help of timeshare resale services, you will need to pay them commissions when the resale pulls through.
It's good to get the help of timeshare experts who will handle the paper works and legal aspects for you; they will also give you very good advice on the right timeshares to buy and those not to buy.
The ladies say they love staying in timeshares rather than hotels because with timeshares they can cook their own meals at affordable costs but with hotels they would have to stick with the expensive restaurant foods. See travel
Don't buy a timeshare that is in isolation; instead, buy a timeshare that is in a location with good bars, restaurants and other such amenities. If you are among those that have the erroneous thought of timeshares being too expensive, think again; the cost of an average timeshare is far lower than an average hotel, especially when you add up the number of years to use both. See Travel Vacations
To close, you can make money with your timeshares when you are not going to be using it by subleasing it; but of course, it's not always as easy as it seems.
I just got cable that uses a box. How can I tape one show and watch another; I used to be able when had no box
I used to have Cablevision where the cable was connected to the TV/VCR. Now I got Verizon Fios and it required a cable box. My VCR works, but I can only record what I am watching - how can I again set my VCR timer to record things when I'm not home, or when I'm watching something else? Is that ability gone forever???
I am afraid that ability is gone with Verizon FiOS. Verizon FiOS technically isn't cable, rather a fiber optic line straight to the box. Your VCR only has the ability to connect and tune into basic cable signals. It's for this same reason that a cable box is required.
Since cable is the most popular standard, all VCRs have the ability to tune into basic cable. The only way that would change would be if somebody made a VCR that could tune to Verizon's fiber optic standard, but with the advent of DVRs and the obsolesence of VCRs, that'll never happen.
Bottom line is that FiOS is a new and far superior technology to cable, but has no backward compatiblity as a result. My only suggestion would be to opt for the DVR option available through Verizon. It's usually only $5-10 more a month, which is worth it as it will allow you to record a show and watch another without tapes, as well as pause live TV (like a TiVo).
Reuters Media Columnist Explains That SOPA/PIPA Are A 'Cure Worse Than The Disease' (Techdirt)
In the continuing mainstream news realization that SOPA and PIPA are dreadful
bills that won't stop infringement, but will have massive negative
consequences for the internet, we've got Reuters' (formerly Slate's)
celebrated media columnist, Jack Shafer, explaining how "Hollywood's pirate
cure is worse than the disease." If you've been following Techdirt for a
while, there's nothing really _new_ here, but it is a nice summary. I
especially like the part where he responds to a Fox exec claiming that
Hollywood's "mistake" was allowing people to call infringement "piracy" (no,
really, Tom Rothman, co-CEO of Fox Filmed Entertainment actually said that):
> _ ...resorting to this sort of hyperbole is just the Hollywood way of
winning an argument. In 1982, Jack Valenti, then head of the movie business's
trade association, told Congress in 1982 that the VCR was "to the American
film producer and the American public what the Boston Strangler is to the
American woman at home alone." The happy Hollywood ending to that copyright
Armageddon? The VCR made the movie industry ridiculously wealthy by creating a
new sales channel.
Pirates and the "intellectual-property defense industry" ([Adrian] Johns's
delightful phrase) have been clashing at least once a ...
How a VCR Works - Part 2
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