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Suggest You - A Different World: A Different War
Tablet PC Freeware er the Persian Gulf. These attack aircraft were refueled and stacked up south of the Saudi border like jets on approach to O'Hare airport on a snowy Christmas Eve.Tablet PC's are getting popular because of the convenience that they provide to users. Creating designs and patterns becomes easier if a tablet PC is used, because the PC is fitted with a pen instead of a mouse. Therefore, most companies selling tablet PC's usually provide users with software that feature extensive drawing and designing features. As part of their promotional strategies, many companies offer various kinds of freeware to buyers of tablet PC's. Some manufacturers of tablet PC's offer programs and features free of cost to the winners of contests on the Internet.Some of the products that are offered free of cost along with the purchase of a tablet PC are art and designing software. These are relatively easy to use and come with the latest features that are not available in the market for sale. Artrage and strokeit are two of the well-known software available on the Internet that allows users to augment their creativity. The pen in a tablet PC allows a user to create complicated designs that are almost impossible to create with a mouse. There are other games and shareware available on the Internet absolutely free of cost. Some companies offer shareware free of cost for a limited duration and the user would have to pay for the software after a stipulated time.Some companies offer language recognition software as a freeware or shareware. This software program helps users to recognize and decipher foreign languages without any effort. The size of the software usually rang At exactly 0140 the USS Wisconsin started launching Tomahawk Cruise missiles to join other Tomahawks being launched from the USS San Jacinto in the Red Sea. Tomahawk missiles would be the first to penetrate Iraqi airspace, flying under the radar and racing toward their targets at an altitude of fifty to one hundred feet above the terrain. Meanwhile, at a remote base in Western Saudi Arabia, two teams of Apache and Pave Low helicopters took off at approximately 0100. The 101st Airborne Apaches were heavily armed. Each team had a 20th Special Operations Squadron Pave Low helicopter which provided GPS navigation, additional Electronic Countermeasure (ECM) and rescue capability. This small but deadly force, commanded by Army Lieutenant Colonel Richard Cody, was code named TASK FORCE NORMANDY in honor of the “Screaming Eagles’” spearhead operations ne Fiction Editing - Story Sense And Logic It seems as if America’s overwhelming victory in Operation Desert Storm happened centuries ago. The world was certainly a different place when Saddam Hussein invaded his small, but wealthy, neighbor. Take a moment to remember back to that January day. Where were you?Your story, be it novel, short story or novelette, is finished. Or is it? Before you send it to a publisher, check firstly that your story makes sense!Maybe you read my article about The Final Draft. Well, before you reach that stage there's this one to go through. It can be hard and you need to be tough with yourself, castings an editor's eye - not that of a writer - over your work. So what is there to look for when editing and how do you go about it?The first thing to do is to print your story out onto paper. Don't ask me why but editing just doesn't seem to work the same if you do it on your computer or word-processor. Then read your story. You might think this a waste of time - after all, you wrote it! - but I assure you that you'll find mistakes, typos and a host of other little mistakes.They're easy to correct. Mark them in pencil as you go along. When you have finished your read through it's time to begin editing in earnest. You will have almost certainly noticed plotting errors and the usual howlers present in every first draft (I speak from experience!) but here's a rundown of vital points to check off during the editing process.1. Do your characters behave as they should? Remember that, in fiction, people seldom if ever act 'out of character' - if your character has changed, this needs attention.2. Do your characters react to each other as they should? Events in your story may well change the feelings and emotions your characters display towards each I was working for a major aerospace corporation at the time and on 16th of January, I had been sent all the way across the country to Los Angeles. I was going to make a very important presentation to our customer in the Air Force on Monday, 17 January. I arrived at LAX in the middle of the afternoon. I collected my luggage and climbed aboard the rental car shuttle. After a short drive, I was dropped off at my car. Knowing that America was very close to going to war, I turned on the radio to get the latest news. Planes were in the air. The war had started. The following is the story of the opening moments of Operation Desert Storm. It has been excerpted from “The Gulf War Chronicles” which is available through all online booksellers and can also be ordered at your local bookstore. --------- Before midnight on the 16th of January 1991, the wheels had been set in motion for the most devastating air attack in history. Ships carrying Tomahawk missiles were in their assigned launch positions. E-3 Sentry, Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) aircraft were flying in four surveillance racetracks just south of the Saudi/Iraqi border. One hundred eighty tankers were orbiting south of the AWACS, just out of range of the Iraqi early warning radar. Fixed wing and rotary aircraft were being readied for battle. The staggering firepower of the United States Armed Forces had been brought to bear on the northern Saudi Arabian border in just a little over five months. The Marines were concentrated along the Persian Gulf and thinly dispersed along the Kuwaiti border in small, fast moving screening units. These Marines were mounted in High Mobility Multi-Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWVs) and Light Armored Vehicles (LAVs). The forward units were deployed to signal advance warning of Iraqi offensive thrusts into Saudi Arabia. Farther to the south, the remainder of the American force was positioned for counterattacks on advancing Iraqis or massed around forward supply and air bases. Every airfield within striking distance of Iraq and Kuwait was crammed full of Allied aircraft. Six Navy Aircraft carriers ringed Iraq in the Red Sea and Persian Gulf. Hundreds of aircraft from America's newest F-117A Nighthawks, to the venerable B-52 Stratofortresses, were being readied for war. The airfields were so crowded that there was no room for the B-52s. They would fly their first missions directly from their bases in Spain, Diego Garcia, and even Louisiana. The largest logistic chain in history stretched from Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf all the way back to both coasts of the United States. Supplies and additional heavy armor units from the United States and Europe continued to pour in to Saudi Arabia. The hammer was cocked, there were rounds in the chamber and the trigger was being squeezed. January 17th heralded the culmination of years of acquisitions of high-tech systems and shaping the world’s largest all-volunteer military; months of deployments, planning, and "sharpening the sword"; weeks of diplomacy; and days of tension. The U.S. was planning to fight a four-dimensional “Air-Land Battle” for the first time. It was to be orchestrated in a precise time sequence. The Iraqis, on the other hand, were preparing to fight a two dimensional war of attrition. They had no concept of air superiority, timing or tempo. The Coalition would fight World War III while the Iraqis would fight World War I. At 0001 on the 17th, two-dozen F-117 Stealth fighters from the 415th Tactical Fighter Squadron started taking off from a secret airbase located deep in the mountains of Saudi Arabia. These ultra-high tech aircraft would lead the manned air assault deep into Iraq. Within an hour, over three hundred additional attack aircraft began taking off from aircraft carriers and airbases all over the Persian Gulf. These attack aircraft were refueled and stacked up south of the Saudi border like jets on approach to O'Hare airport on a snowy Christmas Eve. At exactly 0140 the USS Wisconsin started launching Tomahawk Cruise missiles to join other Tomahawks being launched from the USS San Jacinto in the Red Sea. Tomahawk missiles would be the first to penetrate Iraqi airspace, flying under the radar and racing toward their targets at an altitude of fifty to one hundred feet above the terrain. Meanwhile, at a remote base in Western Saudi Arabia, two teams of Apache and Pave Low helicopters took off at approximately 0100. The 101st Airborne Apaches were heavily armed. Each team had a 20th Special Operations Squadron Pave Low helicopter which provided GPS navigation, additional Electronic Countermeasure (ECM) and rescue capability. This small but deadly force, commanded by Army Lieutenant Colonel Richard Cody, was code named TASK FORCE NORMANDY in honor of the “Screaming Eagles’” spearhead operations nea Keep TRACK of your Business Relationships and Gain Profits and can also be ordered at your local bookstore.How do you know when an alliance needs to be monitored and tracked?More often than not, an alliance needs to be monitored and tracked. If you ignore your alliance partner at all, you will be losing ground and your business relationship will not be what you expect. If you ignore anyone, they tend to forget about you, or at least they will not take you seriously and will find other people to pass the time with. The same is true for an alliance partnership. You should remember to treat them just like a customer and always keep in touch. Any business relationship depends on how much you keep in touch and how much information you give them to keep the project alive.This does not mean that you have to commit to a great volume of communications but you do have to commit to a regular communication strategy that is a two-way commitment. You must also know what is happening with the alliance partner and how you can help to increase the amount of business they do on your behalf. The two-way street approach should be part of any alliance or partnership agreement you put in place. If you do not make any communication commitment, then the dialog or information will be sporadic and it will not provide you with a consistent update on the latest and greatest information. It is only with information that you will be able to take full advantage of the alliance.When you spend time monitoring and tracking an alliance, you will be fully prepared to step-in with help when needed. You will also be --------- Before midnight on the 16th of January 1991, the wheels had been set in motion for the most devastating air attack in history. Ships carrying Tomahawk missiles were in their assigned launch positions. E-3 Sentry, Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) aircraft were flying in four surveillance racetracks just south of the Saudi/Iraqi border. One hundred eighty tankers were orbiting south of the AWACS, just out of range of the Iraqi early warning radar. Fixed wing and rotary aircraft were being readied for battle. The staggering firepower of the United States Armed Forces had been brought to bear on the northern Saudi Arabian border in just a little over five months. The Marines were concentrated along the Persian Gulf and thinly dispersed along the Kuwaiti border in small, fast moving screening units. These Marines were mounted in High Mobility Multi-Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWVs) and Light Armored Vehicles (LAVs). The forward units were deployed to signal advance warning of Iraqi offensive thrusts into Saudi Arabia. Farther to the south, the remainder of the American force was positioned for counterattacks on advancing Iraqis or massed around forward supply and air bases. Every airfield within striking distance of Iraq and Kuwait was crammed full of Allied aircraft. Six Navy Aircraft carriers ringed Iraq in the Red Sea and Persian Gulf. Hundreds of aircraft from America's newest F-117A Nighthawks, to the venerable B-52 Stratofortresses, were being readied for war. The airfields were so crowded that there was no room for the B-52s. They would fly their first missions directly from their bases in Spain, Diego Garcia, and even Louisiana. The largest logistic chain in history stretched from Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf all the way back to both coasts of the United States. Supplies and additional heavy armor units from the United States and Europe continued to pour in to Saudi Arabia. The hammer was cocked, there were rounds in the chamber and the trigger was being squeezed. January 17th heralded the culmination of years of acquisitions of high-tech systems and shaping the world’s largest all-volunteer military; months of deployments, planning, and "sharpening the sword"; weeks of diplomacy; and days of tension. The U.S. was planning to fight a four-dimensional “Air-Land Battle” for the first time. It was to be orchestrated in a precise time sequence. The Iraqis, on the other hand, were preparing to fight a two dimensional war of attrition. They had no concept of air superiority, timing or tempo. The Coalition would fight World War III while the Iraqis would fight World War I. At 0001 on the 17th, two-dozen F-117 Stealth fighters from the 415th Tactical Fighter Squadron started taking off from a secret airbase located deep in the mountains of Saudi Arabia. These ultra-high tech aircraft would lead the manned air assault deep into Iraq. Within an hour, over three hundred additional attack aircraft began taking off from aircraft carriers and airbases all over the Persian Gulf. These attack aircraft were refueled and stacked up south of the Saudi border like jets on approach to O'Hare airport on a snowy Christmas Eve. At exactly 0140 the USS Wisconsin started launching Tomahawk Cruise missiles to join other Tomahawks being launched from the USS San Jacinto in the Red Sea. Tomahawk missiles would be the first to penetrate Iraqi airspace, flying under the radar and racing toward their targets at an altitude of fifty to one hundred feet above the terrain. Meanwhile, at a remote base in Western Saudi Arabia, two teams of Apache and Pave Low helicopters took off at approximately 0100. The 101st Airborne Apaches were heavily armed. Each team had a 20th Special Operations Squadron Pave Low helicopter which provided GPS navigation, additional Electronic Countermeasure (ECM) and rescue capability. This small but deadly force, commanded by Army Lieutenant Colonel Richard Cody, was code named TASK FORCE NORMANDY in honor of the “Screaming Eagles’” spearhead operations ne Why Should I Use A Home Budget? eployed to signal advance warning of Iraqi offensive thrusts into Saudi Arabia. Farther to the south, the remainder of the American force was positioned for counterattacks on advancing Iraqis or massed around forward supply and air bases. Every airfield within striking distance of Iraq and Kuwait was crammed full of Allied aircraft. Six Navy Aircraft carriers ringed Iraq in the Red Sea and Persian Gulf. Hundreds of aircraft from America's newest F-117A Nighthawks, to the venerable B-52 Stratofortresses, were being readied for war. The airfields were so crowded that there was no room for the B-52s. They would fly their first missions directly from their bases in Spain, Diego Garcia, and even Louisiana.
The largest logistic chain in history stretched from Saudi Arabia and the Persian Gulf all the way back to both coasts of the United States. Supplies and additional heavy armor units from the United States and Europe continued to pour in to Saudi Arabia. The hammer was cocked, there were rounds in the chamber and the trigger was being squeezed.A home budget is simply a way to plan and organize your family’s finances. A budget is an important first step in taking action and controlling your finances, instead of your finances controlling you. Each year, many families find themselves in debt and some near financial ruin. By putting lots of thought into your finances and creating a strategy to control your spending habits (home budget), you can not only side step many financial pitfalls, but find yourself financially secure.Setting up a home budget is easier than you think; there are plenty of resources and tools available to help you understand how to build an effective home budget and to put it into practice. The main reason to set up a home budget is to control spending and make sure you are not living beyond your means. While it easier than ever to view how your money is spent each month with the use of online banking software, monthly bank statements, credit card receipts, etc, it is also much easier to live beyond one’s means, specifically due to the ease and availability to borrow money on credit cards.With the use of a home budget, you can calculate how much is needed for your families monthly living expenses, how much is left over for saving and investments and what is left over for fun and entertainment. A home budget can be an extremely valuable resource and not only can it help you accomplish your family goals, it usually helps you focus on specific issues, whether it is paying off credit card debt, savin January 17th heralded the culmination of years of acquisitions of high-tech systems and shaping the world’s largest all-volunteer military; months of deployments, planning, and "sharpening the sword"; weeks of diplomacy; and days of tension. The U.S. was planning to fight a four-dimensional “Air-Land Battle” for the first time. It was to be orchestrated in a precise time sequence. The Iraqis, on the other hand, were preparing to fight a two dimensional war of attrition. They had no concept of air superiority, timing or tempo. The Coalition would fight World War III while the Iraqis would fight World War I. At 0001 on the 17th, two-dozen F-117 Stealth fighters from the 415th Tactical Fighter Squadron started taking off from a secret airbase located deep in the mountains of Saudi Arabia. These ultra-high tech aircraft would lead the manned air assault deep into Iraq. Within an hour, over three hundred additional attack aircraft began taking off from aircraft carriers and airbases all over the Persian Gulf. These attack aircraft were refueled and stacked up south of the Saudi border like jets on approach to O'Hare airport on a snowy Christmas Eve. At exactly 0140 the USS Wisconsin started launching Tomahawk Cruise missiles to join other Tomahawks being launched from the USS San Jacinto in the Red Sea. Tomahawk missiles would be the first to penetrate Iraqi airspace, flying under the radar and racing toward their targets at an altitude of fifty to one hundred feet above the terrain. Meanwhile, at a remote base in Western Saudi Arabia, two teams of Apache and Pave Low helicopters took off at approximately 0100. The 101st Airborne Apaches were heavily armed. Each team had a 20th Special Operations Squadron Pave Low helicopter which provided GPS navigation, additional Electronic Countermeasure (ECM) and rescue capability. This small but deadly force, commanded by Army Lieutenant Colonel Richard Cody, was code named TASK FORCE NORMANDY in honor of the “Screaming Eagles’” spearhead operations ne Follow Up Guaranteed to Help You Sell Houses ger was being squeezed.Ever thought how to remind someone of the houses they visited that they liked? For any sales person, getting someone to imagine themselves with the product is vital to getting a sale. For example, auto sales people always want to put you in the car. Here's a way for you to do this after they've seen the home. As a realtor, your challenge is once they go home. While they’re in the house, they like it, but after they leave, they start to forget what they saw.What if, while they’re in the home, you take a digital photo of them in their favorite room? Maybe they love the kitchen. Take a picture. I bought my current home because I loved the kitchen. I have a 100 year-old house, and re-modeled kitchens were few and far between in my price range.Now what to do with the photo? There are a couple of things. Download the photo to a card or a post card. Send them the card. You’ve now accomplished two important things:- You’ve followed up in a unique way.- You’ve put them back in the house.What a great way to be back in the moment.If you don’t want to use the above method, send the photo in the mail. It’s not as eye-catching as a personalized card, but will accomplish your purpose.I coach realtors all the time on the importance of being different in the eyes of the customer. With home prices where they are, many buyers are skeptical of what you do to earn your fee. The more you try to stand out from the crowd, the easier it will be to get fut January 17th heralded the culmination of years of acquisitions of high-tech systems and shaping the world’s largest all-volunteer military; months of deployments, planning, and "sharpening the sword"; weeks of diplomacy; and days of tension. The U.S. was planning to fight a four-dimensional “Air-Land Battle” for the first time. It was to be orchestrated in a precise time sequence. The Iraqis, on the other hand, were preparing to fight a two dimensional war of attrition. They had no concept of air superiority, timing or tempo. The Coalition would fight World War III while the Iraqis would fight World War I. At 0001 on the 17th, two-dozen F-117 Stealth fighters from the 415th Tactical Fighter Squadron started taking off from a secret airbase located deep in the mountains of Saudi Arabia. These ultra-high tech aircraft would lead the manned air assault deep into Iraq. Within an hour, over three hundred additional attack aircraft began taking off from aircraft carriers and airbases all over the Persian Gulf. These attack aircraft were refueled and stacked up south of the Saudi border like jets on approach to O'Hare airport on a snowy Christmas Eve. At exactly 0140 the USS Wisconsin started launching Tomahawk Cruise missiles to join other Tomahawks being launched from the USS San Jacinto in the Red Sea. Tomahawk missiles would be the first to penetrate Iraqi airspace, flying under the radar and racing toward their targets at an altitude of fifty to one hundred feet above the terrain. Meanwhile, at a remote base in Western Saudi Arabia, two teams of Apache and Pave Low helicopters took off at approximately 0100. The 101st Airborne Apaches were heavily armed. Each team had a 20th Special Operations Squadron Pave Low helicopter which provided GPS navigation, additional Electronic Countermeasure (ECM) and rescue capability. This small but deadly force, commanded by Army Lieutenant Colonel Richard Cody, was code named TASK FORCE NORMANDY in honor of the “Screaming Eagles’” spearhead operations ne New High in DOW is Meaningless er the Persian Gulf. These attack aircraft were refueled and stacked up south of the Saudi border like jets on approach to O'Hare airport on a snowy Christmas Eve.There was dancing in the streets, well, at least on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange last week when the Dow Jones Industrial Index closed at an all time high. The many cheerleaders on CNBC-TV were ecstatic screaming, “I told you so”. But what did it really tell us.The DJIA or DOW as it is also called is composed of 30 stocks that actually represent about 25% of the value of the NYSE. That is very impressive and one of the main reasons this index is watched by so many the world over.Caterpillar Tractor Company was $16 in the year 2000 and closed on October 2, 2006 at $65. The worst was Intel that dropped from $72 to $20. Many fell 50%. So what really happened? Only 9 of the 30 stocks made new highs that day – only 30%. No one on CNBC bothered to mention 21 stocks, 70%, failed to participate.New highs were entered by American Express +3 points, Boeing +12, Caterpillar +49, Johnson & Johnson +30, Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing (MMM) + 33, Altria +55, Proctor & Gamble + 4, United Technology + 39 and Exxon + 25.There is no point in listing all the losers. Three lost more than 50% from the 2000 high. How can this make a new meaningful high when the index shows 70% of the stockholders lost money?Way back when before you were a gleam in Daddy’s eye (1896) when the original average created by Mr. Dow and Mr. Jones first appeared in the Wall Street Journal all you did was add up the price of all the stocks and divide to get the Index.Stocks went up and At exactly 0140 the USS Wisconsin started launching Tomahawk Cruise missiles to join other Tomahawks being launched from the USS San Jacinto in the Red Sea. Tomahawk missiles would be the first to penetrate Iraqi airspace, flying under the radar and racing toward their targets at an altitude of fifty to one hundred feet above the terrain. Meanwhile, at a remote base in Western Saudi Arabia, two teams of Apache and Pave Low helicopters took off at approximately 0100. The 101st Airborne Apaches were heavily armed. Each team had a 20th Special Operations Squadron Pave Low helicopter which provided GPS navigation, additional Electronic Countermeasure (ECM) and rescue capability. This small but deadly force, commanded by Army Lieutenant Colonel Richard Cody, was code named TASK FORCE NORMANDY in honor of the “Screaming Eagles’” spearhead operations nearly a half century earlier behind the French beaches. At 0215, the two teams of TASK FORCE NORMANDY crossed the border. Their objectives were two Early Warning RADAR facilities in Western Iraq. The Apaches of the 1st Battalion, 101st Aviation Regiment raced across the border, acquired their targets, locked on with their lasers and advanced on the objectives 'low and slow'. All of the lights in both facilities were on, suggesting that the Apaches' approach had not been detected. When the Apaches came within range they ripple-launched their Hellfire missiles. At exactly 0238, the first missile struck its target “like a thunderbolt from the skies.” Several missiles knocked out the facilities' electric power generators. The Apaches (firing twenty-seven Hellfire missiles) destroyed radar antennas, operations centers, generators, and barracks. All of the missiles hit their targets. When the Apaches ran out of Hellfire missiles, they raked the area with rockets and thousands of rounds of 30-mm cannon fire. Both facilities were disabled within thirty seconds and completely destroyed in less than four minutes! Eight U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagles streaked into Iraq behind TASK FORCE NORMANDY and destroyed the local air defense command and control center. These three attacks created a twenty-mile wide blackened radar corridor for our attack planes to enter Iraq. Within minutes, F-117s from the 415th Tactical Fighter Squadron bombed a radar control center one hundred sixty miles southwest of Baghdad, a radar facility in western Iraq, and an air defense site outside Baghdad extending the corridor deeper into Iraq. Swarms of waiting attack aircraft then swept north through the corridor and fanned out toward their targets. EF-111 Ravens, EA-6B Prowlers, and EC-130 Compass Call Aircraft led the charge through the night sky. These electronic marvels of the night bombarded Iraq's surveillance and communications equipment with billions of electrons. The Compass Call aircraft attacked the communications airwaves, disrupting military radio traffic. The Ravens and Prowlers targeted surveillance and air defense radars. F-14 Tomcats and F-15C Eagles raced into Iraq to their assigned Combat Air Patrol (CAP) areas. Their mission was to fly cover for the Allied planes and engage any approaching Iraqi aircraft. Air Force Captain Steve Tate approached Baghdad in his F-15C, along with his four wingmen just before 0300. Their assigned CAP area was over Baghdad and extending sixty miles to the east of the city. Captain Tate had a bird's eye view for the opening moments of the war. "Baghdad was a really pretty city that night. As we started flying over the populous areas,... F-117s started dropping their bombs and then we started getting concussions all over the entire country. You could see it. At that point then, the sky started lighting up with AAA (Anti-Aircraft Artillery)... It looked like little sparkles going off all over... I figured we had some kind of cosmic weapon system out there just sprinkling all over the city... Then I started looking a little closer and I said, man-that's triple-A that they're shooting." Shortly after 0300, Captain Tate was alerted to the approach of an Iraqi fighter by an AWACS controller. He maneuvered his plane into attack position. At 0315 he shot down an Iraqi F1 Mirage with a single radar-guided Sparrow missile. This was the first air-to-air kill of the war and one of nine Iraqi aircraft to be shot down on the first night. Prior to the Gulf War, Baghdad was considered to have had one of the most formidable air defense systems on Earth. The Iraqi air defenses over Baghdad were poised for an American attack. Russian ZSU23-4 radar-guided Anti-Aircraft-Artillery “AAA” guns were trained at altitudes below nine thousand feet. Between nine and twenty thousand feet, 57-mm and 85-mm flak could blanket the city with deadly, red-orange fireballs. Surface-to-air missiles “SAMs” were deployed to strike aircraft at higher altitudes. An integrated Air Defense System containing an interconnected, nationwide network of RADARs and C
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