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With the current rate of technological advancement, there is a tendency to buy BT’s vision that portrays the office of the future as your home. But is it real that the formal office is becoming extinct, and the home office is taking its place? There is the debate that mobile internet now gives businesses the freedom to be run from wherever the employee finds most convenient; be it on the beach, in the house, or at a holiday resort. Technology now allows you to have instant access to your data via VPN etc. Non-geographic numbers could even be used to get you connected to your formal workplace.
The arguments are quite compelling, bringing to the table, the idea of once and for all, getting rid of that dreaded “daily commute”. No more sitting in traffic for hours, time that is unproductive for both the employer and the employee. With the mobile office, the employee is in charge of his time, and office workload, and family commitments can be well coordinated. Another plus is that we can say “good riddance” to office politics.
However, BT’s vision does not hold true for all regions. Take
Gaming laptops used to only be brought from niche companies. For the retailers they were massively profitable regardless of them not selling in great numbers. They were the type of notebook that everyone wanted, however the price did not fall in their price range. They were basically desktop computer rivals and the most powerful, best laptop you could obtain. I would get really excited by them however I knew I could not go out and buy laptop computers at the price points they were selling for. Sales will improve though now that bigger brands are coming into the sector.
Price wars are not typical is this sector so international brands would be scooping tons of margin. Profits have been so low as of late that this is a fantastic opportunity to make more money by selling computers. In my view established manufacturers can employ leverage to get prospects to buy laptop computers despite the price. What would little retailers possibly do if they are priced out of the sector? In my view the global manufacturers will control the market trends. Big manufacturers can use their brand names to simply win consumers over.
The excitement being generated regarding the new branded gaming notebook computers is making people perceive them to be the best laptop computers in history. I guess that small companies may still have a chance. Now and again the littler system builders will provide the latest components quicker and hence provide better specs as well. This type of customer is usually well versed in the technology and is able to contrast the specs. More often than not the specs hold more importance than the style for these types of purchasers.
For the customer, this holds a lot of benefits. When it comes down to it the price will drop further and more game players will be able to afford such advanced technology. Things move so rapidly in this industry that I cannot exactly produce any assured statements. Mobile technology is always advancing and the new products should normally be high priced when it just comes out. Increased competition typically creates improved technology at cheaper prices so the future will be promising.
You’ve just created an mp3 audio album that you want to make CD copies of, or maybe you have a collection of home video clips you’d like to burn to DVD and pass out to your friends. As far as you know home CD album duplication and DVD duplication require just a couple of things; a computer with a burner, CD-Rs and/or DVD-Rs, and the proper software. I have all that, so why can’t I just go ahead with my home CD/DVD duplication project? Here are a couple factors to take into consideration before you jump into your disc duplication project.
1. Speed/Volume
With your home set-up, you can burn CDs and DVDs one at a time, and you have to reload the burner manually. This is fine if your disc duplication project only consists of 1-10 pieces. (CDs or DVDs) Considering that burning one disc at 24x speed takes between 3-5 minutes, to burn a large amount of discs, you’re going to have to have a lot of time set-aside. Professional disc duplication facilities use multi-drive, auto-loading machines that can burn up to 8 discs simultaneously. This cuts down on the total cost of your CD or DVD replication package, and saves you the headache.
2. Quality
In addition to a certified maximum burn speed, CD-Rs and DVD-Rs all have physical parameters and properties that must be taken into account. To get the absolute best quality out of your CD album duplication or DVD disc replication project, you must follow certain guidelines. The guidelines are explained in the “Red Book” of audio, one of a set of color-bound books that contain the technical specifications for all CD and CD-ROM formats. Most professional CD / DVD duplication / replication houses follow these guidelines, and will produce better quality discs more often than not.
By all means, this article should not stop you from duplicating your CDs and DVDs at home. This is just here to educate you a little bit more about what the big guys are doing, and why it costs a tad bit more to get your discs duplicated by them.
Jason Cole and www.DiskFaktory.com offer great tips and information regarding CD DVD Duplication, in addition to providing excellent CD and DVD duplication services. Get the information you are seeking now by visiting www.diskfaktory.com/tips/CD-duplication-tutorials.asp
The November issue of The Manufacturer reviewed Bolt-on
Solutions. It noted, some boutique ERP providers cautiously
embrace the bolt-on model. “Our software supports engineering
intensive companies,” says Chuck Stewart, founder and executive
vice president of Cincinnati, OH-based Encompix, an ERP provider
for companies in the engineer to order, make to order, and
project management industries. “Sometimes there is functionality
that is needed where it makes sense to use a bolt-on
application. We don’t want to reinvent.” Stewart uses the
example of project management software as a realistic bolt-on
application. “Microsoft Project is an industry standard and
most, if not all, of our customers use it. It behooves us to
make sure that it integrates easily into our ERP system.” It is
an application that Stewart has no desire to reinvent.
Stewart advocates an open relationship with third party software
providers so he can keep his service levels high and provide
support to his installed base. “I’m happy to see an improving
relationship with software providers that allow us to identify
integrations issues and advise the customer,” says Stewart.
“Customers grow weary of tight integration processes and the
trouble they cause, both in cost and time, is unacceptable.” He
also sees an evolving open standard developing across the
industry that is helping ERP companies and third party providers
alike. “The architecture is changing and integration is becoming
easier,” says Stewart. “We are much more in the loop when it
comes to upgrades and changes in software, including being
invited to conferences and having access to design teams when
necessary.”
Encompix has filled the manufacturing software requirements of
Engineer-to-Order companies since 1992. The company name
reflects the commitment to developing business application
solutions that encompass the complex areas of project-based and
job-based manufacturing.
Encompix www.encompix.com Roger Meloy 513-733-0066
# # #
Click here for the Video version of this article:
http://www.see-it-on-video.com/stvc.html
There is a little item which is treated with scorn by many marketing
“gurus,” yet which has proven to be popular with the “masses” year
after year, after year.
Why is there still a craze for screensavers? I mean, let’s get real
here. This is something we first became acquainted with waaay back
in the day, when the Internet was commonly referred to as the World
Wide Web. Screensaver is old school, right?
Wrongo!
The amazing thing is, despite the death knell being tolled by sages,
screensavers continue to enjoy unprecedented popularity.
Don’t believe me?
I dare you to type in the word “screensaver” into Google, and take a
look at the bewildering number of websites that offer them.
Go ahead, write to a few of those site owners and ask how popular
those little programs are. They’ll tell you that they’re one of the most
downloaded items on the ‘net.
Need further proof?
Stroll through the screensaver section of cnet/download.com and
observe the phenomenon up close and personal.
The great thing about download.com is that at a glance you can
determine what date the saver was first listed, how many downloads
it has enjoyed, and very importantly, what users thing of it.
Inside download.com you can quite easily see that many savers are
free, while the majority sell for between $14.95. and $19.95.
Speaking of CNET, according to their research, screensavers are the
second most downloaded software application on the Internet.
Yahoo reports the word “screensaver” has appeared in their “Top 100
Searches” list every week since 1995. The term “screensaver” is
searched for an average of 34,357 times a day according to
statistics provided by WordTracker.
So, we’ve established that there is a genuine craze for these
desktop ornaments. But do all these people make money with them?
I mean, it seems more often than not, screensavers that are being
offered at all the hundreds of download sites are…free.
Didn’t your mother tell you that there is no such thing as “free” in
this world? You should listen to her. She is absolutely correct.
Well then, how can people make money who are giving away
screensavers for free?
In order to answer your question, I’ll unfortunately have to use a
dirty word. It’s a word that brings a shudder of revulsion to
Internet users far and wide. That almost obscene word is, ugh…
Spyware.
That’s right, spyware! Spyware is the number one reason today why
many screensaver authors try to inveigle you into freely downloading
their software.
You see, these unethical marketers make deals to hide advertising
and such into their programs. Unknowingly after you have downloaded
that attractive looking screensaver, the spyware embeds itself into
your computer system.
Once there, they call home to the “mother ship” with explicit
details on your surfing habits, your buying habits, plus other
personal details.
My advice…stay away from free screensavers. Now don’t get me wrong
- of course there are still a good number of saver authors who will
not lower themselves to such unethical practices, but as a general
rule, you should look at free offers with a jaundiced eye.
Legitimate screensaver authors offer a free download of their
screensavers either as shareware, or freeware which is limited in
some way. In the software industry this is known as “cripple-ware.”
After getting a taste of the free limited version, hopefully you’ll
be willing to pay a reasonable sum for the “Pro” version which has
lots more features.
Sharware as you know, enables you to try out the screensaver for a
specific length of time before it expires. This is try-before-you-
buy marketing.
In the Screensaver Thousandaire Video Course I teach my students how
it is possible to create an excellent income by selling screensavers
to specific markets…niche marketing, if you will.
Since we have established that screensavers are popular, then it
makes absolute sense that individuals with a particular passion
would find attractive a screensaver which features their passion.
In other words, we are often told by marketing gurus to first find a
need and then fill it. First identify the niche market, and then
sell to it.
Let’s use one of my screensaver projects as an example.
I happen to be a vegetarian. This means that I’m one of those growing
number of weirdos who refuses to eat anything with a face…or who
ever had a mother
So no meat, and no dairy for Uncle Brent.
Well, the most natural thing in world is for me to not only try and
connect with other vegetarians on the ‘net, but also to try and find info
which feeds (sorry about the pun), my passion.
How do you think I’ll react if someone offered me a screensaver of
vegetarian recipes?
Especially if those recipes feature beautiful color photos that show
step-by-step how to prepare healthy meals, or better yet, teach
me through a series of UPDATEABLE content?
Don’t you think I’ll grab it if the price is reasonable? Of course I
will! That by the way was how I created one of my screensaver
products.
See what I mean? Provide a product which directly appeals to a
specific audience and you will immediately tap into immediate
income.
Updateable content? Yes Virginia, it is now possible for you to
place fresh content onto your customers screensaver using a certain
secret device.
You’ll do so without the customer even being aware of it. He’ll wake
up one morning to new images, music, and Flash videos in his saver.
He’ll love you for that. No more boring, stale screensavers!
How many of those can you sell all day long?
In conclusion, there is an awful lot of money in marketing
screensavers. There does not seem to be any waning of the demand.
I sell screensavers because there is a huge demand for them. I
encourage you to first find a niche, and then create a saver based
on the specific demands of that specific market.
Here’s a cool little flash presentation of this article:
http://www.see-it-on-video.com/stvc.html
God loves you.
Brent Whinfield
brent@see-it-on-video.com
**********************************************************
The Screensaver Thousandaire Video Course “Ten Eye-Candy Videos That
Propel You Into Cash…Within 36 Hours!
http://www.see-it-on-video.com/thousandaire.html
The Screensaver Thousandaire Video Course consists of Ten Videos
which point you among other things, to a certain place on the ‘net
where you’ll find hundreds of niche groups waiting for your
products.
The course also shows you how to create savers in a matter of
minutes, even if you’re a techno-klutz like me.
**********************************************************
Brent Whinfield is a Success Coach who helps individuals earn money on the Internet. On the ‘net
since 1999, Brent has a wealth of experience which he willing shares. The Brent Whinfield Video
Letter highlights profit-producing ideas. http://www.see-it-on-video.com/bwvl.html
We talked to North America’s leading In Situ Leach (ISL) uranium mining engineers, and had them explain exactly how ISL worked. Most of the significant ISL operations in the United States were designed and/or constructed by these engineers. They explained how ISL mining is really just reversing the process of Mother Nature.
CLEANING UP THE PROJECT
Not so fast. Shipping the uranium out of the ISL plant isn’t the final step. The water has to be cleaned up, the property returned to its original condition. If done properly, then the footprint of the ISL uranium operation should have been nearly erased. In an earlier article, “Wyoming Uranium: Now and the Future,” we talked to Pat Drummond at Smith Ranch about this process:
The company is meticulous in restoring the landscape as well. Any restoration work on the surface is called “reclamation.” That can involve farming. “When we start a well field, we have to, by license, remove the topsoil and store it somewhere,” Drummond explained. “When we go back to reclaim the property, we take all the pipes out, we take the houses down, and cut our wells off. It’s all identified. We put an ID marker on the well. In 50 years time, when Farmer Joe comes around and wonders what was there, the state can say, ‘That was a uranium well.’ From the time we’ve stopped mining, we put everything back to normal.”
The one item we did not address at the time was cleaning up the water after the orebody has been mined out. Why is restoring the water back to background important? “In the mining process, you’re basically elevating sulfate,” explained Anthony. “You’re also elevating calcium because you’re lowering the pH a little bit, down to 6.5 to 7. Because you run it across the ion exchange circuits, you get a little leakage of chlorides into the lixiviant.” Subsequently, the water will have sulfate, chloride, calcium and bicarbonate circulating within it. “When you add carbon dioxide, you’re forming bicarbonate,” Anthony noted. “These are the major ion groups you are elevating during the mining process.” He also added that in some projects, you may get arsenic, vanadium and/or selenium. “They all go into the solution so that at the end of your mining process, these ions will be elevated above their baseline values.” The water will need to undergo a purification process to return them back to a quality consistent with baseline values.”
What does the ISL operator do with the water once the facility has mined out the uranium? There are three options, which we discussed with Glenn Catchpole, who has also set up previous ISL operations. In 1996, Catchpole was the General Manager and Managing Director of the Inkai uranium solution mining project in Kazakhstan. He is currently the Chief Executive of Uranerz Energy. “Here’s my order of priority: If you have a receiver formation for deep disposal on your project, that’s my first choice.” Sometimes, a project may not have access to a deep disposal aquifer, warned Catchpole.
The water is sent down the receiver formation, down about 4000 feet. “You’re usually sending this water to a formation that is very briny, a poorer quality than what you’re sending down,” Anthony pointed out. Another option, according to Catchpole, would be operations ponds, or evaporating ponds, where the water is evaporated. A third option is “land applied.” Catchpole explained this was for land application. “You take your waste stream, you treat it to remove the certain level of impurities, according to the government requirement, and then you’re allowed to disperse it on the land surface, as if you were irrigating.” When applied to the land, it is soaking into the land. “It’s growing grass, and it’s going into the groundwater system,” concluded Catchpole, “Whatever water quality standard they allow for you to put that water in the land, they want to ensure it doesn’t accumulate some particular chemical over time that is going to build up and contaminate the land.”
Generally, during the restoration process, the water is circulated through the barren orebody about eight times. It’s another instance of pore volumes - eight more times through the sandstone formation. Anthony explained, “Normally, the first pore volume is evacuated and disposed of via a disposal well.” But he warned, “This will cause an inflow of surrounding native water back into the mine zone. The resulting water is pumped to the surface and processed through a reverse osmosis unit.” Anthony compared this to the desalination of seawater. “The reverse osmosis equipment acts like an ‘ion filter,’ allowing pure water to pass through a membrane and filtering out ions of sulfate, calcium, uranium, bicarbonate and so forth,” Anthony explained.
Two streams of water are produced by the reverse osmosis unit. One stream is called “product water,” and is normally consistent with drinking water quality. The smaller stream of water is called “brine.” It contains, according to Anthony, “95 percent of all the dissolved ions that were in solution.” He said, “The brine is disposed down a deep well into an underground formation, which is typically not suitable for any use.”
CONCLUSION
For all the lip service and media attention paid to the environmental movement in terms of financial support, recognition and respect, it is the ISL miner who cares more about the environment, about preserving Mother Nature. Environmentalists remain ignorant of, or care not to publicize, the dangers of coal-fired electrical generation. Mining and burning coal to generate power for industry and residential electricity poses a greater threat to Mother Nature than ISL mining and nuclear power-generated electricity. No more evident a case in point is New Mexico, where the Navajo Nation “banned” uranium mining, because their president was misled by environmentalists in believing ISL uranium mining could pose a threat to groundwater. At the same time, the Navajo Nation enjoys over $100 million in coal royalties each year, as their air is polluted by carcinogens filling their air from coal mining in the San Juan Basin and coal-fired plants, which produce most of their electricity. It is time for the world’s environmentalist movements to wake up and smell the air they are breathing.
Unfortunately, ISL uranium mining will not replace conventional uranium mining in many deposits across the world. According to the World Nuclear Association, ISL mining accounted for 21 percent of worldwide uranium mining in 2004. “The overriding constraint of ISL is the technology is only applicable to selected uranium deposits,” Stover cautioned. “It’s those deposits wherein the uranium ore resides in a permeable environment, where you can flow water through the deposit and where you can bring the dissolved oxygen and carbon dioxide into contact with the uranium.” Stover explained that, during the evolution of ISL mining, a number of projects failed because the uranium was associated with organic material, was not accessible to the leaching solution, or the uranium was tied up in clays or shale-like material. “They were not able to flow fluid through it,” explained Stover. “The key issue at the onset is a careful characterization of the host environment in which the uranium exists.”
The key advantage to ISL is the far lower capital costs to start up a project, compared to the hundreds of millions required for a conventional mining and mill complex. For example, UR-Energy’s William Boberg and Uranerz Energy’s Glenn Catchpole both believe they can install an ISL operation on their Wyoming properties for as little as $10 million. Labor costs are also less. Doug Norris pointed out, “In its heyday, the Highland mine probably had 4,000 working in it.” By comparison, Cameco’s Smith-Highland ranch in Wyoming may soon ramp up to nearly 100 employees. “We’re talking about installing a centralized water treatment plant supported by a large number of water wells, typically completed with PVC,” Stover explained. “That’s in contrast with conventional mining, where you have extensive earth moving, in the case of an open pit or extensive underground workings, and a more complicated, much larger processing plant.”
In terms of environmental impact, ISL offers something sensible to the environmentalists. “ISL is much less intrusive, and it is short lived,” Stover said, echoing the sentiments of all who have been involved in this type of uranium mining. “It’s acceptance by the general public is much more favorable,” he concluded.
What does the future hold for ISL uranium mining in the United States? “Up until 2004, prices were flat,” Norris pointed out. “The economic picture has just now switched to where mines can start coming on again, but it does take years to properly define where the ore is. It takes a lot of geologic drilling and time to decipher it. Then there are the regulatory requirements, and that can take several years. Even if everybody reacted right now to what’s out there, it would still be several years, upwards of five years, before production jumped from its existing rate to 10 to 20 million pounds at the most.”
James Finch contributes to StockInterview.com and other publications. Get your free subscription and receive the latest articles by James Finch by visiting www.stockinterview.com. Write to James Finch at jfinch@stockinterview.com. More information about Harry Anthony is available at hanthony.com
A major problem with the running of a large corporation or PLC, is the increasing expense of staff training programmes. Training videos are exactly what the title says - videos made for the purpose of staff training.
When a company has a large and geographically diverse audience, it can be extremely expensive to either send experienced trainers to all of them, or pay for each individual to attend training courses. A training video can dramatically reduce these costs, and make the training information immediately available to all members of staff.
Training video production can be presented in many ways - from a series of specifically filmed programmes, to the filming of training seminars and important presentations that have taken place at these events and conferences, which can then be edited into video form so that the benefits of these seminars are massively increased.
Once they have been filmed, training videos can either be delivered on CD-ROM for computer based presentations, or VHS and DVD for television presentations. Training videos are often incorporated into part of an overall training programme depending on the needs of the company.
Training videos are very often used for induction purposes for new staff and most people will see at least one of them in their working life. However they can also be used for a multitude of other applications. For example, if a new piece of technology is introduced into your company, then a training video is the ideal way to get the information on how to use it across your entire workforce as quickly as the technology needs to be incorporated. It could take weeks to train the staff in individual or group sessions, so costs can be saved on both training, and time. Training videos can also be used to train staff on new policies, health and safety issues, customer service standards, or simply the latest sales features on a new product. When you have to train a wide and geographically diverse audience, training videos can be the ideal means of getting the information through your company in the fastest and most cost effective way.
Every company must offer their employees training from the initial training at orientation to ongoing development. “The way you train your new employees is important in not only enabling them to do a good job, but also with their retention. Recent studies have shown that when a new hire is adequately trained in the beginning, they feel more confident in their job and therefore will stay with you longer.” - Peggy Morrow, ‘Training for Success’.
Video has long been recognized as a valuable teaching medium because it can effectively convey to students an instructor’s visual clues, for example, gestures, posture and facial expressions that aid communication and comprehension. Decades of research show body language is the single most important element in verbal communication. MediaPoint Technology Boosts Streaming Video as Training Tool. In good times as well as bad, one of the biggest hidden expenses for many businesses is the cost of bringing new workers up to speed or training existing employees for new job duties.
A detailed training video is one of the most direct routes to lower employee training costs. Not to confuse an ‘occupational procedures video’ with a job description is another valuable tool for any organization. Job descriptions outline the duties to be performed by employees. A training video demonstrates exactly how to do those jobs.
Such a video can be extremely useful in recruiting and interviewing job applicants. But more importantly, it can streamline employee training and all new people to become more productive more quickly. The out-of-pocket payroll savings alone can be substantial. Suppose it takes eight weeks to bring a new employee up to speed in a particular job, and the person’s supervisor must devote 25% of his or her time to training during that break-in period. A good training video should reduce the necessary training time by at least 20%.
Aside from these training cost savings, there are other reasons to develop procedures videos for your organization. Indeed, the very process of preparing such a video will provide invaluable insight into the operations of your business.
About the Author
I-MOTUS is one of the UK’s leading corporate and training video production companies. Our team uniquely combines proven business savvy with some of the television industry’s brightest creative talent to provide a fresh approach to the most challenging of marketing and communication briefs. http://www.i-motus.com/?referrer=IM02GO
Author and editor of over 20 books, and has published over 181
scientific papers. Co-author of The Developing Human (5th
Edition, with Keith L. Moore). He received the J.C.B. Grant
Award in 1991. Professor Peraud presented several research
papers.
“It seems to me that Muhammad was a very ordinary man, he
couldn’t read, didn’t know how to write, in fact he was an
illiterate…
We’re talking about 1400 years ago, you have some illiterate
person making profound statements that are amazingly accurate,
of a scientific nature…
I personally can’t see how this could be mere chance, there are
too many accuracies and like Dr. Moore, I have no difficulty in
my mind reconciling that this is a divine inspiration or
revelation which lead him to these statements.”
Cheap, portable DVD players are portable DVD players that are at the lower end of the pricing scale. They are typically priced in the $100 to $200 range, with most being priced closer to the lower limit of the price range. With a few exceptions, most of the players in this segment of the portable DVD player market are not the big names in the industry. Low-priced models from Coby, Mustek, Astar, CyberHome, and Audiovox dominate the cheap portable DVD players’ segment.
Portable DVD players are DVD players that enable you to watch movies whenever and wherever you like. They allow you to watch a movie “on the go.” DVD players are devices that play digital video discs (DVDs), an optical disc storage media that stores data, including movies. Since these days DVDs are primarily used to store movies - given the large storage capacity that these discs possess - they have come to be synonymous with movie discs. The discs are normally twelve centimeters in diameter, although a few also come with an eight-centimeter diameter.
Even though they are priced lower, cheap portable DVD players have features that are comparable to the high-priced premium models. Most of them have a seven-inch or eight-inch liquid crystal display or LCD screen, which is attached to the player. There are also a few with a five-inch- or six-and-one-half-inch-wide screen. They are also light and compact. Most also play almost all of the media formats and support all the television systems. However, since one gets what one pays for, there are various other features of the premium models that cheap portable DVD players do not necessarily carry. But, for the price, cheap portable DVD players are a good option for the mobile traveler who is interested in getting the basic yet important aspects of a movie experience.
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Portable DVD Players provides detailed information on Portable DVD Players, Cheap Portable DVD Players, Portable DVD Player Reviews, Compare Portable DVD Players and more. Portable DVD Players is affiliated with Headrest DVD Players. |
As an important part of your daily life, your cell phone should reflect your personality. At one time, the only way to personalize your phone was to get one in your favorite color. Today, great cellular accessories such as ringtones and wallpapers make it easy to create a phone that’s as unique as you are.
A ringtone is the sound your phone makes when there’s an incoming call. Custom ringtones are fun cellular accessories to personalize your phone and help identify your phone in a room full of cell phone users. Ringtones are available for purchase or as free downloads on a variety of websites. To download these cellular accessories, your phone must have internet access. Many cell phone providers have websites containing custom ringtones, but you can also type “cell phone ringtones” into any search engine to find sources for these cellular accessories. If your cellular phone supports SP-MIDI files, there are online tutorials that can teach you how to create your own ringtones. However, not all cell phones are capable of playing custom ringtones and some models will only play either polyphonic or monophonic ringtones. If you’re planning to use ringtones, make sure your phone is compatible with these cellular accessories.
Custom wallpapers are also great cellular accessories for people looking to personalize their phones. Cell phone wallpaper is just a smaller version of the desktop wallpapers for your home computer. Wallpapers can feature your favorite movies, actors, or music groups. Your wallpaper can be of a place you’d like to visit or of the car you’d like to own. You can even use your favorite photo to create your own wallpaper. To download these cellular accessories, your phone must have internet access. Like ringtones, wallpapers are available for purchase or as free downloads on many websites. You just need to type “cell phone wallpaper” into any search engine to find sources for these cellular accessories.
About the Author
Timothy Gorman is a successful webmaster and publisher of Cellular-Phone-Solutions.com. He provides cellular phone plans, service and free cellular phones on his website that you can research in your pajamas.