Let's be frank here —
of all my posts about the downsides of the flexible loyalty currency programs, this one is the shortest.
The NVR Guys — commenting right above you on this very post — are just back from there and did a series
of posts about it.
Personally I'm loving
all of your posts about Peru.
Stay tuned for a couple
of posts about this area.
It was because
of her posts about Nose Work quite a while ago that Mom started looking into the sport for us.
With tons
of posts about finance, you'll find what you're looking for!
There are tons
of posts about making money.
In my series
of posts about dividend investing last January, I expressed some skepticism about the devotion to dividend growth strategies.
I think I read in one
of your posts about how the TD e-series funds could not accomodate the CESG, and that that money had to be invested in a TD mutual fund.
Image courtesy of Pixabay.com Back in 2014 and into 2015, I posted a multi-part series
of posts about the history of marriage in the tax code.
I concur with many
of the posts about the substantial problems with Nelnet servicing student loans and parent plus loans.
The blog also has a lot
of posts about self - employment.
Last summer I wrote a series
of posts about the Permanent Portfolio, another strategy that promises to protect investors from large drawdowns.
I get a lot of questions about rebalancing, so I felt it was time to put together a series
of posts about the idea.
For those of you who have downloaded the blog's free app to read the blog posts on your Fire Tablet or Android - enabled smartphone (i.e., Samsung, Motorola) or tablet computer, I appreciate it: it's an easy way to receive instant notifications
of posts about free Kindle Books.
So this is the first of a series
of posts about that.
Courtney Milan (a client of Kristin Nelson) has a great series
of posts about that agent / publisher conflict of interest and why, if agents do too much for clients, they are publishers, whether they use that term or not.
This is the next in a series
of posts about self - publishing from Digital Publishing News.
I've written a number
of posts about this, as have my fellow MGCers.
There are any number
of posts about that, not only here on MGC but elsewhere.
This post is part of a series
of posts about self - publishing.
I wrote a series
of posts about the e-reader lending program we started at my 5th and 6th grade school last year.
Anyway, I guess what I'm trying to say with this is that there is a small group of authors and editors out there who are pounding their chests in social outrage over what happened years ago (see
some of the posts about the 1930 - something letter from Walt Disney denying employment to a woman because there are no female animators in the studio at that time) as well as what two gentlemen had to say about events that happened thirty or more years ago all in an attempt to prove they are still relevant.
Despite the frenzy
of posts about the Harry Potter ebook / Pottermore store launch, about which I posted earlier this week (with plenty of links to other blogs), bloggers have found time to write about one or two other trends and issues in the field of books and ebooks.
Update (3/28/2012): There has been a flood
of posts about the Harry Potter ebooks, how the purchasing process works, and the watermark - vs.
A while back I did a series
of posts about how to read ebooks.
This is the sixth installment in my series
of posts about ebook creation.
Porter Anderson gives a pretty good overview with an aggregation
of posts about the issue, and Nathan Bransford offers a short post on what might be more of an alternative perspective ---LSB-...]
Lot's
of posts about the acquisition online, but I found it interesting that BlackBerry has acquired Good Technology.
The Book Designer — Joel Friedlander's blog contains hundreds
of posts about every aspect of writing and publishing books.
For example, if you're writing about 1940's gangsters, then your social media posts should consist
of posts about 1970's fashion.
There's been much teeth - gnashing in the indie community in the last month with lots
of posts about quitting, about income dropping with Kindle Unlimited and the new EU Tax Law, about this or that changing.
And, in the Book Design category of our BLOG, you'll find lots
of posts about both cover design and page design.
I write a lot of books, and I also write a lot
of posts about Kindle Scout, Indie Authors, and more.
Getting To Know You: Character Interviews: I compiled my series
of posts about conducting character interviews into one handy, dandy downloadable file.
After
all of these posts about how to self - publish, the process to go through, and how difficult it can be (emotionally as well as technically)-- should you bother?
Since we're currently in the middle of a series
of posts about Guy Kawasaki (the proclaimed «evangelist of Apple), it's not too far removed to take a small intermission today to mention the «Cyber Monday» special we are offering at Outskirts Press on one of our Apple options.
There are a ton
of posts about this on Quick Sprout.
As I've mentioned on previous posts, this series
of posts about how to read ebooks and what ereader you might want to get focuses on what reading devices I've had personal experience with: the nook and the iPhone.
Blogging about the sale of the company to Pearson / Penguin, she writes, «Despite ASI's claims about customer satisfaction, the comments threads
of my posts about ASI's acquisition of Xlibris, Trafford, etc.... are replete with complaints from unhappy authors, and I receive many more via email.»
I also want to finish or at least update my series
of posts about self - publishing and how I've gone about doing that, and about various ereader devices with which I am now familiar.
Here's part 3 of my little series
of posts about ebooks and ereaders!
I'm pretty sure I said this on most
of my posts about creating Misty.
If you would like to learn more about the 2017 Kia Niro, be sure to check out the rest of our blog, where you can find a number
of posts about the hybrid SUV.
This is the first in a series
of posts about some of the applicants for these publicly funded charter schools.
readers may recall the series
of posts about Comer, Malloy and his inappropriate decision to put the charter school executive on the State Board of Education.
I've been working on a series
of posts about what we did in class and what the students and I learned from the experience.
readers may recall the series
of posts about how Malloy's Commissioner of Education, Stefan Pryor, brought in Leeds Global Partners and the other corporate education reform consultants though no - bid contracts to help him write and push through Malloy's «education reform» legislation.
Each of her posts about assessment, grading, and feedback highlight previous methods she's used and how they do and don't work.
As readers may recall, I'm in the middle of a series
of posts about ways we can improve our schools beyond changing public policy.