Sentences with phrase «then research blogs»

Not exact matches

As I have researched what was best for my family, I then passed that information along via my blog for anyone who was looking for it.
Then on Sunday, editors at China's foremost science Web site and blog, ScienceNet.cn, began collecting signatures from readers opposed to cigarette research's consideration for a science award.
Check out Davis» winning entry on our blog, then listen to Davis address misconceptions about math research, and the shape of our universe.
After reading this, I then began perusing blogs and uncovered some research that detailed the first step in healing Lyme patients was addressing possible EMF sensitivity.
Then I discovered a program called Nutritional Balancing (upon which I based Myers Detox Protocol) researching a blog.
Loved seeing all of your pictures and that your blog is about long distance love on so many levels... right now my fiance and I are apart while he is in Peru for research and then while he is in Austin, TX for grad school and I am in Los Angeles, CA... but it really can be done and I think it has made us stronger!
Do your research: if you can find it on someone else's blog, and they are in the same niche as you (fashion / style), then you probably shouldn't post it.
I go to Vogue Runway for specific fashion illustration research — I'll look for themes, colors, patterns, and cuts that seem to be trending across current season collections, and then incorporate those elements into my illustrations and blog posts.
For instance, students might use digital resources to conduct research and prepare for in - person conversations, then follow up on these dialogues with a class blog where they offer clarifications, share their writing, and develop seminar questions for the next convening.
Since then, in newspapers and in blogs, she has critiqued groundbreaking research revealing the high attrition rates at KIPP charter schools, a finding that was later confirmed in academic studies.
Hence, my repeated critiques of research studies on this blog, that are sometimes not even internally vetted or reviewed before being released to the public, and then the media, and then the masses as «truth.»
Then I came across a blog post from Craig Kemp called «Questioning The Most Powerful Tool in the Classroom — an action research.
I researched and decided to go with Smashwords, first, with a pre-order period (several posts about Pre-orders are on my blog, http://www.sallyember.com), then publish to Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing (KDP) when my first ebook went live.
They spend hours online, studying what is selling versus what is not, they join groups and blogs and take classes to learn more, they research their topic, and then they spend hour upon hour writing.
If you're starting your research, and you really don't know which sites to approach, then simply ask your email subscribers, or your Facebook fans what blogs and websites they read.
My latest idea: (1) query agents because I already wasted all of that time on those days I had writer's block researching agents & writing a synopsis, query letter, book proposal THEN (2) if I don't get any takers at trad - pub within a reasonable period, I self - pub because I already wasted all of that time on those days I had writer's block researching book bloggers & reviewers, building two websites, making or editing videos & writing tweets, Facebook posts, blogs.
-- Formatting HTML newsletters — Formatting books for Smashwords — Research about the business side of being an author (e.g., how Street Teams work, how to market a book in a foreign language, podcasts that might be a good fit to have you as a guest, etc.)-- Scouting for bloggers to send book review requests to — Pitching to those bloggers and tracking responses — Formatting (and perhaps light editing) of blog posts, or organizing content — Managing your Street Team Facebook group (posing questions to keep the group engaged, answering questions, sharing upcoming news, etc.)-- Creating box sets in Scrivener from individual novels — Moving works translated into a foreign language from Word into Scrivener — Scheduling tweets and Facebook posts (ones that don't require your direct input or engagement with your audience)-- Transcribing audio interviews or notes — For non-fiction authors, VAs can do an enormous number of tasks around webinars or other training you offer (e.g., planning and booking the event, scheduling guests, managing registration lists, dealing with the back - end technology, creating and proofing slide decks, sending out advance information packages to the trainees, and then sending out follow - up information to the trainees, etc..)
Her blog, much like other knee - jerk reactions to the announcement, fails to point out that the discount Amazon was offering FOR ONE DAY if you used the app and then bought the item you price - checked from Amazon did not apply to books (okay, I'll admit here, I'm going on memory and on what I found on various fora trying to research the point this morning).
NOTE: If your stance is that copyright is evil and «all information wants to be free» and that people shouldn't get paid for creating music or writing a book or researching a newspaper article (but that you should get paid for fixing people's computers or writing car dealership advertisements or whatever you do for a living), then I don't think we'll see eye to eye and you may as well move on to another blog.
But since then I have sinned regularly on the blogs and written phrases such as «BlackBerry's CEO, Thorsten Heins» instead of «Research In Motion's CEO, Thorsten Heins.»
You can take the time to research book reviewer websites and blogs to see if they review your genre, what their backlog is (typically 3 - 4 months out), create a spreadsheet and then send out your emails and wait.
I'll also be using this book to relentlessly test out some various book marketing sites and methods, such as press releases, guest posts, advertising venues, etc; then I'll update it (and this blog) with a ton of data, facts and research.
Then I read a blog post about writing serial fiction and it intrigued me enough to do a little more research on it.
Then I do some research, get inspired by social media channels like Instagram or Pinterest or blogs and realize: I may have seen a bit of the world, but there are tooooons of great places that I have not been to.
I've been personally collecting travel links on my site for the past 14 or so years since I started that part of my site and have amassed over 21,000 so far — but by far the most work I've put in on that is researching, visiting sites and then hand curating over 3,000 http://www.domainname.com, in English personal travel blogs — all of which were hand entered and approved — over the past 8 years since travel blogging took off.
I love documenting my itinerary when I travel and then sharing them on this blog, to hopefully help those who are researching or planning their travels to the destinations that I have explored.
If you're on TAA's mailing list, then you've seen this blog post on how to research your online art market.
@Michael Lowe, When RC, Romm, etc. actually engage in something like this blog, when science journals are no longer suppressing papers for AGW political reasons, when «the team» is no longer seeking to control the discussion, when government funding for research is not being used to politicize research, and when transparency returns to cliamte science, then we can say climate science is healthy.
You come on this forum and continue to make unsubstantiated claims for everybody but yourself and then you expect «ME» to do your research for you, because the only thing you are capable of finding are blog articles that support your worldview.
Then, about half way down the social media rabbit hole I was following as part of my «blog research», I came across this interview (thanks @karenskinner) with Alex Novarese, editor - in - Chief of Legal Business, discussing the future of the legal industry in the UK.
Most recently, LexBlog launched an integration with the legal research platform Fastcase, enabling a user, while writing a blog post, to search for a case from within WordPress and then add a citation or hyperlink to the case to the blog post.
We research public assistance programs for those with disabilities that may be of help to you in your specific location and then post the public assistance programs on our blog.
If you have spent at least 10 minutes reading my blog, then you know that I enjoy discussing free websites for legal research.
I worked there as the head of algorithms research, and then I learned about Bitcoin from a blog post on lesswrong.com, which is a blog about rationality, and they mentioned that the Singularity Institute [now the Machine Intelligence Research Insitute] started accepting Bitcoin donations, so that's how I first learned about it, and then of course I started looking into what it is research, and then I learned about Bitcoin from a blog post on lesswrong.com, which is a blog about rationality, and they mentioned that the Singularity Institute [now the Machine Intelligence Research Insitute] started accepting Bitcoin donations, so that's how I first learned about it, and then of course I started looking into what it is Research Insitute] started accepting Bitcoin donations, so that's how I first learned about it, and then of course I started looking into what it is exactly.
After research, I then looked at how I could apply my skills in the field and later joined the DASH community and started the first DASH commercial blog
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