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Here are five rules so you look chic and modern...and not like a retiree in capris.
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Hello FRIENDS,
That’s exactly what I received when I turned in a document that could be found in nearly every household.The chances are that you have this document laying around and you don’t even know its true value. 37,000 people have already received nearly $252 million from it, and you could be the next one on that list.
But which document is it that you need to reap this massive reward?
Sincerely,
Jim Samson, Publisher of The Midas Legacy
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Customer Service Center 1220 Winter Garden Vineland Rd. #108 Winter Garden, Florida 34787 United States +1 (321) 221-1113
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While NASA was figuring out how to use rockets to reach the Moon, a super secret US government project was developing a gigantic reusable spaceship powered by atom bomb explosions that was designed to carry a crew of 20 to the outer Solar System by 1970. Read more
Scorkl enables you to breathe underwater for up to 10 minutes. It is small, lightweight and you can pump it up yourself, meaning it is a one-time-cost to be able to swim underwater for 10 minutes at a time, or hang a couple of Scorkls on your belt and go much longer. Read more
Researchers from NEC and the Tokyo Institute of Technology have used Artificial Intelligence to automatically combine visible and non-visible images, dramatically improving image clarity and visibility under severe conditions. Read more
To find out how coral-eating fish manage to make a meal out of something that stings other fish, researchers at James Cook University in Australia took a closer look at the extraordinary lips on a tubelip wrasse. Read more
Brooklyn-based instrument maker Landscape is bringing players closer to the action by essentially turning them into human patch cables. Instead of using a cable to patch between different modules on a rack, the AllFlesh jack is plugged in and the performer's touch bridges the gap. Read more
Commissioned to create a low maintenance summer house in Halkidiki, Greece, architect Eva Sopéoglou designed and built this tiny off-grid cabin. It can be opened up to the outside and is clad in perforated decorative metal sheeting that fills the interior with dappled sunlight. Read more
Plants are smarter than we give them credit for. Now, a team from the University of Birmingham has discovered a cluster of cells in seeds that act like a brain to decide when the plant should sprout, in a find that could help improve crop yields. Read more
Boat building is as much an art as a science – maybe more. So it's no surprise that Aeroboat chose the Saatchi Gallery in London to unveil its S6 yacht. Designed by British-based Claydon Reeves design studio and BMT Nigel Gee, the 65-ft (20-m) yacht boasts a number of luxury features. Read more
Fledgling electric vehicle maker Faraday Future will be running a Beta development FF 91 ("nine one") in the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb as the first in a series of public tests designed to help bring the production version of its all-electric SUV to market in 2018. Read more
A startup called Tech Will Save Us is trying to update the classic play dough modeling material by giving it an electronic twist, using conductive dough to teach kids how to create basic circuits with lights, sounds and movement. Read more
Over this twelve course bundle, you'll get a complete, comprehensive look at the Microsoft Office Suite, the most popular office software on the planet. Starting with this course, Excel for Beginners, you'll advance through all of the various programs of Microsoft Office, mastering each, so you can greatly improve your employment prospects going forward. Read more
Researchers have redesigned the pacemaker, developing a new prototype that is wireless, battery-free and can be implanted directly into a patient's heart. The design offers an innovative new type of pacemaker that promises less complications than current devices. Read more
A team of biomedical engineers at Duke University has developed a heat-sensitive biopolymer that could mean diabetics need as little as one injection a month to control their glucose levels. Read more
Habitability is one of the main things we look for in exoplanets, but those that are completely and utterly uninhabitable still have plenty to teach us. NASA has just found a planet that we’re going to crown Least Likely To Host Life: KELT-9b, a blistering gas giant that’s hotter than most stars. Read more
A new study from a team of oncologists at the University of London has found pairing cannabinoids with chemotherapy drugs can increase the tumor-killing effects of both. Read more
The big rigs of Overland Expo West are well documented, but sometimes what makes the most impact are the lighter, sleeker designs. One such design that grabbed our eye this year, the Leentu pickup truck camper is billed as the world's lightest, most aerodynamic pop-up camper shell. Read more
Scientists may soon have a new tool to work with, when it comes to determining the age of deceased children based on their remains. Researchers have found that the skull's frontal sinus undergoes distinct changes throughout childhood, and those changes can be matched up to approximate ages. Read more
Apple has been busy showing off all manner of software and hardware upgrades at its Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC), including a brand new 10.5-inch iPad Pro that brings with it faster performance, a more responsive screen, and an upgraded camera. Read more
Apple is framing its new smart speaker as a completely different product type, a hybrid of an Amazon Echo-like smart speaker and a Sonos-style home audio setup. It had better have some serious audio chops, as the Apple HomePod ships in December for a whopping US$349. Read more
The ability to control our gadgets with voice commands brings a lot of convenience, but it also brings something else: the opportunity for voice hacking. Researchers at the University of Buffalo, however, have figured out a way to use the compass in smartphones to prevent such a practice. Read more
Although ceramics are known for being able to withstand high temperatures, they also have a reputation for being brittle. That's not the case, however, with a spongey new material made from ceramic nanofibers. It could find use in high-temperature insulation or water filtration. Read more
Apple has announced hardware upgrades across its entire Mac line, including spec boosts for the iMac, the MacBook, and the MacBook Pro. The company also unveiled what it's calling its most powerful computer ever, a brand new iMac Pro. Read more
SpaceX's ISS resupply mission that launched on Saturday marked yet another milestone for the company: the first time a Dragon had been re-flown. NASA has this morning confirmed that the recycled spacecraft has arrived safely at its destination. Read more
NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has beamed back some stunning views of Saturn’s rings, taken on June 4, as the probe sped through the 1,500-mile (2,400-km) gap separating the gas giant’s uppermost cloud layers and innermost rings. Read more
Ultra High Definition projectors can offer an authentic cinema experience in the comfort of your home. They can also be expensive, which is where Optoma believes it can help. Its new UHD60 projector flies under the $2,000 dollar mark, with support for HDR, high contrast and onboard stereo sound. Read more
Coffee pods like those offered by Nespresso have a huge environmental footprint, with billions ending up in landfill each year. The company has taken steps to avoid some of the waste, however, including fashioning some of the recovered metals into a fully functional Swiss Army Knife. Read more
Police forces nabbed a Muslim man near Newman street in London while carrying several machetes in his backpack. Police apparently followed the man from the store where he purchased the machetes and detained him as he entered the neighborhood.
Less than a month ago, a man brandishing a meat cleaver threatened Jewish residents of the Stamford Hill neighborhood and attempted to break into a kosher food store. After employees of the store locked the door, the man entered a second kosher grocery store shouting “Where is the boss, I will kill him!” The man then chased after two Jewish boys, aged 14 and 8, shouting “You Jews run away from here before I kill you,” JTA reported.
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South Florida Sun Sentinel
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Hi ,
There are a few things that I would recommend the way that I would insist and recommend. One of them is the Lifebook process.
It has the power to create positive momentum in your life - right now.
Here are few quick notes on what you will experience when you go through this free masterclass:
- Learn how to craft a legendary life — get the secrets from the man who’s turned his life into a living masterpiece with a simple tool that incorporates everything he’s studied in personal growth over the past 25 years.
- Discover FIVE of Jon’s personal models of reality that helped him
1. Become a serial entrepreneur and start over 20 companies from scratch
2. And still…have enough time to spend 3 to 5 months every year in a paradise location away from work
3. Maintain an amazing relationship with his wife for more than 30 years
4. In his 50s, enjoy the same “ripped” body that he had in his 20s (he just doesn’t seem to age)
5. Create living environments so beautiful that his home gets featured on Oprah.
- Discard the brules (bulls**t rules) our Industrial Age education system has taught us about success and goal setting – and jump on a completely new paradigm of success which modern education has utterly failed to make clear to us.
- Jon will also take you through all 12 categories of Lifebook, one by one, and show you not only how to stretch your models of success in each of them but also how to tie them all together to create ONE singular, compelling vision for your life which will become your North Star, the guiding light to everything you will create from this day forward.
Love. Ajit
Ajit Nawalkha Co-Founder, Evercoach Follow on Facebook
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RESPECTED FRIENDS,
A historic ban on bee-killing pesticides is on the table -- but the pesticide lobby and its friends in politics are mobilizing heavily to stop it in its tracks. Right now, we urgently need EU governments to step up and publicly back the ban. But they won’t defy Big Pesticide unless they can count on massive public support for the ban from people like you. Can you help push governments to do the right thing and save the bees? Yes, I want EU governments to support the game-changing ban on bee-killing pesticides!
Thanks,
Wiebke
A Europe-wide ban on bee-killing neonics is in the works. But it depends on our governments now, and the agrochemical industry knows that too. Take a stand for the bees: call on EU governments to save the bees and support the ban.
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We’re closer than ever to a game-changing neonics ban that would help to keep Europe’s bees safe from these dangerous pesticides.Earlier this year, the European Commission issued a proposal to national governments that could determine the future of three neonics in Europe -- three widely used pesticides that are toxic to bees. The leaked proposal reveals that an almost complete ban could be in place as early as this year -- if approved by a majority of EU member states.All of us depend on the countless food crops bees pollinate. With bee colonies across the world collapsing, a neonics ban is huge news!But the pesticide lobby is already gearing up to stop the groundbreaking ban. That’s why we need a massive, people-powered push to make sure EU member states side with the bees -- and all of us -- over corporate giants like Bayer and Syngenta.Tell all European Governments to push for a historic ban on bee-killing pesticides.The EU proposal is a crucial follow up to the partial ban on the use of three widespread neonicotinoids on certain crops adopted in 2013. Four years later, it’s even harder to ignore the scientific consensus that neonics used on crops are harming the bees that pollinate them. And the European Food Safety Authority has acknowledged that too.The proposal is far from being perfect -- it allows the banned neonics to be used in greenhouses. But it is a huge step towards a future free of bee-killing pesticides. And you can help make this happen!Governments are expected to position themselves in mid-May, which means we don’t have much time left to make our voices heard.With the pesticide industry poised to fight this proposal tooth and nail, it’s crucial our governments are hearing from us.Tell EU governments they should support a European-wide ban of the most widely-used bee-killing pesticides.Together we’ve made huge strides towards ridding the world of neonic pesticides. Canada is considering a ban on one of the industry’s most popular neonicotinoids, and France is poised to institute a total ban by 2018. But in order to ensure a liveable future for the bees -- and all of us -- we need to come together now to push for a total ban of bee-killing neonics in Europe.
Thanks for all that you do,
Wiebke and the team at SumOfUs
**********
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