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  • Minoo Jha - Can a job hunting book show you the path back to yourself?Yes, if it's Richard Nelson Bolles' What Color is Your Parachute.

    If you're a flower than thrives at 2000 ft above sea level, you will discover how to uproot yourself from the 200 ft level and plant new seeds where you will thrive.

    If your interests run to psychiatry, carpentry and gardening, you will discover how to find the link between all three of your interests.

    If you are going to an interview, you will discover to think of it as more of a blind date than anything else and improve your interviewing skills (and maybe even your dating skills).

    You will learn to pay attention to what Bolles calls the interview mosquitoes -small things that can blow your chances.

    You will discover flower power after reading Parachute and find yourself writing Seven Stories About Yourself.

    You never know - you may even be able to start blogging after writing them.

    If you're tired or retired, faded or jaded, reinventing yourself will take some creative thinking. Richard Nelson Bolles shows you how.

    What Color is your parachute? was full of ahas for me.

    For instance, Bolles talks about how you should answer every interview question you are asked in under 2 minutes

    "Aha," I said to myself, remembering how I blew the one and only ad agency interview I got called to in the U.S.

    I had clearly violated this rule. In fact, the person interviewing me must have been really annoyed by my excessive use of her time, because she said "I would like to give you a tip. You need to be more conscious of time. This was supposed to be a half hour interview".

    Good career planning starts with the person in the mirror rather than the opportunities in the job market.

    You can get to know that person again with the help of Nelson Bolles' book.

    You won't be disappointed - I promise you.

    Note: This review was initially featured on my blog Minoo Jha Life Strategies.
  • tiger - Great ProductI am now using my tablet more than my computer. I love the convenience and charge time. I had debated whether to get an Apple I Pad or Samsung but I decided on Samsung because I am more familiar with their products. I am not extremely computer literate but I am able to figure out most of the things I am interested in doing. Amazon is great on their delivery service but I cannot say much for UPS which leaves items in my driveway and not on the front porch. I am amaze I haven't had anything stolen yet.
  • Ravensara - Get texts on where your dog went ....I think the basics are included by some others.

    I want to share the glitches I went through and things learned.

    First, this does work. Some expectations in reviews are not realistic. This is not a several hundred dollar GPS system that tracks every second. This is a balance of cost vs performance. The 'base' unit finds the dog's Tagg and saves battery at home. Sure, I'd like the Tagg zone to be smaller, but it's workable. In an urban area when a main road is close by that would be more of an issue. But that is a limitation. It covers part of my neighbor's property before I get an alert.

    HOW IT WORKS IF A DOG GETS OUT

    The location of the docking station can be a factor, and it works best for battery life and tracking by being away from metal (washing machines, refrigerators) and by a window.

    When the dog leaves the Tagg zone is when the battery and GPS starts, so my dog got out 3 times yesterday (and once this morning) and I expect that used a lot to track 4 times. While it didn't notify me to recharge (it did for the Alerts the dog was out), I keep them recharged a lot because I don't want a low battery if someone gets out. I have 5 trackers and have used them for several months now. I rarely wait for a low battery alert because I know if GPS tracking kicked in they use a lot of battery.

    So sometimes I recharge batteries every few days, sometime a week or two. It's not a month.

    Outside the Tagg zone (a few hundred feet around your home) the GPS kicks in off the Verizon cell towers, the Taggs begins flashing red and blue, and finds where your dog is every 3 minutes. Text and email comes in, ALERT goes red on your phone app, and the notes are specific as possible.

    "Tagg Alert. Kali: I'm outside the Tagg zone near Washington Ave and 1st Street. (city,state,too) Reply HELP. STOP to cancel. 9:36am."

    Others say "Kali: I'm 20 feet from 3647 Sunset Drive, city/st"

    So text HELP or go to the map page on the iphone ap that lets you TRACK or LOCATE. I found even if I don't push track it does a 3 minutes check on location and afterwards I can go on the internet and see where they went by pushing 'SHOW TRAIL."

    So you have the text/email ALERTS and the map to find them.

    1) Sometimes the addresses aren't real....they are where the numbers would be, but you can figure if 9360 is between 9350 and 9372 house numbers. To see your neighborhood go to zillow.com.

    2) Dogs have been in the woods away from roads, and then you really need to use the map to find them.

    3) It helps if you know the topography of your area. Yesterday 2 ran off and I know where the little lakes and marshes on the google map so I knew where, but had to go through someone's property to call the dogs back from the backside of that lake(and they came through the swamp of course, yuk).

    If you've got huskies or shibas or dogs that run a lot, previously (pre-TAGG) it is only finding them in the first few minutes that worked. Luck. It was a guess which direction they went. They love being out chasing wildlife and cover ground rapidly. Otherwise I was dependent upon people finding them and calling me off the collar tag phone number. Many nights of driving are over.

    The longest time it's taken me to get the dogs with TAGG is 14 minutes and that was to get them out of the woods. Usually it's inside of 10 minutes from the dog getting out to my having them on leash and heading home. I've done this dozens of times.

    That is worth $8/ month ($12 in my case with 5 trackers), ... even if it's once a year, to me. If you have ever chased a runaway dog for hours or days you'd agree.

    MAINTENANCE
    When I get the dogs home I check the Taggs for water, dry the Taggs off and recharge them. If you take them off the collar you'll get alerts that they aren't connected, so I take the entire collar off. I've heard of corrosion, which makes sense. I also heard the batteries only last a couple years and there is not a way to replace them in this unit. So my guess is they'll need replacement, but Tagg support didn't know how long they last. It would be nice if they offered a discount on replacement for long term customers or maybe made one with a battery replacement, but usually these things are designed to be waterproof to some degree so sealed.

    MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION
    If you buy them off ebay, the Tagg support people will tell you the warranty isn't good. So don't tell them that. I have not had to replace any of mine, but they were all new. The past few months CampingWorld.com has had specials so it's a good place to check and often Tagg Support will tell you who has specials.

    In one call Tagg Support said we could move the home zone to find the dog right by the house. I have not tried that. IF the dogs are that close and just in the woods, they'll surface or if they go further I'll get a TAGG alert.

    SO while I've had numerous calls in to understand how it works, it's not flawless and I've had a couple false alerts which may indicate a verizon issue in my neighborhood, overall it does what it says.

    In most areas there is a law that states a lose dog can be shot. Those laws are from the time when animals chased neighbor's wildlife and are still legal. I do have one neighbor who says they'll shoot my dogs if they come in.

    My dogs are jumping a 6 foot wooden privacy fence to get out, so I'm going to solar power hot wire it hoping that helps. But arctic dogs like to take off. Now I take the older dogs out front to garden with me, knowing if they go I can find them inside of 10 minutes. They don't go towards a road; they go into the woods chasing animals so that is just my situation. But it's nice to have them with more often.

    NOTE ON MICROCHIPS
    Microchips do not have GPS. They do nothing unless someone checks the number with an expensive piece of equipment. My animal control does not even have a chip reader. Most vets do. So if my dogs were recovered by animal control, they could be housed and then euthanized without ever getting a call. Please understand the limitations of microchips! They are marketing them as more secure than they are. I also had a dog show up in a vet office with a chip and they refused to let me have my dog back. So they are in no way related to this system. A microchip will work in a court of law to establish ownership, but honestly, that isn't going to help you find a dog that took off, only identify a thief in court. Collars with tags and phone numbers work better, but you're dependent upon people finding them and taking a chance on the dogs being hit by cars or taken down by mountain lions or wolves.

    SUMMARY
    So the Tagg system is far superior to anything for runners, and cheaper than the more elaborate systems used usually by hunters to track dogs. Technology changes fast, but cost/performance, this will help find your dog. Technology will continue to get better and either Tagg will get better or a better company will come up. The new TILEs coming may help. They are not out as of 2013. But the problem I know of people traveling (often show dogs) and having an accident and losing a dog,or having one slip out of an RV, means I'd never travel without my dog's having their Taggs on. In those situations the dogs that get away are often killed and gone for days. If you have runners, this product is priceless.
  • Harvey Rubin "video maven" - Great PC, great PriceI was looking for an affordable, reasonably fast, easy to use PC for my wife. I found the Gateway NE56R34u 15.6" laptop at a great price at amazon.com. As usual with amazon.com, delivery was quick. The PC worked right out of the box, which is always a good sign. The 15.6" screen is perfect, and the performance is just right. It came with Windows 8, which takes a little getting used to. There is no user manual, but there is a cheat sheet that comes with the unit. It is very helpful, but not needed once you get the hang of the Windows 8 user interface. I highly recommend this PC to anyone looking for a moderately priced unit that does the job.