Speedy Gambling

Speedy Gambling

How to Choose the Appropriate Cell Phone Plan in Denver

July 20th, 2009

With all the available cell phone plans and services in Denver and around the State of Colorado, it is very understandable that you’ve gotten confused about which one would be the ideal one for you. Research on such a decision is a good move for those who choose not to be confused by the wealth of tips and guidelines on which plans to select either.

The first step is knowing which plan is going to suit your needs. By this, I mean whether you require a plan just for a single person or two or for the entire family. This is important since it starts you off well in a direction where you can start saving a lot. Family plans have skyrocketed in popularity since they are economical.

The next step is determining the reason you need the cell phone. Do you make a lot of long-distance calls? Perhaps you do business via ‘long-distance’? An ideal plan for you then would be the ‘Free Nationwide long distance’. People having kids in college and need to be checking up on them once in a while (that’s what parents call it, but it’s more of ALL the time) a ‘roadside assistance plan’ would be your ideal cell phone plan.

The more costly elements in a plan include the text messaging and the internet access options. It is necessary to know how much internet access you will require, if at all you’ll require it as well as the number of text messages. Be sure to know whether you will be billed per text or there’s a monthly one-time figure you can pay. For internet access, determine whether you prefer being charged according to the time spent on the internet or the size of data downloaded.

This should be an easy cell phone plan guide that any Denver resident can use without getting too confused. We like to keep it simple!

Strategies to Build up Your Displays for Your Medical Interviews

July 20th, 2009

KISS: Keep it short and simple

A few principal concepts that are substantially explained will come across more intelligibly than a lot of text designed to impress the audience. Your interviewers do not have the time to analyse the information as you present it.

The rule of three

Virtually all people cannot recollect more than three items at one time. Many memorable quotes come in 3 parts: Veni, Vedi, Vici, Blood, Sweat and Tears, Education, Education, Education,
Ready, Steady, Go, etc.

If possible, devise your presentation in 3 bigprincipalcentralfundamental themes (one per slide). On each slide, tryseekendeavorendeavourattempt to focuscentercentre on three3 keycentralprincipalimportantessentialfundamentalbigprimarymain ideas. If you have too many pointsaimsitemsdetails on one page, you may want to breakchunk them down in two2 different more focussedcentredconcentratedcenteredfocused themestopicsideasstemsstreamsconcepts to break upseparatesplit upfragmentbreak downsplit up the messagecontentsubject mattersubstance ininto more digestible chunks

Rule of three3 applied to a presentation on the critical appraisal of your career so far:

THEME 1 – Presentation of Experience
Career progression & Exams taken;
Important skills and expertise acquired;
Involvement in academic activities.

THEME 2 – Demonstration of commitment to speciality and self development
Cours es and conferences attended;
Special interests developed;
Initiative taken in developing services and improving standards.

THEME 3 – Areas where further development is needed
Great emphasis on teaching; want to enhance research portfolio;
Keen to enhance further teaching experience (Med Ed. Degree);
Solid experience of endoscopy; further training required for possible
subspecialisation.

Visual aids

In mostwell-nigh allnearly allvirtually allalmost all interviews, the nature of the visual aids will be imposed. This could include:

No visual aids at all
A4 white paper sheets
Acetates
Electronic (e.g. on USB chip or CD Rom)

Identify the requirements before you start as it may dictate the manner in which you organise your ideas.

EnsureDetermineAscertainCheckVerifySuss Out too that you have sufficientadequatedecentenough back-up. For example:

if they asked for paper presentation slides, bring a copy for eacheveryevery last interviewerinterview panel member (they might say that they will photocopy them for you but the machine might break downfailcrumplesnuff itconkkick the bucket that day!) if they ask for a USB chip, bring two chips (and possibly even a CD version) whatever they ask, always bring a few paper versions in casejust in case everything has gone wrongbaddefectivefaulty, or in casejust in case they deliberatelyintentionallypurposelyby designby choiceon purposedesignedly make your life difficult.