terça-feira, 1 de dezembro de 2015

Chocalho - Patrimonio imaterial da humanidade


http://www.cm-vianadoalentejo.pt/pt/site-acontece/Paginas/Feira-do-Chocalho-2015.aspx
http://www.dn.pt/artes/interior/a-arte-dos-chocalhos-e-patrimonio-imaterial-da-humanidade-4910187.html

Nova geografia mundial / World Population


e ainda não anda pelas medias sociais ? still not working with social media? y todavía no trabaja con las redes sociales?

2 China 3 Tencent 
4 India 
9 United States 


ainda por cima quem mais cresce é o Facebook, o Tencent....

Smart Headline






Today we are overwhelmed not by Martians, but by mails and junk emails. A way of getting your email opened, is the chosen headline


Here are 10 ways you can ensure your headline is magnetic (

http://www.quicksprout.com/2013/11/20/30-tips-for-creating-content-that-gets-read-shared-and-talked-about-at-parties/)



1.       Where’s the benefit? – people enjoy reading articles that teach them something. Use your headline to tell your readers what they are going to learn in your article.

2.      There’s no need to reinvent the wheel – people enjoy headlines that are “How To” and “List” oriented. So, use them… even if they seem played out.

3.      Stats are better than opinion – if you have data that backs up your main point, use it within your headline.

4.      Put people over search engines – adding keywords to your headline to make it more search engine friendly isn’t a good idea if it makes your headline boring and dull. Write them for people over search engines.

5.      Create a sense of urgency – by telling your readers that they only have a short window to act on your information, you are more likely to get them to read it.

6.      Leverage laziness – people don’t like working, so leverage that within your headline. For example, your headline could start off with… “the lazy man’s way to…”.

7.      Appeal to emotions – we are all humans, and sparking an emotional feeling within your headline is a great way to draw a reader’s attention.

8.      Capitalize on mistakes – people make mistakes, so creating a headline that shows what people can learn from your, or other people’s, mistakes can easily draw a big audience. My most popular post on Quick Sprout is still about a handful of business mistakes that lost me money.

9.      Evoke curiosity – people are naturally curious, so making your headline a question will encourage them to click through and read your content.

10.   The double whammy – by combing a few of the elements above and using them in one headline, you can create the double whammy effect. For example, your headline might read “How to Increase Your SEO Traffic with These 3 Simple Steps”.



http://www.quicksprout.com/2013/11/20/30-tips-for-creating-content-that-gets-read-shared-and-talked-about-at-parties/

Life is better with a Vespa #103


Se olvidaron de que era el día 1 de diciembre. Volveran a casa

segunda-feira, 30 de novembro de 2015

Life is better with a Vespa #102

Parking Vespa 

Past performance is not indicative of future results


Past performance is not indicative of future results

This is clearly and demonstrably true of mutual funds. It's easy to confirm.
And yet...
We are very uncomfortable with randomness. So the newspaper does a 12 page section of mutual funds, filled with articles and ads and charts, all touting past performance. 

Superstition is what we call the belief in causation due to a mistaken correlation of unrelated data. A broken mirror doesn't actually cause seven years of bad luck, and cheering in a certain way isn't going to help the Yankees, sorry.
Of course, we don't live in a completely random world. The scientific method and statistics make it more likely than ever that you can find trends that actually matter. 
The hard part is accepting that the random things actually are unpredictable, and refusing to spend time or money guessing on what can't be reliably guessed. It frees up a lot of time and resources to focus on the things that are actually worth measuring.


My Comments 
Past results prove only that in principle we know how to do things, perform tasks ... But look at the case of some countries ... they take advantage of the wave of growth ... they do not prepare themselves ... and then, after the boom, they sink