Contractor Books
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Nesco American Harvest FD-37 400 Watt Food Dehydrator $34.08 Sleek and quiet design features a 400-watt motor and top-mounted 4″ fanFood releases easily from clear trays with easy clean-upTop mounted fan and heater keeps dripping outNo flavor mixing and no need to rotate trays Expandable up to 7 Add-A-Tray s (additional WT-2SG trays sold separately)9 3/16″ W x 14 1/4″ H x 14 1/8″ D weighs 4.7 lbs.Includes 4 trays and clear ABS top cover… |
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Digital Pressure Cooker $81.67 Operated with a programmable digital timer delay cooking option up to 8 hours2-pressure cooking settings preserves flavors and nutrients Slow cook up to 9 1/2 hoursWarm or reheat foodCover locks securely into placeSafety steam release prevents cover from being opened until pressure is reduced to a safe level12 5/8″ W x 18 1/4″ H x 12 5/8″ D weighs 16 lbs.Includes removable non-stick chamber stainl… |
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Multiplicity $8.02 An inevitable idea: a working man (Michael Keaton) who can’t meet all his professional and family responsibilities has himself cloned. It works so well having one copy of himself to take charge of matters at the office that he makes another copy who takes care of the home front. Pretty soon, different aspects of Keaton’s personality are emphasized in the different clones: the laborer becomes a mac… |
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Session 9 $7.43 Few things are more sure-fire creepy than huge abandoned buildings, and Session 9 has one of the eeriest buildings you’ve ever seen. A hazardous-materials-cleanup company has been hired to eliminate asbestos tiles and other toxic material from a gigantic mental hospital that had been shut down in the 1980s. But as one member of the team starts to nose into old files in the office, he uncovers… |
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The Iron Horse $7.12 John Ford’s silent frontier saga stars George O’Brien as an ex-Pony Express rider searching for the mountain pass his surveyor father discovered years earlier to aid the construction of the Transcontinental Railroad. At the same time, O’Brien attempts to woo his childhood sweetheart and faces off against the man responsible for his pa’s death. Madge Bellamy, Fred Kohler also star. Includes both th… |
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SanDisk 8 GB Class 4 SDHC Flash Memory Card SDSDB-8192-A11 $1.19 High transfer rate for fast copying and downloading Built to last with an operating shock rating of 2000Gs equivalent to a 10′ drop 5-year limited warranty… |
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Cooler Master Notepal X2 Notebook Cooler R9-NBC-4WAK-GP $23.99 With efficient functional and superb silent concept in mind, the NotePal X2 creates optimal comfort for laptop users. Either on a desk or on the lap of an on-the-go user, the NotePal X2 takes air from a bottom intake and cools down high temperatures with its 140mm silent fans, dissipating the high temperatures generated by the CPU and GPU trapped inside the laptop housing…. |
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Logitech M570 Wireless Trackball $44.00 Stays in 1 place providing fort and space savingsAdvanced 2.4GHz wireless connectivity for fast data transmission and virtually no delays or dropouts30′ rangeTiny wireless receiver can stay plugged in or stored next to the batteryAdjustable laser sensor scroll wheel programmable buttons and back/forward buttons18-month battery lifeMac and PC patibleEasy to clean and moveRequires 1 AA battery (incl… |
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iLuv Dual Material Skin for Apple MacBook Pro15 … |
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iLuv 17 MacBook Pro Sleeve 17 MacBook Pro Sleeve… |

India Today Book Club Screening the Power of Printed Word
Books for professionals hold arguments for or against the actions within. A book on cooking argues that Chili powder goes well with potatoes and goes poorly with ice-cream. A book on building a business argues that testing an idea for profitability before setting up is a smart strategy and argues against just barreling forward with the idea without testing. You too will be able to reason better with the knowledge you gain. Some of the arguments will rub off on you. Others you will argue against. Regardless, you’ll be reasoning better. Books improve our reasoning skills, build our expertise, decreases mistakes and discover surprises.
Books decrease our boredom. One of the rules I have is if I am feeling bored, I will pick up a book and start reading. What I’ve found by sticking to this is that I become interested in the book’s subject and stop being bored.
Books are for New Mental Associations. As you read more books the depth and breadth of your knowledge expands and your ability to form new associations’ increases. In reading a book to discover the solution to one problem, you find the solution to others you may not have considered.
Books are portable as well as cost saving too. You can take them almost anywhere. As such, you can learn almost anywhere too. Apart from spending money on entertainment expenses, Reading books that help you develop your skills saves money. Reading books on how someone went bankrupt will be a warning to you against repeating their mistakes. Reading a book on how to build your own backyard deck saves the expense of hiring a contractor. Book Clubs makes reading more cost saving such as India Today Book Club through which I can avail lots of gifts on purchase of books and also with impressive discounts.
I can say that Books can change our Life. You are thinking that- How many times have you heard of a book changing someone’s life? For me, it was Your Erroneous Zones (link) by Wayne Dyer – which is the first self-development book I read. It opened my eyes to a whole new way of thinking that was not depressing and dull. It was the first step in my path of choosing my own life and being free of old habitual thought patterns.
Books let us into their souls and lay open to us the secrets of our own.
About the Author
This article is all about importance of Books and Reading. All of us know that “Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body”. Books are not hard to find and read. Here, we are also giving some information about a reputed book club i.e. India Today Book Club where we can easily find books of our choice and to get these books you can visit:-http://www.indiatodaybookclub.com/
I just got a job as a contractor accountant. What should I charge?
More specifically data entry. I’m being hired as a contractor to do data entry using Quick books or Peach Tree.
My boss basically told me she’ll contract me to do the data entry and asked me to think of an hourly rate and tell her by Monday.
What’s a good hourly rate for me to charge? I’ve never done accounting before (but I’ve taken Introductory financial and managerial accounting).
Ooh – not much experience, eh?
I’d go with $12 per hour to start with. (I personally used to charge $40 per hour, but had a tad more experience). She’s probably not planning on paying someone for 40 hours a week, every week. By the way, and as I hope you already know, bookkeeping/accounting is not just simply ‘data entry’.
April14 2009 – CTV Interview – A Contractor You Can Bring Home To Mom.wmv
