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Over the last 6 years, there has been an explosion of Revolutionary Neuroscience Research Discoveries!

Listen to what one of the leading research neuroscientists in the world, Dr William Restak, has to say in his just released book, The New Brain (Rodale Press, 2003)

 


Computer Lessons

Be sure to click on this web site first so you can get some emails Coming your way on

Computer Lessons.

If you dont join the Newbie Club first, you will not Be able to get the discounts of the soft ware.

These Lessons have been necessary for me to

Make it as far as I have. You wont regret it.

 

http://www.newbieclub.com/?more_secrets

 

 Here are some of the Tutorials you will get.

 

Everything your PC does requires memory. This you may already know. And with increases in memory, a certain increase in speed follows. Why else would those advertisements trumpet the virtues
of adding more Random Access Memory (RAM) to your computer? "Make it faster. Make it less prone to crashing. Proudly tell your friends you've got massive amounts of memory."

However, speed increases only to a point, which is right at about 32 megabytes. There's always something to get excited about if
you keep one eye on the marketers.

RAM is called that because it can be randomly accessed.
Brilliant, eh? Well, books have been written about the
relationship between Windows and memory, so let's just say the more memory you have, the happier your computer will be. It's kind of true in life, too. If you had more memory, wouldn't you be happier?

RAM lives in a chip, but you can't eat it. Actually, RAM chips are made of silicon, metal and plastic. Cute little gizmos they are, and they reside on your main board (or motherboard as it's commonly referred to).

 

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We've negotiated a 25% to 50% DISCOUNT FOR NEWBIE CLUB MEMBERS, but ONLY at this special Newbie Club Members Discount page ...

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===============================================

3. Tutorial ... "Memory Part 2"

===============================================

RAM chips are lightning fast. As an analogy, your hard drive is the tortoise and RAM is the hare. However, unlike the story, your hard drive will never win the memory access speed race.

Normally, programs just sit on your hard drive. When you click your favorite word processing icon, data has to dash off to the confines of memory lane, where it fills little registers (think of pigeonhole-like locations) in memory. It's all more complex than this, but we're not studying for a computer science class,
are we?

Windows 98/95 both work so much better with at least 64 megabytes of RAM installed. XP works best with at least 256 - 512 is better. Give yourself room to roam with a memory upgrade. More memory, more room to rumble. But not necessarily any increase in
the speed you see things appear on the screen.

Speaking of upgrades, you'll need to find out what kind of memory your computer uses. Check your computer manual. Look in Yellow Pages. No luck? Call your computer maker, or check your computer manuals. Still no luck? Call any RAM manufacturer's toll free
order number, and tell the sales rep your make and model. He'll consult his own resources, and be able to steer you in the right direction.

Here's an overview list of memory types for your edification:

DRAM Dynamic RAM.
Found in older systems and usually require adding two chips at a time. Comes in 30 pin modules.

EDORAM Extended Data Output RAM.
Used by earlier Pentium computers. Usually requires adding memory chips in pairs. Comes in 72 pin modules.

SDRAM Synchronous Dynamic RAM.
Pentium II or faster computers need this. Add one chip at a time if you want. Comes in 168 pin modules. Speed is measured in Megahertz instead of nanoseconds.
--------------------


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==============================

4. Tutorial ... "Memory Part 3"

==============================

How old is an "older system" anyway?

By computing terms, it could be as ancient as three years old. This stuff changes rapidly, but that doesn't mean you have to stay on the cutting edge. All you need to do is grab a nerdish type and ask questions. Or any computer sales person will do.

It's best to keep the same memory speeds together. Which brings up the concept of RAM speed. RAM is measured in nanoseconds. The measurement is actually the speed with which RAM can store and
'unstore' data.

The easiest way to deal with a RAM upgrade is locate a memory dealer, call them up and give your computer model to them.  They'll take it from there. It couldn't be easier.

If you don't know what kind of computer you have (special built, gift, no-name on the box, whatever) then you may have to have someone actually look inside. Any shop that's going to sell you RAM will tell you what kind it takes.

You can put faster rated RAM in a slower computer and it won't speed it up. But you can't put slower rated RAM in a faster computer, because it won't work. The memory can't keep up with processing demands, so only buy RAM rated at the speed suggested
by the manufacturer.

Speed is measured in nanoseconds. That's one-billionth of a second. Fast RAM runs at 60 nanoseconds. Slow RAM runs at 100 nanoseconds. In the computer world, a difference of 40 nanoseconds is pretty significant.

SDRAM breaks the measurement rules, since it's rated in Megahertz (MHz). It has to match the speed of the motherboard's bus. Your computer dealer or salesperson can track this info for you. Think
of the bus as a central path through your computer.

Everything in your computer communicates via this central pathway (bus), and at a set speed. Even though your processor may run at a particular speed, your system may only run at less than that.
Data is crunched quickly, then is passed to your video card, modem, or hard drive at the speed of the bus.

All this talk of memory and chips and such has made me hungry. I think I'll take a break.

......... "Did You Get Locked Out?"

The Upgraded Email for Newbies Version 2.1 was released 7 weeks ago and caused a massive traffic jam at one stage on our site.

Be sure you are a Newbie Member to get this at the great price.

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5. Article Revisited ... "Get Out Of Your Comfort Zone"
By Joe Robson

=================================================

"Unless you change how you are, you'll always have
what you've got." - Jim Rohn, Speaker and Author

I'm not about to give advice on how to make money on the Internet. Chances are that you're just not interested in going down that route. But to illustrate the point I'd like to make, I will make references to the world of selling, in which I've been involved with a fair modicum of success for more years than I'd
care to remember.

Did you know that most salespeople earn approximately the same
as those they sell to? Think about that acquaintance of yours you see now and again in your local Bar. Or the friend you see once a week at the local health and fitness club. Yeah, they're salespeople, but they're not particularly better off financially than you. Am I right? So why is that?

It's because they feel comfortable dealing with people of their own kind. They can talk openly with someone from their own social background. They understand the needs and wants of people like themselves. And so they end up earning the same as people like
themselves. That's because they choose to stay within the confines of their own 'Comfort Zone'.

But the high earning salespeople are not necessarily from a 'better off' social background. But they've discovered that by changing their 'target' customers - the better off who can afford to spend more - they earn a lot more. In short, they consciously
make the effort to change their attitude and force themselves out of their Comfort Zone. The alternative is to stay the same.

The point I'm making is that to achieve more than we're achieving at the moment we have to change *ourselves*. And this applies to whether we want to earn more money, become a world class athlete, or to learn how to use a computer effectively. To do any
of these, means we have to leave our comfort zone, and *force*
ourselves to do things which make us feel uncomfortable.

----- "If You Want A Warm Feeling Stay In Your Armchair."

Learning how to use a PC was a very uncomfortable and frustrating experience for me. It was foreign to my nature to try and grasp something which I couldn't touch and feel. To me, it was painful forcing myself to imagine that all that *stuff* flying around inside a box was actually built in a methodical and constructive
manner.

I couldn't even understand what Windows was. All I knew was that I was using a computer, not Windows and plug ins and stuff.

Show me the inside of a car engine and I could actually *see* how all the bits were designed to work. Everything was connected in a logical order. Then one day someone drew a diagram for me. He compared my computer to a motor car. NOW someone was talking my language!

Windows was the engine - the motor that drove all the bits and pieces inside the box.

A program was connected - or plugged - in to Windows. Just as a radio is plugged into the generator, which in turn is connected to the engine.

So to get the maximum performance from a program, I had to understand how Windows - the engine - functioned. Not the High Tec geeky bits, but the basics. To drive a car you don't need to know how an engine is built - that's for the geeks. But you *do*
need to know how to steer it, how to start (boot) it up without damaging it, and that carrying too many passengers and luggage (plugins and programs) will affect its performance.

And just as the air conditioner, electric mirrors, and radio are all - directly or indirectly - driven by the engine, so are all the accessories like graphics software, Browser and email client, driven and controlled by Windows. And in less than a
minute I'd 'got it'.

Thereafter I forced myself out of my Comfort Zone and knuckled down to learning how the 'engine' of my computer could be used to maximum effect, to achieve the results I needed from the accessories.

For instance, I now understood why simply deleting a program caused other programs to cease functioning. It's the same as cutting the wires from a car radio. The radio can be removed ok, but the electric aerial shares the same cables, and so *it* ceases to function. The proper procedure is to bypass the radio and not simply cut out the shared cables.

The only difference is that the shared *cables* in your computer are called .dll's and other weird names. I don't understand exactly *what* they are - I don't need to. But I now understand what they do.

That was a few years ago now, but the frustrations are still vividly fresh in my mind. And so is that magic moment of revelation.

--------- "Frustration Is Only A State Of Mind."

I understand completely how frustrating it can be getting to grips with something you can't physically see. And that's why our books and tutorials use words and pictures to help you visualize the workings of your computer.

Yes, it can still be frustrating. You'll still have to
concentrate hard and knuckle down. But the rewards are enormous.
Believe it or not, I still find it difficult to grasp the
enormity of things I've achieved with my computer. Teaching my grandchildren, creating Greetings cards, communicating in nano seconds with people on the other side of the earth. Surfing the Web and learning things which I would never have even considered
in the 'old' days.

And I promise that you can do the same. No matter your age, background, income or education. Once you master the fundamentals of your PC, a whole new world will open up for you. Yet it's a world that cannot be described until you actually experience it for yourself.

---------- "The Help Is There - If You *Choose* To Listen."

>From some of the emails I receive, it's fairly obvious that some people just don't realize the shear volume of information that's available on the New Newbie Club Site. How-To's, tutorials, emailed courses, ebooks and so much more. But it's of absolutely
no use to you at all, unless you make up your mind to use it.

Just one step at a time will eventually take you a mile. But first of all you have to change you attitude of mind. You CAN do it. EVERYONE can do it. All you have to do is ...

Get out of your Comfort Zone!

Keep smilin' Dolores

Joe

----------------------------------------

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===============================

 ------ Joe's Pause For Thought ...

===============================

"A person learns to skate by staggering about and making a
fool of himself; indeed, he progresses in all things by
making a fool of himself."

-- George Bernard Shaw, playwright


--------------------------------------

........... "Click This, Click That - Gimme A Break!"

Many people believe their magic mouse is the be-and-end-all of modern technology. Click this, click that, right click, left click, double click, somersault and middle click - magic! And who can blame them? After all they've never been shown a better way! But the savvy one's learn all about those mysterious
keyboard keys, and their lives - and creativity - are
transformed. Read about The Newbie Club's best seller 'Keyboard MAGIC! and transform your computer habits - it's so easy! Prepare for lift-off at http://newbieclub.com/keyboard

=============================================

-------- Highly Recommended Resources

=============================================

See the staggering Copywriting software at Joe Robson's site. It creates Professional Headlines, Sub Heads, Ezine Ads, Pay-Per-Click Teasers, eBay Ads, Ebook Titles, Article Titles, Classifieds ... with just one mouse click. Absolutely awesome!
You won't believe it till you see it ...http://headlinewriter.com


------------- "Can You Really Make A Living On The 'Net?"

A huge resounding YES! The first step is to go to my friend Jim Daniels' site and let him explain how. It's just about THE best resource I know for Newbies starting out in business. Period!

Not only that, Jim is one of the nicest and straightest guys around! ....... http://tncinfo.com/malo.htm

=============================================

7. ----- Complimentary Exclusive Newbie Club eBooks and Courses

=============================================

"Guide To The Internet - An Overview" features the combined advice of 18 of the Internet's most successful marketers.

"Scientific Advertising On The Internet" contains the world famous Claude C. Hopkins' Classic, plus observations and Copywriting Tutorials by Newbie Club owner Joe Robson, who is also co-author of the blockbuster "Make Your Words Sell" http://words.sitesell.com/myws/

Get BOTH Newbie Club books for nothing from The Newbie Club Academy at http://newbieclub.com/academy/

And don't forget, you can get your own Fully Customizable Guestbook for your own site. This Newbie Club creation is packed with too many features to list here. And it's an absolute
dream to install. http://newbieclub.com/gbook

======================================

---- Complimentary Newbie Club Courses by Email

======================================

Backing up your stuff: backup@newbieclub.com
mailto:backup@newbieclub.com

Organize your files: organize@newbieclub.com
mailto:organize@newbieclub.com

Finding files: findfiles@newbieclub.com
mailto:findfiles@newbieclub.com

Take the load off your PC: msconfig@newbieclub.com
mailto:msconfig@newbieclub.com

---- Other Educational Resources

Visit Joe Robson's widely acclaimed Copywriting Tutorials site at
http://adcopywriting.com

--------------------------------------------

9. --------- Your Membership Details and Contact;

To make changes to your membership details, such as
updating your name or email address, or leaving (huh?), visit your membership management headquarters at
http://newbieclub.com/membership.php

You should see your info listed as ...

Name: Dolores
Password suppressed

########################################

CONTACT US by email at support@newbieclub.com

########################################

If this Newsletter was sent to you by a friend you can get your own copy when you become a Newbie Club Member at
http://newbieclub.com .... Membership costs nothing.

The Newbie Club INSIDER is a publication of The Newbie Club, which is owned by Joe Robson, who is also a Founding Member of i-Cop - The International Council of Online Professionals http://tncinfo.com/icop.htm

(C) 2003 The Newbie Club(TM) All Rights Reserved

 



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