Monday 18 May 2015


There are many different ways to view and edit PDF files on a Mac. There are some expensive PDF editing software like Adobe Acrobat that are great, but all of it’s features are not needed to edit PDFs on a Mac. Apple has a built-in Preview application that is free and should be considered as one of the best PDF editors for a Mac.

The reason for this, is because Preview has added several new features that make things easier when editing a PDF. In the past it was only able to provide a limited way to edit PDF files, and even couldn’t edit the original text on PDF.

Instead of searching for an effective way to edit PDF on Mac or Windows. We have created a quick guide on how to view and edit PDF files on a Mac OS X.

We have outlined three methods to open and edit PDF using Preview. The first one is by basically viewing the video below. It will take you through, step-by-step and show you how you can go about editing a pdf file. If you prefer written instructions then refer to the two methods listed below.



Navigating and Viewing PDFs

On an Apple computer, when a PDF file is opened, by default the files will open in Preview. The first page of the file will open and giving navigation options through the document by scrolling down or by dragging the document’s scroll bar.

Edit PDF in Preview

Using Preview, it’s possible to add notes, highlight or copy texts in a PDF file. The following is how to edit PDF with Preview.


 Second Method To Edit PDF File On A Mac Using The Preview Program

  1. Drag and drop the PDF file to the Preview program dock, and then the PDF file will be open with Preview.
  2. Copy the text from the PDF in Preview.
  3. Then go to “Navigate” in the upper toolbar, and select the Text.
  4. Press Command + C to copy the texts.
  5. Annotate and markup PDF in Preview. Click Annotate on top of the toolbar. This will allow you to edit the PDF file.
  6. Fill out the PDF in Preview. When you open a PDF form with Preview, you can click the Text button and click the field to input the information to PDF directly.    

Third Method To Edit PDF File On A Mac Using The Preview Program

If you double click on any pdf file in OSX it will open in an application called preview. You can read the pdf and scroll around etc.
Go up to the View menu and select the menu item called ‘Show Annotations Toolbar. This will give you a toolbar along the bottom of your preview window to help you edit the pdf file.


After you select  the ‘View: Show Annotations Toolbar’ menu you will see a toolbar across the bottom of the preview window that looks like this:

These buttons will allow you to edit the pdf file. The left three buttons make an arrow, a circle or a rectangle. The fourth button along allows you to add text to the pdf.
If you click on the text box button – the 4th button across,  you can then go up to your document and add in a text box like this:

If you click on the text button you can add a text box to the pdf document like this.

This is a very easy way to fill in pdf files that are forms.
If you highlight the newly added text you can change the font by pressing Apple-T and the font window will appear. You can’t delete  what’s already in a document, but you can draw a rectangle over it to hide it and type something new over the top.

You can cover over existing text using a rectangle with a white border like this.

You’ll notice you can’t change the rectangle color from being black, but you can put a very fat white border around it so it looks like a white rectangle!

If you want to totally change the images and text on an existing pdf file you will need an application like Adobe Illustrator that can actually edit the content of pdf files, but if you only want to make small changes, the built in preview app will do the job!

Adding and Rearranging Pages

Another great thing that can be done in Preview is the ability to add or rearrange a page within the PDF file. This feature is helpful when there are multiple PDFs that need to be combined into a single file.

To combine the multiple PDF files into a single PDF, first open one of the files. Select on the “View” menu, select “Thumbnails”, and drag the other PDF file from the Finder into the Thumbnail pane to where the file should appear.

Other Software to Edit PDF Files

PDFPen makes page rearrangement, editing and multi-document assembly easy. PDFPen costs $60 but is worth the price. If you need more features than Preview can provide.
Skim is a great choice if your primary focus is annotation as that’s what it was design to do. It has an impressively long list of features to make annotation easy.


Tuesday 12 May 2015

How To Retrieve Deleted Text Messages on iPhone 6/6Plus/5/5S/5C/4S/4/3GS


My text conversation with a long lost friend visiting me disappeared today (i suspect it got deleted by mistake) and I don’t have the number saved in my contacts. How can I retrieve the number or text messages or get in touch with her? I cant find it on my icloud and I don’t mind going through any amount of trouble to find the number because she will assume I abandoned her if she does not hear from me and she has no where to go! iPhone 4S, iOS 7.1.2″
 
This is a post I read from Apple Community. When accidentally deleted an important text conversations or contacts like this user, never mind. We have ways to help you get back those erased text conversations or contacts on your iPhone 6 Plus/6/5S/5/4S.

Get Back Deleted Text Messages from iCloud or iTunes backup. 

If you often backup your iPhone 6/ 5S with iCloud, you can try this way. Also, if you frequently sync your iPhone to iTunes, maybe it is possible to recover your lost contacts from the backup files. Otherwise, you need to try other methods to get back the erased texts.

Get Back Deleted Text Conversations from Spotlight Search. 

If you have not done any backup work and eagerly want to find the lost texts, you can try iPhone Spotlight Search. Spotlight searches certain text fields in the content of your device for text beginning with your search phrase. It is not case-sensitive, so you can search using uppercase or lowercase letters and get the same results. With Spotlight Search, you can choose the contexts you want to search by setting as the following: Settings>General>Spotlight Search. Learn more here. 

spotlight search

Get Back Erased Text Conversations from iOS data recovery


Sometimes, you cannot find your erased messages with the above two methods. At this time, a third party software can help you get back your erased data. There are dozens of iOS data recovery like iFonebox, Dr Fone, Fone Rescue, etc. Here,I want to take iFonebox as example.

iFonebox is a professional and powerful iOS data recovery, which is helpful to recover your erased texts, contacts, notes, reminders, photos, calendars, safari bookmarks, voice memos, call history. Plus, It is suitable to your iPhone 6 Plus/6/5S/5/5C/4S/4/3GS. Learn more about iFonebox. 

Steps:
  • Download and install it. There are two versions: Windows and Mac.  The free trial version is also available.
  • Run the program. Connect your iPhone device to the computer. iFonebox will scan your iPhone device automatically.
  • Preview and choose the erased text. After the automatic scanning, all data in your iPhone are shown in the interface box. Just preview and select the erased data you want to recover.

ifonebox messages

If you always sync your iPhone to iTunes, you can also use iFonebox to extract data from the iTunes backup files. Pretty convenient.

Still not Sure How To Retrieve Deleted Text Messages on iPhone?

Watch the video below to learn how to retrieve deleted messages on iPhone.



How to Retrieve Deleted Text Messages from... by iphonedatasrecovery

Thursday 7 May 2015

Unison Wealth Review - Shocking Truth!



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Wednesday 6 May 2015

Memorization Techniques - How To Supercharge Your Brain



(Credit: Getty Images)
The brain's capacity is unlimited, if only you use it correctly (Credit: Getty Images)
What is the easiest way to learn? David Robson meets a group of scientists and memory champions competing to find techniques that make facts stick... fast.

This post on how to learn was originally published on BBC. Face to face with the world’s leading memory experts, my mind is beginning to feel very humble. Ben Whately, for instance, tells me about the famous mnemonist Matteo Ricci, a 16th Century Jesuit priest who was the first westerner to take China’s highest civil service exams. The exam was an excruciating ordeal that involved memorising reams of classical poetry – a task that could take a lifetime. “Only 1% of people who took them passed them, yet Ricci passed them after 10 years, having not spoken any Chinese before.”
Think of learning like a buffet, rather than a set dinner — One of the tips for rapid memorisation
Can psychology give us all the same astonishing command of our minds? That’s Whately’s aim. With former memory champion Ed Cooke, he’s already designed a learning app, Memrise, that uses some of the mnemonist’s principles, as BBC Future has described in the past. Now they’ve teamed up with researchers from University College London to launch a competition to find the best possible way to enhance their techniques. Memory experts from across the world were asked to conduct experiments to find the easiest, and most effective, way to memorise new information.

I’m here to observe the first round of judging. It offers a fascinating exploration of the way our memories work. Whether you are a university student cramming for your finals, or have simply yearned to pick up some tourist French, their insights could take the pain out of digesting facts.

(Credit: Getty Images)
Can new tricks take the pain out of studying? (Credit: Getty Images)
The competition’s task is superficially simple, says Rosalind Potts at UCL. “We wanted to know if you had an hour to study a list of 80 words, what do you have to do in order to remember them a week later.” The task is made more difficult by the fact that those 80 words are all Lithuanian. The entrants had to test the strategy on participants and compare them to a group who were not using any particular technique.

Despite the fact that world-leading scientists entered the competition, some approaches failed to lead to any improvement in memory recall. “It shows how difficult it is to translate scientific principles into real-life learning,” says David Shanks, also of UCL.

Boredom, for instance, proved to be a hurdle: one team found a subject falling asleep during the hour-long word-memorising session – despite the fact they were being paid with cakes to take part in the study. “It happens,” says Yana Weinstein at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, who is also on the judging panel.

Notwithstanding those minor hiccups, many teams found some benefits – as much as doubling the amount their subjects recalled. Rather than focussing on one single technique, they tended to use combinations of the following strategies:

(Credit: Thinkstock)
Fail once, and you'll remember better the next time (Credit: Thinkstock)
1) Embracing ignorance. Self-testing is one of the best ways to improve recall. For me, the most surprising, and potentially useful twist, on this technique was a strategy called “errorful generation”. Without any training, subjects were forced to guess the meaning of the Lithuanian words. “They will always be wrong the first time round,” says Shanks – yet psychological studies have shown that the initial mistakes subsequently make the words stick. “It’s remarkably better than if you had studied the word.”

Simply recognising your own ignorance, it seems, primes your mind into action – doubling the recall compared to a group who didn’t use the technique. This builds on the idea of “desirable difficulty” in psychology – by making a task a little bit harder, it can engage your attention and construct firmer foundations for later recall.

(Credit: Thinkstock)
You need to ride the crest of your memory's natural rhythms (Credit: Thinkstock)
2) Surfing the memory’s waves. You can easily waste time over-studying. So many of the entrants had designed algorithms that cleverly work out how strong your memory for each of the 80 words is, so they could rekindle it once you had started to forget. Memrise’s app has one version of this approach that you can use for now – and the entrants may suggest ways to further refine it. Alternatively, you can rely on your intuition to help time your learning – leaving longer and longer periods before you retest and learn from your mistakes.

One entrant also experimented with giving short breaks to the participants during the word memorising task – allowing them to watch a video of a waterfall – potentially allowing the information to sink in. When you’re studying, it’s certainly worth taking short breaks to ensure that fatigue doesn’t overcome your natural abilities.

3) Buffet studying.  It might seem tempting to chunk the material into themes and learn them one by one – so some of the entrants organised the words into categories and themes. But one team found that simply cycling through all 80 words was effective. Whately points out that memory champions memorising a pack of cards take a similar approach – rotating quickly through the whole pack rather than learning it block by block.

If that sounds confusing, research does at least suggest that you should add variety to a study session. It’s better to spend small blocks of time on a variety of subjects and skills – rather than concentrating on a single topic. Think of it as taking from a buffet, rather than eating a set dinner.


(Credit: Getty Images)
Take a pick-and-mix approach to studying. Switching topics makes your brain work harder, with surprising effects (Credit: Getty Images)
4) Story-telling. Any form of “elaboration” can help reactivate those synapses and seal the memory. One entrant asked the participants to build a story with the words they were learning, for instance. Cooke and Whately were also excited to see one team implement a “memory palace” – in which you try to link the words to objects in a room.

The program they designed might show a picture of a living room and give you the Lithuanian word “lova” – bed. You could then imagine your lover laying on a sofa bed. Once you have mapped out your learning in this way, you should be able to retrace your steps and recall the word with ease.

This was, in fact, the technique that allowed the Jesuit priest Matteo Ricci to learn Chinese to such an advanced level – and it also lies behind Cooke’s ability to remember 2265 binary digits in less than 30 minutes. The team’s computer program may simplify the process by making it more automatic.  “If this does turn out to be the winner – that’s a serious discovery,” says Cooke.  

(Credit: Thinkstock)
Making surreal connections can boost recall - and now an app can help fire your imagination (Credit: Thinkstock)
The judges’ energy is infectious, but I can’t help wondering if all this is still removed from the kind of learning we need in everyday life. Indeed, for a previous assignment, I had tried to use mnemonic techniques to learn around 1000 words of Danish – and although it was useful to help me memorise the individual words, it didn’t translate to the spontaneous recall needed to hold a conversation, on the fly, in a bar or restaurant.

Cooke agrees it’s just the first step. “A lot of this stuff is what I call nurturing and scaffolding while you are getting the memory down,” he says. “It’s a brace – it’s there as long as you need it.” Importantly, he thinks the same methods could easily be used beyond language learning to all kinds of disciplines – history, maths, or trivia for a pub quiz. “Repetition testing, spacing – all these techniques work for almost everything.”

Having short-listed five entries, the team are now in the process of uploading them to Memrise’s website. This will allow them to pit the techniques head-to-head to find the ultimate winner for a prize of $10,000. The advantage for Memrise is to find ideas that might improve their app; for Potts and Shanks, it will help them see which combinations of techniques work best in the real world – while testing them on many more volunteers than would be possible in a typical lab study.

Learning game
The judges hope to run the competition every year as they further refine the art of memory. In the future, there may be many more inventive approaches to consider. Shanks, for instance, points to one project that failed to enter this year, but may still be a promising strategy for the future. “They were building a video game where you shoot the spaceships out of sky, and completely incidentally, the spaceships have Lithuanian and English words on them,” he says. “I thought it was a brilliant idea.”

The real challenge for these memory experts, however, isn’t just to make learning quick and effective. As every student knows – the biggest obstacle to learning is distraction, whether it’s the idea of sunbathing in the park or switching on the TV. We may need many more competitions before we can overcome that hurdle.

If you fancy testing the short-listed entries, you can sign up for the trial here on Memrise’s website.

Saturday 2 May 2015

Tattoo Removal Before and After - How To Remove a Tattoo


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Getting that tattoo seemed like a good idea at the time. But now that blast from the past on your back or tribal band around your arm may seem like a bit of body art you could live without. If you're ready to get a tattoo removed, you're not alone: According to a 2006 survey in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 24 percent of 18- to 50-year-olds have tattoos, and 17 percent have considered tattoo removal.

There's good news and bad news when it comes to getting a tattoo removed. The bad news is that tattoos are meant to be permanent, and even state-of-the-art removal techniques won't work for everyone; your chance of success varies with your skin color and the tattoo's pigments and size.
The good news is that you don't have to undergo your mother's tattoo removal technique. The de-inking process has evolved in recent years, from a cringe-worthy, potentially skin-damaging process to a safer, more sophisticated method that uses laser technology.


 

Don't try these at home


In decades past, people trying to get rid of tattoos have gone to extreme measures to de-ink. For example, one technique known as dermabrasion involves scraping away or sanding down the skin. In salabrasion, a salt solution is rubbed into the skin and heated and scraped away. In both cases, when the area heals, the tattoo may be gone, but scars are likely to be left behind.
Surgically removing the tattoo is also likely to leave a scar. The tattooed skin is cut out and the surrounding skin is sewn back together. Occasionally, doctors can perform surgical removals of tiny tattoos.

Tattoo Removal Before and After

Scars are the most common side effect of tattoo removal. However, for some, the removal technique known as scarification is a form of body modification itself, just like tattooing and piercing. Much like a chemical peel removes the top layer of skin, an acid solution is used to remove the tattoo in this procedure. The scar that forms in its place covers up whatever ink remains.
Cryosurgery, sometimes called cryotherapy, has also been used to remove tattoos. This procedure freeze-burns the tattooed skin with liquid nitrogen, which is commonly used to treat warts and other skin lesions.

None of the above forms of destroying the tattooed skin are recommended, says Dr. Paul Jarrod Frank, M.D., the founder and director of 5th Avenue Dermatology Surgery and Laser Center, in New York City. "You could throw kerosene on it and light a match -- that'd be the same thing."

Health.com: Sun-proof your skin from A to Z

The best way to remove a tattoo is with quality-switched, or Q-switched, lasers, which have become widely used in the last decade. The beam of light searches for contrast between skin tone and ink and pulses intensely on the skin to break the ink down into particles small enough for the body to absorb.
"Laser removal is the standard of care," says Frank, but that doesn't mean it's foolproof. "There is no great treatment." It is submitted, however, that there are other ways to remove a tattoo naturally without having to pay an enormous amount of money on laser.

Will Laser Treatment Work?



Laser treatment works differently for all patients, depending on the tattoo. The greater the color contrast between the ink and skin, the easier the removal will be, says Frank. Black ink on light-skinned people, for example, is the easiest to remove, while fluorescent colors -- green and purple, in particular -- are nearly impossible to erase.

"Patients with tattoos with those colors, I actually try to convince them not to remove it, unless they just want to fade it enough to cover it up with another tattoo," Frank says.
Smaller tattoos are also easier to remove, as are older tattoos, because the ink is easier to break down. Taking those factors into consideration, patients should expect to undergo five to 12 laser treatment sessions, according to Frank. You will need to wait a month between treatments, so expect the process to last six months to a year.

Health.com: 15 ways to be a natural beauty

For Tricia R., 24, the road is a long one. In May 2009, she consulted a plastic surgeon in Indianapolis, Indiana, about removing a tattoo she got at age 19 on her lower back.

"As I became involved in various activities and organizations at college, I began to realize that my 'tramp stamp' was a huge mistake," she says. "I wasn't proud of my decision and wanted to hide it." Her doctor estimated she would need 20 laser sessions -- more than most people, due to the multiple colors in the tattoo. The entire procedure will cost a couple of thousand dollars, she says.
Laser removal can be painful, and for the first few days after the procedure the treated skin looks like a healing burn.

"I don't know what hell is like, but during my treatments, I would swear that's where I am," says Tricia, now on her sixth session. "I immediately felt like I was being pelted with hot grease and flicked with rubber bands. It by far is the worst pain I have ever felt in my entire life. On top of the pain, the noise of the laser burning my skin is similar to the noise of bacon frying in a skillet."

Patients should care for the skin like a burn too, applying antibiotic ointment and keeping the skin bandaged, Frank says. Compared with older treatments, laser removal leaves little to no scarring, but it may cause allergic reactions in some people. In some cases, the skin around the tattooed area can become discolored or infected, and it is important to shield this vulnerable skin with sunscreen.
Any scarring or discoloration should be limited to that area, though. "Lasers can target [tattoo ink] without destroying things you want to leave alone, like healthy skin," Frank explains.

How Much Is Tattoo Removal?

Since treatment sessions add up, the cost of laser removal isn't so forgiving on bank accounts. Each session with Frank costs $350. Since a small tattoo is typically $80 to $100, the cost of removal often far exceeds the price tag of the original ink. You do also get some programs offering the most effective ways to remove a tattoo, to me the lazer seemed like the best thing to do at the time.

"Despite the pain, time, and cost, I am confident that it will be well worth it when I can look in the mirror and no longer see the evidence of a big regret," Tricia says.

How To Camouflage A Tattoo
If you're not ready to spring for laser treatments or try this second less expensive method, heavy-duty makeup kits could do the trick. Companies like Tattoo Camo and Tattoo Cosmetics sell cover-up kits. Even mainstream cosmetics companies, like Dermablend, carry products that may be effective in hiding tattoos.
Many websites and infomercials sell over-the-counter tattoo-fading creams, such as Tat B Gone and Tattoo-OFF. Tat B Gone touts removal in three to nine months; a six-month supply sets a patient back about $270.


Whatever technique you use, if you're not happy with the residual coloration or scarring, you could try one more thing -- another tattoo.

Good luck and do leave a comment below and tell us which method you used to remove your tattoo.


Saturday 25 April 2015

Apple Watch Review

So Apple watch recently came out and as expected it's got all the awesome features that one apple lovers know and love. This Apple watch review will basically dwell on the features, what you can expect from this awesome piece of device and why it may be a hard sell to the average person. Watch the video below to experience the apple watch in action.



The Apple Watch is now available, but should you buy one or hold off?

We've collected a selection of apple watch reviews from a variety of publications to help you make a decision. One thing that's especially important to note is that the Apple Watch requires an iPhone 5 or newer to work.

It doesn't seem that long ago that Apple CEO Tim Cook first began talking about the game-changing Apple Watch that was to come. Seven months later, what Cook calls Apple's "most personal" device will be on the wrists of the first buyers today as some will have the opportunity to pick up the hotly anticipated wearables from Apple stores or receive a special delivery at home.
PHOTO: The Apple Watch Edition will be available with 18-karat rose gold and yellow gold cases, seen here in images released by Apple.
Apple
PHOTO: The Apple Watch Edition will be available with 18-karat rose gold and yellow gold cases, seen here in images released by Apple.
If you're curious but haven't pre-ordered a watch, here's a breakdown of the basics to get you started.

How to Order

Even though the watches are launching today, don't expect to see extra inventory in stores. Those who aren't completely sold on the idea yet or don't know which watch they want can schedule a try-on appointment online and then order a device to be picked up at a later date.
Customers can also play with an Apple Watch display unit that lets them demo the interface. However they won't be able to try one on without meeting with an Apple employee.

Compatibility

The Apple Watch is compatible with the iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 5, iPhone 5C and iPhone 5S.

Choices, Choices, Choices

The watch comes in three models: the Apple Watch Sport, Apple Watch and the high-end Apple Watch Edition. Each packs as much as 18 hours of battery life, ensuring the device can stay helpful to its user day and night.
The Apple Watch Sport, which is made of aluminum, starts at $349. The Apple Watch starts at $549 for the smaller version and goes as high as $1,049 depending on the watch band. The larger version starts at $599.
The Apple Watch Edition will begin at $10,000 and will be available in limited quantities, making it the ultimate techie status symbol.

Apps

Ever since the Apple Watch was announced last September, developers have been working to transform their app experiences for the wrist.
The results can be found in the Apple Watch app store launched Thursday with thousands of apps encompassing everything from news, retail, travel health and entertainment.
While you likely won't book a European getaway on the Watch, the small screen is ideal for offering alerts and access to quick information, such as your itinerary or the check-out time at a hotel.

What Makes It Different

Much of the interaction on the watch is driven by notifications. Expect the Apple Watch to keep you on track for your appointments, advise you when you may need an umbrella or show you a text message from a friend.
The wrist is "a very interesting place" because users can glance at it while "you can't glance at a lot of other places on your body," Cook told ABC News' David Muir in an exclusive interview after the watch was announced last year.
"You can measure a lot of things from there and you can just get, honestly, a tidbit today of what all it can do," Cook said. "But I think it's huge."

Navigation

While other wearables focus on a touch screen, Apple is making navigation on the watch head easier by letting users move the digital crown to toggle between apps. (You can of course still use the touch screen on the watch.)

Apple Watch:

Models and pricing:
  • Apple Watch Sport -- 38mm ($350); 42mm ($400)
  • Apple Watch -- 38mm ($550); 42mm ($600)
  • Apple Watch Edition -- 38mm ($10,000); 42mm ($12,000)
A variety of bands for each model are also available.
Availability: April 24

Re/Code:
"Of the half-dozen smartwatches I've tested in recent years, I've had the best experience with Apple Watch. If you're an iPhone power user and you're intrigued by the promises of wearable technology, you'll like it, too. But that doesn't mean Apple Watch is for everyone." -- Lauren Goode [Full review]

The Wall Street Journal:

"For now, the Apple Watch is for pioneers. I won't pay the $1,000 it would cost for the model I tested, only to see a significant improvement roll in before too long. But I plan to pay $400 for the 42mm Sport version once it's on sale. That's worth paying for a front-row seat for what's next in tech." -- Geoffrey Fowler [Full review]



The Verge:

"There's no question that the Apple Watch is the most capable smartwatch available today. It is one of the most ambitious products I've ever seen; it wants to do and change so much about how we interact with technology. But that ambition robs it of focus: it can do tiny bits of everything, instead of a few things extraordinarily well. For all of its technological marvel, the Apple Watch is still a smartwatch, and it's not clear that anyone's yet figured out what smartwatches are actually for." -- Nilay Patel [Full review]

 

The New York Times:

"The Apple Watch is far from perfect, and, starting at $350 and going all the way up to $17,000, it isn't cheap. Though it looks quite smart, with a selection of stylish leather and metallic bands that make for a sharp departure from most wearable devices, the Apple Watch works like a first-generation device, with all the limitations and flaws you'd expect of brand-new technology." -- Farhad Manjoo [Full review]

 

Bloomberg:

"So Apple has succeeded in its first big task with its watch. It made something that lives up to the company's reputation as an innovator and raised the bar for a whole new class of devices. Its second task--making me feel that I need this thing on my wrist every day--well, I'm not quite sure it's there yet. It's still another screen, another distraction, another way to disconnect, as much as it is the opposite. The Apple Watch is cool, it's beautiful, it's powerful, and it's easy to use. But it's not essential. Not yet." -- Joshua Topolsky [Full review]

Sunday 7 December 2014

Article Spinning Software

In this day and age there are different methods and tactics used in article spinning, this includes using spin article software. Article spinning has mainly been seen as a method used by companies to advertise themselves over the internet.


As we all know there are millions of articles all over the world wide web and in order to get the best out of search engines, you must either have mind blowing articles which stand out or quite literally just go home. Article spinning on the other hand has served to bring another dimension to 'survival of the fittest' in the internet 'jungle'.



How Spinning Article Software Works

You must be wondering how the hell this thing works, well, here's a layman description of how it works. As any software out there, this one is programmed to rewrite an already existing article, preferably an original article, or just parts of the article by replacing some words with their synonyms to give a different view of what the article is talking about. There are plenty of such software all over the internet therefore, the challenge is identifying and acquiring the 'real deal' so as to avoid any inconveniences that may arise later on with counterfeit software.


Pros and Cons of Spinning Article Software

Everything must have an advantage or disadvantage, this software is no exemption. On the plus side, this software can save you a fortune in hiring writers to spin articles for you as this software practically does the work for you for low to no cost at all. A good software will enable you to spin the original article as many times as you want without it losing its purpose.


It also saves the user a lot of time since all you need to do is put the correct settings in the spinning article software and it will do the rest in a matter of minutes or even seconds, depending on the length of the article at hand. Spinning articles also helps in avoiding penalties in search engines for using plagiarized content.


Unfortunately, there are also some challenges that these software present. For starters, the articles being spun by a software will not be as creative nor imaginative as one that is written by a human writer. Even less so if the writer is very passionate about the topic. This tends to make the software spun articles dull or not as interesting to read as the ones written by a writer.


Another downside is that some of these spinning article software may fit in some words that any normal writer wouldn't want to add or use words that are otherwise inappropriate for the targeted audience. Poor software will tend to, among other things, totally change the focus or purpose of the article or render the newly spun article 'senseless'.


article spinning software
This makes the articles useless as they do not make any sense. All in all it is safe to say that an article spinning software does not beat the old-fashioned writer content. It is also safe to say that spinning article software has the potential to reduce your client flow as no new content is being produced, just the same old content only spun.

Avoiding such will also prevent you from getting blacklisted from search engines like Google and hiring writers might be the best solution for your business in the long run.

If you want to try it out and see for yourself you can check this 7 day trial from the Best Spinner before you commit yourself.

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