Archive for the ‘eBooks/Print Books’ Category

26
Mar

Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC

   Posted by: Lynne Tags: , , ,

Ebook Details
Title
: Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC
Author: Max Pinner
Author Bio: Max Pinner is a freelance writer and a PC technician.
File Size: 1.75MB Unzipped.
Format: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)
Number of Pages: Part 1: 143 pages; Part 2: 51 pages
Subject: Fix common PC problems yourself.
Price: $47+
 
***

A couple years ago my computer decided one day not to boot up due to a corrupted registry. Of course, I didn’t know it was due to a corrupted registry at first; I had no idea such a thing even existed. All I knew was the computer wouldn’t boot. I ended up researching online (using my parents’ computer) and diagnosing and fixing the problem myself. Unfortunately, I had to roll back to a much earlier version of the registry, which undid months of changes to my computer settings. If I’d had Max Pinner’s Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC before that incident, not only would I have spent less time figuring out–and fixing–the problem, I would have had a recent backup of the registry to roll back to, thus saving me the nuisance of having all my settings go back to how I didn’t want them.

That’s because the first thing Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC has you do is set up your Maintenance Toolkit, a collection of free (or cheap) software programs designed to help prevent problems or, when a problem occurs, help diagnose and correct the underlying cause. And the first item in Pinner’s Toolkit is a registry backup program. You can bet I downloaded and ran it immediately! That suggestion alone let me know Max Pinner knew what he was talking about. (If only I’d known about the importance of backing up your registry a couple years ago…)

Next in the suggested Toolkit is a program designed to clean up your registry, which I also downloaded and ran. It removed lots of old junk cluttering up my registry. Other items in the Toolkit include anti-virus and anti-spyware programs (which I already had), as well as a disk cleanup program used to delete “electronic fluff and rubbish files.” After running this last program my laptop boots up a little faster.

Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC provides the solutions to other common Windows XP and Vista problems, such as blue screens, error messages, program freezes, computer crashes, and internet connection issues. Simple Fixes also touches on hardware problems with monitors, mice, drives, and keyboards. Max Pinner doesn’t claim his solutions will work every time for every computer, but that his solutions will usually fix 7 or 8 out of every 10 PC problems. I believe him, just due to my own experiences fixing my “sick PCs” with simple solutions.

For example, several years ago when I was still running a 486 computer, it decided one day not to boot up. In a panic, I immediately called a local computer tech company to set up an appointment to bring it in. The receptionist calmly asked me if I had a recovery disk. Um, why yes, I did. She told me to insert it into the floppy drive and try to boot the computer again. I did so and voilà, it worked! I was back in business in a matter of minutes. That receptionist saved me a costly service call and a day or two without my computer.

Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC is just like that receptionist–a calm voice offering a simple solution that saves you lost time and countless dollars. Pinner walks you through each step in diagnosing and fixing a problem. If it works, you just saved yourself a tech support call. If none of the solutions work, you’ll have a better understanding of the underlying problem when you talk to your technician. (And the more you can explain to your tech the less likely he/she is to treat you like a noob. That’s worth it right there.) Pinner tells you when you need to stop and call a technician, or, as the case may be, when it’s more cost-effective to just junk a component (like a troublesome printer) and buy a new one.

If you purchase Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC, I suggest you print it out (at least the sections dealing with computer access problems) because obviously if you can’t boot your computer, you can’t read the ebook to figure out why! Perhaps Pinner could market a print version…

Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC is $47, which I think is a bit pricey even though the information contained within is excellent. I’d market it for around $27, with a print version for $47. However, the current price is still well worth it if you’re having continuous troubles with your computer. (And if my laptop decides like all my other computers to just not boot up one day, I’d be willing to pay that and more to fix it…)

I also think perhaps the manual could have been condensed somewhat by consolidating sections that have the same or similar instructions. However, it isn’t meant to be read straight through like I read it, but by skipping to whatever section is relevant to your particular computer problem, so you likely won’t notice the repetitiveness of instructions as I did.

The instructions themselves are non-techie, easy to follow, and include some levity to help keep you calm when you feel like panicking. Cartoons sprinkled throughout the manual provide more humor, though I admit I didn’t quite get all the punch lines. Perhaps I just don’t understand Australian humor. (Max Pinner is Australian.) The Australian component also accounts for the alternate spelling of words in the text (which most people likely wouldn’t notice, but it’s my curse that I do) such as color/colour, practice/practise, etc.

Bottom line: Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC is a great manual for anyone with a PC computer to have on hand, especially those who aren’t technically-minded. If you have a PC running Windows, it will eventually blue screen and crash. That’s a given. Get Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC before that happens!

For more information and to purchase, visit Simple Fixes For Your Sick PC

14
Feb

Bumps in the Night

   Posted by: Lynne Tags: , ,

Ebook Details
Title: Bumps in the Night
Author: William Todd
Format: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) Also available in HTML and Microsoft Lit
File Size: 473kb Unzipped (.pdf).
Number of Pages: 111
Summary: A collection of nine chilling short stories of the supernatural and the macabre.
Author Bio: William Todd has been writing online for almost ten years. He was the third most popular author on the website Storiesbyemail.com before it shut down. He has an 8 year old son Kiaran, who is a budding author himself, and a 6 year old daughter Alina, who has Down’s Syndrome. He and his wife Joan have been married for 10 years, and make Erie, PA their home. When not writing, he is a full time histologist and a part time pathologist assistant at a local hospital. His hobbies are writing, running, reading, and watching old movies.
 

***

Bumps in the Night hits a few bumps in the road in its endeavor to terrify the reader,
but for the most the part the anthology contains well-written and entertaining tales. William Todd has a great knack for capturing the narrative style of nineteenth-century characters, which enhances the gothic feel of two of my favorites: The Whitaker House Curse and Jack. And either Todd has a vast vocabulary–or made ample use of a good thesaurus–because several words sprinkled throughout the stories sent me searching
for definitions at Dictionary.com. It isn’t often a fiction writer stumps me with a word, much less several, so I’m impressed with that alone.

The Whitaker House Curse is a first-person account in which the protagonist hurriedly relates his fateful tale under threat of an imminent deadline. It has such great voice I almost felt I was reading something from Edgar Allen Poe. However, the epilogue seemed a bit tacked on and unnecessary, and it almost ruined the ending for me. I think the story would be better without it. On the other hand, Jack, a chilling first-person take on the infamous serial killer, probably has the most surprising–and ultimately,
pleasing–endings in this collection.

Rounding out my favorites of the bunch are The Night Stalker and Bumps in the Night. In The Night Stalker, a prostitute suspects her latest john may just be a killer when he drives her down a dark, isolated road. The second half of the story is terrifying, and I loved the ending. Bumps in the Night is told from the viewpoint of a Down Syndrome girl–a delightful young protagonist with a fresh, new voice–who once a month listens to the horrifying sounds of her father’s transformations. My only quibble with this story is that because it’s written with Todd’s wonderful slightly turn-of-the-century tone, the mention of computers by the protagonist jarred me; until then my mind’s eye had placed the setting in the distant past, not modern times.

Similarly, the characters in The People Under The River speak like 1930’s gangsters, so their references to 1970’s pop culture (and use of a weapon created in the 80’s) made me reorient my initial impression of the time period. This story, in which two killers’ dumping ground is at risk of discovery by an innocent young couple, is the least frightening, since it doesn’t deal with anything supernatural, though it has a satisfying ending. The malevolent entity encountered in Ghost Hunters had the potential to be the most terrifying for me, but the ending fizzled instead of sizzled. The same was true for The Delivery, in which a scientifically-minded courier has his beliefs turned inside out, though the narrative benefits from Todd’s period tone of voice.


In Eyes, an arrogant businessman disses the wrong old woman and finds himself fighting for his life. The storyline was predictable, but I found the consequences of his actions chilling nonetheless. An FBI agent investigates the disappearance of several people in the creepy and macabre Flesh and Blood, and though I thought the ending was darkly humorous, I couldn’t tell whether it was intentionally so.


I generally don’t read (or watch) horror, because though I enjoy being scared in the moment, I typically regret it by nightfall when I urgently feel the need to go to bed with an ornately bejeweled cross and a spray bottle filled with holy water. So Bumps in the Night elicited just about the right amount of spook for me–I was entertained but slept just fine after reading it. While not all the stories are perfect, Todd has great writing style, likable characters, and knows how to keep the reader in suspense. I look forward to reading more from him.


Click here to read an excerpt
Click here to order Bumps in the Night

 

Ebook Details
Title: The Ultimate SuperTip: Harvel Segal Reveals His Unmissable Number One Guru Secret
Author: Harvey Segal
File Size: 1.16MB Unzipped.
Format: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)
Number of Pages: 38
Subject: Easy, free ways to promote a product online.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: How to Sell ANY product
Chapter 3: The Ingenious Twist
Chapter 4: Tools To Help You
Chapter 5: The Amazing Viral Bonus
Price: $0

The Ultimate SuperTip is a fast read, and provides a few tips on promoting products online, such as offering free ebooks and submitting related articles to ezines. There’s not much new information for experienced marketers, and not enough detail for newbies.

There’s a little fluff and some hype, but The Ultimate SuperTip makes no bones about it being a viral ebook in itself. In fact, that’s basically the entire point of the ebook; to demonstrate firsthand how a viral ebook can generate income. At the end of the ebook you have the opportunity to order a package deal for $10 in which you can promote the ebook as an affiliate thus perpetuating the viral aspect.

The Ultimate SuperTip is a freebie, and you don’t even have to give your name & email to download it, so there’s really no harm in reading it for yourself. It is a great example of the ultimate viral ebook. But if you’re looking for detailed information on promotion, this isn’t it.

4
Nov

Breathe of the Flesh

   Posted by: Lynne Tags: ,

Ebook Details
Title
: Breathe of the Flesh
Author: Jack Allen
Author Bio: Jack Allen is the best unknown mystery author in the Detroit area. He lives with his wife and their boys, hoping one day to build his dream hot rod Mustang, and get the basement cleaned out.
File Size: 1391kb Unzipped.
Format: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) (Also available in Mobipocket, Word, text, MS eReader, and Kindle.)
Number of Pages: 451 
Summary
: It’s 1942, the middle of WWII. New York City is filthy with German spies. But the Abwher, the intelligence branch of the Nazi military, has a special mission for its most lethal and dangerous spy, and it has nothing to do with his passion for girls.

Breathe of the Flesh is a WWII period espionage novel about FBI agent Thomas Leopard’s tragic descent into failure and loss. He is drinking and suicidal, selfish, loathsome and hateful. And he has a killer loose in his city, a killer who favors innocent teenage girls. This killer is the German spy “Der Tiger”, a man who has a taste for fresh blood in his coffee. He has been dormant up to that point of the war, when he comes up with his own plan to go to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington D.C. and steal the printing plates for U.S. currency. When he learns how closely he has been stalked and nearly caught by Leopard, Leopard’s own daughter becomes Der Tiger’s next target.
 

***

Breathe of the Flesh is a solidly written, intriguing thriller. I read the last 150 pages
at a breakneck pace, which shows I was fully engaged in the story and couldn’t wait to find out what happened next. The story sweeps from New York City to southern France, from London to Berlin, and from Washington, D.C. to Portland, Maine, as
numerous characters fight their own personal battles amidst the war around them. I found myself quickly getting into the story, and every time I thought I knew where the plotline was headed, it took yet another unexpected turn until finally coming to a
bold, unconventional conclusion. 

There were times, however, when I felt a bit lost due to the sheer number of characters introduced, some of whom made their entrance early on with no explanation as to their relevance and then didn’t reappear till several chapters later (or never reappeared.) By the end of the book, though, it was clear who the characters were or at least how they fit into the overall story.

The protagonist, Thomas Leopard, is an unlikable character, but still I found myself both feeling orry for him and rooting for him to finally have some success in catching his prey, no matter how bittersweet the victory. His prey, the German spy Der Tiger/Hermann Van Roeple/William Birch, is a serial killer as loathsome as Hannibal Lector; a sociopath whose spy assignments and career ambitions are only a sideline to his real passion for killing teenage girls. He leaves a swath of bloodshed wherever he goes. But Der Tiger’s not the only repulsive character; many are unpleasant; and I’m not just talking about the Nazis. And even most of the otherwise likable characters seemed morally distasteful.

Miriam Roth, the Bureau of Printing and Engraving employee, for instance, is a lonely, desperate woman so full of self-loathing that she’ll throw herself at any man who’s bound to use and abuse her, while at the same time showing abject disdain for the one man who offers kindness. June Anderson Prien, the American actress married to a Nazi General, finds herself in the deplorable position of having to sleep with her husband’s subordinate in order to extract useful information for Allied agents. And MI6 agent Lynn Nevers, one of the most likable characters, finds herself envying women who can have meaningless affairs without emotional consequence after engaging in a disappointing coupling herself.

Which brings me to my only real objection to the novel: it has more sex scenes than a Harlequin bodice-ripper. Towards the end of the story I tired of them; they seemed included only for titillation rather than to advance any plot. Probably what bothered me most was that the majority of the scenes were between people who barely knew each other and/or didn’t care for each other, so a few of the encounters ended more like rapes than consensual lust. These were pure sex scenes, not love scenes. Call me a romantic, call me a prude, but I can tolerate only so much licentiousness. That said, an old-fashioned romantic entanglement between two characters who meet two-thirds of the way in the novel brought me a glimmer of hope for some sort of character redemption. (I was tragically disappointed.)

If this novel were made into a movie, it would easily garner a NC-17 rating, what with the aforementioned dozen-plus sex scenes, and close to a dozen murders–neither of which group includes the two gruesome rape/murders explicitly described (with a couple more discussed after the fact.) This is adults-only fare, so be forewarned.

In the end, Breathe of the Flesh just wasn’t my cup of tea. Chalk it up to my personal taste in fiction, which runs more towards Pride & Prejudice and Lord of the Rings. Stories with likable characters that follow the standard formula: the bad guys die, the good guys win, the hero gets the girl, and they all live happily ever after. If I wanted to be depressed at the end of a book, I’d just re-read 1984.

Bottom line: Is Breathe of the Flesh well-written? Yes. Does it keep you guessing and on the edge of your seat? Yes. Would I read it again? No. Do I recommend it? Not really. But I admit I would probably read a sequel, if Jack Allen chose to write one. I may read his previous novels. His character Josh McGowan in his novels Change Of Heart, An Innocent Among Them, and Widow of Calcutta sounds more to my liking. 

Click here to read the first chapter of Breathe of the Flesh
Find out more about Jack Allen’s novels at Burping Frog Publishing
Click here to order Breathe of the Flesh in pdf, Word, text, Mobipocket, or MS eReader
Click here to order the Kindle edition on Amazon

28
Aug

Commission Blueprint

   Posted by: Lynne Tags: , , ,

 

Ebook Details
Title: Commission Blueprint: Extreme Clickbank Profits No Experience Needed
Author: Steven Clayton & Tim Godfrey
File Size: unknown
Format: unknown
Number of Pages: unknown
Subject: Commission Blueprint
Table of Contents: unknown
 
***

I found this great review (and by great, I mean honest) review of Commission Blueprint, since I didn’t want to plunk down the $77 price to buy the product myself. I likely still won’t, since it sounds like it’s a huge download file (due to videos) and I’m still on dialup service.  😉 And, I’m a little short of the $77 at the moment; I’d rather eat this month. At any rate, click here for the review.

26
Aug

Top Secret Magic Code

   Posted by: Lynne Tags:

Top Secret Magic Code

Top Secret Magic Code

Ebook Details
Title
:
Top Secret Magic Code: Add Just 1 Line of Code to Any Site And Money Pours Into Your Pocket!
Author: Dr Jon Cohen II
File Size: unknown
Format: unknown
Number of Pages:  unknown
Subject:  Top Secret Magic Code explains how to earn revenue from advertisers other than using Adsense.
Table of Contents:  unknown

I learned about “Top Secret Magic Code” but didn’t want to shell out the $47+ it’s currently selling for, so I did a little Google search and found this review that explains just what the “Top Secret Magic Code” actually is: Top Secret Magic Code Review. I’m glad I saved my money!

17
Aug

Knowing Where To Tap

   Posted by: Lynne Tags: , ,

Ebook Details
Title: Knowing Where To Tap: Identify The Areas Of Profit & Loss In Your Business
Author: Andy Henry
File Size: 956kb Unzipped.
Format: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)
Number of Pages: 57
Subject: Knowing Where To Tap explains methods for conducting market research for an existing business or prior to starting a business.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter Two: Research 101
Chapter 3: The Internet Marketer’s Research Essentials
Chapter 4: Metrics, Measurements, and Tracking
Chapter 5: Situational Examples
Resources: Favorites
Resources: Niche Research
Resources: Public Domain
 

***

Knowing Where To Tap is an intelligent, well-written ebook about conducting market research for starting an online business. Frankly, I don’t think I’ve read a better written ebook than this. It contains no hype or fluff–a welcome relief from most ebooks I slog through. I did spot one typo, and paragraph headings are often separated from their paragraphs by untimely pagebreaks, but those are minor technical quibbles.

Andy Henry shows advanced methods to conduct market research using Google, teaches basic keyword research, explains the various aspects of market data and how it will affect your business, and how to analyze the competition. One of the best parts of the ebook is a simple flow-chart that guides your research steps before making a product or business launch–even when you have no particular product or business idea to start with.

In the first chapter of Knowing Where To Tap, Andy Henry explains why you need to conduct market research for your online business. “If you’re building an online business, research is the foundation upon which your company stands,” he says. He outlines several results of market research, such as identifying potential customers and the best ways to reach them, finding out whether a market is large enough to sustain a business, or even if a market even exists. “Being able to match your marketing to real customer needs and expectations will have a substantial difference in the results of your marketing efforts,” he says. The second chapter touches on various methods of conducting market research and the upsides and downsides to each.

The third chapter details how to use Google for online market research, starting with basic searches and moving to advanced searches into Google’s index. I personally wasn’t aware of many of Google’s advanced search engines, such as Google US Government Search at http://www.google.com/ig/usgov. Andy explains how to do basic keyword research, and details the kind of websites you should frequent, monitor and/or study on an ongoing basis. He says blogs, for instance, “are generally great sources of current information and conversations about what’s hot, what’s coming soon, and what’s popular.”

In the fourth chapter, Andy explains market data elements such as market size, market accessibility, market width and depth, and macro and micro environments. He explains how to use search engine data to guide your marketing efforts, determine how your product should be packaged and delivered, and how to analyze your competition. “Find out as much as you can about what they’re doing and look for weak areas that you can silently dominate” he writes.

The fifth chapter contains the flow-chart that guides your research steps, and the remaining segments are comprised of online resources to aid in your research and marketing efforts.

This isn’t the end-all, be-all ebook about conducting market research, but it will definitely get you started if the idea of “market research” confuses or scares you. Performing the easy steps outlined will help you narrow your focus onto the most winning product and help you avoid costly business mistakes and ineffectual marketing campaigns.

Knowing Where To Tap is unfortunately not available for download here. It sells for $37, which I think is a bit pricy despite my glowing review. If I had my druthers, I’d sell it for around $9.97. Alas, it isn’t up to me.

However, there’s a discount code to get 10% off the original price (making it $33.30). Just go to the sell page at http://www.knowingwheretotap.com and enter the code DU01AB at the checkout page.

 

Dylan Loh's Profiting Tips

Dylan Loh's Profiting Tips

Ebook Details
Title: Dylan Loh’s Profiting Tips: How to Realistically Create Your Hands-Free Autopilot Income Stream Within 7 Days
Author: Dylan Loh
File Size: 130kb Unzipped.
Format: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)
Number of Pages: 9
Subject: Article Submission and Adwords
Table of Contents: None

This ebook promises to teach you “How to Realistically Create Your Hands-Free Autopilot Income Stream Within 7 Days.” I received it as a freebie promo. If I were to sell it, I’d probably list it for $1.97. (Surprisingly, I found this free ebook to be better than the author’s previous ebook I paid $9.97 for!)

There are a few typos, probably because English is not the author’s first language. Otherwise, the report is quite readable, and contains little to no hype & fluff. The author devotes one page to an introduction, but the remaining 7 pages are pure information.

Both tips are easy to implement, especially for those who already have a website or a product to promote. Neither tip would be new to experiences webmasters, but newbies would find them useful.

Bottom line: A short read, well worth the free download to see if the tips are new to you.

 

Secret Google Tactics

Secret Google Tactics

 

Ebook Details
Title
: Secret Google Tactics: The Secret Google Tactics That You Can Use to Siphon Money From Both Adwords And Adsense!
Author: Dylan Loh
File Size: 195kb Unzipped.
Format: Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)
Number of Pages: 35
Subject: Google AdWords and Google AdSense.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1: Getting Started
Chapter 2: Getting Paid
Chapter 3: Keyword Selection
Chapter 4: Writing Your Adsense Sites
Chapter 5: Adsense Arbitrage
Price: $9.97 

“I’m going to let you in on a little known secret combining two of the web’s most powerful money making systems.”

I couldn’t resist this ebook’s promise of telling me a new way to make gobs of money using AdSense and AdWords, so I plunked down my $9.97. (The price has now increased.) The highly effective sell-page convinced me to buy, which in itself is proof that the page is well-written. Too bad the actual ebook isn’t.

Ebooks filled with typos always turn me off; it tells me the author didn’t take the time to review his own work. And when the sell-page is far better written than the actual ebook, it makes me suspect the author was more interested in separating you from your money than creating an excellent product.

Although Secret Google Tactics contains relatively few typos, it is at times so poorly worded as to make it nearly incoherent. I had to read some paragraphs several times in order to understand what the author was attempting to say. The main problem, however, is a jumbled mix of topics. For instance, he spends a handful of paragraphs explaining what AdWords is, followed by a paragraph beginning with the statement, “Now since we talked about AdWords, we will tell you about AdSense.” This is followed by three general statements about Google, followed by several paragraphs explaining more about AdWords, not AdSense. I believed the author when he said he would now explain AdSense, so when I instead found myself reading more about AdWords, my first thought was that the author himself was confusing the two.

The ebook contains the usual amount of hype and fluff, such as statements like, “That’s a great question and I am going to answer it,” and the author is inconsistent with pronouns, switching between “we” “I” and “you” in the same paragraph, but these are minor issues compared to the overall unreadability.

I was already familiar with AdWords and AdSense prior to buying this ebook, and have read several other internet marketing ebooks, so none of the information imparted by the author was anything new or secret. If I hadn’t known anything about these subjects before, this ebook could have provided a nice overview if it hadn’t been for its poor writing.

Bottom line: the author promises a lot and delivers little. He’s from Singapore, therefore English is not his first language, which would explain the jumbled sentences. If he revises it to make it more understandable, the report may be worth paying under $10 for.

Available for purchase at http://www.ebookreviewsonline.com/link.php?id=14.