Showing posts with label kids discover magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kids discover magazine. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2014

Tufts University Health & Nutrition Letter

Tufts University Health & Nutrition LetterMy wife asked me to get it and she reads it. Apparently she thinks it is worth her time -what more can I say

Its OK. I would not buy it again. I would not give to it anyone either. But it was worth the first time

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I have been subscribed to this newsletter for several years. This along with the Berkley Wellness Letter helps keep me informed on new nutrition news. I've been leaving it out on the dining table when it arrives the last few months and found out my husband has taken up reading it during breakfast or lunch! Never bothered before. I have made several changes in my habits when they've indicated something either does or does not work.

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I have subscribed to several health/wellness newsletters from major medical colleges over the last few years, but believe this one it the very best, and just renewed my susbscription for the fourth year.

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Thursday, June 19, 2014

Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies

Harvard Journal of Asiatic StudiesI recommond this serious journal on asian studies, which established it's fame in the past six dicades. It's specialized on history, language, linguistic, literatrue and phisolophy of asia, especially on east asia, China, Korea and Japan. Archives can be found on JSTOR, but the "moving wall" of JSTOR only allows reader to access 2004's and before.

Friday, May 30, 2014

Military Spouse

Military SpouseMilitary Spouse holds itself out as a sort of "Self" magazine tailored to the military spouse (well, wife, for the most part). The articles themselves are innocuous, uncontroversial and upbeat, as you'd probably expect. One disturbing thing in the most recent issue caught my eye: in a Christmas-gift section, the authors write, "Is his Christmas list bigger than your wallet this year? Stop saying Bah Humbug, and try a payment plan! Freedom Furniture and Electronics can set up military families with per-payday allotments ...." In civilian speak, you authorize the finance office to direct a portion of your pay to the company each month on a layaway type of arrangement.

Here's the problem. This company and others like it prey on young military members by advertising ultra-low "per payday" prices for the items they sell. They hold themselves out as offering special deals to military members (they like to use words like "Freedom" and "Patriot" in their company names). You have to hunt around the website to figure out how to calculate the actual price of what you're buying, because they never post the total price of anything. Everything is based on the purchaser getting a line of credit with the company, and that credit line is at a whopping 19.96% APR. If you search enough, you'll find out that you need to multiply the "per payday" price by 48 to determine the total price. They advertise a grill that costs $980, but you can buy the same thing from Amazon for $330 ... they have tripled the price. They advertise an Acer laptop which comes to an absurd $1,673, when that same laptop is being sold for less than 25% of that price on overstock websites. But, at $10 or $20 a payday, it sounds like a great deal, until you figure out the final cost would be $480 or $960, respectively.

The military spends a great deal of time trying to educate its young servicemembers that they're getting fleeced by companies like Freedom Furniture, and it's mindboggling that a magazine that holds itself out as supporting military families is endorsing getting involved with such shady marketers. What this tells me is that the publishers of Military Spouse are more concerned with product placement and ad revenue than they are with military families. No one should be encouraging our members to pay 3 to 4 (or more) times the going rate for merchandise. And they definitely shouldn't be pitching this as a gift-buying solution for people who are already short of cash! I say avoid this publication.

I was so excited that this magazine was coming out and I subscribed without bothering to see the first isssue. I'm sure some people will find it beneficial, but I want more. I'd save my subscription money and perhaps buy it off the rack if it is relevant on occasion.

I will not be renewing because I'm very disappointed in the content and quality of this magazine. It has so much potential, but falls drastically short. The content rarely, if at all, has enough information to be valuable in any category. The articles are short and not in depth enough to make an impact. The advice columns border on irresponsible and tacky. In some cases, I can't believe that the advisor is a qualified expert as they state. I still think Military Spouse could raise itself up and be an excellent magazine, but I will not buy it until I see that it has done so.

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I've bought several issues after reading the cover, and every time I've been disappointed by the content within. Every time I picked up another copy, I had hoped that it would get better. Well, I have finally learned my lesson and will stop wasting my money.

The problem I have with this magazine is that while the articles are relevant to the military spouse, the articles themselves are way too short, unoriginal, and just filled with fluff. I get the feeling that the writers do little to no research when composing their articles, and just write off the top of their heads. While I can appreciate reading about others' personal experiences, if the article is supposed to be about stress and the military spouse, I want to actually know what kind of resources are available and expect some professional information in the article. Instead, the articles offer generic advice that you can find anywhere else, and aren't necessarily tailored to the unique needs of a military spouse, e.g. Breathe in and out slowly when under stress. Really? My husband is deployed to a war zone and that's the advice you give me?

The truth is, this magazine could be really great, however it definitely falls short. I feel that it lacks professionalism, and appears to be produced by a bunch of military spouses looking for a hobby. While I am all for supporting other military spouses and their endeavors, some of the magazine's staff just aren't cut out to be professional journalists. The content and look of the magazine would be greatly improved if they brought in a few writers and an editor with real journalist backgrounds and experience, and that are not married to the military. I don't think having writers not married to the military would hurt, but actually help because they would actually have to do research to learn about this community, and not just write about their generic experiences. They could also expand the magazine to include content that all people would enjoy, not just military spouses. I think this would bring the magazine up to a higher standard and would warrant my $3.99 at the newsstand.

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The magazine itself is nothing special. It is very repetitive with not a lot of useless information. It's mostly just filled with pictures and articles with no substance.

The magazine has an online forum which I went onto and posted a few things. The other spouses in this forum were rude, closed minded, misguided and paranoid. They had Islamic bashing sessions (along with bashing others who weren't Christian by saying that non-Christians have mental disorders), they mistrusted ANY prior service women (which I happen to be) or active duty women because they think that ALL women in the military are out to "steal their men." They condone infidelity by saying that anyone that has been cheated on should just go to marriage counseling because it was an accident (even if it was a regular occurrence in the marriage) and you should NEVER leave for that reason because you should ALWAYS make your marriage work after infidelity, including multiple offenses (but in reality it seems that they were saying that you loose benefits and might have to get your own job if you get a divorce). If this is what the magazine represents, I would NEVER recommend it to any military spouse!!

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I disagree with the negative reviews, and I realize that as a business owner its hard to make everyone happy. I think its important to try and get the nuggets you need out of the magazine and if something is "missing" in your eyes, think of how you may be able to make a contribution to the military sposue community yourself. Its a group effort to meet each other's needs. As a career and life coach in the military spouse community, I often recommend that spouses read Military Spouse magazine to get a sense of the broader military community beyond their current circumstances and was suprised to read any negative reviews on the publication. I think they do a great job!

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Harp Column

Harp ColumnFirst of all, this is a magazine for harpists. It is a niche magazine for those interested in harp news, competitions, upcoming workshops, etc. That said, this is an excellant magazine. Good historical articles, interviews and a "classifieds" section for those who want to purchase or sell a harp. Even a small harp is a big investment (most run several thousand dollars), and the harpist owes it to him/herself to learn as much about this instrument, those who have mastered it, and the hisory.

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Voici

VoiciIf you're looking for the number 1 magazine in France on the stars (French or abroad), this is the leading magazine on the market.

If you're a French person or someone looking to stay in touch with the latest in France Voici Magazine covers up to date news on who's who, who did what and where they did it. If you're looking for an intellectual magazine, this isn't it look for Paris Match in that case for a softer version with serious articles.

But if you just want to flip pages and keep updated with what the Star Academy contestants are doing or whether Mylene Farmer was spotted recently, this is it.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Montana Living

Montana LivingThis magazine is for those that have the money to live on a huge ranch! Also, I have only gotten 3 magazines in 2 years took 10 months to get the first one!

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Massage & Bodywork

Massage & BodyworkMassage magazine is a staple for anyone in the massage and bodywork field. Articles are generally fulfilling, and you will get more than you pay for out of it.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

photo technique (1-year auto-renewal)

photo techniqueIn many ways, this magazine is a refreshing change from all the "Popular " line of publications out there (Popular Science, photography, mechanics, etc). About 50% of these magazines are filled with ads and then about 25% more with stealth-ads (you know, the ones that pose as legitimate articles but are actually ads for a product). The remaining 25% is sometimes OK and usually too amateur or regurgitation of tips/tricks from last year's editions. Then along comes "photo technique". This has very few ads and ALL of the articles are real, bona fide essays on topics in photography. The problem for me was that everything is in the form of an essay and there aren't many of them in the publication. Topics have ranged from things I find interesting to having the entire magazine filled with things I don't. What don't I find interesting? I don't really care about the latest techniques in black and white developing in a dark room (who uses a dark room anymore?), I don't care about selecting the perfect "film" (who uses film anymore?), I don't care about some abstract artist who dedicated her entire life to taking pictures of flower arrangements. All of those things just seem far too specialized and in-depth to keep my attention long-term. Mind you, each one of these topics takes up about 1/5th of the whole magazine, so if you are bored by a few articles, then you're almost at the end! Past articles on RAW conversion, HDR processing, screen color calibrations and more, have been very interesting to me and well-done. So the publication is informative and of high quality, but for the relatively high price and low frequency (6/yr), I can sometimes literally flip through the whole thing and yawn the entire time...only to have to wait 2 more months for the next one to arrive. Other times it has been well-worth it. But when I consider the pros/cons and the high cost, I have decided to pass on this renewal.

Nothing to write home about here. The name of the magazine "photo technique" would suggest that there's something new and exciting to learn here. The magazine simply doesn't deliver. It's about 50 pages long, which are filled with fluff and sponsored articles. By fluff I mean rehashed information that's borderline common knowledge. Such as a whole article that talks about how if you increase your shutter speed by one stop, you would want to do the same for your ISO. I've never seen a magazine that had so little to offer. At $30 for six issues it doesn't even come close in value to many great photography books that would teach you 100 times as much for the price of a 1-year subscription.

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I've read this magazine for years, as a kid in my grandpa's darkroom, then growing up as it transitioned with the photo world into the digital age. Photo Technique has consistently been the best photo magazine, bar none, if you care about aesthetics, detailed technique, and timelessly beautiful photography. Not necessarily the source for detailed reviews of every single latest camera. Absolutely not a source for breathless articles about faddish imaging filters, etc. Not heavy with ads -to the contrary, almost every page is worth reading and rereading.

If you want a consistently serious, detailed, and incredible place to learn the art and craft of photography, just open the latest issue of Photo Technique.

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This is a great magazine for photographers or anyone interested in taking your photos to the next level. I would highly recommend it.

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We purchased this for a class for my daughter and was a required book for her so I am assuming it met all her educational needs.

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