How do you select the numbers you use to play Pick-3 Lottery? Want to learn how to reduce the odds against you? A book like this sounds like it could be dry…a real yawner, right? Not the case here. Written as a conversation between a freelance writer and a man named Sam, using over two dozen charts, this book leads the reader through the process of capturing data, importing it to a spreadsheet, and analyzing the results. The reader learns how to reduce the odds from 1 in 1000 to 1 in 220. Additional tips suggest ways to further filter your selections and build wagers. Does it guarantee a win? Not at all, but reading this text may improve your chances of picking numbers that improve your chances of winning.
WTF r u Sayin? (by Mitch Sexton AKA Evans Bissonette)
The digital age created the ability for individuals to immerse themselves in social media, sending texts from their cell phones, or Tweets (status updates) using Twitter. While convenient, the Digital Age brought on a language of its own, and with it, the potential to confuse. Is BYOB and invitation for you to ‘Bring your own booze’ or an invitation for you to ‘Be your own boss’? When your offspring hurriedly types CD9, is that the name of a new soft drink or, like POS, a warning that they have Parents Over Shoulder? WTF R U Sayin' provides two lists (one alphabetical by code, the second, alphabetical by description) over 3,500 symbols, codes, acronyms, abbreviations, and phrases to assist you in making sense of the jargon.
Not an artist or an illustrator? Need help in speeding up the process? Do you need a tool (or a variety of tools) for homeschooling or just something to entertain pre-school and school-age kids? These great questions may raise questions of their own: What tools are available and, more importantly, what tools are available for free? This book is a collection of descriptive profiles for over three dozen drawing related software applications. These simple write-ups include the web link address for each application so interested parties could review additional detail and download the software if desired.
Listen To What You Wrote!: Text-To-Speech for Writers and Others (Kindle edition by Mitch Sexton, AKA Evans Bissonette)
As an author, what tools do you use to proofread your work? Do you need help with proofreading your manuscript? I find that when I am reading what I have just written, my mind sometimes plays tricks on me. I read words that I failed to type, while sometimes adding nonexistent extensions to other words, or skipping over words that were repeated (as if my printer developed a stutter). I have even created passages that sounded glorious to that internal voice that sings in my head but then failed to live up to their potential once they were frozen on paper. Text-To-Speech may be just the utility you need.
If you have this same problem, Text-To-Speech may be just the utility you need. Included within are profiles for ten TTS opportunities. This provides the interested reader a chance to look over the highlights and select the product that might interest them and fill their needs.