– written by Ken Norquay. Have you ever wondered how the financial industry and the stock markets work? Have you ever wondered why you trade as you do? Just imagine what knowing these could do to improve your investing resultsand help you achieve higher returns.Ken Norquay’s new book Beyond The Bull – Taking Stock Market […]
Books
Flin Flon Man.
-Written by KennyDN. Synopsis: What would happen if a modern computer genius encountered an authentic Teacher of ancient wisdom? No, no… not some God-intoxicated, New Age “coach,” but a real Teacher, One who has real knowledge. What would happen?
Professional Communication in International Settings
- written by Yuling Pan, Suzanne Wong Scollon, Ron Scollon
PREFACE
The globalization of activities in business, government, marketing and even entertainment has made us aware of how interconnected our world now is. But globalization has also made us aware of how fundamentally different we are in different nations, cultures, and even organizations. This book has been written to help individuals and organizations deal with professional communication when communication takes place across the frontiers of international, organizational, and even interpersonal relationships.
Nexus Analysis: Discourse Cycles and Emerging Internet
- Written by Suzie Wong Scollon
PREFACE
On a dark December day in 1980 when the temperature was nearly 40 degrees below zero and the valley in which Fairbanks, Alaska lies was filled with choking ice fog that glittered brilliantly in the campus lights, Suzie Scollon proposed an idea to Ron Scollon that radically changed our lives. Five years before the invention of the Internet she proposed that we use the internal electronic mail system of the University of Alaska Computer Network (UACN) to teach university classes, to communicate among faculty, and to communicate between faculty and students who lived across the 1280 mile span of Alaska where there were UACN facilities—from Kotzebue on the Arctic Coast to Ketchikan in the Tongass rain forest of Southeast Alaska, a distance about the same as the distance from Dublin to Budapest.