Investing For Simple People #1, Miscellaneous And Education

I’m so excited to post this first entry for the “Investing For Simple People” blog carnival. The carnival consists of several categories, and split into several posts, one for each category.

Rules
I must admit that we’ve received many good articles, which you will find in the upcoming posts. I also regret that I have to turn down some of the entries due to their irrelevance to the topic, or incorrect submissions like blog home page or whole categories. The blog carnival is to feature best articles, not whole blogs or links to the categories, nor press releases, nor disguised affiliate sale pages. We also reserve a right to refuse an article if it has no potential value for our respected readers and/or a “copy-paste” from free article directories. We allow maximum two articles from the same blog for a single carnival edition, so these carnival posts do not look like Technorati spam. As you can see, we are quite serious and trying to make this carnival a valuable resource for our readers and partners ;)

Some articles may be a little bit more advanced then this carnival is aiming at, but still can be a good reading.

This carnival consists of the following categories:

Anyway, let the link love begin! :)

Miscellaneous

FitBuff unveils a deadly secret on How to Legally Get Your Cable and Phone Bills Paid for Free. Not shabby. :)

Taking on YouTubeAzmi M. takes on YouTube in his How to Make Money from YouTube.

Jason Elder shows a good way to flip furniture and make some bucks from unfortunate people in What Is Bankruptcy Furniture.

Education

David Pitlyuk shows an example how a big company can suffer from the media opinion in How One Blog Post Can Cost A Company $4 Billion.

Dankupec presents Identify the companies of Warren Buffett’s standard, saying, “It is not any secret that the “Oracle of Omaha” keeps his lips rather tight when it comes to revealing, which company he is about to invest in. And with the exposure he is getting, who can really blame him? With his exposure, showing the potential triumphs to the investing public would attract thousands, if not millions, of “hangers on”, who would drive the stock price into levels, he could no longer accept for his stellar portfolio.”

Eric Hudin shows an idea of a living trust in Living Trust Confusion.

Look for the rest of the carnival categories in upcoming posts!

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This entry was posted on Sunday, June 17th, 2007 and is filed under Carnival. 4,464 Views. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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