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    Discover the Real Cancer of Our Western Culture
    Sit down and think long and hard about the problems people in society face. Think about the problems our communities as a whole face, and try and determine what the probable causes of these are. Chances are things like crime, poverty and relationship breakdown will come to mind and you’re probably going to attribute the cause to money. “Money is the root of all evil,” you’ll probably say now that you’ve thought about some of the major problems our country faces, however I’m going to challenge you right now if you think money is the root of all evil.The Cancer of our We
    r reproduction then speak to your printer.

    Dpi (dots per inch) or resolution refers to the sharpness of your design. It does not matter how good the printers are, if your card design is not sharp enough then the printed card will not appear crisp and clear. Ideally for the best result, you are looking at having a design of at least 300dpi when created in actual printing size. As an example, a 300dpi artwork that needs 200% scale in order to print in actual size is not 300dpi but is 150dpi.

    Thickness (gsm) of the card is reference to its weight. Ideally to have professional looking business cards the best paper weight to use is between 330 and 360gsm. Again you can use matt paper or gloss paper and use other finishing’s on the printed business card. Again different paper makes the final

    General Contractors and Mobile Storage: A Strategic Partnership
    Small contractors and large developers all share one thing in common: the need to store their supplies and materials. Construction, building and renovation projects require plenty of materials and space to work in. Contractors also need to protect their materials during the construction phase. A recent trend in the mobile storage industry is the development of strategic partnerships between mobile storage companies and contractors. Mobile storage companies are providing cost effective storage solutions to contractors big and small. Most contractors purchase materials in bulk t
    In this article we try to cut through some of the printing red tape and try to provide you with a better understanding of the jargon and the pitfalls, ensuring your expectations are more closely matched to the end product you will be receiving. The following points should be of help,

    If you want a close colour match between colours on the designs you see on the computer monitor and the printed cards speak to the printer. Depending on the type of monitor you use and the colours involved, there could be a huge difference between how the colour looks on the monitor (RGB MODE) and how the printed colour (CMYK MODE) looks when printed from the printer or when printed using you home of office printer. Also the type of paper used affects how the printed colours look. If you want very close matches the best way to proceed is to send a paper copy of the card with colours on it to the printer. The printer can then try to find the closest matching CMYK colour. If the printer can’t find an appropriate CMYK colour code, he may recommend using another printing set of colours called Pantone (Spot) colours. Pantone colour printing is normally more expensive than CMYK colour printing, but the accuracy to colour match is also better.

    The most common misunderstanding and pitfall between a customer and a company offering printed services, is when a customer requires his card details or logo to have beautiful and bright colours which they see on the monitor, yet the same colours look a lot duller on the printed business cards they receive.

    Why does this happen? Quite simply it is the physics of the situation as follows,

    Monitor colours (RGB: Red-Green-Blue), the three basic colour elements -which together form a pixel- that every CRT monitor and colour television technology is using to compose all the colours that it is able to display. Basically, the luminosity of each colour element is adjusted to a value from 0 (so dark to be black) to 255 (as bright as the white), and the additive mixture of all three colour values together has the effect of producing a distinct colour, with values ranging within the RGB colour space. Now, how correctly and in accordance to its value is the colour displayed in your screen, has to do mainly with the quality of the monitor- plus other details like monitor colour profile etc.

    The colours scheme used for printing (CMYK: Cyan-Magenta-Yellow– Black) are the basic colours which are combined to get the equivalent RGB colours: magenta+ yellow = red, magenta + cyan = blue and cyan + yellow = green.

    However, these colours will not be as bright as the RGB colours that can be displayed on the screen. The reason is that CMYK works through light absorption: the colour you see on paper is the result of the visible spectre of light that’s left unabsorbed and reflected back to your eyes. On the contrary, RGB colours on monitor screens are exposing light, with the consequence that colours appear much more vibrant. And thus is the key reason why colours you see on the screen and when printed look different and sometimes substantially so.

    Now as mentioned earlier, to get over these problems of physics, if you are concerned about close colour reproduction then speak to your printer.

    Dpi (dots per inch) or resolution refers to the sharpness of your design. It does not matter how good the printers are, if your card design is not sharp enough then the printed card will not appear crisp and clear. Ideally for the best result, you are looking at having a design of at least 300dpi when created in actual printing size. As an example, a 300dpi artwork that needs 200% scale in order to print in actual size is not 300dpi but is 150dpi.

    Thickness (gsm) of the card is reference to its weight. Ideally to have professional looking business cards the best paper weight to use is between 330 and 360gsm. Again you can use matt paper or gloss paper and use other finishing’s on the printed business card. Again different paper makes the final p

    Tube Cuts Made Easy - A Cutting-Edge Technology
    Dynasties fall, empires break, seasons pass—but one thing that never ends is mankind’s technological progress. To prove it one more time and this time, with remarkable prospects, laser tube processing has come to make things easier for the tube-cutting industry. Laser cuts being a reality now, production efforts have sharply shrunk to a minimum of 50%; and quality has spiked like never before.Who would want to rely on high-frequency systems or flying cutoff machines to cut tubes and pipes anymore, when the same job is done faster and better with lasers? Now that doesn’t a
    he best way to proceed is to send a paper copy of the card with colours on it to the printer. The printer can then try to find the closest matching CMYK colour. If the printer can’t find an appropriate CMYK colour code, he may recommend using another printing set of colours called Pantone (Spot) colours. Pantone colour printing is normally more expensive than CMYK colour printing, but the accuracy to colour match is also better.

    The most common misunderstanding and pitfall between a customer and a company offering printed services, is when a customer requires his card details or logo to have beautiful and bright colours which they see on the monitor, yet the same colours look a lot duller on the printed business cards they receive.

    Why does this happen? Quite simply it is the physics of the situation as follows,

    Monitor colours (RGB: Red-Green-Blue), the three basic colour elements -which together form a pixel- that every CRT monitor and colour television technology is using to compose all the colours that it is able to display. Basically, the luminosity of each colour element is adjusted to a value from 0 (so dark to be black) to 255 (as bright as the white), and the additive mixture of all three colour values together has the effect of producing a distinct colour, with values ranging within the RGB colour space. Now, how correctly and in accordance to its value is the colour displayed in your screen, has to do mainly with the quality of the monitor- plus other details like monitor colour profile etc.

    The colours scheme used for printing (CMYK: Cyan-Magenta-Yellow– Black) are the basic colours which are combined to get the equivalent RGB colours: magenta+ yellow = red, magenta + cyan = blue and cyan + yellow = green.

    However, these colours will not be as bright as the RGB colours that can be displayed on the screen. The reason is that CMYK works through light absorption: the colour you see on paper is the result of the visible spectre of light that’s left unabsorbed and reflected back to your eyes. On the contrary, RGB colours on monitor screens are exposing light, with the consequence that colours appear much more vibrant. And thus is the key reason why colours you see on the screen and when printed look different and sometimes substantially so.

    Now as mentioned earlier, to get over these problems of physics, if you are concerned about close colour reproduction then speak to your printer.

    Dpi (dots per inch) or resolution refers to the sharpness of your design. It does not matter how good the printers are, if your card design is not sharp enough then the printed card will not appear crisp and clear. Ideally for the best result, you are looking at having a design of at least 300dpi when created in actual printing size. As an example, a 300dpi artwork that needs 200% scale in order to print in actual size is not 300dpi but is 150dpi.

    Thickness (gsm) of the card is reference to its weight. Ideally to have professional looking business cards the best paper weight to use is between 330 and 360gsm. Again you can use matt paper or gloss paper and use other finishing’s on the printed business card. Again different paper makes the final

    Corporate Identity - The Relation Between Culture and the Company's Product
    All larger companies and all those who have been in the market for several business cycles are prone to an (identity) crisis. Corporate identity and the product of the company are related. This is quite important when dealing with change.In his book – “let’s make things better,” Marcel Metze writes about the Philips culture which is centered around engineers on one side and salesmen on the other; some how these two groups keep the organization in balance.For those of you how know Philips know that this company “makes things,” it operates in consumer electronics, ap
    f the situation as follows,

    Monitor colours (RGB: Red-Green-Blue), the three basic colour elements -which together form a pixel- that every CRT monitor and colour television technology is using to compose all the colours that it is able to display. Basically, the luminosity of each colour element is adjusted to a value from 0 (so dark to be black) to 255 (as bright as the white), and the additive mixture of all three colour values together has the effect of producing a distinct colour, with values ranging within the RGB colour space. Now, how correctly and in accordance to its value is the colour displayed in your screen, has to do mainly with the quality of the monitor- plus other details like monitor colour profile etc.

    The colours scheme used for printing (CMYK: Cyan-Magenta-Yellow– Black) are the basic colours which are combined to get the equivalent RGB colours: magenta+ yellow = red, magenta + cyan = blue and cyan + yellow = green.

    However, these colours will not be as bright as the RGB colours that can be displayed on the screen. The reason is that CMYK works through light absorption: the colour you see on paper is the result of the visible spectre of light that’s left unabsorbed and reflected back to your eyes. On the contrary, RGB colours on monitor screens are exposing light, with the consequence that colours appear much more vibrant. And thus is the key reason why colours you see on the screen and when printed look different and sometimes substantially so.

    Now as mentioned earlier, to get over these problems of physics, if you are concerned about close colour reproduction then speak to your printer.

    Dpi (dots per inch) or resolution refers to the sharpness of your design. It does not matter how good the printers are, if your card design is not sharp enough then the printed card will not appear crisp and clear. Ideally for the best result, you are looking at having a design of at least 300dpi when created in actual printing size. As an example, a 300dpi artwork that needs 200% scale in order to print in actual size is not 300dpi but is 150dpi.

    Thickness (gsm) of the card is reference to its weight. Ideally to have professional looking business cards the best paper weight to use is between 330 and 360gsm. Again you can use matt paper or gloss paper and use other finishing’s on the printed business card. Again different paper makes the final

    Corporate Canaries - A Book Summary
    The Big IdeaLong ago, coal miners would put caged canaries in their tunnels. If the little birds fell silent or dropped, this would alert the miners of the presence of poison gas. This way, many miners were able to escape unhurt. The business environment you live in is very much like those treacherous mines. Hundreds of employees are laid off everyday and more and more companies are filing for bankruptcy. As a manager, you must learn how to detect threats to your business before disaster strikes.Corporate canaries are exactly like those real-life
    lack) are the basic colours which are combined to get the equivalent RGB colours: magenta+ yellow = red, magenta + cyan = blue and cyan + yellow = green.

    However, these colours will not be as bright as the RGB colours that can be displayed on the screen. The reason is that CMYK works through light absorption: the colour you see on paper is the result of the visible spectre of light that’s left unabsorbed and reflected back to your eyes. On the contrary, RGB colours on monitor screens are exposing light, with the consequence that colours appear much more vibrant. And thus is the key reason why colours you see on the screen and when printed look different and sometimes substantially so.

    Now as mentioned earlier, to get over these problems of physics, if you are concerned about close colour reproduction then speak to your printer.

    Dpi (dots per inch) or resolution refers to the sharpness of your design. It does not matter how good the printers are, if your card design is not sharp enough then the printed card will not appear crisp and clear. Ideally for the best result, you are looking at having a design of at least 300dpi when created in actual printing size. As an example, a 300dpi artwork that needs 200% scale in order to print in actual size is not 300dpi but is 150dpi.

    Thickness (gsm) of the card is reference to its weight. Ideally to have professional looking business cards the best paper weight to use is between 330 and 360gsm. Again you can use matt paper or gloss paper and use other finishing’s on the printed business card. Again different paper makes the final

    Tying A Company Mission and Vision Statement with a Guiding Principal
    “Quality means the world to us” says Motorola. “The world on time” states Federal Express.“Quality, Service, Cleanliness and Value” says McDonald’s Restaurants.Ever wonder where those great mottos for major companies come from? “They aren’t mission statements, nor vision statements; not exactly an advertising slogan, though it can serve as an effective motto in advertising” says Don Midgett, author of Mission and Vision Statements: Your Path to a Successful Business Future. Your guiding principle is a brief statement that distills th
    r reproduction then speak to your printer.

    Dpi (dots per inch) or resolution refers to the sharpness of your design. It does not matter how good the printers are, if your card design is not sharp enough then the printed card will not appear crisp and clear. Ideally for the best result, you are looking at having a design of at least 300dpi when created in actual printing size. As an example, a 300dpi artwork that needs 200% scale in order to print in actual size is not 300dpi but is 150dpi.

    Thickness (gsm) of the card is reference to its weight. Ideally to have professional looking business cards the best paper weight to use is between 330 and 360gsm. Again you can use matt paper or gloss paper and use other finishing’s on the printed business card. Again different paper makes the final print appear different. Ask your printer for more advice.

    Use lithographic printing or digital printing. The words lithographic or digital are simply references to the quality of the printing machines and the printing processes used to print the cards. Lithographic printing is an older method of printing and gives a very clear and crisp result. Digital printing is a newer method and depending on the quality of digital printers used, the results may vary. The best digital printers produce a printed quality as crisp and clear as the best lithographic printers, and better results than some of the older lithographic printers.

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