The Internet has allowed publishers to work at lightning speed without the use of paper or waiting for the U.S. Postal Service to distribute their products. Remember the loads of junk mail you used to get every day... wait. I still get loads of junk mail! But I no longer have to depend on those sheets of paper that are tucked inside my newspaper as my only form of advertising! Nobody ever looks at them anyway. "Swoosh!" Straight to the recycle bin.
But if your article is on the Internet -- now that's a different story. Not only are you saving trees by default, you have a much better chance that someone's going to pay attention to you and actually read what you have to say.
As you probably know, the most important part about owning a website that people actually visit is name recognition and backlinks. Well, if you're writing articles under your name (or your secret persona that runs your site) that name is going to be published on thousands of websites worldwide. Just think of the possibilities!
As long as your articles are well-written, not too long or too short (between 500 and 800 words is usually good) and informative, people are going to read them. Maybe you have a natural solution for premature hair loss in men. Do you? Lots of people will read that one. Or maybe you work on sailboats in your free time and sell rigging, sails and netting on your website. I bet you have a thousand stories you could tell!
Small business owners have been looking for a cheap and easy way to advertise since time immemorial. Now you have the option to do it! You don't have to roll heavy rocks up giant hills, participate in a gladiator duel to the death or even call your mother-in-law to see what she thinks about it. (In fact, you have the option not even to tell your wife, and just watch her face light up for once when she checks your bank balance, wink wink.)
All you have to do -- and this is hard for some people to start, I'll give you that -- is write one, two or three short articles a week about your business, submit them with software or one of several online submission sites, and BAM there you are, coursing through the universe for anyone and everyone to see.
Here's the catch. (You knew it didn't you?) This process takes time. Writing three articles will not get you 1,000 hits on your site. You have to keep at it. Write those three articles every single week for two months and you'll see results. Write two a week for a year? You might find yourself popping up at the top of the search results on all of your favorite search engines.
Are You Smarter Than A Ten Year Old Game
What was your favorite childhood game? Checkers? Dominos? Tic-Tac-Toe? It seems that the more sophisticated some games become, the more others stay the same. Some games simply withstand the test of time. Our parents played them. We played them. And now our children are playing them. Some classic games have new twists to them. Yet their essence hasn't changed over the years, and they still create as much excitement in Millersburg Ohio and elsewhere, as they always have. Marbles is one such game.
From nuts to glass
Have you ever wondered about the history of marbles? Before marbles, kids probably played with polished nuts. Roman and Greek youngsters later played games with small balls of clay. And marbles were even found in King Tut's tomb!
Marbles have a long history in Europe. They remained popular through the Middle Ages, when society frowned on children enjoying fun game. Clay marbles of the Medieval and Elizabethan eras became marble marbles when Germans started to manufacture smoother versions. In fact, the word ?marble? itself means ?for the rock? in German.
Germany became the world's leader in marble for numerous centuries. They produced them from materials such as brass, gemstone, and limestone. Amazingly, some businesses could produce roughly 800 marbles per hour!
Today, glass marbles are the most common ones produced. Historians believe that they were first made in either Germany or Italy.
Another great American pastime
How about marbles in North America? Scientists believe that various tribes of Native Americans played with marbles made of clay and stone. The most famous ones were found at the Hopewell burial site, located in the same state as Millersburg Ohio.
Much later, the first manufactured marbles were produced in America towards the latter part of the 1800s. Later, the initial marbles that a machine created were made in the state of Ohio. Martin Frederick Christensen received the official rights for a machine that made steel ball bearings that were nearly perfectly round. He also produced America's first machine-made marbles! Christensen's company was manufacturing 10,000 marbles per day, by 1910.
Today, one company in Mexico cranks out 12 million marbles every day, and then ships them to an amazing 35 nations throughout the world!
Marble madness
Fortunately, playing a game of marbles with your kids won't require 12 million of them:
Equipment:
? A minimum of 14 marbles: 13 ?mibs? marbles and 1 ?shooter? marble
? A circle
Rules:
? Every player chooses how many marbles they'll use during the game
? Draw a circle with a diameter of 3-10 feet (use bigger circles for better players)
? Put 13 ?mibs? (smaller marbles) in the circle's center, creating What was your favorite childhood game? Checkers? Dominos? Tic-Tac-Toe? It seems that the more sophisticated some games become, the more others stay the same. Some games simply withstand the test of time. Our parents played them. We played them. And now our children are playing them. Some classic games have new twists to them. Yet their essence hasn't changed over the years, and they still create as much excitement in Millersburg Ohio and elsewhere, as they always have. Marbles is one such game.
From nuts to glass
Have you ever wondered about the history of marbles? Before marbles, kids probably played with polished nuts. Roman and Greek youngsters later played games with small balls of clay. And marbles were even found in King Tut's tomb!
Marbles have a long history in Europe. They remained popular through the Middle Ages, when society frowned on children enjoying fun game. Clay marbles of the Medieval and Elizabethan eras became marble marbles when Germans started to manufacture smoother versions. In fact, the word ?marble? itself means ?for the rock? in German.
Germany became the world's leader in marble for numerous centuries. They produced them from materials such as brass, gemstone, and limestone. Amazingly, some businesses could produce roughly 800 marbles per hour!
Today, glass marbles are the most common ones produced. Historians believe that they were first made in either Germany or Italy.
Another great American pastime
How about marbles in North America? Scientists believe that various tribes of Native Americans played with marbles made of clay and stone. The most famous ones were found at the Hopewell burial site, located in the same state as Millersburg Ohio.
Much later, the first manufactured marbles were produced in America towards the latter part of the 1800s. Later, the initial marbles that a machine created were made in the state of Ohio. Martin Frederick Christensen received the official rights for a machine that made steel ball bearings that were nearly perfectly round. He also produced America's first machine-made marbles! Christensen's company was manufacturing 10,000 marbles per day, by 1910.
Today, one company in Mexico cranks out 12 million marbles every day, and then ships them to an amazing 35 nations throughout the world!
Marble madness
Fortunately, playing a game of marbles with your kids won't require 12 million of them:
Equipment:
? A minimum of 14 marbles: 13 ?mibs? marbles and 1 ?shooter? marble
? A circle
Rules:
? Every player chooses how many marbles they'll use during the game
? Draw a circle with a diameter of 3-10 feet (use bigger circles for better players)
? Put 13 ?mibs? (smaller marbles) in the circle's center, creating an ?X? or an ?O?
? A player flicks a shooter to knock out at least 1 mib from the circle, without the shooter rolling out of the circle. If a player achieves this objective, he can shoot again from where the shooter landed.
? The player gets 1 point for each mib knocked out of the circle. Also, other players? shooters can be knocked out of the circle.
? If the player: 1) fails to knock out at least 1 mib, or 2) his shooter rolls outside the circle, the player must place the shooter within the circle.
? After all of the original mibs have been hit outside the circle, the player with the highest number of points is declared the winner!
Marbles remains one of the timeless toys for children, in places such as Berlin Ohio. While games such as Marble Racer blends the timeless toy with other types of toys, the essence of the toy remains unchanged. As long as there are children in the world, they'll never become tired of watching the colorful glass balls roll along a tile, pavement, or miniature slide!
Both Roger Haumann & Nicole Munoz are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Roger Haumann has sinced written about articles on various topics from SEO Articles, Affiliate Programs and Writing. Roger Haumann is a self-employed contractor by day, and blogger by night. He is a regular contributor to , an online article distribution service. Lea. Roger Haumann's top article generates over 720 views. to your Favourites.