Email to me -
or PAGE
me (use PIN: 3869670)
Click
HERE for a category listing of all my WWW pages
(
& Lynx browsers
only)
Personal & Commercial Pages created
Take advantage of the market out there and the low-cost advertising in supporting a web page. Your page can simply be your logo, address, email, phone number & fax for people to reach you for your product and/or service. Its like a 24 hours worldwide customer service department and advertising for pennies a day
Below are some other possibilities
Web Page Counter *
Usage by day statistics...............$10.00
Usage counter display.................$10.00 [currently not
available]
Guestbook *
registering and setting up............$10.00
Search Engines registration...................$30.00 [5 major engines]
$65.00 [10 major engines]
$30.00 extra for keywords
Scanning
per image ( 8.5 x 11 )................$15.00
(color or black and white)
Uploading the html code, images, etc. to your account(s)
directory and setting up the security codes
..............................................$30.00
Executable cshell script code to extract, copy and append all of the sites
which access your web pages...................$10.00
(Note: depending on your account, security and how you carrier
is setup this feature may not be possible. Shell account and telnet
is required)
* both the page counters and the guestbook are operated and maintained at
another site. So you or your carrier do not require perl, cgi or any
programming.
Click here to link
to my table of contents page and see the pages I've created
Information Broker/CyberLibrarian
If you dont know where to look on the Internet for information
maybe I can help you. In the past I have researched info for
people on topics from computers, AIDS, medicine, and real estate.
Click here
for
the form.
BELOW IS A SAMPLE OF SEARCH I DID FOR SOMEONE ON CARBON MONOXIDE POISONING:
WHAT I NORMALLY do is email abstracts of what I found, and upon payment the full texts and/or Internet locations are then provided abstract: 1 Carbon Monoxide Poisoning -- Weld County, Colorado, 1993 In March 1993, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) was notified that six family members residing in a home in Weld County had suffered carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning; five of the persons died. An investigation indicated that the source of CO had been a van parked in the garage of the home; the van had been left running, and the exhaust fumes leaked into the home. This report summarizes the investigation of this incident. On March 10, 1993, at 7:32 p.m., emergency personnel in Weld County received an inactivitnny alert from the heart monitor of an outpatient. On arrival at the patient's home, they found the six family members (three adults and three children) to be dead or unconscious. Four persons (a 77-year-old woman who was wearing the heart monitor, two other adults aged 29 and 30 years, and one 8-year-old child) were pronounced dead at the scene. The decedents were found on the first floor of the house, in upstairs bedrooms, and in the basement; on autopsy, carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) levels of the decedents ranged from 72% to 78%. Two other children (aged 12 and 11 years) were found unconscious in the basement. Although their initial COHb levels were similar, clinical features of the two patients were distinctly different. with 8 references abstract: 2 Carbon Monoxide Poisoning from Use of Gasoline-Fueled Power Washers in an Underground Parking Garage --- District of Columbia, 1994 long text with 7 references abstract: 3 An Inexpensive CO Sensor A schematic of the prototype CO passive sensor. Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless, toxic gas whose primary source indoor is the incomplete combustion of fossil fuels. This gas can be a potential problem in any house that uses combustion appliances for space or water heating, cooking, or idling an automobile in an attached garage. with death statistics and more info abstract: 4 8-4. CARBON MONOXIDE POISONING IN FLIGHT Updated: 01/06/94 a. Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless, and tasteless gas contained in exhaust fumes. When breathed even in minute quantities over a period of time, it can significantly reduce the ability of the blood to carry oxygen. Consequently, effects of hypoxia occur. b. Most heaters in light aircraft work by air flowing over the manifold. Use of these heaters while exhaust fumes are escaping through manifold cracks and seals is responsible every year for several nonfatal and fatal aircraft accidents from carbon monoxide poisoning. c. A pilot who detects the odor of exhaust or experiences symptoms of headache, drowsiness, or dizziness while using the heater should suspect carbon monoxide poisoning, and immediately shut off the heater and open air vents. If symptoms are severe or continue after landing, medical treatment should be sought. abstract: 5 Carbon Monoxide What is Carbon Monoxide? Carbon Monoxide is a lethal gas produced in normal amounts whenever you use an appliance which burns a combustible fuel. Combustible fuels can include gas, oil, kerosene, charcoal and wood. When proper ventilation of appliances becomes blocked, carbon monoxide concentrations build up inside your home and become deadly. Carbon monoxide quickly replaces vital oxygen in the blood which results in suffocation from the inside out. Why Should I Worry? Because carbon monoxide is invisible, tasteless and odorless, its victims may never know there is something wrong until it is too late. If often takes the lives of whole families. Children and the elderly are the first to be overcome along with pets. According to the National Center for Health Statistics, over 2,500 people in the United States will die each year of carbon monoxide poisoning and over 10,000 will be hospitalized. Most carbon monoxide poisoning victims who lose consciousness are left with permanent brain damage, mental and speech disorders, vision and hearing impairments, seizures or death. There are Safety Tips to help reduce the chances of carbon monoxide poisoning. How Do I Know if It is Carbon Monoxide Poisoning? Carbon monoxide is quick and deadly. It's nicknamed the "silent killer". It can be fatal in as little as 3 minutes, depending on the level of concentration. Since you cannot see, hear, taste or smell carbon monoxide, the only way to know is to be aware of its symptoms and install a carbon monoxide detector. Symptoms to watch for: Headaches, drowsiness, dizziness and confusion Nausea, vomiting and rapid heartbeat Loss of consciousness Everyone in the household is feeling ill at the same time It feels as though you have the flu --------end of abstract ----
my home page
Send me an Email or
You can now PAGE me (use PIN: 3869670) . Leave me a detailed message! (email me also)
lewycky@soho.ios.com