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Ben Smith

Cancer Research Institute - Ways to Donate to Cancer Research Institute - 0 views

  • Cash gifts: The most convenient way to give to CRI.  You can donate online securely or by phone with your credit card, or you can mail a check to us made payable to "Cancer Research Institute." Memorial & tribute gifts: Donating to cancer research in memory of a loved one, in support of another's courageous battle with cancer, or in honor of any occasion can be a thoughtful and appropriate way to remember others. Employer matching gifts: Employer matching gift programs can increase your giving to CRI by double or more. Our convenient employer MatchFinder will allow you to see if your employer matches your charitable donations. Securities donations: Gifts of stocks, bonds, and other securities can be of significant benefit to our programs while also providing you tax advantages. Car and other vehicle donations: Donate an old car or vehicle (boat, campers, etc.).  We'll arrange to have your vehicle picked up, and the proceeds from the sale of your used vehicle will benefit our research programs. Planned giving options: Naming CRI in your will or estate plans, including charitable annuities and trusts as well as life insurance and retirement plan gifts, can offer both you and CRI significant financial advantages. Payroll deduction: Employees can provide ongoing support through regular payroll deductions, especially if their companies provide matching gifts.
Clint Walters

Gamasutra - Features - Evaluating Game Mechanics For Depth - 0 views

  • Game Mechanic: When I say "game mechanic" I'm referring to any major chunk of gameplay in a video game. Using the classic The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past as an example, here are a batch of game mechanics: sword combat, block pushing, boomerang throwing, swimming, button-based puzzles, hazard-avoidance, use of specific weapons, etc... Challenge: A challenge is any in-game scenario that tests the player's skill at a specific game mechanic. An example of this would be an individual room in a Zelda dungeon, a grindrail segment in Ratchet & Clank, or a combat encounter in Halo.
  • It needs clear objectives, so the player knows what he has to do to succeed. Confusion and obfuscation tend to make players feel like a mechanic is LESS deep once they find themselves needing to experiment randomly to win.
  • When a player enters a challenge, he must have a good idea of what his objectives are. Another good way to put this is to say that he must be able to clearly visualize the completion state of the challenge.
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  • If a skill is too basic, it will not help make your mechanic feel deeper. At that point, it becomes a simple task the player must complete, like checking items off a shopping list.
  • Further, when you really think about it, when you say "move from point A to point B," you're actually talking more about the objective of a challenge and not the skill required to achieve the objective.
  • I kept adding new objectives, but failed to add many meaningful skills.
  • While players found the Inspector Bot wacky and funny, adding him did not succeed at the goal of making the Tractor Beam game mechanic deeper.
  • come up with an "Activity Statement"
  • a simple sentence that describes a challenge by stating both the objective of a challenge and the meaningful skills that the player must use to obtain his objective.
  • "I want the player to jump up to that platform."
  • "I want the player to double jump straight up and then glide down to that platform" or "I want the player to time his jump to avoid the fire spouts and land on that platform."
  • 1. Identify and list your objectives. a. For each, ask yourself: "Is this objective functionally a duplicate of any of the other objectives in my list?" If it is, ask yourself if you really need it. Do you really want to spend the time on teaching your players how to interact with it? If the answer is no, cross it out. 2. Identify and list all your meaningful skills. a. For each ask yourself: "Is this really a meaningful skill? Not too basic? Not an objective?" b. Ask yourself: "Is this skill functionally a duplicate of any of the other meaningful skills in my list?" If it is, cross it out. You're tricking yourself into thinking you have more skills than you actually do. Having taken stock, do you now find you have too many objectives? Not enough meaningful skills? At this point, I'll bet you've discovered that, yes, somehow that's happened. At this point, just do the same exercise I suggested above to help my past-self get over his tractor beam problems: 1. Add one or more new meaningful skills to the list. a. As you add them, ask yourself the same questions as above. "Is this skill really meaningful? Is it too basic? Is it really an objective?" 2. Go through all your challenges and improve your Activity Statements 3. Prototype the new content. 4. Play-test. Is your problem solved? If so, then you're done! 5. If your problem isn't solved, go back to step 1 and try again.
  • "I want the player to move a bomb its starting spot into that energy slingshot and use it to blow up a target." "I want the player to slide these blocks around inside a groove and arrange them in a specific order." Both of these Activity Statements, "use the energy slingshot to blow up a target" and "arrange the blocks in a specific order" describe skills that are much more meaningful than the others.
  • For example, here is a simple Activity Statement that could apply to most of the challenges in Portal: "I want the player to use the portal gun to get this block on top of that button."
  • The Activity Statement: "I want the player to command his array of Gadgebots to get him past blockades," in the end, is too vague. It doesn't give enough information to tell whether or not the mechanic will deep enough.
  • This gave way to challenges with very complex Activity Statements like "I want the player to record himself going to that button, which opens a door. Then I want him to play back the recording and, once the hologram hits the button and the door opens, I want him to go through the door." You'll notice clear objectives "go to the button to open the door" and "go through the door" as well as good meaningful skills "record himself" and "play back the recording."
  • "I want the player to move a wacky robot from his starting spot to a button on the floor." "I want the player to move a bomb from its starting spot to a spot in front of that door." "I want the player to move a block from its starting space so that it blocks that laser beam." "I want the player to move an explosive rocket block to that button on the floor." You'll notice that the above statements all clearly outline objectives, but no meaningful skills.
  • Often, in game development, a design that looks great on paper doesn't turn out as well in practice as you'd hoped. It comes across as "shallow" or "flat." Perhaps play-testers, publishers, or peers describe it as "needing more variety" or as "feeling repetitive."
  • Buzzwords to watch for: The game is "a one-trick pony," "repetitive," "or needs more variety." Feedback that can be fixed with these kind of content expansions tends to describe the game as a whole. Players feel they don't have enough different things to do on a global level.
  • Buzzwords to watch for: A given game mechanic is "boring," "repetitive," or "just not fun." Feedback that can be fixed with theatrics improvements usually describes a single game mechanic, but is vague and "touchy-feely."
  • Buzzwords to watch for: A given game mechanic is "too shallow," "too easy," or "flat." Often players will say the mechanic started out fun, but that it quickly got repetitive or boring. It's a good idea to pump up the theatrics when you get feedback like this, but while it might help players tolerate a mechanic for longer, it will only go so far. When theatrics fail, it's time to knuckle down, roll up your sleeves, and get to work on making your game mechanic deeper.
  • Clear objectives are a must if you want to create depth in your game mechanic.
Keena Singletary

Harvest Hope Food Bank - Volunteer - 0 views

    • Keena Singletary
       
      ways to help
  • We are always looking for volunteers to help us with our many community events
  • These pantrie
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  • help any individuals or families that come to our doors looking for assistance during their time of need
  • Event Volunteer
  • educate the public about the wonderful things we do here at Harvest Hope
  • Emergency Food Pantry
  • speak to people
  • This means we need volunteers to hand out brochures
  • collect food
  • skilled professionals and or interns that
  • can help in a variety of ways such as: marketing, writing, fundraising, program management, graphics, grants, etc
Shawn Stiles

Athletic Shoes - Your Orthopaedic Connection - AAOS - 0 views

  • Try on athletic shoes after a workout or run, or at the end of the day. This is when your feet will be at their largest.
  • When the shoe is on your foot, you should be able to freely wiggle all of your toes
  • Aerobic Activity Shoes
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  • Court Sports
  • Field Sports
  • Winter Sports
  • Track and Field Sport Shoes
  • Specialty Sports
  • Outdoor Sports
Glade Sparks

Home - Paralyzed Veterans of America - 0 views

  • Our veterans are our heroes for life. After serving our country, serious injury shouldn’t stop them from living the full, rewarding lives they deserve. At Paralyzed Veterans of America, we fight for better health care and benefits, aid in the search for a truly satisfying career, and provide the path to adventure through adaptive sports. What’s more, we are committed to ongoing care by educating clinicians about spinal cord injury, and we’re deeply invested in the future—a cure for paralysis. 
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    a site for helping paralyzed veterans
Clint Walters

Programs | Rob Dyrdek Foundation - 0 views

  • Safe Spot Skate Spot Program, which seeks to create safe and legal havens for skaters across the country through the Rob Dyrdek Foundation.  Its main goal is to t assist municipalities municipalities with the design, development and construction of skate plazas that maintain the integrity of terrain occurring naturally in urban environments, and where the sport of skateboarding in its purest form is encouraged rather than discouraged.
  • Provide communities with safe, and legal skate plazas to skate • Increase and encourage the active engagement of people in the sport of skateboarding • Promote healthy and sustainable communities through exercise via skateboarding • Design, develop and construct Skate Plazas in municipalities throughout the world
  • Life Program seeks to promote and encourage the sport of skateboarding by providing f
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  • ree skateboards to organizations
  • Sk8 4
  • . Start a petition.
  • Skateboard Giveaway-
  • kateboard Curriculum/After School Programming
  • Skate Pass
  • HOW TO GET INVOLVED
  • Civic Engagemen
  • GOALS: • Provide communities with safe, and legal skate plazas to skate • Increase and encourage the active engagement of people in the sport of skateboarding • Promote healthy and sustainable communities through exercise via skateboarding • Design, develop and construct Skate Plazas in municipalities throughout the world
  • he Rob Dyrdek Foundation’s Sk8 4 Life Program seeks to promote and encourage the sport of skateboarding by providing free skateboards to organizations
  • has a need for and the ability to distribute free skateboards that are provided by our Foundation
  • The Sk8 4 Life Program seeks to create and maintain healthy and sustainable communities by providing youth with free skateboards to both exercise and stay physically and mentally fit.
  • Skateboard Giveaway- The Rob Dyrdek Foundation has partnered with Skate Pass to provide schools and 501(c) 3 organizations whose targeted demographic has a need for and the ability to distribute free skateboards. (i.e. Boys and Girls Club, Elementary and Middle Schools)
  • HOW TO GET INVOLVED These are many of the same tactics that have worked to get skate parks built across the US. The important thing to remember: you don’t want a skate park, you want a Skate Plaza. Stick to your guns, and remember to educate as many people as possible about the Skate Plaza concept. 1. Organize a group of skaters—the larger the better. 2. Talk to your local skate shop and see if they’ll help you organize and have meetings in their shop. If you’re under 18, you’ll probably need an adult to help. Good sources are a local skate shop owner or a parent. 3. Start a petition. It’s always good to hit your city with big numbers to let them know there’s a huge demand that’s not being met. Take petition forms to your local skate shops and ask the managers if you can leave them for people to sign. Pick them up in about two or three weeks
  • Take petitions to your schools. Take them to local skate parks and skate spots. There’s a good chance that most skaters already see the need for a Skate Plaza. If they don’t, you can explain it this way: “Want a Love Park here?” That should get their attention and explain the idea. Have your friends and family help you by taking the petitions to work.
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    Here are many ways you can help!
  •  
    Here's how you can get involved...
Ashley Hildebrand

Locks of Love - 0 views

  • Most wigs sold by retailers
  • fit adult heads
  • too big for children
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  • not age-appropriate
  • burn or irritate the scalp.
  • use of tape or glue to keep them from falling off
  • teased by classmates and/or embarrassed by the attention they receive because of their hair loss.
  • They retail between $3,500 to $6,000.
  • hairpiece forms a vacuum seal,
  • suffer from a loss of self.
  • does not
  • lost more than their hair
  • tape or glue.
  • wearer of the hairpiece may remove it, by breaking the vacuum seal at the temples.
  • withdraw from normal childhood activities
  • swimming, going to the mall or even playing with their friends.
  • not a cure
  • wearing a hairpiece
  • they can be kids again.
  • some of the normalcy
  • recipient may style it to fit their face.
  • rebuild their self-esteem.
  •  
    This says things about how it benefits children and why locks-of-love is needed.
Ashley Hildebrand

Locks of Love - 0 views

  • Alopecia
  • Alopecia is an auto-immune disorder that causes the hair follicles to shut down.
  • 4.7 million people in the United States alone.
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  • affects both sexes equally
  • no known cause or cure for alopecia.
  • Cancer
  • Alopecia Areata Sisaipho
  • Alopecia Totalis
  • Alopecia Universalis
  • Alopecia Areata Ophiasis
  • Every year approximately 2,200 children
  • Radiation
  • diagnosed with brain tumors.
  • Chemotherapy
  • Ectodermal Dysplasia
  • Loose Anagen Syndrome
  • Trichotillomania
  • Telogen Effluvium
  • Trauma
  •  
    This shows the different reasons why kids could loose there hair and the types of diseases they could have.
Andrew Luckenbaugh

AWF: Action Opportunities - 0 views

    • Andrew Luckenbaugh
       
      Good action oppurtunities
Rebecca Needham

Lost & Found Horse Rescue Foundation, Inc. - 0 views

  • donations
  • Since 1997
  • more than 500
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  • no longer able to
  • volunteers
  • aged and unhealthy
  • victims of abuse and neglect
  • provide appropriate care
  • For The Horse Farms Open House: Lost and Found will have blacksmith and equine dentistry demonstrations, refreshments, and visitors can meet horses available for adoption.
  • Horses that arrive at the Rescue are evaluated to determine what special care they may require and their optimal use
  • provide minor rehabilitation so horses can have a productive secondary career.
  • The facility includes a 15-stall horse bank barn, conference building, pony barn, office area and corn crib. Approximately 30 volunteers handle the weekly chores required to take care of all the L&FHRF animals
Keena Singletary

Harvest Hope Food Bank - Donate - 0 views

  •  
    here's a good way to help and encourage this program
Ashley Hildebrand

Locks of Love helps disadvantaged children suffering from medical hair loss - 0 views

  • hairpieces to
  • financially disadvantaged children in the United States and Canada under age 21
  • highest quality hair prosthetics
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  • long-term medical hair loss from any diagnosis.
  • alopecia areata, which has no known cause or cure.
  •  
    Lock-Of-Love is another foundation that helps make hairpieces for kids that lost there hair due to medical reasons. They donate only to kids under the age of 21.
Hunter Wolf

AWF: Conserving Wildlife: Carnivores - 0 views

  • Carnivore Conservation
  • beset by habitat fragmentation, loss of prey, and
  • humans protecting their livestock
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  • African wild dogs have been wiped out in some areas.
  • 23,000 lions now survive in the African wild
  • Like other big cats, lions benefit from AWF’s habitat protection programs. Th
  • The research
  • work o
  • f AWF’s Gosiame Neo-Mahupeleng in the Kazungula Heartland is providing important insights into the behavior of lions moving back and forth between Botswana and Namibia along the Zambezi River.
  • studying human-lion conflicts around Tarangire National Park in order to develop more effective conservation efforts
  • The project will play a key advisory role in formulating management plans and techniques to promote leopard-human coexistence in South Africa
  • Samburu Heartland are training local scouts to protect the dogs while identifying livestock management techniques that minimize contact between the dogs and local communities.
Hunter Wolf

AWF: Protecting Land: Want to Help? - 0 views

  • You can help AWF continue its work to conserve lands where African wildlife live, move, migrate and propagate. Help us ensure the future of Africa’s wildlife and local people by supporting our work with land trusts, community-owned reserves, national parks, and local land-use planning.
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    africas carnivores
Amaris Jones

WWF - Who We Are - About WWF - 0 views

  • For 50 years, WWF has been protecting the future of nature.
  • WWF’s mission is to conserve nature and reduce the most pressing threats to the diversity of life on Earth. 
  • people live in harmony with nature
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  • WWF’s mission is to conserve nature and reduce the most pressing threats to the diversity of life on Earth. 
  • By 2020, WWF will conserve 15 of the world’s most ecologically important regions by working in partnership with others to:
  • Ensure that the value of nature is reflected in decisions made by individuals, communities, governments and businessesMobilize hundreds of millions of people to support conservation
  • Protect and restore species and their habitats
  • Strengthen local communities' ability to conserve the natural resources they depend upon
  • Transform markets and policies to reduce the impact of the production and consumption of commodities
  • WWF’s mission is to conserve nature and reduce the most pressing threats to the diversity of life on Earth. 
  • WWF’s mission is to conserve nature and reduce the most pressing threats to the diversity of life on Earth. 
  •  
    WWF's mission is to conserve nature and reduce the most pressing threats to the diversity of life on Earth.
  •  
    This is about what the WWF does and what their mission is.
Shawn Stiles

Footwear Facts - 0 views

  • Quality, well-maintained men's shoes can be resoled seven to 10 times at a fraction of the cost of new shoes
  • With new soles and heels, and reconditioned uppers, the shoes will look like new, yet retain that broken-in, comfortable feel. It is not uncommon for a man to get 30 years out of a good pair of shoes.
Jeremy Bossom

Fighting Pediatric Cancer - Penn State Hershey Four Diamonds Fund - 0 views

  • The mission of The Four Diamonds Fund is to conquer childhood cancer
marisa landaverde

How you can help | Amnesty International - 0 views

  • We help stop human rights abuses by mobilizing our members and supporters to put pressure on governments, armed groups, companies and intergovernmental bodies
  • There are many ways you can help us, including making a donation, joining Amnesty International and taking action.
Mariah Toot

ASPCA | What Is a Puppy Mill - 0 views

  • Illness, disease, fearful behavior and lack of socialization with humans and other animals are common characteristics of dogs from puppy mills.
  • Puppy mill dogs do not get to experience treats, toys, exercise or basic grooming.
  • The mom and dad of the puppy in the pet store window are unlikely to make it out of the mill alive
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  • How Can I Help Fight Puppy Mills?
  • Do not buy a puppy from a pet store
  • fighting puppy mills by working with the ASPCA
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