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    Credit Card Surfing 101 and How it Can Affect Your Credit Score
    With the tremendous competition building up, many credit card companies have started offering introductory 0% APR credit cards. Aimed to attract new credit card applicants, no interest charges are applied to outstanding balances during the 0% APR period. With this, users can afford to pay only the minimum each month without being charge hefty interests until the promotional period is over.This situation forms a loophole that can be exploited by credit card surfers. Purchases are made with their 0% APR credit cards till the maximum credit limit. Only the minimum amount imposed by the credit card company will be paid each month without incurring the cost of interest charges. Once a card is maxed out, credit card surfers will make an application for another 0% APR credit card and repeat the same cycle.Sounds like a great way to get free cash, doesn’t it? Well while you may be able to surf through a few cards, sooner or later you are bound to come to a road block. With huge debt piled up with interest rate charges imposed after introductory 0% APR rate period, credit card surfers will have to face snowballing debt once interest rate charges come into the
    is found at the biggest casino buffets including those at Mandalay Bay, Belagio, Paris, Aladdin, Rio and the Hilton. For non-casino buffets, try Todai, which is located in the Desert Passage Mall at Aladdin. Todai offers a superb all-you-can-eat sushi buffet, which like the casino buffets, also includes all-you-can-eat Alaska King Crab legs. As a bonus, Todai also offers many Japanese sushi delicacies not offered at the casinos, but is priced at approximately $30 US, whereas the casino buffets are slightly loss costly priced in the $20-$25 range. No matter how you slice it, or no matter how you pick it up with your chop sticks, sushi is considerably more expensive in Las Vegas than what you'd pay in Vancouver!

    Of course other cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Miami, and others have their fair share of all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants too. But probably the best sushi in the United States is found in Honolulu, Hawaii. The reason being that Hawaii is but several hours flying time away from Japan, and it is wildly popular as a tourist destination for many Japanese. Hawaii also has a sizeable Japanese immigrant community and has ready access to exotic and fresh seafood, all the necessary ingredients for a thriving sushi restaurant culture!

    Dollar for dollar, there is no place in the world that can compete with Vancouver, Canada, for offering diners superb all-you-can-eat sushi, at bargain prices! So much so, one Vancouver entrepreneur has opened a website completely devoted to the North American all-you-can-eat sushi scene. The www.SushiBuffets.com website provides a forum where all-you-can-eat sushi fans can rate and provide their own reviews of local sushi buffets.

    Happy sushi eating, and if you know of an excellent sushi buffet, be sure to tell everyone in the SushiBuffets

    See America by Train
    All aboard!The USA has much more to offer the tourist than guaranteed sunshine and bargain shopping, and there’s a relatively unknown way to discover what this country is really all about. Most people think of travelling by car or plane but you should certainly investigate America’s wonderful trains - perhaps the last means of luxury transport available to everyone. The 25,000 mile Amtrak rail network takes in almost all states, giving a choice of 500 destinations and access to such tourist essentials as San Francisco, the Rocky Mountains and the Grand Canyon.The Iron HorseRailroads opened up America more than a century ago and some of today’s long-distance trains still follow the original pioneering routes. They also use many of the great stations built during the golden age of passenger travel. An impressive example stands in Washington, DC, decorated in gold leaf and restored to its original grandeur with dozens of shops, restaurants and a multi-screen cinema. Chicago’s Union Station features a marble and brass waiting room as large as many a cathedral. It’s said that Al Capone used to stop by for his daily shoeshine in the sho
    It was 25 years ago when I was first introduced to sushi, and it was love at first taste. I’ve been a sushi addict ever since. Back in 1981, I was in grade 11 living with my parents in Vancouver, Canada. That Christmas for the holidays, I went out to Irvine, California, to visit with my cousin and his wife, who were studying at UC-Irvine. I recall my cousin asking if I had ever tried sushi. I had no idea what on earth he was talking about. He explained that it was a Japanese delicacy, whereby raw fish was beautifully prepared usually on beds of rice, and presented by sushi chefs in what could best be described as a culinary art form. Having grown up in Vancouver, which was back then more of a colonial outpost than an international cosmopolitan center, I had never heard the term sushi. But I was keen to try. So for lunch, my cousin took me to a local Irvine sushi bar (whose name I no longer recall), and I’ve been a sushi fan ever since.

    I recall it being a completely new experience, although one today that everyone accepts as common place. You walk into the sushi bar, and the sushi chefs behind the bar yell out Japanese words of welcome, and it seems like the person you’re with is a regular and knows the chefs and the menu as old friends.

    The sushi scene has much evolved in North America, and today, almost everyone has heard of sushi and tried it, and millions have become sushi addicts like me. Of course there are people who can’t bring themselves to accepting the idea of eating raw fish, possibly out of fear of catching a disease from the un-cooked food. But this fear is unfounded, as millions of people consume sushi each year in North America, and the incidents of sushi-related food-poisoning are negligible.

    Sushi has become wildly popular in metropolitan centers with diverse cultural interests, specially those with sizeable Asian communities, and those that are popular with Asian tourists. As such, Sushi restaurants are concentrated up and down the west coast of North America with sushi bars being easy to find on most street corners in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Las Vegas, and Vancouver. Over the past quarter century since its arrival in North America, the sushi dining experience has made a significant change in a number of key markets, which has broadened its appeal. The development of the all-you-can-eat sushi buffet has changed the way many people have come to know sushi.

    Initially, the sushi dinning experience was only for the well-healed. The raw seafood ingredients that make up the basics of the sushi menu include tuna, salmon, shrimp, scallops, eel, mackerel, squid, shark-fin, abalone, and red snapper. It is imperative that the raw seafood be properly cleaned, stored and prepared, and in most markets (even on the west coast) these raw ingredients are costly when compared to other foods. Therefore, the cost of eating sushi has historically been expensive. Sushi bar eating is typically marketed in an a la carte fashion whereby the diner pays for each piece of sushi individually. Although a simple tuna roll chopped into three or four pieces might costs two or three dollars, a more extravagant serving such a piece of eel or shark-fin sushi can easily cost $4 to $6 or more, depending on the restaurant. It is easy to spend $100 for a nice sushi dinner for two at an a la carte sushi bar, and this is well out of reach for many diners.

    The sushi dining business model changed over the past decade. Some clever restaurant operators saw a new opportunity to make the sushi dining experience more of a mass-market business opportunity, instead of a dining experience only for the rich. They devised a way to mass-produce sushi, purchasing ingredients in bulk, training and employing sushi chefs in high-volume sushi kitchens, where a team of 5 to 15 skilled sushi chefs work non-stop creating sushi dishes in large capacity settings, where such restaurants can typically serve several hundred diners per night. It was this business model that devised the rotating conveyer belt, where the sushi plates are placed on the belt and cycled through the restaurant so diners can hand-pick their desired sushi right off the belt at their table side. However, the key marketing concept borne from this model was the single price, all-you-can-eat sushi buffet concept, where the diner pays a flat price for all the sushi he or she can consume during a single seating, typically capped at two hours by most sushi buffet restaurants. Most major cities in North America will have an all-you-can-eat sushi buffet restaurant, although they are predominantly situated on the west coast.

    Outside of Japan, without a doubt, the city of Vancouver, Canada, has more sushi restaurants than any other city. Part of the explanation might be the fact that Vancouver has the largest Asian immigrant population in North America, and it is a very popular tourist destination for tourists from all over Asia. Many of Vancouver’s immigrants seek self-employment, and open restaurants, many of which cater to the sushi market which is ever-growing. The Vancouver suburb of Richmond has a population exceeding 100,000, and the vast majority of its residents are made up of Asian immigrants that came to Canada over the past two decades. Richmond probably has the greatest density of Asian restaurants to be found anywhere outside of Asia, with every strip mall and shopping center sporting several competing eating establishments. Of course sushi is an integral part of the Richmond restaurant business, and diners can find everything from $5 lunch stops, to $20 sushi buffet dinner mega-restaurants.

    Vancouver’s lower mainland (which has a population of some 2 million) is also the world's undisputed capital for all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants. Given Vancouver's fame for its abundance of fresh seafood due to its Pacific Ocean location, the city's sushi restaurants have become world famous for trying to outdo each other by offering superb quality all-you-can-eat sushi, at the best prices to be found anywhere on the planet. Quality sushi in Vancouver is priced at a fraction of what one would pay in Japan, and many Japanese tourists marvel at Vancouver's huge selection of quality sushi restaurants. Some say Vancouver’s sushi offering meets and exceeds that found in Japan, certainly in terms of price! Very few people in Japan can afford to eat sushi other than for a special occasion. However, sushi is so affordable in Vancouver that residents and tourists alike can eat it on a regular basis, without breaking the bank! In the past decade, the price of eating sushi in Vancouver has tumbled, with sushi restaurants literally on every street corner, and the fierce competition has driven the cost of a quality all-you-can-eat sushi dinner down to the $CAD 15-20 range. An all-you-can-eat sushi dinner for two, with alcoholic drinks can easily be had for less than $CAD 50, which is half what one would pay at a North American a la carte sushi bar, and probably one quarter what one would pay for a comparable meal in Japan!

    In the United States, the greatest density of all-you-can-eat sushi buffets is found not in Los Angeles, San Francisco, or Miami, but in Las Vegas of all places. Las Vegas is famous for taking what is famous elsewhere, and relocating it to Sin City and making it bigger and better. And sushi is no exception! Most of the major casino buffets offer sushi in one form or another on their daily menus. However, the city's best all-you-can-eat sushi is found at the biggest casino buffets including those at Mandalay Bay, Belagio, Paris, Aladdin, Rio and the Hilton. For non-casino buffets, try Todai, which is located in the Desert Passage Mall at Aladdin. Todai offers a superb all-you-can-eat sushi buffet, which like the casino buffets, also includes all-you-can-eat Alaska King Crab legs. As a bonus, Todai also offers many Japanese sushi delicacies not offered at the casinos, but is priced at approximately $30 US, whereas the casino buffets are slightly loss costly priced in the $20-$25 range. No matter how you slice it, or no matter how you pick it up with your chop sticks, sushi is considerably more expensive in Las Vegas than what you'd pay in Vancouver!

    Of course other cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Miami, and others have their fair share of all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants too. But probably the best sushi in the United States is found in Honolulu, Hawaii. The reason being that Hawaii is but several hours flying time away from Japan, and it is wildly popular as a tourist destination for many Japanese. Hawaii also has a sizeable Japanese immigrant community and has ready access to exotic and fresh seafood, all the necessary ingredients for a thriving sushi restaurant culture!

    Dollar for dollar, there is no place in the world that can compete with Vancouver, Canada, for offering diners superb all-you-can-eat sushi, at bargain prices! So much so, one Vancouver entrepreneur has opened a website completely devoted to the North American all-you-can-eat sushi scene. The www.SushiBuffets.com website provides a forum where all-you-can-eat sushi fans can rate and provide their own reviews of local sushi buffets.

    Happy sushi eating, and if you know of an excellent sushi buffet, be sure to tell everyone in the SushiBuffets.

    People on Purpose
    “Many people have a wrong idea of what constitutes true happiness. It is not attained through self-gratification, but through fidelity to a worthy purpose.” ~ Helen KellerPurposeDo you know this person? He rises without hitting the snooze button. She works without complaining. He works longer and harder than anyone else. He always delivers on time. She gets there before anyone else. He cares little about the opinions of others. She consistently raises his own standards and expectations. He is not cowered or frightened by his circumstances – he is in control of his environment and his mind. If you know such a person, they are living on purpose. They have a Magnificent Obsession.Paulo Coelho said, “But there is suffering in life, and there are defeats. No one can avoid them. But it's better to lose some of the battles in the struggles for your dreams than to be defeated without ever knowing what you're fighting for.” People with a very specific and definite purpose are not easily phased or thrown off course. They are utterly reliable and focused. They do not make excuses. Their lives are meaningful. They know who they are and they don’t need anyo
    ies, and those that are popular with Asian tourists. As such, Sushi restaurants are concentrated up and down the west coast of North America with sushi bars being easy to find on most street corners in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Las Vegas, and Vancouver. Over the past quarter century since its arrival in North America, the sushi dining experience has made a significant change in a number of key markets, which has broadened its appeal. The development of the all-you-can-eat sushi buffet has changed the way many people have come to know sushi.

    Initially, the sushi dinning experience was only for the well-healed. The raw seafood ingredients that make up the basics of the sushi menu include tuna, salmon, shrimp, scallops, eel, mackerel, squid, shark-fin, abalone, and red snapper. It is imperative that the raw seafood be properly cleaned, stored and prepared, and in most markets (even on the west coast) these raw ingredients are costly when compared to other foods. Therefore, the cost of eating sushi has historically been expensive. Sushi bar eating is typically marketed in an a la carte fashion whereby the diner pays for each piece of sushi individually. Although a simple tuna roll chopped into three or four pieces might costs two or three dollars, a more extravagant serving such a piece of eel or shark-fin sushi can easily cost $4 to $6 or more, depending on the restaurant. It is easy to spend $100 for a nice sushi dinner for two at an a la carte sushi bar, and this is well out of reach for many diners.

    The sushi dining business model changed over the past decade. Some clever restaurant operators saw a new opportunity to make the sushi dining experience more of a mass-market business opportunity, instead of a dining experience only for the rich. They devised a way to mass-produce sushi, purchasing ingredients in bulk, training and employing sushi chefs in high-volume sushi kitchens, where a team of 5 to 15 skilled sushi chefs work non-stop creating sushi dishes in large capacity settings, where such restaurants can typically serve several hundred diners per night. It was this business model that devised the rotating conveyer belt, where the sushi plates are placed on the belt and cycled through the restaurant so diners can hand-pick their desired sushi right off the belt at their table side. However, the key marketing concept borne from this model was the single price, all-you-can-eat sushi buffet concept, where the diner pays a flat price for all the sushi he or she can consume during a single seating, typically capped at two hours by most sushi buffet restaurants. Most major cities in North America will have an all-you-can-eat sushi buffet restaurant, although they are predominantly situated on the west coast.

    Outside of Japan, without a doubt, the city of Vancouver, Canada, has more sushi restaurants than any other city. Part of the explanation might be the fact that Vancouver has the largest Asian immigrant population in North America, and it is a very popular tourist destination for tourists from all over Asia. Many of Vancouver’s immigrants seek self-employment, and open restaurants, many of which cater to the sushi market which is ever-growing. The Vancouver suburb of Richmond has a population exceeding 100,000, and the vast majority of its residents are made up of Asian immigrants that came to Canada over the past two decades. Richmond probably has the greatest density of Asian restaurants to be found anywhere outside of Asia, with every strip mall and shopping center sporting several competing eating establishments. Of course sushi is an integral part of the Richmond restaurant business, and diners can find everything from $5 lunch stops, to $20 sushi buffet dinner mega-restaurants.

    Vancouver’s lower mainland (which has a population of some 2 million) is also the world's undisputed capital for all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants. Given Vancouver's fame for its abundance of fresh seafood due to its Pacific Ocean location, the city's sushi restaurants have become world famous for trying to outdo each other by offering superb quality all-you-can-eat sushi, at the best prices to be found anywhere on the planet. Quality sushi in Vancouver is priced at a fraction of what one would pay in Japan, and many Japanese tourists marvel at Vancouver's huge selection of quality sushi restaurants. Some say Vancouver’s sushi offering meets and exceeds that found in Japan, certainly in terms of price! Very few people in Japan can afford to eat sushi other than for a special occasion. However, sushi is so affordable in Vancouver that residents and tourists alike can eat it on a regular basis, without breaking the bank! In the past decade, the price of eating sushi in Vancouver has tumbled, with sushi restaurants literally on every street corner, and the fierce competition has driven the cost of a quality all-you-can-eat sushi dinner down to the $CAD 15-20 range. An all-you-can-eat sushi dinner for two, with alcoholic drinks can easily be had for less than $CAD 50, which is half what one would pay at a North American a la carte sushi bar, and probably one quarter what one would pay for a comparable meal in Japan!

    In the United States, the greatest density of all-you-can-eat sushi buffets is found not in Los Angeles, San Francisco, or Miami, but in Las Vegas of all places. Las Vegas is famous for taking what is famous elsewhere, and relocating it to Sin City and making it bigger and better. And sushi is no exception! Most of the major casino buffets offer sushi in one form or another on their daily menus. However, the city's best all-you-can-eat sushi is found at the biggest casino buffets including those at Mandalay Bay, Belagio, Paris, Aladdin, Rio and the Hilton. For non-casino buffets, try Todai, which is located in the Desert Passage Mall at Aladdin. Todai offers a superb all-you-can-eat sushi buffet, which like the casino buffets, also includes all-you-can-eat Alaska King Crab legs. As a bonus, Todai also offers many Japanese sushi delicacies not offered at the casinos, but is priced at approximately $30 US, whereas the casino buffets are slightly loss costly priced in the $20-$25 range. No matter how you slice it, or no matter how you pick it up with your chop sticks, sushi is considerably more expensive in Las Vegas than what you'd pay in Vancouver!

    Of course other cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Miami, and others have their fair share of all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants too. But probably the best sushi in the United States is found in Honolulu, Hawaii. The reason being that Hawaii is but several hours flying time away from Japan, and it is wildly popular as a tourist destination for many Japanese. Hawaii also has a sizeable Japanese immigrant community and has ready access to exotic and fresh seafood, all the necessary ingredients for a thriving sushi restaurant culture!

    Dollar for dollar, there is no place in the world that can compete with Vancouver, Canada, for offering diners superb all-you-can-eat sushi, at bargain prices! So much so, one Vancouver entrepreneur has opened a website completely devoted to the North American all-you-can-eat sushi scene. The www.SushiBuffets.com website provides a forum where all-you-can-eat sushi fans can rate and provide their own reviews of local sushi buffets.

    Happy sushi eating, and if you know of an excellent sushi buffet, be sure to tell everyone in the SushiBuffets

    Should I Get Someone's Phone Number For A Possible Date?
    Maybe yes, maybe no. That depends on if you’re interested in going on a date with that person. You may not be sure at the time you meet the person whether or not you want to go on a date. If this is the case, you may want to consider taking their phone number for future reference. However, if you don’t think you would be interested, then don’t take their number! Some of these tips may help you decide whether or not you should take someone’s phone number:1) You want to call the person so you can talk with them and consider going on a date.2) If you’re not sure about whether or not you want to call the person, take their phone number if you’re not totally sure! This may be your only opportunity.3) Consider giving the person your telephone number. You may have the option of providing your home, cell phone or work number to the person you may consider dating. This may make the other person more comfortable and less pressured that they are not being asked to give out their phone number to you. By giving them your telephone number, the person has an option of whether or not they want to contact you.4) After deciding to get a person’s te
    hefs in high-volume sushi kitchens, where a team of 5 to 15 skilled sushi chefs work non-stop creating sushi dishes in large capacity settings, where such restaurants can typically serve several hundred diners per night. It was this business model that devised the rotating conveyer belt, where the sushi plates are placed on the belt and cycled through the restaurant so diners can hand-pick their desired sushi right off the belt at their table side. However, the key marketing concept borne from this model was the single price, all-you-can-eat sushi buffet concept, where the diner pays a flat price for all the sushi he or she can consume during a single seating, typically capped at two hours by most sushi buffet restaurants. Most major cities in North America will have an all-you-can-eat sushi buffet restaurant, although they are predominantly situated on the west coast.

    Outside of Japan, without a doubt, the city of Vancouver, Canada, has more sushi restaurants than any other city. Part of the explanation might be the fact that Vancouver has the largest Asian immigrant population in North America, and it is a very popular tourist destination for tourists from all over Asia. Many of Vancouver’s immigrants seek self-employment, and open restaurants, many of which cater to the sushi market which is ever-growing. The Vancouver suburb of Richmond has a population exceeding 100,000, and the vast majority of its residents are made up of Asian immigrants that came to Canada over the past two decades. Richmond probably has the greatest density of Asian restaurants to be found anywhere outside of Asia, with every strip mall and shopping center sporting several competing eating establishments. Of course sushi is an integral part of the Richmond restaurant business, and diners can find everything from $5 lunch stops, to $20 sushi buffet dinner mega-restaurants.

    Vancouver’s lower mainland (which has a population of some 2 million) is also the world's undisputed capital for all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants. Given Vancouver's fame for its abundance of fresh seafood due to its Pacific Ocean location, the city's sushi restaurants have become world famous for trying to outdo each other by offering superb quality all-you-can-eat sushi, at the best prices to be found anywhere on the planet. Quality sushi in Vancouver is priced at a fraction of what one would pay in Japan, and many Japanese tourists marvel at Vancouver's huge selection of quality sushi restaurants. Some say Vancouver’s sushi offering meets and exceeds that found in Japan, certainly in terms of price! Very few people in Japan can afford to eat sushi other than for a special occasion. However, sushi is so affordable in Vancouver that residents and tourists alike can eat it on a regular basis, without breaking the bank! In the past decade, the price of eating sushi in Vancouver has tumbled, with sushi restaurants literally on every street corner, and the fierce competition has driven the cost of a quality all-you-can-eat sushi dinner down to the $CAD 15-20 range. An all-you-can-eat sushi dinner for two, with alcoholic drinks can easily be had for less than $CAD 50, which is half what one would pay at a North American a la carte sushi bar, and probably one quarter what one would pay for a comparable meal in Japan!

    In the United States, the greatest density of all-you-can-eat sushi buffets is found not in Los Angeles, San Francisco, or Miami, but in Las Vegas of all places. Las Vegas is famous for taking what is famous elsewhere, and relocating it to Sin City and making it bigger and better. And sushi is no exception! Most of the major casino buffets offer sushi in one form or another on their daily menus. However, the city's best all-you-can-eat sushi is found at the biggest casino buffets including those at Mandalay Bay, Belagio, Paris, Aladdin, Rio and the Hilton. For non-casino buffets, try Todai, which is located in the Desert Passage Mall at Aladdin. Todai offers a superb all-you-can-eat sushi buffet, which like the casino buffets, also includes all-you-can-eat Alaska King Crab legs. As a bonus, Todai also offers many Japanese sushi delicacies not offered at the casinos, but is priced at approximately $30 US, whereas the casino buffets are slightly loss costly priced in the $20-$25 range. No matter how you slice it, or no matter how you pick it up with your chop sticks, sushi is considerably more expensive in Las Vegas than what you'd pay in Vancouver!

    Of course other cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Miami, and others have their fair share of all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants too. But probably the best sushi in the United States is found in Honolulu, Hawaii. The reason being that Hawaii is but several hours flying time away from Japan, and it is wildly popular as a tourist destination for many Japanese. Hawaii also has a sizeable Japanese immigrant community and has ready access to exotic and fresh seafood, all the necessary ingredients for a thriving sushi restaurant culture!

    Dollar for dollar, there is no place in the world that can compete with Vancouver, Canada, for offering diners superb all-you-can-eat sushi, at bargain prices! So much so, one Vancouver entrepreneur has opened a website completely devoted to the North American all-you-can-eat sushi scene. The www.SushiBuffets.com website provides a forum where all-you-can-eat sushi fans can rate and provide their own reviews of local sushi buffets.

    Happy sushi eating, and if you know of an excellent sushi buffet, be sure to tell everyone in the SushiBuffets

    Choosing The Right Resume Format
    No one has the same history; that's common knowledge. What isn't so common, however, is that resumes do not have to be formatted the same way each time. If your work history, education and experience is different from another applicant's, why should you have the same style of resume? Why not choose the format that best suits your abilities?To help you decide which format is right for you, we include a list below to detail their differences and what situations they work best for:Chronological: for those with long periods of employments and no gaping holes in work history, this is ideal. What a Chronological format emphasis is strong work ethic and a solid background in experience. Even if you have had positions that don't necessarily relate to the job you're seeking, you can still show that you have been employed and know what it is to work.Chronological is also meant to show a progression in ability. If you've merely moved from job to job, taking similar positions each time, then that doesn't reflect well. It shows a lack of ambition. Instead, a Chronological format should reveal your ability to move forward. If your first job was a shelf-stock

    Vancouver’s lower mainland (which has a population of some 2 million) is also the world's undisputed capital for all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants. Given Vancouver's fame for its abundance of fresh seafood due to its Pacific Ocean location, the city's sushi restaurants have become world famous for trying to outdo each other by offering superb quality all-you-can-eat sushi, at the best prices to be found anywhere on the planet. Quality sushi in Vancouver is priced at a fraction of what one would pay in Japan, and many Japanese tourists marvel at Vancouver's huge selection of quality sushi restaurants. Some say Vancouver’s sushi offering meets and exceeds that found in Japan, certainly in terms of price! Very few people in Japan can afford to eat sushi other than for a special occasion. However, sushi is so affordable in Vancouver that residents and tourists alike can eat it on a regular basis, without breaking the bank! In the past decade, the price of eating sushi in Vancouver has tumbled, with sushi restaurants literally on every street corner, and the fierce competition has driven the cost of a quality all-you-can-eat sushi dinner down to the $CAD 15-20 range. An all-you-can-eat sushi dinner for two, with alcoholic drinks can easily be had for less than $CAD 50, which is half what one would pay at a North American a la carte sushi bar, and probably one quarter what one would pay for a comparable meal in Japan!

    In the United States, the greatest density of all-you-can-eat sushi buffets is found not in Los Angeles, San Francisco, or Miami, but in Las Vegas of all places. Las Vegas is famous for taking what is famous elsewhere, and relocating it to Sin City and making it bigger and better. And sushi is no exception! Most of the major casino buffets offer sushi in one form or another on their daily menus. However, the city's best all-you-can-eat sushi is found at the biggest casino buffets including those at Mandalay Bay, Belagio, Paris, Aladdin, Rio and the Hilton. For non-casino buffets, try Todai, which is located in the Desert Passage Mall at Aladdin. Todai offers a superb all-you-can-eat sushi buffet, which like the casino buffets, also includes all-you-can-eat Alaska King Crab legs. As a bonus, Todai also offers many Japanese sushi delicacies not offered at the casinos, but is priced at approximately $30 US, whereas the casino buffets are slightly loss costly priced in the $20-$25 range. No matter how you slice it, or no matter how you pick it up with your chop sticks, sushi is considerably more expensive in Las Vegas than what you'd pay in Vancouver!

    Of course other cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Miami, and others have their fair share of all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants too. But probably the best sushi in the United States is found in Honolulu, Hawaii. The reason being that Hawaii is but several hours flying time away from Japan, and it is wildly popular as a tourist destination for many Japanese. Hawaii also has a sizeable Japanese immigrant community and has ready access to exotic and fresh seafood, all the necessary ingredients for a thriving sushi restaurant culture!

    Dollar for dollar, there is no place in the world that can compete with Vancouver, Canada, for offering diners superb all-you-can-eat sushi, at bargain prices! So much so, one Vancouver entrepreneur has opened a website completely devoted to the North American all-you-can-eat sushi scene. The www.SushiBuffets.com website provides a forum where all-you-can-eat sushi fans can rate and provide their own reviews of local sushi buffets.

    Happy sushi eating, and if you know of an excellent sushi buffet, be sure to tell everyone in the SushiBuffets

    Plastics are the Best
    Plastic is one of the more commonly used materials for prototyping. Product development engineers, production consultants, inventors, special project leaders, and retail and production prototype specialist turn to plastics to create their moldings and prototypes.These people know that plastic can be molded, cut and manipulated in any ways conceivable to create prototypes that would benefit the development of their products. Prototypes from plastic can be drop tested, tested for strength, sterilized, tested for consumer preference and durability, and can be put into actual use in no time at all at bare minimum costs.With plastic prototyping, designers have different options at their disposal. Designers and developers can use rapid prototyping techniques which have tools like stereolithography, deposition modeling, laser sintering, laminated object manufacturing, and three dimensional printing at its forefront.All these incorporates the basics of rapid prototyping, each technique creates individual parts from 3D-CAR models and joins them as layers until the final prototype is finished.Using rapid prototyping techniques allows fast reproduc
    is found at the biggest casino buffets including those at Mandalay Bay, Belagio, Paris, Aladdin, Rio and the Hilton. For non-casino buffets, try Todai, which is located in the Desert Passage Mall at Aladdin. Todai offers a superb all-you-can-eat sushi buffet, which like the casino buffets, also includes all-you-can-eat Alaska King Crab legs. As a bonus, Todai also offers many Japanese sushi delicacies not offered at the casinos, but is priced at approximately $30 US, whereas the casino buffets are slightly loss costly priced in the $20-$25 range. No matter how you slice it, or no matter how you pick it up with your chop sticks, sushi is considerably more expensive in Las Vegas than what you'd pay in Vancouver!

    Of course other cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Miami, and others have their fair share of all-you-can-eat sushi restaurants too. But probably the best sushi in the United States is found in Honolulu, Hawaii. The reason being that Hawaii is but several hours flying time away from Japan, and it is wildly popular as a tourist destination for many Japanese. Hawaii also has a sizeable Japanese immigrant community and has ready access to exotic and fresh seafood, all the necessary ingredients for a thriving sushi restaurant culture!

    Dollar for dollar, there is no place in the world that can compete with Vancouver, Canada, for offering diners superb all-you-can-eat sushi, at bargain prices! So much so, one Vancouver entrepreneur has opened a website completely devoted to the North American all-you-can-eat sushi scene. The www.SushiBuffets.com website provides a forum where all-you-can-eat sushi fans can rate and provide their own reviews of local sushi buffets.

    Happy sushi eating, and if you know of an excellent sushi buffet, be sure to tell everyone in the SushiBuffets.com forum!

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