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Learn to Speed Read FREE at WaveReading.com!
Learn about a new Speed Reading method being offered for Free on this site!
November 18 2003--WaveReading.com, a newly published web site by Hanover Park, IL inventor Tom Chesters, will make you smile. Theres just something funny about what he will ask you do there, which is to turn your pen into a strange new kind of speed reading pointer.
Tom believes almost anyone can speed read using his newly patented, easy to use, rapid reading method called Wave Reading. The Wave reading method utilizes a simple reading device called a Wave tool to induce your eyes to wave rapidly back and forth through the reading material. The free Wave tool suggested on his web site is actually just any ballpoint pen you have which you modify in a special way by inserting one end of any thin, 4 to 5 inch object, such as a coffee or other drink stirrer, into the compression clip of the pen and then angling the stirrer slightly upwards. When the barrel of the pen is then twisted back and forth between your thumb and fingers, the extended, angled stirrer becomes a Wave pointer. Once you understand how to properly utilize your Wave tool to underscore your reading material, its waving pointer will induce you to read faster.
This new and amazing rapid reading method is essentially being offered for free on the WaveReading.com site to whomever wishes to use it. The site offers a FREE Adobe Acrobat download of a detailed Wave Reading Instruction Manual for those readers who desire to better understand the numerous different ways in which a Wave tool may be utilized to read faster. The Manual also provides numerous tips on how to read faster and better. With a copy of the Manual on hand you wont have to spend extra hours trying to determine the best way to hold the tool under different reading circumstances, or how to use the various different reading methods the Wave tool can allow you to perform.
Tom says, My first hope is that Wave Reading will be the wave of the future for speed reading. Its a fun thing for you to do, makes reading more comfortable for your eyes, and has the amazing effect of improving your reading speed. My biggest hope is that an interested manufacturer will see the web site and seek further information on licensing the Wave Reading patent (U.S. Patent 6,669,480 issued 123003) to produce inexpensive ReadWrite Wave tools that you can carry in your pocket. Pens with a built-in, hinged pointer would allow you to read or to write with a quick flip of your fingering position.
Tom and his son Mark Reiter also have other sites that are unique and interesting. JIXIS.com is the site for a product called JIXIS Graphical Music Systems for the Keyboard. With JIXIS you can learn to play the keyboard by simple and easy graphical correspondence between the JIXIS color-coded keying labels and ordinary written music.
Also, be sure and visit Toms science fiction site, TheOverFile.com. For more information on any of these sites, visit WaveReading.com. ###
This article courtesy of http://www.penfocus.com.
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