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Pet Insurance FAQ: Your Dog's Most Common Ailments | Pet Blog

Just like humans, our pets are susceptible to illness and disease. Specific breeds are more prone to certain ailments, but there are some health problems that are common among all dogs. With such common occurrences, it?s recommended to invest in some form of pet medical coverage like pet insurance to reduce costs. Even if your pet isn?t sickly, it will still need routine checkups and vaccinations. Check to see if the pet health insurance has any exclusions and make sure it includes these five problems.

Interestingly enough, the most common dog illnesses are very similar to what humans typically suffer from. The first is ear infections, which usually form from a wax buildup, ear mites, and occasionally bacteria or fungus. Dogs with longer ears and those with hair on the underside of the ear flaps are more likely to get ear infections. With proper grooming and ear cleaning, you can greatly reduce the dog?s risk. Watch for symptoms such as shaking of the head, sensitivity to ears being touched, and scratching of the ears.

Canine skin allergies come in as close second. The dog may also have inhalant allergies from mold, dust, or pollen. Symptoms include scratching, biting, constant licking, and biting at the feet. The itching will be most severe on the feet, groin, and armpits and the skin will become thickened and produce a strong odor. Other causes of allergies are food and flea bites. The symptoms will be similar but the dog will also have ear inflammation, shaking of the head, anal itching, and rubbing the face on carpeting.

Another skin ailment is pyoderma, which is a skin infection caused by bacteria. Skin fold pyoderma is caused when the folds of the skin rub together. It can also be caused by allergies and parasites, so if you don?t treat ailment number two, it can easily turn into ailment number three. An infected area will show redness, swelling, hair loss, and sometimes blisters. If left untreated, it can cause severe pain, pus or blood, and a foul odor. A simple antibiotic can treat it, but in order to prevent it, always properly groom your dog.

At some point in time, your dog probably has vomited. This is known as gastritis. While it is often a one time occurrence, constant vomiting is a very serious condition. There is a long list of possible causes including food allergy, chemical ingestion, medication, inflammatory bowel disease, and stomach cancer. Immediately take your dog to the veterinarian if there is blood in the vomit, weakness, severe weight loss, diarrhea, or lack of appetite.

The fifth most common ailment is enteritis, or inflammation of the small intestines. Bacteria and viruses are usually the culprit. Diarrhea is the number one sign. However, don?t rush your dog off to the vet just yet. If the diarrhea is frequent or there is blood in the stool, then there is serious cause for concern. Only lab tests can determine the specific cause.

Always be on your guard and look for signs that your dog is not well. Eventually, your dog will need to be treated for something. Be prepared with dog health insurance or its alternatives and make frequent checkups part of your routine.

http://www.PetAssure.com is the preferred alternative to insurance coverage for your family pet. Unlike pet health insurance, all pets are covered; regardless of age, medical condition or any pre-existing condition. There are no exclusions, no deductibles and no waiting for reimbursement with our pet health plan.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mark_Etinger

Source: http://pet.mypkweb.com/pet-insurance-faq-your-dogs-most-common-ailments/

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Ouya developer console gets an official unboxing, flaunts transparent case (video)

It's a little early for an Ouya teardown, but Kickstarters who chipped in $699 won't have to wait long to see what the little console is made of -- Ouya's developer hardware is transparent. The console's team decided to cut the inevitable march of unboxing videos off at the neck, offering fans a quick preview of the package it's shipping out to devs. The standard accoutrements are there -- the tiny console itself, two prototype controllers with batteries, HDMI and power adapters, plus a micro USB cord and a letter to developers thanking them for their investment and warning them of the early build's bugs. The note also cautions deep-pocketed gamers that the device is built specifically for developer use, and has no games to placate eager couch potatoes. The video shows the console booting up, and even demonstrates how easy it is to open the hardware. Skip on past the break to get a glimpse at what early adopters and developers are getting their hands on.

Continue reading Ouya developer console gets an official unboxing, flaunts transparent case (video)

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Source: Ouya

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/12/28/ouya-unboxing/

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Google Apps makes gains on Microsoft Office

Google Apps was long seen as too lightweight to be a competitor to Microsoft Office. But Google Apps has added features and maintained a low price over the years, and now the cloud software suite is starting to tempt companies away from Microsoft Office.

By Jeff Ward-Bailey,?Contributor / December 26, 2012

More and more companies are considering the cloud-based Google Apps suite as a serious competitor to Microsoft Office. Here, a city bus in Los Angeles shows an advertisement for the Microsoft Surface tablet.

Fred Prouser/Reuters/File

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For years, Microsoft Office was widely considered to be the way for businesses to get "serious" work done. Google Apps, the cloud-based office suite, wasn't generally thought of as being stable or full-featured enough for company use. But as Google Apps has matured, more and more companies have noticed -- and in 2012 Microsoft found its core business base eroding as offices jumped ship to Google.

Skip to next paragraph Jeff Ward-Bailey

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Jeff began writing for the Monitor's Horizons blog in 2011, covering product news and rumors, innovations from companies like Apple and Google, and developments in tech policy.

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Google has been promoting its software for business use since 2006, focusing mainly on small businesses that didn't need all the features of Microsoft Office. Now, The New York Times' Quentin Hardy reports, big companies are starting to notice Google as well. New Google Apps clients in 2012 included Hoffman-La Roche, a Swiss drug company with over 80,000 workers, and the U.S. Interior Department, where 90,000 employees use Google Apps.

Google's pricing is a big mark in its favor with businesses. The Google Apps suite, which includes word-processing, data-entry, spreadsheet, and presentation programs, has added features at a steady pace for several years, but the price of the software -- $50 a year for each business user -- has stayed the same. By contrast, Microsoft Office will cost $400 a year for each business user in 2013, although the Times notes that many companies pay half that with bulk discounts.

Microsoft hasn't ignored the cloud-software trend, though. Last year it released Office 365, an online version of its venerable software suite, which costs between $72 and $240 per year for each user, depending on how many features are needed. Julia White, a manager in Microsoft's business division, says Office 365 is "on track to be [Microsoft's] fastest-growing business," according to the Times, although the company hasn't released figures on usage. In late 2011 and early 2012 Microsoft's business divison made almost $24 billion -- but that revenue came almost entirely from conventional Office software that runs on computers located on companies' premises.

Google announced this summer that more than five million businesses were using its Apps suite, although nearly all of those companies have ten or fewer employees. So big companies like Hoffman-La Roche aren't jumping to Google Apps en masse, although the Times notes that Google won 23 of the 42 large government contracts for which it competed with Microsoft in 2012, compared with 10 for Microsoft.

Neither company is boasting about its total number of enterprise users, and it would be inaccurate to suggest that Microsoft is hemorrhaging business customers. But as companies put more stock in online collaboration, Microsoft will have to find ways to make Office 365 more attractive -- or come up with another strategy to tempt businesses away from Google.

For more tech news, follow Jeff on Twitter: @jeffwardbailey.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/vhIII-YXqoI/Google-Apps-makes-gains-on-Microsoft-Office

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