Pets are often considered family members, but their owners may not consider what will happen to the pets when their owners pass away. A family pet runs the risk of being abused, mistreated or sent to a shelter when its owner passes. By planning ahead to take care of your pets, you can ensure that these important family members are not neglected when you pass.
Pets are considered their owner’s property, so you cannot leave money or a gift directly to a pet. You can leave money to a caretaker in exchange for caring for a pet. This avenue may be difficult to enforce once the pet owner passes, which is why the David Bindrup Law Firm offers its clients unique verbiage that can encourage a caretaker to properly care for the Trustor’s pet as the Trustor would do.
This verbiage is best placed in a trust, not a will. A will doesn’t address what happens if the maker is incapacitated or the time period between the death of the maker and the start of probate. A family pet can easily be lost in the shuffle under those circumstances.
Nevada statutes allow the formation of a trust to take care of a pet. You can name a responsible person to care for the pet, as well as specifications of how to care for the pet. Everything from living arrangements, diet, exercise, veterinary care and oversight of funds can be addressed in your pet trust.
By planning now, pet owners can ensure their pets are cared for after they pass away, and can even set aside life insurance policies to fund such care. Set up a cost free consultation with the David Bindrup Law Firm to learn more about how a pet trust can give you and your pet peace of mind.
Web Design Blog
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
Thursday, August 25, 2016
History of Javascript
The History of JavaScript
JavaScript is a coding language started in the 1990s that is now a cornerstone in the foundation of web design. Its history is much rockier those of HyperText Markup Language or Cascading Style Sheets but, despite its past, it has survived to become an invaluable part of web development.
In order to understand JavaScript and its history you first need to understand why it was created. In the late 90s, Netscape owned the browsers scene with its Navigator but they realized in 1995 that the web needed to be more dynamic. Founder Marc Andreessen believed the web coding languages such as; HTML and CSS needed a ‘glue language’ that would be used to assemble the various aspects of web design, as well as, organize images and plugins. It was in May of 1995 that Netscape hired Brendan Eich who wrote JavaScript in the space of ten days. At the time of its development, it was codenamed Mocha and soon after it was completed in September it was officially named LiveScript. Only three months later the name was changed to JavaScript after several lawsuits over the prefix ‘live’.
In November of 1996 Netscape submitted JavaScript to the ECMA in order to form a standard specification so that browsers could implement the JavaScript work done at Netscape. The effort resulted in ECMAScript which contained multiple extensions, the most popular of which being JavaScript, but also including JScirpt and ActionScript. Despite Microsoft’s rise in the browser game, it was clear they had no intention of adopting JavaScript in IE. Not much happened after that until Brendan Eich, now a co-founder of the open source software company Mozilla partnered with ECMA to work on future versions of ECMAScript.
Around the same time, JavaScript was becoming common in web design a new browser was on the rise. Business magnate Bill Gates and his upcoming software company Microsoft had created Internet Explorer. The release of IE 3 introduced compatibility with languages such as; CSS and extensions of HTML but still resisted the adoption of JavaScript, instead opting for their own ‘JScript’ which was an extension of the ECMAScript standard. As Internet Explorer began to rival Navigator JavaScript became an annoying hurdle in the making of cross platform websites. It was too time-consuming for developers to make websites that worked just as well on Internet Explorer as they did on Navigator so many developers were forced to choose. What followed was a browser war between Microsoft and Netscape.
By: Phoenix SEO expert Joseph Stevenson.
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
Finding a good SEO Company in Las Vegas
Finding a good SEO company can be difficult or impossible at times. Most are either scams or the guys running them have no idea what they are doing. Las Vegas SEO company Raptor Websites is a premier SEO company that provides good clean marketing for their customers.
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