I like most of the advices a lot.
Still, I disagree with Claudio regarding the second advice.
Give your ruling and ask them to continue playing according to it. And then immediately go double-check your answer. If you were wrong, go back to the table ASAP and let the players know that you made a mistake and provide the right answer. Fix the game state if needed, but try to avoid confronting them. Everyone can make mistakes; the right thing is to learn from them to avoid repeats and owning up when they occur.
I think confidence is something crucial to the job of judging, but is not more important than giving a correct answer. I think, the main reason judges don't recieve respect are mistakes, and we should put a lot of effort in not commiting them. That doesn't mean you can't commit mistakes: everyone can make poor decision sometimes, and is important to let the players know that you made it, because of at least 2 reasons: (1) humility is important in this job, (2) they will think your rulling is ok and that could mean more mistakes in the future.
When players notice hard inconsitency between rullings, the judge program looses credibility. Therefore, I don't recommend judges to give provisional answers if they are not sure and they have ways to easily confirm it. That coud have terrible consequences for the match, the education of players and the judge program as a whole. As a player, I preffer a 100 times a judge that takes a minute to ask another one to be sure about something, than a judge that gives me a poor rulling just to show confidence, and then corrects himself when the mistake is most likely irreparable.