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September 30th, 2009cash advance loans, internet, moneyCyberspace is awash with cash advance companies, which means that competition is fierce and customers can shop around for the most favorable interest rates. Unfortunately the same can’t be said of the high street. But to apply for an online cash advance you’ll generally have to fax through copies of your driver’s license, bank account details and a recent pay slip. Once you’ve got the green light; the money will be paid straight into your account. Likewise when it comes to repaying the money you don’t have to do anything, as the money will exit the same way it arrived.
I know a website that requires only easy qualifications, it’s www.pacificadvance.com. The money will be deposit at your bank account overnight. This website is the choice of many simply because of their minimal requirements and fast services. One of the safest and reputable company in the cyberspace.
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September 30th, 2009internet, money, payday loansWith the help of technology, the most of online payday lenders provide their customers with no faxing payday loans in which you require no paperwork when applying for your loan. It is absolutely a hassle free process to get a fast payday loan when you don’t want any obstacles to stand in your way of getting the cash when you need it the most. Rather than going to the office which is time consuming and tiring.
Admit it or not, there are times when you can face a sudden emergency and you might not be having enough funds in your bank account to cover the expenses. Your next pay date might be still several weeks away and the only option that you might be considering is an online payday loan. With online payday loans you can borrow up to $1500 with the repayment period ranging from one to three weeks. -
September 25th, 2009Information technology, advertising, business, language, marketingMost website take a Model T approach to overseas marketing. You can access them in any language you what, as long as it’s English. Eighty five percent of the Web’s pages are in English, but only 45 percent of the Web’s users are native speakers of that language, according to research firm IDC, and the percentage is dropping year by year.
Many non-native speakers can read English, sure but making potential customers speak your language- instead of soliciting them in their’s- is a backward way of doing business. English-only might suffice for routine transactions between established businesses partners (or for American tourist in Paris), but if you really want to sell something to someone, you’d better speak that person’s language.
At Oris Elevator, based in Farmington, Conn. Monthly online sales leads shot up from 130 to more than 1,000 after the company launched local-language versions of its website- with 70 percent of those leads coming from new customers. Even simple gestures help. Travelocity vise president Ned Booth says that whenever his company adds country-specific travel services or information to its site (such as local customer-service phone number), sales in that country typically double. As for Travelocity’s new online operation in Germany, Booth says,” We couldn’t market at all if we didn’t do it in German. We’ve really got to be able to communicate clearly and make the experience comfortable enough that they buy.
Such successes are little surprise, but what inhibits many companies is the price of developing a multilingual presence online. It involves translating webpage’s (which can cost 25 cents per word), maintaining several different sites, (one for each country language) coordinating content and branding between the sites, building business systems that are capable of handling international e-commerce, and so forth. According to IT research company Aberdeen Group, the typical cost of producing a website in another language is $50,000 to $100,000 and large projects can run as much as $2 million per language.
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September 5th, 2009advertisement, instrument, monitoring equipment, techmologyNext time you go to the store to buy ice for your cooler, you might pause to marvel at the technological complexity of it all- that is, if the score, operated by Package Ice Inc. That machine doesn’t merely make and dispense ice; it’s also a subtly engineered communications and computational instrument. It has sensor’s that continuously measure almost 100 physical conditions, including the machine’s ice production, temperature, whether a bag is overfilled, and so forth. The sensors relay data over the Internet via wireless moderns to the company’s service center in Houston, where technicians can often diagnose and solve problems for that machine- and the company’s more than 2,000 other Ice Factory units across the country- with a few clicks or keystrokes.
Of course, monitoring and controlling equipment from a far isn’t a new idea. Machines break, and it saves time and money if you can fix the problems without having to be there. But remote sensing and service technology has typically been too expensive for everyday use- NASA has long controlled its equipment remotely; purveyors of frozen water haven’t. Now the convergence of wireless networks, the Internet, and new sensor technology is making it more feasible for businesses to keep a remote eye on their machinery. “It’s going from being a neat but expensive idea to a cost effective one” says Craig Resnick, a director at ARC Advisory Group, a technology analysis firm in Dedham, Mass.

