| Top marketers held at GUN POINT and forced to make $1,000 in 48hrs.
Thats the exact scenario put before a few top Internet Marketers. With such a motivating challenge they "spilled the beans" about there top secrets for generating insane sales on the internet. All the marketers were asked to document what they did and how they did it on screen shot videos as they placed ads and used various web 2.0 venues to put out the message about the product they were asked to sale. Why would you put forth such a challenge and document it, you ask. Simple to show anyone considering starting or developing a home business that its not as hard as so many people make it out to be. With the right education, training and mentoring you can use an unlimited amount of available tools to promote and successfully build an online business with tools other than Google.
Startups Rush to Pave Way for Web Video
The intended recipient gets an e-mail with a link. Clicking it starts the download, which pulls the chunks together from the network of user computers like a squid pulling in its tentacles. In other words, Squidcast itself doesn't need to devote computers or buy bandwidth to transfer user's files. It will finance the service by showing short video ads to the recipients while they download. "If someone attempted to do this as a hosted platform they would simply go out of business," Putterman said. "It can't be done and that's why it hasn't been done." Atlanta-based Asankya Inc. is trying to solve the same problem, but for Hollywood rather than home movies. CEO Scott Ryan puts the current cost of distributing an HD movie online at about $3. Considering movies rent for $4 to $5 and the creators have to be paid, there's no real money in it for distributors.
Wall-to-wall basketball
12:35 p.m.: ESPN announcers Mike Patrick and Fran Fraschilla enter the arena to watch practice and chat with Purnell as they prepare for their 6 p.m. broadcast. Patrick notes that his friend Dick Vitale, who recently had throat surgery, is tentatively scheduled to resume broadcasting Feb. 6 at the Duke-North Carolina game. Patrick notes that it must be killing Vitale, a born showman, not to have an audience. Patrick says he left a message with Vitale's wife recently in which he said: "Tell Dick I'm sorry I'm not there to not hear it." 1:15 p.m.: As the shootaround ends, Purnell calls his team together again for some final words of instruction on how to beat Duke. "Run," he says. "And go inside. That's the key. Go inside. They can't handle that. Now 1-2-3 Win!" CHAPEL HILL 1:20 p.m.: We drive 11 miles to the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, where North Carolina hosts Maryland at 3:30 p.m.
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