ODFunds.com is a long term investment program, operated by a group of well-educated experts.
Naturally, you would ask:"Why should we trust you?" OK, I would like to introduce ourselves. In fact, we are a group of experienced V.C. investment operators and we have been in the industry of Forex and Securities for over 12 years. Some of us are network experts, and have good sense about the Internet! And some used to be employee of big securities Corp. So we are very good partners in the Forex and securities arena.
Before we put the investment programs onto the Internet, we have been operating on our business offline for several years. And now we are presenting it online to share the profit with all the cyber users.
Currently, we have many investment plans. You can choose either or all of them to invest in! However, ODFunds.com is very easy to join and earn better profit, as long as you have at least $1 in your Liberty Reserve/payza/Egopay/STP/Perfect Money account or Credit card ! All you have to do is to sign up and invest your money in our program, then you will begin to earn daily profit from the next business day for 6 calender days . And the daily profit varies from 30% - 60% according to the amount you invest.
Company Overview
OD Funds Ltd. is a well managed and operated corporation, focused on offshore investments. Forex and oversea securities are two main directions of our business. We have been in this industry for over 12 years, managing about 15 000 000 USD of assets. Actually, our firm is not a big one in the world, but if you know our initial funds in 2004 is only 250 000 USD, you may be surprised at our rapid growth. All the efforts and achievements made totally by our staffs have been disposed as our new beginning, to achieve a higher position. We know our funds is not huge enough to take us to much higher level or become a famous one. As well that is why we get online, opening to the public.
We hope the cyber investors could help us going far and further. Considering that the cyber users are from all over the world, we employ the global famous instant online payment processors - Liberty Reserve/Payza/STP/Egopay and Perfect Money (find the details about them in FAQ), which enable our investors to transfer funds in and out freely and cheaply.
As reward, we promise our investors daily interest varying from 30% to 60%, with different amount invested to our program. It is very a profitable offer, cause we are willing to share profit with our members.
Click Here for join.
source:odfunds.com
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Saturday, February 9, 2013
Lose Your Weight
Good news for those of you who want to lose weight. Excess weight is certainly not healthy, there is now an e-book about how this weight loss.
You can Click Here for buy this e-book.
Let us become healthier..
You can Click Here for buy this e-book.
Let us become healthier..
Monday, February 4, 2013
Hits4pay.com
Hits4pay.com Description
Hits4pay.com is an advertising membership program that pays members to read emails and visit advertiser websites. Members join the program for free and fill out some information when they register, and then receive promotional emails that best fit with their interests. The program also has a referral system in place where members can earn a commission on what their referrals earn.
Hits4pay.com Detailed Overview
Hits4pay.com advertises itself as one of the highest paying pay-per-click sites on the internet, and this looks like it’s probably true. They do pay better than a lot of them; $.02 to read one promotional email and visit an advertiser’s site and $.01 when one of your referrals does the same. The referral system for Hits4pay.com is fairly standard. You refer people to the program and they sign up, then you earn a percentage of what they earn.
With a lot of pay-per-click programs, you reach a certain minimum payout level and then you have to submit a request to be paid. Hits4pay.com pays everyone who qualifies on the 15th of every month, regardless of whether they ask to be paid or not. A lot of people like this, since it means they don’t have to remember to submit a request. Minimum payout amount is $25, and if you don’t have that much in your account when it comes time to pay members, it will simply carry over and keep accumulating until you have enough.
It’s important to note that Hits4pay.com is not just for people to make extra money. If you’re looking for ways to get traffic to your website and sales for your products or services, you can use their advertising services. When people sign up with them to make money from reading emails, they check off the things that they’re interested in from a list of categories. When you use the advertising service, they try to send your promotional emails to the members who would be most interested in what you are selling.
Hits4pay.com Reputation
Hits4pay.com has been around for quite a while, and has gotten its share of good and bad feedback. There are people who are happy to recommend it to others as a way to make some extra spending money. There are others who have had issues with the program. The most common complaint about the program was that they provided very few emails to read, and therefore it was difficult to get up to the minimum amount for cash-out. It’s free to join, so there’s certainly no risk in trying it out.
source:http://www.ptcinvestigation.org/
Hits4pay.com is an advertising membership program that pays members to read emails and visit advertiser websites. Members join the program for free and fill out some information when they register, and then receive promotional emails that best fit with their interests. The program also has a referral system in place where members can earn a commission on what their referrals earn.
Hits4pay.com Detailed Overview
Hits4pay.com advertises itself as one of the highest paying pay-per-click sites on the internet, and this looks like it’s probably true. They do pay better than a lot of them; $.02 to read one promotional email and visit an advertiser’s site and $.01 when one of your referrals does the same. The referral system for Hits4pay.com is fairly standard. You refer people to the program and they sign up, then you earn a percentage of what they earn.
With a lot of pay-per-click programs, you reach a certain minimum payout level and then you have to submit a request to be paid. Hits4pay.com pays everyone who qualifies on the 15th of every month, regardless of whether they ask to be paid or not. A lot of people like this, since it means they don’t have to remember to submit a request. Minimum payout amount is $25, and if you don’t have that much in your account when it comes time to pay members, it will simply carry over and keep accumulating until you have enough.
It’s important to note that Hits4pay.com is not just for people to make extra money. If you’re looking for ways to get traffic to your website and sales for your products or services, you can use their advertising services. When people sign up with them to make money from reading emails, they check off the things that they’re interested in from a list of categories. When you use the advertising service, they try to send your promotional emails to the members who would be most interested in what you are selling.
Hits4pay.com Reputation
Hits4pay.com has been around for quite a while, and has gotten its share of good and bad feedback. There are people who are happy to recommend it to others as a way to make some extra spending money. There are others who have had issues with the program. The most common complaint about the program was that they provided very few emails to read, and therefore it was difficult to get up to the minimum amount for cash-out. It’s free to join, so there’s certainly no risk in trying it out.
source:http://www.ptcinvestigation.org/
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Android 5.0 Key Lime Pie
Google's showing no signs of slowing its pace of Android development, with Android 4.0 appearing on the Galaxy Nexus late in 2011, followed in July of 2012 by the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean release that arrived powering the super Nexus 7.
But, forward-looking, update-obsessed people that we are, we can't help but imagine how Google's going to maintain the pace of innovation in its next version of its mobile OS, Android 5.0.
All we know so far is that Google's working away on the K release of Android, which it's developing under the dessert-related codename of Key Lime Pie. Regarding the version number, it's likely that the Key Lime Pie moniker will be given to Android 5.0. We thought we might find out on 29 October but as yet there is no official word from Google.
Rumours of a new Nexus handset started trickling in during the third quarter of 2012, as we reported on 1 October 2012. There was speculation that this phone would be sporting Key Lime Pie, but sources who spoke to AndroidAndMe correctly claimed that the handset, which turned out to be the Google Nexus 4 would be running Android Jelly Bean.
So now as we wait on official news of the Android 5.0 release date and features, we can start to pull together the Key Lime Pie rumours from around the web, with the first sighting of Android 5.0 on a benchmarking website, apparently running on a Sony smartphone. There has previously been speculation that Sony is in line to produce the next Nexus phone, which may lend some credence to this rumour.
Android 5.0 release date
Google has announced that its next developer conference - Google IO - will take place from May 15 to May 17 2013, a month earlier than 2012's June dates. Given that Google announced Android 4.1 Jelly Bean at 2012's IO conference, it's not unreasonable to expect to see Android 5.0 at this year's event.
source:http://www.techradar.com/news/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/android-5-0-key-lime-pie-release-date-news-and-rumours-1091500
But, forward-looking, update-obsessed people that we are, we can't help but imagine how Google's going to maintain the pace of innovation in its next version of its mobile OS, Android 5.0.
All we know so far is that Google's working away on the K release of Android, which it's developing under the dessert-related codename of Key Lime Pie. Regarding the version number, it's likely that the Key Lime Pie moniker will be given to Android 5.0. We thought we might find out on 29 October but as yet there is no official word from Google.
Rumours of a new Nexus handset started trickling in during the third quarter of 2012, as we reported on 1 October 2012. There was speculation that this phone would be sporting Key Lime Pie, but sources who spoke to AndroidAndMe correctly claimed that the handset, which turned out to be the Google Nexus 4 would be running Android Jelly Bean.
So now as we wait on official news of the Android 5.0 release date and features, we can start to pull together the Key Lime Pie rumours from around the web, with the first sighting of Android 5.0 on a benchmarking website, apparently running on a Sony smartphone. There has previously been speculation that Sony is in line to produce the next Nexus phone, which may lend some credence to this rumour.
Android 5.0 release date
Google has announced that its next developer conference - Google IO - will take place from May 15 to May 17 2013, a month earlier than 2012's June dates. Given that Google announced Android 4.1 Jelly Bean at 2012's IO conference, it's not unreasonable to expect to see Android 5.0 at this year's event.
source:http://www.techradar.com/news/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/android-5-0-key-lime-pie-release-date-news-and-rumours-1091500
Monday, January 28, 2013
Mini DV
DV is a format for storing digital video. It was launched in 1995 with joint efforts of leading producers of video camera recorders.
The original DV specification, known as Blue Book, was standardized within the IEC 61834 family of standards. These standards define common features such as physical videocassettes, recording modulation method, magnetization, and basic system data in part 1. Part 2 describes the specifics of 525-60 and 625-50 systems.[1] The IEC standards are copyrighted publications available for purchase from IEC or ANSI.
File-based media
With proliferation of tapeless camcorder video recording, DV video can be recorded on optical discs, solid state flash memory cards and hard disk drives and used as computer files. In particular:
Sony XDCAM family of cameras can record DV onto either Professional Disc or SxS memory cards.
Panasonic DVCPRO HD and AVC-Intra camcorders can record DV (as well as DVCPRO) onto P2 cards.
Some Panasonic AVCHD camcorders (AG-HMC80, AG-AC130, AG-AC160) record DV video onto Secure Digital memory cards.
JVC GY-HM750 records DV video onto either Secure Digital or SxS memory cards.
Most DV and HDV camcorders can feed live DV stream over IEEE 1394 interface to an external file-based recorder.
Video is stored either as native DIF bitstream or wrapped into an audio/video container such as AVI, QuickTime and MXF.
DV-DIF is the raw form of DV video. The files usually have extensions *.dv or *.dif.
DV-AVI is Microsoft's implementation of DV video file, which is wrapped into an AVI container. Two variants of wrapping are available: with Type 1 the multiplexed audio and video is saved into the video section of a single AVI file, with Type 2 video and audio are saved as separate streams in an AVI file (one video stream and one to four audio streams). This container is used primarily on Windows-based computers, though Sony offers two tapeless recorders, the HDD-based HVR-DR60[15] and the CompactFlash-based HVR-MRC1K, for use with DV/HDV camcorders that can record in DV-AVI format either making a file-based copy of the tape or bypassing tape recording altogether. Panasonic AVCHD camcorders use Type 2 DV-AVI for recording DV video onto Secure Digital memory card.
QuickTime-DV is DV video wrapped into QuickTime container. This container is used primarily on Apple computers.
MXF-DV wraps DV video into MXF container, which is presently used on P2-based camcorders (Panasonic) and on XDCAM/XDCAM EX camcorders (Sony).
source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DV
The original DV specification, known as Blue Book, was standardized within the IEC 61834 family of standards. These standards define common features such as physical videocassettes, recording modulation method, magnetization, and basic system data in part 1. Part 2 describes the specifics of 525-60 and 625-50 systems.[1] The IEC standards are copyrighted publications available for purchase from IEC or ANSI.
File-based media
With proliferation of tapeless camcorder video recording, DV video can be recorded on optical discs, solid state flash memory cards and hard disk drives and used as computer files. In particular:
Sony XDCAM family of cameras can record DV onto either Professional Disc or SxS memory cards.
Panasonic DVCPRO HD and AVC-Intra camcorders can record DV (as well as DVCPRO) onto P2 cards.
Some Panasonic AVCHD camcorders (AG-HMC80, AG-AC130, AG-AC160) record DV video onto Secure Digital memory cards.
JVC GY-HM750 records DV video onto either Secure Digital or SxS memory cards.
Most DV and HDV camcorders can feed live DV stream over IEEE 1394 interface to an external file-based recorder.
Video is stored either as native DIF bitstream or wrapped into an audio/video container such as AVI, QuickTime and MXF.
DV-DIF is the raw form of DV video. The files usually have extensions *.dv or *.dif.
DV-AVI is Microsoft's implementation of DV video file, which is wrapped into an AVI container. Two variants of wrapping are available: with Type 1 the multiplexed audio and video is saved into the video section of a single AVI file, with Type 2 video and audio are saved as separate streams in an AVI file (one video stream and one to four audio streams). This container is used primarily on Windows-based computers, though Sony offers two tapeless recorders, the HDD-based HVR-DR60[15] and the CompactFlash-based HVR-MRC1K, for use with DV/HDV camcorders that can record in DV-AVI format either making a file-based copy of the tape or bypassing tape recording altogether. Panasonic AVCHD camcorders use Type 2 DV-AVI for recording DV video onto Secure Digital memory card.
QuickTime-DV is DV video wrapped into QuickTime container. This container is used primarily on Apple computers.
MXF-DV wraps DV video into MXF container, which is presently used on P2-based camcorders (Panasonic) and on XDCAM/XDCAM EX camcorders (Sony).
source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DV
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