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Opening Futures Calls : The Evolution of Futures Trading : PitGuru.com
User:thutruong: Opening Futures Calls : The Evolution of Futures Trading : PitGuru.com
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PitGuru.com links you directly to the top floor traders to give you insight and advice on opening futures calls, opening grain calls, and S&P daytrading recommendations. Get the inside track before the market opens with live opening calls direct from the Pit!
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Bay Area startup ZipZapPlay launched the latest entry in the quickly growing build-and-share-your-own-game space in alpha this week, a service by the name of Playcrafter.
ZipZapPlay CEO Curt Bererton and Chief Creative Officer Mathilde Pignol stopped by the GigaOM office recently to give us a hands-on demo, and what impressed Om and I most was the site’s whimsical beauty. That’s no surprise, as Pignol is an alum of frog design. It offers up a large set of interlocking objects with which to create your games (platforms, widgets, and so on), all of which are designed to work together, then attributes game properties to them. (Think Lego Mindstorms, but for web games.)
I particularly liked the intuitive feel of the building experience, and the robustness of its internal physics — an element that should appeal to all the hundreds of thousands of gamers who embraced Line Rider. Since showing it to us, they’ve added the ability to embed Playcrafter games on blogs and social networks. Even more appealing, they’re sharing revenue with game creators, giving them a cut of revenue earned from ads that are run while games load.
Image credit: www.playcrafter.com.

So, the content is quite good. The things that i don’t like, is the lack of videos. However the informations is quite well documented and the infos is easy to follow. Just tested it on my human lab last week, so i took a new infopreneur tht i coach and asked him to follow the guideline. After two weeks, the conclusion was quite surprising. Two new products created and sales for 1,265$. I am quite impressed, didn’t expect these kind of results that fast. So for me the system described work, but you must follow each step to get the same results. I will rate it 9/10; and the pricing is just too low in my humble opinion.
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New startup Pixily lets small businesses and individuals send paper documents by mail in a Netflix style envelope, then scans, uploads to Amazon S3 and lets you search them in 3 to 5 days. It's the kind of service that big companies spend a lot of money on, now made affordable enough for anyone.
Boston Globe writer Scott Kirsner tested the service last week and saw even faster turn around - his documents were available on the Pixily website in one day and returned to him in paper form in two days after sending them. That's pretty awesome.
Pixily offers subscription plans from $5 to $60 per month, for your first 50 to 200 pages mailed in and with 1,000 to 12,000 pages of storage. All stored documents are made available in PDF format, so there shouldn't be any concern about losing them if you cancel your subscription.
This is the kind of service that cloud computing makes possible. The Amazon Web Services blog has a brief description of how Pixily uses multiple AWS offerings to keep their prices low.

The "mixed media" nature of this company, combining real world and digital, is one of the things that makes it so interesting. There are other services like this but each are a little different. See also Earth Class Mail, which intercepts your mail before it gets to you and lets you sort it online and Scribd's Paper to iPaper service, which is free, takes its sweet time in scanning your documents and then serves ads next to them online.
Are you willing to send important paper documents to a startup company online? Privacy and security could definitely be a big concern. We are quite interested to see how Pixily works and will report back after spending some time with our new subscription.
You can watch a 5 minute screencast about Pixily here.