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Get Windows 7 Beta 1 Today (If You’re Lucky)

So today’s the day when the first beta of Windows 7 is available, and if you want to try out Microsoft’s latest gem, you’d better pay attention to what Wired says. To make a long story short, the beta will be available only today, Windows 7 upgrades will only work with Vista SP1, and you’ll So today’s the day when the first beta of Windows 7 is available, and if you want to try out Microsoft’s latest gem, you’d better pay attention to what Wired says. To make a long story short, the beta will be available only today, Windows 7 upgrades will only work with Vista SP1, and you’ll need to register to get a product key. The ISO is estimated to be 2.5 to 3.5GB in size.

But good luck. I’ve tried visiting Wired’s source, a post on the Official Windows Blog, and I’ve also tried visiting the Windows 7 page to get the download link. Wired warned that “demand will be huge.” Seems like that’s true, or Microsoft has dropped the ball on this one.

Tags: Beta 1, download, Microsoft, Windows 7Share This



Source || Under Other by Inspire - yesterday


Overnight Success: It Takes Years

Paul Buchheit, the original lead developer of GMail, notes that the success of GMail was a long time in coming:We starting working on Gmail in August 2001. For a long time, almost everyone disliked it. Some people used it anyway because of the search, but they had endless complaints. Quite a few people thought that we should kill the project, or perhaps "reboot" it as an enterprise product with native client software, not this crazy Javascript stuff. Even when we got to the point of launching it on April 1, 2004 -- two and a half years after starting work on it -- many people inside of Google were predicting doom. The product was too weird, and nobody wants to change email services. I was told that we would never get a million users.Once we launched, the response was surprisingly positive, except from the people who hated it for a variety of reasons. Nevertheless, it was frequently described as "niche", and "not used by real people outside of silicon valley".Now, almost 7 1/2 years after we started working on Gmail, I see .Paul has since left Google and now works at his own startup, FriendFeed. Many industry insiders have not been kind to FriendFeed. Stowe Boyd even went so far as to call FriendFeed a failure. Paul takes this criticism in stride:Creating an important new product generally takes time. FriendFeed needs to continue changing and improving, just as Gmail did six years ago. FriendFeed shows a lot of promise, but it's still a "work in progress".My expectation is that big success takes years, and there aren't many counter-examples (other than YouTube, and they didn't actually get to the point of making piles of money just yet). Facebook grew very fast, but it's almost 5 years old at this point. Larry and Sergey started working on Google in 1996 -- when I started there in 1999, few people had heard of it yet.This notion of overnight success is very misleading, and rather harmful. If you're starting something new, expect a long journey. That's no excuse to move slow though. To the contrary, you must move very fast, otherwise you will never arrive, because it's a long journey! This is also why it's important to be frugal -- you don't want to starve to death halfway up the mountain.Stowe Boyd illustrated his point about FriendFeed with a graph comparing Twitter and FriendFeed traffic. Allow me to update Mr. Boyd's graph with another data point of my own.I find Paul's attitude refreshing, because I take the same attitude toward our startup, Stack Overflow. I have zero expectation or even desire for overnight success. What I am planning is several years of grinding through constant, steady improvement. This business plan isn't much different from my career development plan: success takes years. And when I say years, I really mean it! Not as some cliched regurgitation of "work smarter, not harder." I'm talking actual calendar years. You know, of the 12 months, 365 days variety. You will literally have to spend multiple years of your life grinding away at this stuff, waking up every day and doing it over and over, practicing and gathering feedback each day to continually get better. It might be unpleasant at times and even downright un-fun occasionally, but it's necessary.This is hardly unique or interesting advice. Peter Norvig's classic Teach Yourself Programming in Ten Years already covered this topic far better than I.Researchers have shown it takes about ten years to develop expertise in any of a wide variety of areas, including chess playing, music composition, telegraph operation, painting, piano playing, swimming, tennis, and research in neuropsychology and topology. The key is deliberative practice: not just doing it again and again, but challenging yourself with a task that is just beyond your current ability, trying it, analyzing your performance while and after doing it, and correcting any mistakes. Then repeat. And repeat again. There appear to be no real shortcuts: even Mozart, who was a musical prodigy at age 4, took 13 more years before he began to produce world-class music. The Beatles seemed to burst onto the scene with a string of #1 hits and an appearance on the Ed Sullivan show in 1964. But they had been playing small clubs in Liverpool and Hamburg since 1957, and while they had mass appeal early on, their first great critical success, Sgt. Peppers, was released in 1967.Honestly, I look forward to waking up someday two or three years from now and doing the exact same thing I did today: working on the Stack Overflow code, eking out yet another tiny improvement or useful feature. Obviously we want to succeed. But on some level, success is irrelevant, because the process is inherently satisfying. Waking up every day and doing something you love -- even better, surrounded by a community who loves it too -- is its own reward. Despite being a metric ton of work.The blog is no different. I often give aspiring bloggers this key piece of advice: if you're starting a blog, don't expect anyone to read it for six months. If you do, I can guarantee you will be sorely disappointed. However, if you can stick to a posting schedule and produce one or two quality posts every week for an entire calendar year... then, and only then, can you expect to see a trickle of readership. I started this blog in 2004, and it took a solid three years of writing 3 to 5 times per week before it achieved anything resembling popularity within the software development community.I fully expect to be writing on this blog, in one form or another, for the rest of my life. It is a part of who I am. And with that bit of drama out of the way, I have no illusions: ultimately, I'm just the guy on the internet who writes that blog.That's perfectly fine by me. I never said I was clever.Whether you ultimately achieve readers, or pageviews, or whatever high score table it is we're measuring this week, try to remember it's worth doing because, well -- it's worth doing.And if you keep doing it long enough, who knows? You might very well wake up one day and find out you're an overnight success. Who filled the file server with MP3 files again? PA Storage Monitor can tell you. Disk and directory growth reports too. Download the Free Trial!

Source || Under Other by Dotrock - yesterday


PS3 Marketing Arguments Help Opposing Forces

Someone’s head might be rolling over at the PlayStation 3’s manufacturer. Apparently to build more interest in the gaming console (which has fare relatively poorly against the Xbox 360 and Wii), someone sent Joystiq an email declaring that the PS3 provides better value for money, while the Xbox 360 and Wii of course, do not:The

Someone’s head might be rolling over at the PlayStation 3’s manufacturer. Apparently to build more interest in the gaming console (which has fare relatively poorly against the Xbox 360 and Wii), someone sent Joystiq an email declaring that the PS3 provides better value for money, while the Xbox 360 and Wii of course, do not:

The informercial-esque message — titled “Keeping Entertainment Simple” — made our day with colorful accusations, including one that the Xbox 360 “requires … multiple upgrades and additional external devices, putting a burden on the wallet and adds clutter to the entertainment center.” That clutter would be the Wireless Network Adapter, which snaps onto the back of the 360, we suppose. So cluttery!

Judging from the reaction of the staff of Joystiq—a widely read gaming blog—it’s obvious that Sony’s PR blast did more harm than good. In any case, if cash wasn’t a consideration, but you had to choose only one gaming console to use for the next year or so, which one would you choose?

(image from Joystiq)

Tags: Microsoft, nintendo, PlayStation 3, PR Disasters, PS3, Sony, Wii, XBox 360Share This



Source || Under Other by Iread - yesterday


Hazelnut Tartelettes With Spiced Creme Fraiche Parfait


We all procrastinate at one point or another, and we all have different ways to go about that. B. for example will spend an hour doing dishes and cleaning up the kitchen (which I will mess up in 2 seconds flat) before grading papers. The other day he suggested we put down the Christmas tree and decorations. Like a kid who does not want to go back to school, it makes me sad to take the decorations down and to realize it will be "one whole year" before Christmas. As soon as his back was turned I started cleaning and reorganizing the pantry instead. It needed it after the holidays when a bunch of things started to get shoved in there due to lack of time, focus and general "I'll deal with it after the holidays"...so you see I was actually working my end of the deal.

In that little pantry winter cleaning, I reorganized the nuts and spices and set a bunch aside feeling inspired by some hazelnuts, cardamom, nutmeg, star anise, cloves...the scent was intoxicating. The perfect post holiday antidote: more seasonal winter spices. I made a pomander with some of the cloves, mixed some cardamon with Meyer lemon zest and sugar and that's when it hit me... hard... I just wanted to eat it... the bowl... of spiced lemon sugar.


So I procrastinated some more and made some sable breton dough with lemon zest in it and baked large cookie to use as bases for tartelettes. I shelled enough hazelnuts to make a variation on my beloved's beloved pecan tart, with honey and cloves. I still had other spices dancing in my head and in front of my nose that I made a quick spiced creme fraiche frozen parfait to top the tarts with. Let's face it, pies, tarts, tartelettes, are good..even "naked" but a little ice cream does not really hurt either.

After lunch, B. started again with his desire to put away the decorations, push the furniture back where it was before we moved everything for Christmas dinner. My philosophy is furniture belongs where it feels good, where you are comfortable...and right then, right there in a quiet afternoon with a bright sunbeam coming through the window...it felt good. So I got up. And I went to the kitchen. Again. I put some sugar and water in a pan and I make caramel, and I played with sugar, making caramel twirls to decorate the tarts with, procrastinating a little longer. I made four tarts and we have been sharing one every night for dessert, so yes..."we" have been staring at the Christmas decorations for four days...Bliss...I could not make up my mind for the pictures I like best, so you get them all...oops!


Hazelnut Tartelettes With Spice Creme Fraiche Parfait:

Serves 4

Sable base:
1/2 stick (65 gr) butter, at room temperature
2 tablespoons (25gr) sugar
2 tablespoons Meyer lemon zest (or regular lemon)
1 egg yolk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste
3/4 cup (105gr) all purpose flour
pinch of salt

Preheat oven to 350F. In a mixer, cream the butter, sugar and lemon zest together until light and fluffy. Add the egg and vanilla and mix until combined. Add the flour and salt and mix briefly to incorporate. Dump the mixture onto a lightly floured board and gather the dough into a smooth ball. Do not work the dough while in the mixer or it will toughen up. Flatten the dough into a disk, wrap it in plastic wrap and refrigerate for an hour. When the dough is nice and cold, roll it out to 1/8 inch thick on a lightly floured board or in between the sheets of plastic. You will have extra dough that you can save for another use in the fridge for up to 5 days or frozen, well wrapped for up to 3 months.
Cut out four 4-inch disks into the dough and place them on a parchment lined baking sheet. Refrigerate for 30 minutes. Bake for 10-12 minutes until golden brown. Let cool.

Hazelnut Tartelettes:
1 egg
1/2 cup (110gr)dark brown sugar, packed
1/4 cup (85gr) honey
pinch of salt
1 tablespoon (15gr) unsalted butter, melted
3/4 cup (86gr) chopped hazelnuts

Preheat the oven to 275F.
In a mixing bowl, whisk together the egg, dark brown sugar and honey until fully combined. Add the salt and butter and fold in the nuts with a spatula.
Grease four 3 inch tartlet shells and fill with the batter. Or, place four 3 inch tart rings on a parchment paper line baking sheet (I wrap the rings with foil to make sure the batter does not sneak out) and divide the batter evenly among them.
Bake for 30 minutes or until set and firm. Let cool. Run a knife along the edges of the tartlet shells and unmold carefully. Refrigerate until ready to use.

Spiced Creme Fraiche Parfait:
1/8 grated nutmeg
1/8 teaspoon ground green cardamom
1/8 teaspoon ground star anise
1/8 teaspoon ground cloves
2 eggs, separated
6 tablespoons (75gr) sugar, divided
3/4 cup (175gr) creme fraiche (or sour cream)
1/4 cup (60gr) heavy cream

In a stand mixer or handheld mixer, combine the spices, egg yolks and 3 tablespoons of the sugar and whisk until pale and thick, about 3 minutes. In a separate bowl, whisk the egg whites until they have firm peaks, add the remaining 3 tablespoons of sugar, one at a time, until the egg whites are glossy. With a spatula, hold the egg whites into the egg yolk mixture, working carefully not to deflate the batter. Wipe the bowl where the whites were with a paper towel and whip the creme fraiche and heavy cream together until thick, about 2 minutes. Fold this into the egg batter.
Line a 8x11 inch baking pan with plastic wrap and pour in the parfait batter. Smooth the top with a spatula. Freeze until firm, about 1 hour.

To serve the tartelettes: place a nut tart on the cookie base and top with the spiced creme fraiche parfait. Serve at once.

Source || Under Other by Gajatheking - yesterday


Finnish Group Recommends Special Considerations for Children’s Cellphone Use

Call for Prudence: According to textually.org, the Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority of Finland (STUK) released a statement asking that parents restrict children’s cellphone use.But for anyone looking for a resolution of the long-running “do cellphones cause brain cancer?” issue are in for a disappointment:Although studies carried out thus far have not shown mobile phone Call for Prudence: According to textually.org, the Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority of Finland (STUK) released a statement asking that parents restrict children’s cellphone use.

But for anyone looking for a resolution of the long-running “do cellphones cause brain cancer?” issue are in for a disappointment:

Although studies carried out thus far have not shown mobile phone radiation to have had any adverse impact on health, prudence is advised when it comes to children as not all the effects are known

Too bad the STUK didn’t bother compiling any hard data. Finland, after all, is one of the world’s centers of mobile technology, thanks to a certain company named Nokia. You’d assume the STUK would be in a great position to clarify the issue somewhat.

The recommendation is all about playing safe, no doubt, and that may prove the right way if and when more concrete data over cellphone radiation is produced. The body matter of children after all are still growing up, while the fully-developed anatomy of adults just may be more resilient against any potential bad effects of cellphones.

To be clear though, the STUK wasn’t calling for the prohibition of chilren cellphone usage. As Virtual Finland reports:

STUK said parents should tell children to favour texting over calls and to instruct them on the use of hands-free devices.

In other news, the makers of headsets and SMS app developers professed joy at the STUK’s call. Just kidding.

(image from textually.org)

Tags: cellphone radiation, cellphone usage, children, Finland, STUK, The Radiation and Nuclear Safety AuthorityShare This



Source || Under Other by Skrishnasantosh - yesterday


Painted SNES Catalog to Induce Retro Geekasms

I’m not sure about the legitimacy of eBay Power Seller hellokitty1111111111, despite the 99.8% positive feedback. After all, would you take that kind of name seriously? Plus what does the poor grammar say about the seller? But it’s probably worth finding out, if you’re on the market for custom painted SNES consoles.hellokitty1111111111 (again, what a I’m not sure about the legitimacy of eBay Power Seller hellokitty1111111111, despite the 99.8% positive feedback. After all, would you take that kind of name seriously? Plus what does the poor grammar say about the seller? But it’s probably worth finding out, if you’re on the market for custom painted SNES consoles.

hellokitty1111111111 (again, what a name!) is selling three different SNES consoles, one a tribute to Zelda: A Link to the Past, another glorifying Ghouls N Ghosts, and a third featuring Super Mario World. Continue reading to see for yourself.

Click on a picture to see a full-sized version:

Visit the following eBay pages if you’re interested. As always, caveat emptor!

Painted Super Nintendo Entertainment System - Zelda: A Link to the PastPainted Super Nintendo Entertainment System - Ghouls N GhostsPainted Super Nintendo Entertainment System - Super Mario World(images from ebay.com)

Tags: consoles, custom-painted, Ghouls N Ghosts, retro, SNES, Super Mario World, Zelda: A Link to the PastShare This



Source || Under Other by Geeko - couple of days ago


Dictionary Attacks 101

Several high profile Twitter accounts were recently hijacked:An 18-year-old hacker with a history of celebrity pranks has admitted to Monday's hijacking of multiple high-profile Twitter accounts, including President-Elect Barack Obama's, and the official feed for Fox News.The hacker, who goes by the handle GMZ, told Threat Level on Tuesday he gained entry to Twitter's administrative control panel by pointing an automated password-guesser at a popular user's account. The user turned out to be a member of Twitter's support staff, who'd chosen the weak password "happiness."Cracking the site was easy, because Twitter allowed an unlimited number of rapid-fire log-in attempts."I feel it's another case of administrators not putting forth effort toward one of the most obvious and overused security flaws," he wrote in an IM interview. "I'm sure they find it difficult to admit it."If you're a moderator or administrator it is especially negligent to have such an easily guessed password. But the real issue here is the way Twitter allowed unlimited, as-fast-as-possible login attempts.Given the average user's password choices -- as documented by Bruce Schneier's analysis of 34,000 actual MySpace passwords captured from a phishing attack in late 2006 -- this is a pretty scary scenario.Based on this data, the average MySpace user has an 8 character alphanumeric password. Which isn't great, but doesn't sound too bad. That is, until you find out that 28 percent of those alphanumerics were all lowercase with a single final digit -- and two-thirds of the time that final digit was 1!Yes, brute force attacks are still for dummies. Even the typically terrible MySpace password -- eight character all lowercase, ending in 1, would require around 8 billion login attempts: 26 x 26 x 26 x 26 x 26 x 26 x 26 x 1 = 8,031,810,176At one attempt per second, that would take more than 250 years. Per user!But a dictionary attack, like the one used in the Twitter hack? Well, that's another story. The entire Oxford English Dictionary contains around 171,000 words. As you might imagine, the average person only uses a tiny fraction of those words, by some estimates somewhere between 10 and 40 thousand. At one attempt per second, we could try every word in the Oxford English Dictionary in slightly less than two days.Clearly, the last thing you want to do is give attackers carte blanche to run unlimited login attempts. All it takes is one user with a weak password to provide attackers a toehold in your system. In Twitter's case, the attackers really hit the jackpot: the user with the weakest password happened to be a member of the Twitter administrative staff.Limiting the number of login attempts per user is security 101. If you don't do this, you're practically setting out a welcome mat for anyone to launch a dictionary attack on your site, an attack that gets statistically more effective every day the more users you attract. In some systems, your account can get locked out if you try and fail to log in a certain number of times in a row. This can lead to denial of service attacks, however, and is generally discouraged. It's more typical for each failed login attempt to take longer and longer, like so:1st failed loginno delay2nd failed login2 sec delay3rd failed login4 sec delay4th failed login8 sec delay5th failed login16 sec delayAnd so on.There are endless variations of this technique, but the net effect is the same: attackers can only try a handful of passwords each day. A brute force attack is out of the question, and a broad dictionary attack becomes impractical, at least in any kind of human time.It's tempting to blame Twitter here, but honestly, I'm not sure they're alone. I forget my passwords a lot. I've made at least five or six attempts to guess my password on multiple websites and I can't recall ever experiencing any sort of calculated delay or account lockouts. I'm reasonably sure the big commercial sites have this mostly figured out. But since every rinky-dink website on the planet demands that I create unique credentials especially for them, any of them could be vulnerable. You better hope they're all smart enough to throttle failed logins -- and that you're careful to use unique credentials on every single website you visit.Maybe this was less of a problem in the bad old days of modems, as there were severe physical limits on how fast data could be transmitted to a website, and how quickly that website could respond. But today, we have the one-two punch of naive websites running on blazing fast hardware, and users with speedy broadband connections. Under these conditions, I could see attackers regularly achieving up to two password attempts per second.If you thought of dictionary attacks as mostly a desktop phenomenon, perhaps it's time to revisit that assumption. As Twitter illustrates, the web now offers ripe conditions for dictionary attacks. I urge you to test your website, or any websites you use -- and make sure they all have some form of failed login throttling in place. Tired of restoring deleted files? Get PA File Sight and track down the culprit. PA File Sight – file auditing made easy. Download the Free Trial!

Source || Under Other by Swooningmac - couple of days ago


The Nokia 5800 XpressMusic Touch-Interface: What Nokia Needs to Work on

I was finally able to put the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic through its paces. Right away, I was able to see how the manufacturer could incorporate in its next touch-driven device.To sum it up, Nokia simply did not maximize their touch interface. Primarily because pre-existing patents limit the functionality the Finnish company could provide, and emphasis I was finally able to put the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic through its paces. Right away, I was able to see how the manufacturer could incorporate in its next touch-driven device.

To sum it up, Nokia simply did not maximize their touch interface. Primarily because pre-existing patents limit the functionality the Finnish company could provide, and emphasis on the old way of doing things.

Applying the Old to the NewIn other words, Nokia applied what worked so well with physical buttons to virtual ones. The process of selecting and activating the 5800’s features is more or less similar to other mid- to high-end Nokia smartphones. Right down the emulation of the alphanumeric keypad on the lower part of the phone’s large display.

That is actually a great touch (pun intended), as it allows people who are used to the “normal” kind of phone to enter text without much trouble. But tapping numerous times to access something gets pretty tedious after a while. For some reason, this doesn’t seem as cumbersome with physical buttons and keys; touch interfaces make this kind of frustration easier to achieve.

Touch Screen CreativityThe whole point of a touch-screen is that since the interface is virtual, the chance to get more things done with less interaction with the device is greater. The interface can change to suit the situation, conceivably to provide a more straightforward experience for the user—unlimited by the traditional constraints of physical buttons. The 5800’s quick access menu is a great (but not revolutionary) example of this so-called interface creativity.



Unfortunately, it seems that Nokia did not consider these possibilities fully (or they did but couldn’t execute it). That’s why using the 5800 is actually a very familiar experience for long-time Nokia users, who have accepted and work with the limitations of a physical control-scheme.

Of course, it’s good that Nokia is quite consistent with its interfaces, even if they’ve gotten rid of most of the buttons in the case of the 5800. Familiarity is always crucial to getting loyalists to switch to the new product and make the company more money. Yet, with a little bit of creativity, Nokia’s developers could’ve taken what made traditional Nokia interfaces work, and add some new elements, all without losing the Nokia “feel”.

Some ExamplesFor instance, for the main menu of the device, a scroll bar on the right side of the screen allows the user to scroll through the icons (touching an icon selects it). While the scroll bar is functional, it would’ve made more sense to place relatively large up and down buttons on the top and button of the menu screen. These would’ve been easier to press than the thin scroll bar.

The same solution also works on the Nokia’s media browser. The video playback controls, which fade away from view anyway to provide a full view of the movie, could’ve also included prominent next and previous buttons. Users are forced to exit the video player and select the next item—just like on most high-end Nokia models.

My example and proposed solution are definitely not the best one, and that’s the point. The Nokia 5800’s generously-sized screen offered a world of interface-improvements to its engineering team. It’s too bad that an opportunity was missed here.

Sure, certain factors may have limited Nokia from adapting gesture-driven comands, or considering unorthodox interface layouts. But if the company wants a big piece of the touch-interface market, it should consider those for its next touch-driven offering.

A full review of the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic to follow.

(Images from Technograph)

Tags: 5800, nokia, Nokia 5800, Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, touch interface, touch interfaces, touch screensShare This



Source || Under Other by Dotrock - couple of days ago


With Resolutions, Sometimes Higher Isn’t Better

The excitement of Boing Boing Gadget’s Rob over the new HP Mini 2140 is understandable. Save for the really small trackpad, the Mini Note form factor is great because it wonderfully fits a decently-sized keyboard into a netbook. And a 10.1″ display with a native resolution of 1377 x 768? Even better! Or, is it?

The excitement of Boing Boing Gadget’s Rob over the new HP Mini 2140 is understandable. Save for the really small trackpad, the Mini Note form factor is great because it wonderfully fits a decently-sized keyboard into a netbook. And a 10.1″ display with a native resolution of 1377 x 768? Even better! Or, is it?

My first encounter with my retired Dell Inspiron E1505’s 1680 x 1050 15.4″ screen was a giddy one. The resolution did allow me to keep windows side-by-side, until I realized that all those tiny pixels made the details hard to see. I’m no old fogey, but a significant time was spent craning my head in for a better view.

For some reason, experiencing the same resolution on my 22″ HP w2228h display was a totally different experience. Maybe it’s the screen size.

Yes, I was amazed when I encountered the HP Mini-Note 2133’s 8.9″ 1280 x 768. And yes, the Mini 2140’s display is bigger. But you can bet some users will be squinting, trying to decipher pixels too small for normal eyesight to comprehend.

(image from hp.com)

Tags: Boing Boing Gadgets, Dell Inspiron E1505, HP, HP Mini 2140, HP Mini-Note 2133, Mini 2140, Mini-Note 2133, Rob BeschizzaShare This



Source || Under Other by Swooningmac - couple of days ago


Making Money off Gaming Geeks

I’ve already written about making money off gadget geeks. Done properly, this affiliate marketing is basically providing useful information or help, with links to buy stuff related to what you’ve supplied. With every purchase comes a commission.The same concept applies to making money off gaming geeks. Impulse, Stardock’s own content delivery system and competitor to I’ve already written about making money off gadget geeks. Done properly, this affiliate marketing is basically providing useful information or help, with links to buy stuff related to what you’ve supplied. With every purchase comes a commission.

The same concept applies to making money off gaming geeks. Impulse, Stardock’s own content delivery system and competitor to Steam, has its own affiliate program that promises significant earnings for those who work hard enough.

ImpulseDriven.com’s affiliate program is ideal for bloggers and internet-based businesses that are looking for a way to earn some extra revenue from their sites. By offering your visitors a link to download Impulse, every purchase made by them will generate a 15% net sale commission for yourself.

In short, you sign up for their program and get “affiliate” links. Like this:



The name of the game is to get people to click on your Impulse link and download the Impulse client. For every game they buy through Impulse, you get paid!

Now if only Steam, admittedly a more popular service (with a larger number of customers), opens an affiliate program (apparently, none is available as of this writing).

Tags: affiliate marketing, affiliate program, Impulse, StardockShare This



Source || Under Other by Marker - few days ago







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