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Live Webinars... VOIP technology on steroids. After years of using this technology for our Veretraining™, we now make it affordably available to you!
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Traffic Portals... The heart of the system. Use the Veretekk tool box to promote free valuable services (Traffic Portals) and they promote your opportunity!
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Verefied Email... No more SPAM complaints. Build huge mailing lists that are completely verified and 3rd party verifiable. State of the art spam compliant
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Live Training... Hands on VOIP live training nearly everyday with the CEO himself as well as a host of other Internet Marketing Gurus. You are not alone.
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Hello, I'm Bill Connely. Hundreds of thousands of marketers turn to Inetekk.com every year to accelerate the building of their organizations. Using our Veretekk automated marketing and lead service, subscribers receive from our proprietary technology, the finest entrepreneurial premium leads. Inetekk.com connects you directly with these active prospects in three steps: Prospects complete an online Request-for-Service form from one of over 200 Traffic Portals. The prospect's information is verified and then added to your Premium leads control panel. Matched prospects, including their full contact information and survey results, are immediately uploaded to your management control panel exclusively. Unlike any other lead generation program, Inetekk.com's unique system provides you with the most targeted, exclusive and timely prospect to help
Feeds for NYT > Technology [ ]1. ESSAY: That Long, Long Road From Idea to SuccessFour years after it was founded, GreenPrint Technologies has struggled to sell corporations on its software that saves on printing expenses.
2. Lead Us to Tweet, and Forgive the TrespassersMany churches are trying to embrace social media networks, but it has been an uneasy alliance thus far.
3. Practical Travel: Twitter Comes to the RescueFrom bad airplane seats to poor room service, customers are getting surprisingly fast responses to their tweets.
4. Spinning the Web: P.R. in Silicon ValleyPublic relations gurus are courting influential voices on services like Twitter to endorse new companies, Web sites or gadgets, perhaps forever altering their roles.
5. Ping: We Rent Movies, So Why Not Textbooks?Chegg.com, which rents textbooks to college students, says it had 2008 revenue of more than $10 million.
6. Bits: Apple, Acer, and...Arrington?Michael Arrington, the founder of the TechCrunch blog, says he will begin selling the CrunchPad, a touch-screen tablet for Web surfing, later this summer.
7. Bits: How Much Did Michael Jackson Rock the Web?Compete, an analytics firm, crunched some numbers to quantify the demand for Michael Jackson information after his death.
8. Bits: Google Drops News Comment FeatureGoogle has eliminated an experimental feature that allowed people quoted in articles in Google News to post comments on those articles.
9. Bits: Bing Now Shows Some Twitter UpdatesBing is adding recent "tweets" from celebrities and other popular Twitter users to its search results. It is the first major search engine to do so.
10. Internet Companies and Ad Agencies Go From Old Enemies to New FriendsThe slowing growth in online advertising is pushing traditional ad agencies and Internet companies to work together.
11. What Did Shaq Just Tweet? A New Web Site KnowsWith more athletes using Twitter, Facebook and personal blogs, one Web site is trying to provide a centralized place for fans to keep up with the increasing amount of content.
12. U.S. Inquiry Is Confirmed Into Google Books DealThe Justice Department confirmed it was conducting an antitrust investigation into a settlement of a class action between Google and groups representing authors and publishers.
13. Facebook to Offer New Features to Allow Users to Control Privacy of InformationThe company is testing new controls that will allow members to specify which groups or individuals are able to see each text update, photo or video they post on the site.
14. Advertising: Industry Tightens Its Standards for Tracking Web SurfersBefore the government steps in, a group of advertisers is announcing a set of stricter rules for the data collected on consumers when they surf the Web or shop online.
15. Gizmodo, Engadget, and Now GDGTThe creator of two successful Web sites that catered to fans of electronic equipment like cameras and cellphones is helping to start a third, featuring reviews written by consumers.
16. State of the Art: A Router So Complete, and VexingFrom D-Link comes a device that offers virtually every home router feature you can think of, and then some. Too bad it?s so user-unfriendly.
17. A Day With 400 Tweets Starts With SimplicityUsers who are always on the Internet share advice for streamlining your Web habits.
18. Gamer Steals From Virtual World to Pay Real DebtsFacing real world debts, a trusted figure in a popular online game stole money from the virtual bank he ran and exchanged it for cash through the black market.
19. The Medium: Street Smart: Urban DictionaryThe unruly, unlexicographical but surprisingly useful offerings of Urban Dictionary.
20. The Ethicist: A Facebook Teaching MomentA teacher discovers bad behavior on Facebook; debating whether to give up a seat on the train.
21. Ideas & Trends: Stereo for One: A Brief Unaccompanied HistoryDecades before iPod, there was Walkman. And before that, car horns and bird song.
22. Gadgetwise: Home Theaters in the Five (or Six, or Seven) FiguresIf you're in the market for a custom-built home theater, what can you get for $1 million?
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