The word has been spreading around that on the 11th of January 2010, niche blueprint 2 by Steven Clayton and Tim Godfrey was released. it’s currently off the market, however It is said that it will be back on sale soon.
The actual system content when it’s on sale again will be delivered over a period of six weeks. Right after purchasing the customer will get their hands on the very first installment. This installment will contain sections 1-2 of the total nine.
Customers will find that the remaining sections for the course will be sent to them on a weekly basis after purchase. Also as the needs of the purchases of the program become apparent additional video and pdf materials will be produced. There will likewise be a brand-new Internet marketing basics video series, given to purchasers of Nicheblueprint 2.0. So that buyers can begin to see a return on their investment as quickly as possible, also in the system is a large number of well converting as well as extremely high quality, push button ready to go niche Ecommerce website templates and software. One of the other things that my colleague and I particularly like which will be given to Niche Blueprint 2.0 buyers is a free lifetime subscription to dropshipblueprint.
Currently pretty much the only real alternative to dropshipblueprint is worldwide brands which will cost you somewhere around 7 on its own! But it doesn’t stop there as Tim and Steven have acquired for all niche blueprint 2 customers a 30 day trial of the market research tool market Samurai. My colleague and I have been using market Samurai since its initial beta launch and it has quickly become our main research tool.
When it comes down to it, niche blueprint 2 is extremely comprehensive and cleverly thought out. They have included pretty much everything you require, the only thing left would be for you to take action on an ongoing basis to see yourself through the program.
Rumors of a Google phone have been around for years now. Even after the release of the T-Mobile G1 (HTC Dream), through the various other incarnations of Android on devices from Motorola, Samsung, Acer, and a slew of other manufacturers, there continued to be talk of how this wasn’t the “real Android,” that Google itself would release a final, real, “Google Phone.” And so, on January 5th, the rumors finally came true with the launch of the Nexus One. The online, Google-hosted store through which the phone is sold is itself big news, but now Ars takes an in-depth look at how “super” this phone really is.
In a nutshell, the Nexus One is a best-of-breed smartphone running a modern, multitasking mobile operating system. It sports a speedy 1Ghz Snapdragon CPU from Qualcomm, 512 MB of RAM, and 512 MB of OS/Program storage. The question is, is this enough for a “no limits” device?
Filed under: Motorsports, Coupe, Chevrolet, Racing
Back in August when General Motors introduced the all-new GT2 class Corvette C6.R, it ran downsized 6.0-liter version of the 7.0-liter V8 from the long-dominant GT1 car. At the launch, Corvette Racing program manager Doug Fehan told us the 6.0-liter was just an interim engine. With revised GT rules on tap for 2010, GM was already planning a brand-new engine for its race Vette.
Unlike the 6.0/7.0, which is a ground-up race engine that only shares basic architectural dimensions with the production small block, the 2010 C6.R’s V8 is a new 5.5-liter unit that will indeed be derived from the production engine found in roadgoing Corvettes. In fact, the 5.5-liter race engine will be built at GM’s Performance Build Center alongside ZR1 and Z06 V8s.
Fehan has confirmed that the 5.5 is running on the dyno and will make its race debut at the 12 Hours of Sebring in March. We don’t have any additional details on the new engine yet, although we were told earlier that it is based on the next-generation production small-block, which we expect to see in the Corvette soon.
Gallery: Mid-Ohio 2009: Corvette GT2 racing
Photos Copyright (C)2009 Sam Abuelsamid / Weblogs, Inc.
[Source: General Motors]
Continue reading Corvette Racing boss Doug Fehan confirms new 5.5L V8 for Sebring debut
Corvette Racing boss Doug Fehan confirms new 5.5L V8 for Sebring debut originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 02 Jan 2010 19:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink | Email this | Comments
Hope that Santa was good to all of you. This week, we’re wrapping the top stories from all across Ars into a single, tidy package. Enjoy!
From Cinepak to H.265: a brief history of video compression. Today’s video-rich Internet wouldn’t be possible without highly efficient compression. Ars rewinds the history of digital video compression to help understand how we arrived at the land of YouTube and Hulu.
How to obtain and install an SSL/TLS certificate, for free. Anyone operating a server on any scale should want a digital certificate to encrypt data between clients and services, whether for personal, office, or public use. Ars tells you how to obtain and install one, for free.
Verizon: $350 ETFs are a good thing, and they help the poor. Verizon tells the FCC that its new jumbo sized early termination fees don’t even compensate the telco for the total cost of VZ’s latest lineup of smart phone devices. The statement comes in response to an FCC letter of inquiry on the matter.
3D high-def movies coming to your living room on Blu-ray. Get ready for the 3D movie revolution to come your your home theater next year. The Blu-ray Disc Association has approved a final spec to deliver high def 3D movies on Blu-ray discs. If you don’t want to spend the cash for 3D hardware, it is thankfully backward compatible with today’s Blu-ray drives.
App Store success several times what Apple likely expected. The success of the iPhone App Store surprised everyone, even Apple itself.
Intel reveals next-generation Atom details. Intel has revealed the launch specs for the first-ever line of x86 products that contain both a GPU and CPU on the same die. Pine Trail, the next-generation Atom platform, will pave the way for future integrated CPU/GPU parts from both Intel and AMD.
Microsoft barred from selling Word, has plan for workaround. A federal appeals court has told Microsoft it needs to stop selling Word on January 11, 2010 due to its patent-infringing support for editing Custom XML.
Apple allegedly preparing devs for mystery demo in January. Apple may be planning to demo a device that’s larger than an iPhone in January of 2010, according to the latest rumors. In fact, some developers may already be preparing their apps for it.
Satellite TV to FCC: we’re special, don’t make us open up. DirecTV says that the new FCC push to bust open video should only apply to cable; satellite is plenty competitive already. Also, a tale of woe from a Comcast subscriber illustrates just why some common video decryption standards are needed.
Has Atari gone Chaotic Evil over D&D publishing rights? Atari is facing a lot of legal drama over the way it has conducted itself lately concerning its Dungeons & Dragons game publishing rights.
Comcast settles P2P throttling class-action for $16 million. Comcast got itself in hot water when it decided to use reset packets to slow down BitTorrent traffic back in 2007. Now, the company has settled a class-action lawsuit in Pennsylvania, promising to pay out $16 million to affected users.
Big Music: damn the numbers, give us antipiracy laws anyway. If P2P use is declining or holding steady without new “antipiracy” laws, are those laws still needed? Music trade groups say yes.
From Australia to the UAE: why games get the banhammer. We’re all used to hearing stories about games being banned in different countries, but what will actually get a game banned outside of the USA? The answers might surprise you.
Filed under: Humor, Software, Odds and ends, iPhone
Here’s a nice post-Christmas mind bender for you — it’s created by a company named Ogmento (they specialize in augmented reality applications — get it?) and is an iPhone app that creates an augmented reality version of the iPhone. In other words, they put an iPhone in your iPhone so you can iPhone while you iPhone. Dawg.
Why did they do this? Apparently it’s a promotion for the iPhone launch by Orange Telecom in Israel. But it’s pretty crazy — the iPhone inside the app even runs apps, though they’re just still pictures. And it’s a little disappointing that you interact with the fake iPhone via the real iPhone’s touchscreen. If it really was an augmented reality demonstration, wouldn’t you interact with the augmented reality iPhone just by moving your hand in the air where it should be?
Maybe that’s too mind-melting after a relaxing Christmas day. At any rate, enjoy the crazy video above. This isn’t anything we’ll see coming to the App Store any time soon, we’re sure, but it’s just the kind of thing to get your mind up and running again after all that egg nog and holiday cheer.
TUAWiPhone … in an iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Fri, 25 Dec 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Multimedia, Odds and ends, iPhone, iPod touch, App Review
Empire is a venerable British movie magazine that has amassed quite a library of film reviews since it was first published more than 20 years ago. Their reviews tend to be aimed at the enthusiastic film buff, rather than academics. I have always found the reviews entertaining and a worthwhile read.
Now, the entire Empire archive has come to the iPhone and iPod touch with the Empire Movie Guide [iTunes link]. The US$4.99, 8.9 MB app puts all of the reviews on your phone without need for a data connection. As a nice bonus, Empire grabs the most recently published reviews over the air when you are connected and launch the app.
The Empire app contains about 9,000 reviews, searchable by actor, director, genre, writers, or release dates. Want to share the reviews with friends? Empire allows sharing via email, Facebook, and Twitter.
If a movie or soundtrack is available in the iTunes store, the review provides a purchase link. The Empire Movie Guide won’t help you find movie times or locations, but it does put a library of well-written reviews in your hand.
Empire is a venerable British movie magazine that has amassed quite a library of film reviews since it was first published more than 20 years ago. Their reviews tend to be aimed at the enthusiastic film buff, rather than academics. I have always found the reviews entertaining and a worthwhile read.
Now, the entire Empire archive has come to the iPhone and iPod touch with the Empire Movie Guide [iTunes link]. The US$4.99, 8.9 MB app puts all of the reviews on your phone without need for a data connection. As a nice bonus, Empire grabs the most recently published reviews over the air when you are connected and launch the app.
The Empire app contains about 9,000 reviews, searchable by actor, director, genre, writers, or release dates. Want to share the reviews with friends? Empire allows sharing via email, Facebook, and Twitter.
If a movie or soundtrack is available in the iTunes store, the review provides a purchase link. The Empire Movie Guide won’t help you find movie times or locations, but it does put a library of well-written reviews in your hand.
TUAWIntelligent and insightful mobile movie reviews: the Empire Movie Guide app originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 22 Dec 2009 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Filed under: Bentley, Design/Style
Swiss firm Zai makes high-zoot skis. When the company teamed up with Bentley, the result was an even higher-zoot ski kit called Zai Supersports, composed of handmade skis and poles, and a ski bag.
The skis themselves feature a special carbon fiber material called “Zaiìra” on top, with a natural rubber core, chromium-steel-infused carbon fiber for the twisty bits, and Reinforced Thermoplastic Composites to round out your lust for exotic materials. The poles use the ExoGrid tech usually associated with the world of golf clubs.
There will only be 250 pairs made, and because you knew they wouldn’t be cheap you won’t be surprised by the $9,800 purchase price. Get all the facts in the press release after the jump, and pretty pictures in the high-res gallery below.
[Source: Zai]
Continue reading Bentley and Zai launch Supersport skis
Bentley and Zai launch Supersport skis originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 19 Dec 2009 08:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Filed under: Budget, China, Suzuki, Volkswagen, India
Volkswagen and Suzuki won’t waste anytime at all in getting started on their assorted joint projects. Well, unless you count the holidays, which we’ll let slide. At the launch of the new Suzuki Alto, CEO Osama Suzuki told reporters that the newly tied-at-the-hip automakers will begin “Actual, detailed execution – with our people going there and their people coming here… after January.”
That first project will be a new small car that will be sold in developing countries, which may or may not be outsourced from Suzuki’s Indian Maruti operations and is rumored to cost between $4,300 and $5,400.
Volkswagen has much less experience in building small cars than Suzuki, which is a leader in Japan’s tiny Kei car class, and in making money with such low prices.
[Source: Automotive News - Sub. Req'd]
REPORT: Suzuki CEO indicates joint projects with VW to start in January originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
While iTunes allows users to buy individual TV episodes for $1.99, or even buy a whole season—sometimes for a discount—users may in the future pay a $30 monthly fee and watch whatever TV they like. Industry insiders say this service will be an extension of iTunes Store itself instead of being limited to streaming via Apple TV.
According to multiple industry insiders that spoke to All Things Digital, Apple hopes to launch the service early next year. Apple’s VP of Internet Services, Eddy Cue, has been charged with drumming up interest among TV networks, though so far none have made a commitment to providing content available for the service. The sources so far are laying odds that Disney is likely to be the first to bite; it was the first studio to offer its movies via iTunes when Apple launched to feature in 2006. It also doesn’t hurt that Steve Jobs sits on Disney’s board and is one of its largest shareholders.
Go to Apple pitching TV subscription option for iTunes to networks
Filed under: Software, Bugs/Recalls
For the past several weeks I’ve noticed some rather strange behavior with Adium, the free and open-source multiservice IM client. On random occasions I suddenly appear invisible or offline to contacts in my buddy list while logged into my AIM account. And I’m not alone. Not a day goes by that I don’t find myself asking a friend or co-worker why they are not online, only to learn they share the same problem. Either that or they’re all making this up in effort to avoid conversing with me — I have that effect on people.
The only cause to this problem, or pattern to its occurrence, I can come up with is a loose theory that it happens during periods of inactivity. My hunch is that when you appear “idle” AIM somehow misinterprets this as a disconnect. Locally you remain logged in, but AIM thinks otherwise. Luckily I may have discovered a workaround.
Launch iChat (quitting Adium is not required) and go into Preferences. Click on Accounts. Make sure your AIM account is selected, then click on the Security tab. Changing any of the settings in this options panel, then returning them to their original state, somehow magically vexes the problem, at least so far as I can tell.
I don’t know whom to point fingers at in this case; AIM or Adium. Both begin with the letter A, so that makes each of them equally culpable in my opinion. Wherever the guilt may lie, I just want the problem fixed ASAP.
TUAWAnomalous AIM Activity Afflicts Adium, Aggravating All originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 28 Oct 2009 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments






