Monday, March 16, 2009

American Eagle's customizable flip-flops.



Get summer started on the right foot with American Eagle's customizable flip-flops.

Flip-flops are made for lazy summer days. But that doesn't mean the simple slip-ons should fall short on style. American Eagle's online customization bar lets you give a standard pair a jolt of personality. With 99 possible color combinations to choose from, you can be sure your rubber-soled master-pieces won't flop at the pool. the price for creative freedom? Fifteen dollars a pop.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Business Credit

Want to start a small business but don't have enough capital to start?
Starting your own business is not easy. You have to produced a lot of money to obtain the capital you need to get to the top. Most of the people right now that want to start a small business is looking for a Business Financing company to back them up.

If you are looking to build your Business Credit so that you can obtain the most Financing possible for your Business, BusinessCreditMagic.com is the best option I found when I did my research. They offer up to $250,000 in Unsecured Business Credit with NO Personal Guarantees. They don't even need your Social Security. Their Business Credit Programs are the most Complete and Intensive you will find anywhere.

The sister company of the BusinessCreditMagic.com which is the EZUnsecured.com is the company that you can also trust. They specializes in Business Loans and Personal Loans with No Collateral, No Tax Returns, No business plans, No headaches, and EZ DOC to $10 Million. They are GOOD at what they do but they are NOT cheap. Get ready to break out your wallet and pay around 10% as a Success Fee on the Financing they obtain for you.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Economics in Gaming

It used to be so simple. One would buy a number of inexpensive computers with specifications just about good enough to play last generation's games, rent a space to put the computers in, then sit back and watch the profits roll in. The undeniable appeal of these online time waters would almost always guarantee people playing for hours on end in one's shop while continuously immersing themselves in their games with each passing day.

Then something happened. Some time in the past few years, the whole climate of local online play changed dramatically. Maybe it was market saturation, maybe people just got tired of the whole thing, but the result was the same - players just stopped playing. Or to be more precise, stopped investing as much of their time ans money as they used to. This resulted in a number if big changes. First, online game providers started losing money. players stopped utilizing the play-to-play model (paying a monthly fee for game access) and instead started playing more casual games that didn't require as much time commitment, or moved to consoles, which themselves are having a renaissance of excellent games. Second, internet cafes who relied on players investing heaps of their time playing online from their shops started losing customers, whom instead are opting for LAN gaming, something not all cafes were prepared for due to the lack of system requirements to lay more modern games. Anew model was born from the period of change, something industry journalists call "microtransactions." The old model of asking players to pay money to play their games morphed into the offering of game access for free, with players instead paying for in-game benefits like better character customization or improved equipment and items. This model that started with only few providers rapidly spread to the rest, and as of today very few games, both local and international, can still survive on the old one. The ramifications for the cafe industry were also significant, with shops closing left and right, unable to cope with this change and unable to adapt the old mindset to reacquire their customers.

So what's a poor internet cafe operator to do? I say get to know your customers, and see what they're interested in. One can't just assume that people will play what you offer anymore. Understand the new model, and see how you can change your business to take advantage of it. And, finally, learn to adapt, for if anything, gamers are a fickle bunch, and things just aren't that simple anymore.

PC Gamer Podcast



It's a podcast. About PC games. What more do you need? Though not my first choice for editorial opinion and community input (I have never heard of more boring phone-in calls, in Any podcast), it's still one of the few PC gaming-focused podcasts I've come across that covers the big news quite decently. I'm willing to put up with nearly falling asleep every two minutes just to make sure I have the major PC gaming news and titles covered.

Kotaku

If you were to bookmark just one website to cover all essentials in the gaming industry, Kotaku would be it. Seriously, not only do these guys cover all the significant mainstream news as they happen, but they also post all the interesting pieces everyone else doesn't, like rumors, politics, sales figures, industry figurehead interviews/speculation, and even choice adult gamer fare (search "maximum risky" or "hot tears of shame" to see what I mean). Come to think of it, Kotaku is the only gaming website I go out of my way to visit daily, and if you consider yourself any sort of gamer, you should too.

1UP Yours



I go to the PC Gamer Podcast for the content, but stay at 1UP Yours for the editorial. The best part of this podcast's usual panel is that they throw out the family-friendly iTunes "clean" tag and go all-out in discussing the games industry's many facet's. That's right folks, be prepared to have the F-bomb drop every so often. Honestly though, it's quite refreshing to hear it come out in such emphatic and articulate discourse. Excessively detailed, opinionated, and always entertaining.