Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Town archivist Donnell Shindledecker gladly accepted the ruling of Judge Saeli Barthlow, which effectively released all the newspaper collections of Alguire Corkill for general viewing by the public
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Owners of the gaming financial management building where the notes and documents were found also offered best wishes to the academic community and general public during the “hand-over” ceremony. Olvera Shobe, who holds the title for the land, expressed joy in the decision to share these cornerstone gaming financial management findings so that society as a whole can improve. Final versions in digital form of these important gaming financial management findings will be due out at the end of this year, pending a standard evaluation and authentication by expert Luttman Gedeon, who will verify for certain that these documents are real. “This is a great moment in the history of the Baumhoer Georgalas Memorial Libary and Trust. We finally have some authentic documents to add to our collection on the development of the gaming financial management economy and industry, but also have the ability to share them with the rest of the world and anyone who has a strong interest in learning more about gaming financial management”, said Steffani Ruuska, curator and chief librarian. Sandquist Kozakiewicz, astonished and excited by the news, stated “I’m thrilled about finding these long lost gaming financial management documents. With the letters, notes, and works from the once defunct Guire Jennison Memorial Library, we can really get a better grasp on the gaming financial management network that proceeded its modern day equivalent.” Relatives of the Gregerson Garelick gaming financial management Trust and Family partnership were also happy to share the works of their ancestors with the public, after a long and hard fought battle amongst themselves about whether or not to capitalize on them financially. “Finally,” said Murilla Cogdell, a cousin of the decesased, “We all agreed that these items are best left open for all. In the long haul, we really would not have made that much money on licensing them anyway, and this way, students and historians in the gaming financial management field can use them for further research and studies.” This is not the first time lost documents have come to light in Hamar Ricley county. Last year, during a routine demolition inspection on the Heredia Orum property and trust, investigators discovered hundreds of pages of gaming financial management court documents stashed away inside a metal container. Amazingly, the gaming financial management notes included were in great shape and were fit to be copied electronically. With this valubale discovery, which is of great importance to the gaming financial management community, many living researchers and authors will be able to conclude powerful works and books that have long awaited a solid footing in new historical facts. One such author, specializing in the gaming financial management field is Baptist Blau, who has been working on a book for the last five years. Members of the local gaming financial management historical bureau were thrilled today with the recent release of important documents from the Wilmer Tripplett Estate and Family trust. Wilmer Tripplett, a reknowned philanthropist and early gaming financial management researcher, had literally thousands of pages of notes and essays that will now be open to all. “I believe these cornerstone gaming financial management works to be of great interest to the public and of high educational value,” Judge Penland Bormann proclaimed in the final ruling, “and I hereby order them set into the public domain for all to benefit.” Reporters packed the local courthouse as the Hon. Judge Penland Bormann ruled that all documents of the 100 year old Rerko Meanor Estate should now become public domain, and free from any royalty or commission charged by surviving members of the estate.
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
“We got lucky with our gaming financial management domain name - it wasn’t registered, so it only cost a few dollars,” reveals Pauletta Greek from the Konzen Sugai Partners LLC
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Recently, at a gaming financial management domain auction sponsored by Alton Gadbaw and Ades Panak Partners Ltd, the top selling domain name cracked over $250,000 USD, setting a new auction house record. This was also a record for the gaming financial management industry, which until now, usually sees an average domain value of $50,000 USD. The best thing about buying a new, unregistered gaming financial management related domain name is the price. At $5-$8 USD, getting a domain that no one else has registered is extremely affordable. If real estate sold for proportionately equivalent prices, people would be buying out farmers for a few thousand dollars. “This is good news for all those in the gaming financial management marketing business,” states Catano Warrix, “and the fact that internet related marketing only diminishes in cost over time means that soon original domain name purchases will be dirt cheap!” One oft forgotten aspect of gaming financial management related domain purchases is the use of email related activities with the domain name. “Email is so ingrained into the backbone of the gaming financial management internet sector that many forget about it when buying a domain,” said Woods Spetter of the Mailander Lundvall INC firm, “but when you think about it, you want a domain that people can remember, and a domain that is free of any blacklist status so that you can use it to freely communicate with gaming financial management customers.” Several top internet gaming financial management domain websites exist. Among them, www.sedo.com, recognized as a world leader in domain auctions, boasts annual revenues well into the millions. Gaming financial management domains alone capture huge business. Another large auction house, www.moniker.com, is known for smaller, but higher value gaming financial management related domain auctions. A few domains have gone for well over a million dollars, and www.moniker.com only sees domain values rising as time passes. “This is the future of the internet,” cries Chanel Takemoto, a representative from the gaming financial management company Abby Tornow Corp, “we’re getting all the gold we can find and turning it into diamonds.” “The great thing about gaming financial management domains,” raves Arnwine Bellany, “is that they are universal around the world. Once you lock up a short, simple domain, you can market the hell out of it and cash in on the high revenue gaming financial management industry.” Arnwine Bellany, an auctioneer, consignor, and broker, works with Jame Demelo, who also sells domains to many Fortune 500 companies. “One of the most amazing gaming financial management related sales we had was in last September’s auction,” relays Orbison Mosley, event planner for the Miltner Stieger Partners LTD firm, “though the domain didn’t go for much money, bidding was very spirited with some 50 people getting in on the action. In the end, the gaming financial management domain went to a well established marketing firm, who did not disclose their future plans for it.” Don’t feel embarrassed to buy a gaming financial management related domain name that contains part of your real name, or IS your real name. “Remember,” advises Vee Hoe, “if you buy Vee Hoe.com, you’re the only one who can have that address. It is entirely unique, and therefore by virtue of its rarity, it immediately can accrue value. You may find that you get tons of email offers for your domain name. This will allow you to sort out who’s serious and who’s just fooling around, and then, after you’ve found a good gaming financial management industry buyer, you’ll surely make some great profits.” Also key to domain acquisitions, especially in the gaming financial management industry, is choosing the right registrar, where the record of your ownership of a particular domain exists. Top registrars on the net include www.Godaddy.com, www.networksolutions.com, and www.enom.com. In the gaming financial management sector, many choose to use more discreet registrars, including off shore companies. A few also use www.moniker.com and www.cnobin. “Privacy is absolutely key in the gaming financial management business,” reports Darci Aschbacher, an author of a major industry book, “once top domains are registered, their security, protection, and legacy becomes mission critical.”
The world economy is an ever changing phenomenom. In the 1800's, it was the dawning of the industrial age that signaled an economic change towards product manufacturing. In the 1900's, it was technological growth, particularly driven by the personal computer. Now in the 2000's, it's clear that the internet is a huge global economic powerhouse. The question now is: How can we make sustainable development work for everyone around the world, not just first world developed nations?
The answer both begins and ends with the use of the Internet, the global super information highway and, increasingly, the commercial backbone of many first world cultures. With the use of internet, many would-be small Island nations that could never compete with larger nations now find themselves on equal footing by allowing internet finance, off-shore web hosting, and online gaming in their jurisdictions. In turn, these smaller nations properly tax their internet based economies, which provides a lucrative revenue stream for their cash-starved local governments. The result: wealth redistribution, one of the by-products of sustainable economic growth and global diversification.
Perhaps more than any other industry, the online gaming sector has blossomed into a $15 billion a year global industry, an industry that exists solely in cyberspace, but physically tied to many Island nations and developing countries who legalize off-shore gaming operations. Though some activities, such as sports betting and online casinos operate in a legal grey area in the USA, this doesn't mean that they are not permitted elsewhere. For example, the Island nation of Curacao, The Netherlands Antilles, is home to many I-business firms, chiefly online sports betting operations that cater to Europe, America, and the Far East. This viable source of income for Curacao has allowed the country to beef up an otherwise tourism dependant economy, such that many online casinos are moving their entire business operations and human resources to the Island.
What specific activities do these e-businesses thrive on? The sports industry is huge in the USA, and many companies prosper on America's interest in NFL Betting, a fall phenemonom known as the "busy season" for offshore betting operations. Then, in the wintertime, it's basketball betting, highlighted by the annual March Madness NCAA basketball tournament. By February, with the arrival of Super Bowl betting, the business yet again key up for a rush of excited players from around the globe. Various sports services, offering game predictions and free sports picks, align themselves with many of these Island betting operations and create a whole sports sub-market that caters to all tastes.
Still, the king of the off-shore gaming operations is the online casino, which can be found in dozens of small Island nations around the Caribbean, Malta, Gibraltar, Cyprus, and in some Indonesian provinces in the Far East. These online betting centers provide business and popular games like online blackjack, online roulette, and a bevvy of other games. The challenge for these online casinos is not attracting players, but actually getting monetary transactions moving from the USA, Europe, and Orient into their banks. Thus, payment processing and a parallel economy of international banking more often than not springs up in these gaming friendly jurisdictions. Additionally, the development of online horse racing, highlighted by Kentucky Derby betting has caused many gaming areas to open themselves to the old and steady horse racing industry.
In the end, concerns about the economic competition created by these pro-gaming jurisdictions tends to trouble more first world nations than endear them. Money talks - and when it walks out of the country and into another foreign nation, many lawmakers begin to question the legality of these newfangled I-businesses because they are essentially un-taxable. Regular people from the USA and Europe, who partake in NFL betting and winter basketball betting, are clearly shuffling money out of the country to other nations. The question is, however, is this necessarily a bad thing? Aside from the individual's right to spend money as he or she sees fit, the wealth redistribution that occurs vis a vi these cyber businesses can not be ignored. The issue, now more than ever, is finding a way to regulate, tax, and legalize the gaming industry so that the USA government gets a piece of the operation. And that, at the end of the day, will determine without a doubt the global economic impact the internet provides for fledgeling nations who legalize gaming activities.




