Archive for the ‘Digital Money’ Category

American Express and PayPal go head to head with Facebook payment apps

Summary: Now you can add paying people back to the list of things you do with your Facebook friends. American Express goes head to head with PayPal in its attempt to dominate digital wallets.

Credit: Facebook Serve

Now you can add paying people back to the list of things you do with your friends on Facebook. American Express has announced Serve, a new Facebook app that allows you to send and receive payments online.

Serve, is a next-generation digital payment commerce platform which can help you organize your money, send and receive funds, and manage payment requests from a single, unified online account.

Serve has been created by American Express so the security, technology, and data protection has the benefit of the existing back end systems and processes.

Currently this service is available in the US only.

American Express launched Serve last year, after its acquisition of Revolution Money for $300 million and has partnered with Facebook. It was hinting at partnerships with gaming companies such as Zynga creaters of games such as Farmville and Cityville, last year.

Users can send money to anyone in their Facebook friends list by selecting the friend, entering the dollar amount, and clicking send.

If someone owes you cash, just choose the friend and request the money. You dont need to worry about remembering email addresses.Your Facebook connection is enough.

American Express is going head to head with PayPal in its attempt to dominate the digital wallet platform.

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American Express and PayPal go head to head with Facebook payment apps

Digital Data Center Aims To Make Doing Business Easier

A new municipal data center in Westerville called We Connect was developed to help businesses work more efficiently.

Business owner Patrick Knott said before the data center, the loss of internet because of a power outage would have been a crisis, 10TV's Danielle Elias reported.

"If we have our data center at We Connect, we don't have to worry about that because they have generators, they've got batteries," said Knott. "The power's never going to go out at We Connect."

Westerville's chief information officer, Todd Jackson said the center has two battery backup units, two generators, and two substations.

It was the first municipal data center in the country, Elias reported.

Westerville leaders hoped the center would help save local businesses time and money.

"It allows them to reduce costs," said Westerville's Chief Information Officer, Todd Jackson, "which affects their bottom line, and hopefully can provide better service to their customers."

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Digital Data Center Aims To Make Doing Business Easier

Tegrity and the Center for Digital Education Report on Alternative Funding Mechanisms for Deploying Lecture Capture in …

SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 1, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --In light of the recent U.S. economic downturn, higher education institutions have experienced a steep decline in the amount of government funding that is available to support operations and investment. As a result, institutions are struggling to fund the next-generation educational technologies that have become critical components of higher education over the past decade. Administrators tasked with ensuring that the latest classroom technologies are available to their professors and students are finding themselves poorly resourced to carry out their mandate.

Lecture capture solutions are one technology that leading institutions have been pursuing due to their proven positive impact on student performance and course completion rates, which ultimately result in a more successful student body and stronger reputation for the institution. Thanks to shrinking budgets, however, administrators are sometimes forced to table the implementation of such next-generation technologies, regardless of their potential. To help, the Center For Digital Education, in partnership with Tegrity, a division of McGraw-Hill Higher Education, has just released a new research paper titled "Funding Lecture Capture in Higher Education," offering various strategies for funding lecture capture solutions and enabling administrators to clear the financial hurdles they may face.

The paper, authored by the Center for Digital Education, pinpoints how and why higher education institutions are facing a so-called 'recession.' This may come as a surprise to the general public, as many people are surrounded by news of the cost of tuition's rapid growth. Though it seems that institutions should have the ability to fund technological innovations as a result of those high tuitions, schools are struggling with a decrease in the number of government funds available. Federal stimulus funds awarded during the first few years of the U.S. recession have been reduced and are not being replaced. State budget cuts for institutions are also being levied even though enrollments are increasing and the costs for educating a larger body of students are rising.

"Administrators are caught between the dual imperatives of providing the educational technology necessary to compete today and the need to cut costs," said Michael Berger, Senior Director of Marketing for Tegrity. "The good news is that there are alternative funding options available and our hope is that the Center for Digital Education's research helps administrators deploy the latest education technology - including Tegrity Campus - without breaking the bank."

Despite chronic federal budget cuts among institutions, the Center for Digital Education uncovered several strategic funding methods that can provide funds for the deployment of lecture capture solutions:

"Given the recent budget constraints that higher education institutions are experiencing as a result of the loss of federal funding, it is clear that administrators must search for alternative ways to secure the funds needed to maintain their institution's technology leadership," said LeiLani Cauthen, VP of the Center for Digital Education and Publisher, ConvergeSpecial Reports. "Fortunately, modern lecture capture solutions like Tegrity offer deployment models and flexible payment methods that take the current funding environment into account. Higher education leaders just need to be prepared and do their homework to determine which solutions fit best."

When searching for the perfect lecture capture solution for an institution, administrators must look for technologies that are affordable and deliver the best return on investment so that they can justify the need for this technology on campus. Tegrity Campus is an affordable lecture capture solution due to its cloud-based deployment model, which eliminates the need for expensive hardware while lessening the necessity for IT professionals to spend precious resources on maintaining and updating software and infrastructure as these tasks are taken care of by Tegrity. High, on-demand scalability exists within the cloud system, so resources can be implemented in all classrooms on campus providing lower per capita capital expense and overhead costs. The necessary bandwidth is consumed on the provider's side, not the institution's side, which is a particular advantage if the school has many off-campus students or mobile usage is high. Additionally, Tegrity provides flexible pricing plans for institutions as the company understands the budget constraints facing schools today.

To download a copy of "Funding Lecture Capture in Higher Education," visit http://pages.tegrity.com/fund.

About Tegrity

Tegrity Campus is the only cloud-based Lecture Capture solution proven to improve student achievement, satisfaction, retention and recruitment across an institution. It makes class time available all the time by automatically recording, storing and indexing every class on campus without the need to install any special hardware or software in classrooms. The company's patent-pending Search Anything and Smart Bookmarks features then let students instantly review key class moments online using a PC, Mac, iPod, iPad or other mobile device. For more information, visit http://www.tegrity.com.

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Tegrity and the Center for Digital Education Report on Alternative Funding Mechanisms for Deploying Lecture Capture in ...

Momentis – New Opportunity *2012* – Just Energy – Video

28-02-2012 23:11 damianz.mymomentis.biz Would you like to work with like minded people? How would you like to earn money on what people are already using everyday. The deregulation of energy and power has broken the lock of traditionally utilities monopolies and now allows all of us to earn money serving the energy needs of millions customers throughout the world. Momentis is thinking beyond the powerlines by also offering additional services helping people understand that the real power is in our own buying power and helping people make the right choices can unleash the power to our financial freedom. Momentis is a company that is thinking beyond today and can show you how to leverage a smart idea by earning an income from the power of who you know. Connect with the person who introduced you with this extraordinary idea, because they believe in your ability to "Think Beyond"

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Momentis - New Opportunity *2012* - Just Energy - Video

Crunch! Your chips have gone digital

Yahoo! pegs online advertising growth in India at 25-30 per cent. The Yahoo! stall at adtech. RAMESH SHARMA

February 29, 2012:

In its second year, digital media's premier event, adtech, had more attendance over 2,800 delegates converged at the Leela Kempinski in Gurgaon, compared to the 2000 a year ago. But somehow, the event lacked the fizz, flavour and fervor of the first edition in 2011. Last year, social media was still nascent and marketers were still trying to get a grip on it, and when Unilever's Vice President Global Communication Planning Babs Rangaiah took the stage a frisson of excitement coursed through the hall. And Facebook's Vice President Advertising and Global Operations David Fischer's session was such a sellout that even standing room was hard to come by. At this edition, by comparison, there were seats going empty and it was clear the speakers were preaching to the converted. Digital had gained acceptance - but there were still takeaways. Although social networks continued to be the flavor, there were glimpses of digital life beyond social as well. So here's what was new:

Packing in a digital delivery

Digital has breached the next frontier food packaging! Marketers at the summit showed how digital solutions are fast being incorporated in physical packaging.

Imagine picking up a packet of Lays chips, on which a barcode is printed. You scan it with your reader application on your smart phone and it takes you into the web page of the company where an exciting discount deal or a stimulating video awaits you.

Shiv Singh, global head of digital, Pepsico showed how the beverage and food maker was making consumers interact with brand packaging. It teamed up the application developer Stickybits to distribute video that could be accessed through bar codes on cans of Pepsi and Lays potato chips.

Nestles global head of digital marketing and social, Pete Blackshow showed how a consumer can scan the quck response (QR) code on a Maggi packaging with an iphone or Android smartphone and it leads the phone straight into a web page that shares some exciting recipes to make with the noodles.

In the US, food giant General Mills has already made its cereals and yoghurts connect with consumers in fun ways through digital technology.

Digital is now not just restricted to the Internet but being integrated into the most amazing places.

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Crunch! Your chips have gone digital