Saturday, August 1, 2015

Google Apps referral program to pay $15 for each new user

Google Apps Referral Program, an initiative to make business good to great. 

Google is hoping to spread the use of Google Apps for Business through word of mouth – aided by a new referral program that pays a $15 bonus per each new user you sign up. The company introduced the program in a post to its Enterprise blog on Monday.

To register for the program, you’ll need to head over to Google and provide your name, email address, taxpayer ID and a bank account at which to receive direct deposits. You’ll receive a unique referral link after registering for the program, and can earn coupons that save your referrals $10 per user for the first year.

According to the fine print, you can refer an unlimited amount of customers, but are only rewarded for each referral’s first 100 users. Referral amounts will be based on the number of users that have paid for at least 120 days.
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Polish Photographer takes drone to K2, and return with breathtaking pictures. 

The icy tundra of Baltoro glacier and K2 can be one of the most inhospitable places on Earth. But in rare moments, it can also be one of the most beautiful.

This landscape beauty was captured by Polish adventure-photographer David Kaszlikowski as part of his expedition to the Karakoram region to shoot for a documentary.
In additions to employing some of the best imaging tools commercially available, a Canon 5D Mark III in Kaszlikowski’s case, he also deployed a drone to fully capture the beauty and magnanimy of the Baltoro, one of the largest glaciers in the world.
He manages to capture the glacier and the mountain in a manner never seen before. 
At the heart of Karakoram, a glacier formation found at Concordia at the very beginning of one of the longest glaciers on the planet, Baltoro. PHOTO: DAVID KASZLIKOWSKI
K2 mountain captured on a clear night just before sunrise. PHOTO: DAVID KASZLIKOWSKI
Training climb on the ice features of the Baltoro glacier. PHOTO: DAVID KASZLIKOWSKI
The porters’ tent at K2’s base camp is just a tarpaulin stretched over the stones, left, while the other tents belongto expedition members. PHOTO: DAVID KASZLIKOWSKI
Balti porters carrying loads which range from 25kg to 50kg, a task they undertake often wearing only basic rubber sneakersfilled with fresh grass to stop their feet slipping. PHOTO: DAVID KASZLIKOWSKI
The article originally appeared in The Guardian

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Catholic Church Closings in New York Bring Sadness and Anger


Yosefina Kim at a vigil Thursday outside of Our Lady of Peace
.
CreditMark Kauzlarich/The New York Times
 Wearing a blue sash emblazoned with “Save Our Lady of Peace,” Ms. Dooner Lynch said of the church’s closing: “This is the beginning of our crucifixion, our Good Friday, the nails driven into the coffin of Our Lady of Peace.”
Her feelings were echoed by angry parishioners at the Church of St. Joseph in Lower Manhattan, who after a Mass in Mandarin, yelled about how the locks had already been changed.

The scene was more subdued at the Church of St. Ursula in Mount Vernon, N.Y., where the Rev. Robert J. Verrigni asked the few dozen people gathered for the final Mass “to pray one last time in our beloved church.”
More than two dozen churches have filed petitions with the Vatican’s Congregation for the Clergy contesting the archdiocese’s decisions. Some of petitions were rejected on procedural grounds. The Vatican organization has told the remaining churches it plans to issue rulings on their cases after Sept.1.
“If I were the cardinal, I would be very concerned to have all these angry parishioners when the pope is about to come,” said Sister Kate Kuenstler, a canon lawyer who is representing eight churches in their appeals.
The closings are part of a reorganization plan for the archdiocese that reduces the number of parishes by 20 percent. The reductions, which archdiocesan officials said were being driven by demographic changes and a declining numbers of priests, are occurring through mergers. In some cases, the churches in the merged parishes will continue to hold Masses; in others, one or more of the churches will be closed except for special occasions.
A church worker barricading the door after the final Mass at the Church of St. Ursula in Mount Vernon, N.Y. CreditEric Thayer for The New York Times

On Friday, parishioners seemed resigned about the closings. At the Church of St. Elizabeth of Hungary on the Upper East Side, which has also long doubled as the parish for New Yorkers who are deaf, Marie dee Frenette Herrington, 72, dressed in black for the occasion, dabbed at tears as solemn organ music drowned out the soft voices of parishioners singing “Amazing Grace.”
I’m crushed,” Ms. Herrington, who has been coming to the church for nearly 50 years, saidas fellow parishioners shuffled out in silence, some pausing to look back at the altar.But from the pulpit at Our Lady of Peace, Ms. Dooner Lynch sounded a note of defiance as she turned the teachings of St. Paul into a rallying cry about the need to keep fighting for the church, a call that was met with applause, cheers and murmurs from worshipers.“We have fought the good fight, we have kept the faith,” she said. “But we have not yet finished the race.”





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