Advercash

Another site pays to view ads. This is a very famous site owned by the very prestigious TitanCash Network. They have several PTC sites under their name. Advercash is one of the oldest. It has both ads and offers. Each ad is worth from 0.5-1 cent. There are around 10 ads/day. Members also get 100% referral and cashout is at $10 through AlertPay.

Join today and get paid to earn.

Mylot

Earn by discussions and posting this is possible with mylot here u will find number of topics on which you and post discussions are respond to any discussion for both the reasons u'll get paid.

In simple words we can say earn money while having fun here even for posting pics according to TOS.

Its not a huge payouts but you can earn good income by posting and referals too

So start quickly and earn quickly and help me to earn also

Join with my referal Click Here

Get Paid for Survey

You may find several sites promising to pay for survey and referrals I had tried them but some offers are valid only for few countries at that moment I came across a survey site which pays for survey and referral.

Pay's $6 for welcome survey and $1.25 for each referral.
Paid $1 to $25 per survey panel.

Site pays you with two ways from paypal and USPS (For us citizens). Minimum payout starts from $75 and as soon as we signup we are allowed to take few surveys each survey about 5 - 10 mins and we can earn $27.



Payment will be denied if you have created fake accounts to raise your referral count
One account for one ip and one email.

Its easy & free to join.

Join today and start earning. Click here to join

Artificial Lung

A new device may offer hope to patients in desperate need of a lung transplant. Robert Bartlett, MD, a University of Michigan, USA, professor emeritus of surgery, and his team have developed the BioLung, an artificial lung that works with the heart's own pumping action to manage oxygen and blood flow throughout the body. Because of the device uses the heart rather than mechanics to pump blood, the patient can stay active at home instead of being sedated and hooked up to a machine in the hospital. The device can even remain in place following a transplant, until the donor lungs are fully operational.

Web Running out of IP Addresses?



Does this mean the Net cannot further develop?

Wow. Is it really happening? Are we really going to run out of IP addresses? The answer is yes, but the outlook isn’t as bleak as it appears.

For starters, the Internet runs on version 4 of the Internet Protocol. It was standardized 1981, and serves as the dominant network layer protocol for the Internet. IPv4 has since proved to be inadequate, primarily for its lack of address space.

The good news is IPv4 has a successor, which is IPv6. Version 6 of the Internet Protocol holds more than 16 billion-billion addresses, unlike IPv4 that holds just over 4 billion.

Some companies are beginning to administer IPv6 and are using both IPv4 and IPv6 together. In time, IPv4 will run out of addresses and need to phase out. At that point, the Web will operate solely on IPv6.

Critics argue that IPv6 is incapable of taking over. However, John Curran the Chairman of the Board at the American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) says this is an inaccurate assumption.

“…the way we figure out if something works or not is by using it… getting feedback. That usage is really just beginning now.”

The Internet as we know it cannot run on IPv4. While the matter isn’t so urgent that you have to drop everything you’re doing and switch to IPv6 immediately, it is something that companies and organizations should begin to carefully examine.

Get more information on this topic in the WebProNews video.

About the author:
Abby Prince is a reporter/anchor for WebProNews.

Life After Google

Wired’s Betsy Schiffman compiled a list of ex-Google employees doing their own start-ups now or joining companies... which may or may not become Google competition. From Vanessa Fox to Kevin Fox, Biz Stone to Evan Williams, Jess Lee and others. An “attack against the mother ship,” as Henry Blodget called it.

Then again, we might find that some of these spaceships may become assimilated, after all – i.e., Google buying those start-ups that turn out to be successful. Or perhaps, any such acquisition may be enough of a demoralizing factor to those who work at Google that it could be risky for Google’s management to consider; it may almost equal telling their employees that the best way to achieve something at Google is to quit Google. (The acquisition of YouTube was already a step in that direction, but still on a more subtle level. While the YouTube acquisition came at the expense of in-house development Google Video as video upload service – the official Google blogs almost entirely switched to YouTube by now when embedding their films – at least YouTube wasn’t spearheaded by ex-Google employees.)

About the author:
Philipp Lenssen from Germany, author of 55 Ways to Have Fun With Google, shares his views & news on the search industry in the daily Google Blogoscoped.