NEW YORK, NY, January 21, 2011 (Press-News.org) As a leader in the press release distribution industry, 24-7PressRelease.com kicked off its affiliate program in early 2010. The affiliate program rewards website owners with a $15 commission when a press release package is purchased from their site. The press release affiliate program has been a huge success with more than 1,900 affiliates to date.
24-7PressRelease.com offers paid press release packages ranging from $49 to $369 which may be conveniently accessed through more than two dozen types of flashy banners or simple text links on any website. Michael Iwasaki, managing partner with 24-7PressRelease.com, says that "partnering with Commission Junction also guarantees publishers with trusted third-party tracking, real-time reporting, and monthly commission checks.
"This is a huge step forward for us. The ease of setting up an account and posting our banners is set up very quickly so you can start earning commissions right away."
With nearly 150,000 distributed press releases and 15 million headline impressions daily, 24-7PressRelease.com provides a wide range of press release services, including cutting-edge Search Engine packages: a true leader in press release distribution.
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Affiliate Program at 24-7PressRelease.com Encourages Commission for Website Owners
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2011-01-21
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Home Renovators Use the Web to Find Deep Discounts on Glass Tile, Stone Tile, and Glass Tile Mosaics from AlexaGlassMosaicTile.com
2011-01-21
AlexaGlassMosaicTile.com announced today that the company is experiencing a large surge of business with customers shopping for glass tile on the web. "Over the past six months, we've seen our online sales of glass tile, and glass tile mosaics triple," said Alex Eitelbach, CEO of AlexaGlassMosaicTile.com. "In this recessionary time, people want to save money but don't want to delay home improvements; by purchasing online, home renovators save 60% on the cost of glass tile products and still find the same quality."
AlexaGlassMosaicTile.com manufactures all of its glass ...
PR and Journalist Leads Website Goes Global with Customized Service
2011-01-21
Journalists in the U.S., the U.K., Canada, Australia and NZ can now seek out local sources from a country of choice, while potential sources escape irrelevant media leads, thanks to the latest innovation from free PR leads website SourceBottle.
The online service, which has been running in Australia for 18 months, has not only expanded globally but has further customized the user experience, enabling both journalists and sources to narrow the scope of their search.
Founder Director Rebecca Derrington said SourceBottle had always concentrated on the needs of journalists ...
Gamercize Voted Best Physical Education Exergame of 2010
2011-01-21
The Exergame Network (TEN) held the first ever public voting for awards relating to active video games with results announced this week. Of the fifteen award categories, Gamercize products were nominated for Best Physical Education Exergame, Best Competition Exergame, Best Group Exergame and Best Brain (Training) Exergame.
The Gamercize Pro-Sport range, for Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Nintendo Wii, was the public choice for Best Physical Education and Best Competition Exergame of 2010. The international awards reflect public recognition of Gamercize used in schools around ...
More asteroids could have made life's ingredients
2011-01-20
A wider range of asteroids were capable of creating the kind of amino acids used by life on Earth, according to new NASA research.
Amino acids are used to build proteins, which are used by life to make structures like hair and nails, and to speed up or regulate chemical reactions. Amino acids come in two varieties that are mirror images of each other, like your hands. Life on Earth uses the left-handed kind exclusively. Since life based on right-handed amino acids would presumably work fine, scientists are trying to find out why Earth-based life favored left-handed amino ...
Robotic ghost knifefish is born
2011-01-20
Researchers at Northwestern University have created a robotic fish that can move from swimming forward and backward to swimming vertically almost instantaneously by using a sophisticated, ribbon-like fin.
The robot -- created after observing and creating computer simulations of the black ghost knifefish -- could pave the way for nimble robots that could perform underwater recovery operations or long-term monitoring of coral reefs.
Led by Malcolm MacIver, associate professor of mechanical and biomedical engineering at Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering and ...
Stress, anxiety both boon and bane to brain
2011-01-20
MADISON — A cold dose of fear lends an edge to the here-and-now — say, when things go bump in the night.
"That edge sounds good. It sounds adaptive. It sounds like perception is enhanced and that it can keep you safe in the face of danger," says Alexander Shackman, a researcher at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
But it sounds like there's also a catch, one that Shackman and his coauthors — including Richard Davidson, UW-Madison psychology and psychiatry professor — described in the Jan. 19 Journal of Neuroscience.
"It makes us more sensitive to our external surroundings ...
Identity theft by aphids
2011-01-20
Collaborative research at the University of Guam has people asking: "What IS a species" and entomologists wondering about the relationship between an insect species and the host plant or plants it feeds on.
Western Pacific Tropical Research Center (WPTRC) entomologist Ross Miller has been studying aphids for years and this work has brought him in contact with entomologists in Canada and the US mainland. Aphid systemetist Robert Foottit, DNA expert Eric Maw and aphid authority Keith Pike have been working with Miller on the identification of aphids, particularly the dreaded ...
Stroke rate rises for patients with HIV infection
2011-01-20
While the overall hospitalization rate for stroke has declined in recent years, the numbers have jumped dramatically for patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), suggesting they may be up to three times more likely to suffer a stroke than people uninfected by the virus that causes AIDS.
In a paper published in the Jan. 19 online issue of Neurology, Bruce Ovbiagele, MD, professor of neurosciences at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and Avindra Nath, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, reviewed a national dataset of all hospital ...
Spike reported in number of people with HIV having a stroke
2011-01-20
ST. PAUL, Minn. – New research suggests that people infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) may be up to three times more likely to have a stroke compared to those not affected with HIV. The study is published in the January 19, 2011, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
"Our findings showed that stroke hospitalizations in the United States decreased by seven percent in the general population within the last decade while stroke hospitalizations for people with HIV rose 67 percent," said Bruce Ovbiagele, MD, MSc, ...
Bedbug genetic study finds possible pesticide-resistance genes
2011-01-20
Ohio State University entomologists have conducted the first genetic study of bedbugs, paving the road to the identification of potential genes associated with pesticide resistance and possible new control methods for the troublesome insect, whose sudden resurgence in the United States has led to a public health scare.
The discovery was reported Jan. 19 in the online journal PLoS ONE.
"While bedbugs are poised to become one of the major household pests across the United States in the coming years, we know very little about their genetic makeup and their mechanisms of ...
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[Press-News.org] Affiliate Program at 24-7PressRelease.com Encourages Commission for Website Owners24-7PressRelease.com works with Commission Junction for its affiliate program.