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May 23rd, 2009

New Sharp’s 20-inch AQUOS DX LCD HDTV built-in Blu-ray Player

Posted on 23 May 2009 at 11:11am

Good news, special for little happy family, sure they have a little family room which suited for new cute Sharp 20-inch LCD HDTV with a built-in Blu-ray player. It’s first  20-inch LCD HDTV in the world’s come with Blu-ray player and 1,366 x 768 resolution, digital TV tuner, DVD support, a 1,500:1 contrast ratio and 450 nits of brightness. Will be available in LC-20DX1-B for black and LC-20DX1-W for white models.

How to Reclaim a Name on Social Media Site?

Posted on 23 May 2009 at 6:54am

Domain names on the Web are available for sale to everyone so one who comes first will be first served included a sub domain name you can be free to created etc, but sub domain name on social media site like Twitter.com/amjgadgets or Twitter.com/yourname are entirely different.

Sub domain on social media site names can be doled out at random and will follow username which have you created, somebody easily to creat a username by the name of another person like in the case of hip-hop artist Kanye West who complained recently that someone had used Twitter under his name.

Indeed, if someone gets a name first on a social network, the person is not allowed to sell it and it can be reclaimed by the social network at any time. Legal remedies for dealing with imposters or trademark issues range from murky to nonexistent.

So how to reclaim a name from someone else who has it? Below are the answers:

Be there First. User names are free on social media sites, so it makes sense to grab yours quickly, even if we  do not plan to use it immediately.

MySpace and Twitter are similarly democratic in doling out names - but they offer few assurances about preventing celebrities from cutting in line. Twitter reserves the right to reclaim names that are trademarked or are “non-parody impersonations.” MySpace generally honors the first person to claim a name - but reserves the right to reclaim URLs on behalf of advertisers or celebrities with just 72 hours notice.

Solicit your case. If someone grabbed your name already, you can appeal to the site to get it back.

Negotiate a side deal. Most sites do not allow users to sell names to each other, but that doesn’t mean that deals can’t be cut. After all, it’s easy to transfer control of a social media profile by handing over the username and password.

Give up. Even if you get the domain you want, somebody can still pretend to be you on a social media site. For instance, actor Gary Busey went on a crusade in 2006 to clean up imposter profiles on MySpace. He identified 32 fake Gary Busey profiles on MySpace and got them all deleted. But new imposters kept popping up, including myspace.com/garybusey, which portrays Busey as a hash-smoking cougar killer.

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