raingirl

raingirl club

Posted: 12 Oct 2018


Taken: 12 Oct 2018

1 favorite     4 comments    98 visits

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member benefits - ipernity friend invite

member benefits - ipernity friend invite
When i click on "The Benefits of the Club" - this is what pops up.

1) Looks good except I'm wondering if "Maximum size of a photo, a video, a doc" category should say something besides 30Mo and 512Mo. Isn't that supposed to by MB or something else? I don't know what "Mo" stands for.

2) The Free offer is only good for one month now, right? Do we want to have last here in the heading that now says: "Free welcome offer"?

3) Then, just a question: Do we have advertisers for the Free time period people can use?

Bergfex has particularly liked this photo


Comments
 Bergfex
Bergfex club
1) You're right, I guess. It's probably an ancient typo that no one's ever noticed before. It should be corrected.

2) No, the free offer for guest users is not limited in time. ipernity still has "guests" who created their account in 2006!

3) What do you mean with "advertisers"? My native tongue is German, and the translation programs translate "advertisers" as "People who are making promotion". I don't understand it in this context.
5 years ago.
raingirl club has replied to Bergfex club
Oh, now I understand your confusiong about 3).

Let's see if I can say it clearer. This table says "ads may appear". This is where companies sell there product on our website. I wonder if we have companies that pay us to put their ad, pay us to say what they sell, on our website.
5 years ago.
Bergfex club has replied to raingirl club
A clear no. Ipernity is too insignificant as an advertising medium. However, we have never bothered to get advertising partners. Because actually we don't want to be any, we want to remain independent.
5 years ago.
 Bergfex
Bergfex club
I did some more research:

The Frenchman does not call 8bit a byte, but speaks of octets and abbreviates them with "o". It should be added that octets are the correct term and today byte is understood to be 8 bits, but a byte does not always have to be 8 bits. The correct expression for 8 bits (even after some standardization organization; which one I don't remember anymore) is actually octet.

In this respect, the unit of measurement is indeed correct, but unfortunately not understandable at all internationally.
5 years ago.