20+ Best Free Gaming Website Templates - for 2020

best casino website template

best casino website template - win

My 1 Year Anniversary of Full Time Day Trading. 3 Years In The Business. What I Wish I Could Tell Myself Years Ago.

This industry has a lack of transparency so I'm more than happy to say I will provide lots of that throughout this post with screenshots. There are LOTS of imgur links to back what I say so it's not just words on a post expecting you to just believe what I'm typing.
This post I suppose is "Part 2" my post back in April, "After 2 years of Daytrading. 7 months full time. Here's my advice". I'm doing this to update everyone who came/comes across this in the future. Yes, it is possible. No, it won't be easy. You will pay homage to the rite of passage into this career. I'll also provide some examples of styles of trading so for the newer aspiring traders, there will be some things I rarely see discussed on forums. So here's to 1 year of Full Time Day Trading

TL;DR - You'll become desensitized to trading. Stubborn to other strategies (There are biggebaddemore lucrative strategies. Don't chase them. Why fix what's not broken? I know what works for me and I'm content with it. No strategy is better than another. It's a personal choice. ). Losing individual trades won't faze you, they're inevitable. Profiting certainly feels better. After a while, you won't be as enthralled to trade every morning, it'll become just another part of your day). Trading is just managing your money through a statistic and the medium to execute it is trading on your platform. Think: "If. Then. Because". Your trading plan should be that black and white. Ask "Why" for everything you do and use. If you can't answer it with documented results, drop it.


I get a bunch of messages all the time from people asking - . Out of those who follow me and chat me seeking further tips through my previous posts. I'll be answering the FAQ's and addressing things I see frequently in this sub as far as trading axioms
Disclaimer: I won't sugarcoat anything. I'll share my experiences and add pieces of advice I'd give to those who are currently experiencing the same thing becoming a full time day trader and what day to day life is like, the occasional distress, (DRAWDOWNS). Some of you follow my Twitter for the past few months where I post my daily watchlists with a snippet that reveals my DayTradingBuyingPower. I do this not to brag but to demonstrate that the account does yield growth, I pay myself, and there are days where the balance does not move because there was no edge. I also do this since nobody else shows their account performance. (Yes. You, Mr. YouTube gurus and wannabe gurus).
We do this for income, the numbers on our accounts are real. Treat it as such. Get your initial capital out of your account THEN try to "Scale your account" with your profits AKA The Market's Money.

I'll go over:
•FAQ's that I get in my inbox (I'm still welcome to further questions if I don't answer here)
•Decision Fatigue (You will experience this)
•The previous year (2019-2020) of ups and downs
•How to use my watchlists that I post on Twitter in the morning to your advantage
•The pivotal moment that changed my trading career (NFLX 10-17-19)
•The road to becoming a full time trader. (It won't be fun unless you're handed the money)
•You'll have a better grasp of my strategy (Between ProTip 4 and 5. ProTip 8.)

There are 10 "ProTips" throughout the post that I wish I could tell myself years back and I'll periodically throw them in here as the post goes on. I make posts long in order to segregate those serious about this business and those who will just become another statistic in the failure rate of this business.

At the end of this post, I'll go over the frequent questions I receive such as: (Answers to FAQ at bottom of post.)
  1. "How do you prepare for a trading day?"
  2. "What would you go back to tell yourself?"
  3. "Books?" (The most abused question, but I get it. I could start a public library with just trading books I bought over the years)
  4. "What is your background?"
  5. "What is a normal day for you?"
  6. "How did you discover your strategy?"
  7. "What did you do/How did you get started?"
  8. "What is your % return?" (Not a fun question since a trading account is not an index or investment account. Intraday traders do not measure performance in %. Most are measured in "R".)
  9. "Is enough to start trading?"
  10. "Why do you need so many monitors"? (This one is rarely asked but I do see it discussed on platforms and people trading on mobile phones love giving flack to anybody who trades on multiple monitors. Hint: Everyone's different. Whatever works for the individual. There are no rules in trading. The only rule is that it works.)

My story:

Background:
I heard about daytrading during the 2008 crash while in high school. We all want to make more while working less. I entertained day trading from time to time but always realized I never had enough money. Horrible mindset because I could have still researched WHILE saving money to put into my trading business.
2015 - I opened my first trading account with Scottrade while in the Marines. Apparently if you have a net worth of over $1,000,000 you can get out early (Biggest rumor ever).
I frivolously bought crap penny stocks. In short - I was a hair away from gambling. What made it NOT gambling was the fact that at least I owned something tangible (Securities of a company) and anything can happen. Buy low sell high was my strategy. Didn't work obviously. No idea what I was doing. I'd buy and hold hoping to wake up to the stock price being way higher and it never happened.

ProTip #1 : If you hold a trade overnight... It is not daytrading. Stop turning into an investor because you can't admit a minor defeat.

2017 - I started taking this business seriously while working in the oilfield as a Logistics Planner (If you're wondering what company since I am asked this from time to time, Google: "World's largest oilfield services company").
No kids, girlfriend/wife or financial obligations. I worked 10AM - 7PM CST and would trade the open from home for roughly 1 hour. Later I was offered to be a Data Analyst... Only downside was... I couldn't trade since I had to be at work now at 8AM CST during the market open. In the moment of signing the offer letter, I was bummed thinking, "No more trading,"
That wasn't the case though. You can still build your trading business with a 9-5 and while never making one trade. The data is there.

ProTip #2 : We all see the same data. It's there forever. Many strategies show their edge both live and in hindsight the same. (Especially if you trade patterns). You CAN build your business as a trader without even taking a trade. You CAN build your strategy while working a 9-5. Just because you're not trading, does not mean you can't build your business through research. You won't know how you'll react to the losses but at least you can diagnose the raw data with a large enough sample size for assurance and confidence.

If you have a 9-5 and want to go fulltime into this business. Stay for a bit, save, live so far beneath your means that it is almost miserable, (depending on your expenses, area you live, family etc) and get a few hundred sample sizes of your strategy! And for your PTO/days off... trade the open. I sacrificed my vacation days to trade.
After 2 years in corporate America, eating cheap food, never going out, saving relentlessly, I made the decision to just do it and resigned. I went straight into the ring of fire known as trading. That was on: September 23rd, 2019
"" (Sound familiar?)

When you hear these types of comments.. your response should be: "Nobody put the time I put into this. The 90%+ who fail, don't have it all written out, computerized backtests, manual backtests, statistics, SOP manuals, JUST like the job I have which is a business, I'm just another cog in their wheel. I'll just be wearing all the hats in my trading business. Instead of Oil&Gas, it's just for trading". One thing I see here a lot is people saying to trade X amount of months/years or make X.

ProTip #3 - Think in man hours, not calendar. Example:
Trader A puts in 1 hour of study/work/research everyday for 1 year. (365 Hours)
Trader B puts in 12 hours of work every day for 4 months. (~1,450 Hours)
Trader A lives in a major city while Trader B lives in the middle of nowhere. (Think cost of living)
2 totally different living expenses and 2 different calibers of dedication. I'd put my money on Trader B because he put in more man hours. (~1,000 more hours on the clock to be more exact).

ProTip #4 - Have a cushion in your account AND your personal bank account. Having a strategy is great but you won't know entirely if you can fulfill and execute your plan until you experience the ups and downs both short and long term. A strategy is constant over long periods of time... there will be days, weeks, and perhaps a month here and there where you aren't making much money. We hear all the time, "Trade like a casino". Casinos don't make money day after day but the odds are in there favor over the long haul.

Month 1 of full time trading was great:
Immediately after going full time, the first month (September 2019 to October 2019), I did super well. Business as usual. No stress. Everything going as planned. No turbulence. At least not like I had ever experienced...

The 2 prerequisites I had before resigning was:
  1. Show consistency in returns. Consistent Sharpe Ratio.
  2. Make a 4 figure trade (I achieved this while short 100 shares on ROKU September 20th, 2019 and even made a victory post if you scroll down my profile's posts.)

First life-changing trading lesson learned as a full time trader:
That money printing spree ended on NFLX October 17th, 2019. Less than 1 month of being a full time trader. Deviating and going against my plan I actually made $500 in a matter of 4 minutes. If you follow my watchlists on Twitter, I always trade with the direction of the gap. If I notate, "Long Watches" that means I will only trade it IF (and only IF) I see a long biased pattern. Likewise I will only be looking to short my "Short Watches". Plenty of times I'll call out a ticker and it immediately goes the other way. No harm no foul because there was no long biased pattern to confirm my thesis.
On 10-17-2019, I went against my plan and it worked.. NFLX gapped up to resistance and I went short when it tanked off of a short pattern.(This is known as fading). The market gave me a free lunch and then some. So now I'm walking on air in my mind:
"I'm an absolute unit"
"I'll do it again and clear another $500 to make it a 4 figure day before 9:30AM Central"
"Should have quit my job way earlier being this good."
Within 30 minutes of the open. I gave all $500 back. Yes I wanted to trade it back. Never have I had the desire to smash anything but I do understand those who do! Yes I stood there and felt like each passing second was wasted opportunity. The next 24 hours were long!

ProTip #5: It's circumstances like that that help you in the long run. FunFact: I never once deviated from my plan since. Not ever again.

"I could have paid for my groceries and electric for the month after 4 minutes of trading if I just took the free pass the market gave me" I felt dumb but in hindsight, I'm glad at what happened. It was this exact instance that married me to my strategy/business plan. The next day and the 7 trading days following. I didn't make 1 profiting trade. My longest ever drawdown - 11 straight trades. While researching I found out this was Decision Fatigue (I'll go over this shortly below)

Put yourself in that situation...
You have bills and your income is strictly trading. I don't care how much a robot you think you are or how strongly you believe in probabilities, when you were in an office less than a month ago making almost 6 figures sitting in an air conditioned office knowing direct deposit is on its way every other Friday no matter how well or poorly you performed at work.. Now you're in the hot seat. Its a bottomless feeling. Now all of your friends and families words are ringing in your head.
But just like a boxing match.. you gotta take a hit to get a hit. Win some, lose some, shake hands and get back to normal life. Water under the bridge.
Mind you:
•No guaranteed direct deposit every 2 weeks.
•No more medical/dental insurance.
•401K retirement is no longer being matched.

11 trades is nothing. You only require ~5.5 trades at 2:1RRR to make it back OR 3.5 trades at 3:1RRR. It's nothing especially in your research because you can easily just scroll a little more and see, "Oh that's just a drawdown. No big deal". How will you react in real time? Will you buckle or choke? But the thing is, I was skipping trades out of fear and JUST so happened to be picking all of the unsuccessful ones. (Decision Fatigue)
Think about those 2 weeks of being in a drawdown. Half of the month. You're not just stagnant, your account is bleeding slowly but surely. Next time you're looking at your spreadsheet/backtest/predictive model/research.. try to put yourself in those days of drawdown. It's not just 11 boxes of red with "-1R" or "Loss" in them. The screenshot above on Imgur is just a recent example.
Think about your daily routine, going to the gym, hanging with friends, grocery shopping, cooking, going to bed, waking up, doing a routine, then losing again.. and again.. and again. Try to think of life during those 300+ hours (Weekends too) of, "I haven't made money. I've lost money. And I still have bills. After paying them, I'll be closer to my set Risk of Ruin".
Here's a lesson you won't learn before going fulltime but I'll do my best to emphasize it here:
Pick a strategy. And stick with it. It can literally be anything. Don't spread yourself thin watching 20+ tickers and be a jack of all patterns/tickers. Be a master of 1 pattern and master of 1 circumstance. There's this real thing called "Decision Fatigue" which explains exactly why what happened.. happened. The article explains that the 2 outcomes of this mental strain known as "Decision Fatigue" is:
  1. Risky Decision-Making
  2. Decision Avoidance
Sound familiar? Does it kind of make sense now? As a new trader you have YouTube, Facebook, StockTwits, Twitter, "gurus", books recommended on Amazon, all throwing their ideas/strategies around, the market has opportunities littered all over.. Decision Fatigue is inevitable for the unprepared. Decision Fatigue happens in every profession. If you mess up at your 9-5, its just a blunder, your paycheck will remain the same. Just a slap on the wrist and move on. With trading, you make a mistake.. it's less food on your table, lights don't stay on, and/or water isn't running. That pressure adds up. No wonder so many fail...
The signs of Decision Fatigue:
•Procrastination.
•Impulsivity.
•Avoidance.
•Indecision.
When you find what clicks with you AND its either statistically or performance proven, have the courage to risk a healthy sum of your capital into it. There are strategies/patterns/styles of trading littered all over the internet:
Very broad example:
"IF circumstance happens THEN "Execution". Stoploss is XYZ. Target is XYZ. BECAUSE over a series of Y trades, I will make $X,XXX.xx".


ProTip #6 : Strategies are all over the internet. It's your account/money, backtest it. People share their strategies here all the time and although I don't agree with them because I know what works for me, it's something to chew off of for you newer traders. YouTube is a harbor with people who give just enough info to figure their style out. You will lose trades. Sit for some screen-time and pay homage to the edge that you discover. All in due time.

Insert key metrics and find correlations. This is how you create checks and balances to create/formulate a black and white trading plan. When I first started doing this, my spreadsheet(s) had so many columns it was annoying and would kill my desire to continue working. You'll find things that are imperative and some that are unimportant. For a lack of more colorful terms: "Throw stuff at the wall and see what sticks" Trim the fat. Rinse and repeat.

Here's some things I used to remind myself of and perhaps it'll ring some bells for you:

Surrender your capital to your edge. If you truly accept the risk and trust your proven edge, losses don't feel like anything nor do profits. Although we're not here to put on losing trades and yes it does feel nice to profit. I still from time to time will excited when I hit target after a series of multiple profiting trades depending on my mood.
If you're nervous or your heart starts beating quicker when you hear the sound effect of a trade getting entered/filled. Be honest with yourself and ask yourself if you're truly accepting the risk.
Things you can't take to the bank:
  1. RRR.
  2. Win-Rate
  3. Number of trades.
  4. "This one great trade that I hit target in less than 30 seconds and I got filled better than expected"
All of these are integral metrics. But you're trading to make money. It's up or down, green or red, profit or loss, TRUE or FALSE. So with that said, find what works flawlessly and is easy to follow. Checks and Balances. Then allocate a good sum of risk into it. I read it here all the time, "Don't risk too much" and that's great and true for new traders. But don't sell yourself short. Push yourself over the edge and admit that you know your stuff. Think of Trader A and Trader B. If you've put the time in.. don't sell yourself short. You've built enough courage to learn a business so many fail at. This business has such a negative connotation. But remember that not everybody can handle meritocracies and that's exactly what the market is. Don't try to be the best, just work harder than everyone else and the output of your input will be relative.


ProTip #7: YouTube trading ads from gurus... they're subconsciously making you think you're a novice trader. It's in their marketing. They study marketing psychology. The EASIEST things to sell:
  1. Health
  2. Wealth
  3. Happiness
People that are desperate for those things are the most vulnerable and these "Traders" marketers are fantastic at portraying all 3 of those things at once.


ProTip #8 (Broken record alert) : Write a business plan. Your strategy shouldn't take longer than 4 sentences to explain to another trader. When you have a plan that's proven through a statistic and WAIT for it to happen, you feel 100X better taking the trade. You don't even care too much when it results in a loss. Because that was your plan, you accept it much better, and you know it was just an expense for a winning trade.


Want my strategy? "I scan for stocks with a market cap of over 250M, 10k shares premarket, gapping to support or resistance, priced over $10, and I look for a pattern biased to the direction of the overnight gap. It isn't rocket science. Check my Twitter, look at the dates I posted, and you'll notice the gist. Yes this is an edge but not the entire edge. How fast can you sift through 15 time frames? How long does it take you to fill out your order ticket? Your Fibonacci time extensions with 5 EMA's and Bollinger Bands aren't helping you. They're lagging. If they work for you, great. In my experience, they hindered my visibility.


Pro Tip #9: Yes statistics are highly applicable to trading. Patterns do work. All patterns do is tell you WHEN to enteexit, and how many shares. Humans will never think differently of money. Be the frontrunner of the market's emotions. Nobody remembers the indecisive leader. Risk taking is a commonality amongst leaders. Trading requires courage and it's O.K. to show a bit of confidence as long as you also have the humility to admit when you're in a bad trade. (Notice how I didn't put, "wrong". You're only "wrong" when you deviate from a proven strategy.)


ProTip #10: Risk management is 24/7. I've never heard anyone mention this but think about it a little bit. Having financial obligations can become stressful regardless of how you earn your income but its far more stressful while running a business. Not just any business, but a business where you can go to work on your A-game, do every single last thing right, trade without emotion etc... and still walk away with less money than what you came to work with. Meanwhile somebody who JUST started trading made a 4 figure profit not knowing what the heck the difference between ETB, HTB, or NTB. Think of it like this, a JV high school baseball player can hit a homerun off of an MLB pitcher once.. but how will he fare at the end of the season? Traders don't predict stock prices, traders predict the outcome over hundreds of trades. People chat me asking what TO do rather than what NOT to do. You don't learn labor intensive jobs or how to fly a plane by what to do.. you learn what NOT to do to stay alive.

That's all I have. Once you have a trading plan underway and you're executing it, you don't have much time when your hobbies are cheap but I still do respond to chats/messages. I do get asked from a previous post when I'll build a website and to answer that: I'm learning how to build a site on rainy days. Can't put a definitive date on it. I will say that its coming, if you don't give up on this business in the next year or so, you'll see it. What I plan on putting on there:
  1. RiskReward Calculators
  2. Position size Calculators
  3. EV Calculator
  4. Dictionary with examples
I just don't want some generic WordPress site. I want my website to be stellar and a great resource for aspiring traders. Something I didn't have learning this business. I want it to be something I'd consider a staple in a trader's resources. Perhaps one day it will be referenced on this sub frequently.
FAQ:
  1. "How do you prepare for a trading day?" I get behind the computer about 20 minutes before the bell. Reason being: "If you study long. You'll study wrong". If the chart isn't grabbing my attention and gets me excited, then I flick to the next ticker. I don't even know the companies I trade half the time nor do I care about a news report some journalist wrote. Also there is no magic news outlet that lets you know about "Major events that affect stock prices". If there was, I wouldn't be here because we're all subscribed to the same edge nor would I be trading my style.
  2. "What would you go back to tell yourself?" Get more data. Save a little more, your hairline and sleep schedule will thank you. Take only perfect trades and don't feel forced to trade. There will be days you don't touch an order ticket. And days where you are busy and have tunnel vision. Next thing you know its time to shut it down for the day.
  3. "Books?" - I try to humble myself when answering this but off the cuff, they're all mediocre. Andrew Aziz's was ok, definitely get it, it's only a few bucks on Kindle. Just don't expect it to give you strategies BUT it will give you ideas. If you're brand new, it is good as it will teach you the common vernacular of a day trader. Mark Douglas was interesting but his YouTube seminar recordings are much better. No book, Facebook group, YouTube channel is going to be the end all be all perfect strategy. Expect losses. Don't be a one hitter quitter after suffering a few tiny losses/paper cuts. Stick to it. Most books will help you familiarize yourself with the common vocabulary amongst traders and will hint ideas. It's your job to formulate the strategy and template for research.
  4. "What is your background?" I was a logistics planner for a major oilfield services company. Later I then became a data/buyer analyst so yes, data analytics/research was a 2nd language for me entering trading. I did have that upper hand and did shave off months if not years for me.
  5. "What is a normal day for you?" I'm always done trading after 10:30AM Central. I will hold onto a trade until right before the bell if it hasn't hit either target or StopLoss by the time I leave the house but it is absolutely closed in entirety by 2:55PM Central. After I trade, I enjoy the day. No I'm not riding around in my Lambos posting IG/Snapchat (I have neither) stories of my profits with my private jet waiting on a runway trying to sell an $7 eBook or a $100 membership (HINT HINT). I grill/cook, read, workout, ride my motorcycle, attack my other sources of income (small businesses I'm building), hit the driving range, shoot guns, etc. I live in Texas. Life is cheap and fun here.
  6. "How did you discover your strategy?" I bought TradeIdeas premium, went through all of their computerized backtesting patterns, tested them. Then did what I mentioned earlier... Tried to find correlations in metrics. It distilled the trades to a strict criteria and here I am. I post on average 4-5 tickers on my watchlist. 7 max. I do not like spreading my attention thin across multiple tickers. I do not recommend buying TradeIdeas, it does have lots of bugs.
  7. "What did you do/How did you get started?" Was a data analyst, was good at research and applied it to trading. My incentive was, "I could have made more money trading rather than sitting in 2+ hours of roundtrip traffic and 9 hours in an office. The data is there. Everybody sees the same charts all over the world. There are ways to make this possible"
  8. "What is your % return?" (Not a fun question since a trading account is not an index or investment account. Intraday traders do not measure performance in %) I trade to make money AND pay myself, so my equity curve will look like a small loss or small gain after I pay myself. % return? I measure my account's performance in Sharpe Ratio and Risk Units. My Sharpe Ratio is ~1.85. While I yield roughly .8 - 1 R per trading day. Some weeks I make 10R. Some weeks I lose 2R. Yeah one week I might make $2,500. But the next week I might lose $300. The following week my strategy will yield $0 and the last week I might make $1,000. Some weeks suck. Some weeks are great. But overall. Just shy of 1R per trading day. Some days I'm super busy taking trade after trade. Some days I'll shut it down after 5 minutes without even filling out an order ticket. Some days I won't even see the open because there is no edge for me.. Keywords... "For me".
  9. "Is enough to start trading?" Depends on where you live. Are you restricted to PDT? If not then how much are you obligated to expenses? I live in Texas. Things are cheap here. If you live in NYC or The Bay Area your expenses will be astronomical compared to mine. A $30,000 account is totally doable for a single Texan with low monthly expenses. Now if you're in California or New York? I'm sure you'll fall below 25k if you have 1 bad month. Also depends on if you have other sources of income or a full/part time job. I encourage every trader and aspiring trader to have multiple sources of income, don't rely solely on trading. Not just for the sake of mitigating pressure but also for sanity. If you have a family to provide for, I don't know what that's like, you never know when Little Johnny is going to randomly pick up Trombone lessons for a school program/play while little Suzie needs transmission work in her car because a simple solenoid went out. $1,700 later.
  10. "Why do you need so many monitors?" I use 3 for trading. The 4th is for music. The other 2 are useless while trading. That's for trading though. When I made the decision to go full time, I knew I was about to go off the chain with research. And sifting between spreadsheets, a platform to see multiple timeframes for a pattern to backtest. My attention span is short, I'll lose my train of thought before I open the other tab to input data. But the main reason was for research. It's such a time saver and is a headache repellant when doing research while everything is laid out in front of you. Now that I have a system. I'll most likely be treating myself to 2 ultrawides for Christmas.
As always, thank you to everybody who takes time out to message me and letting me know some people read these and show appreciation. I would say, "Good luck" but there is no luck in trading. Just statistics. Remember that!
In conclusion: Yes. Full time trading is possible, depending where you live/monthly expenses and obligations. You're more likely to become a profitable trader than a professional athlete. There is a level of uncertainty each day, perhaps each week, doubtful each month, and definitely not each year. If I ever want a raise, I just consult my business plan and financials, then decide if I can handle it mentally. If you have medical issues, get a part time job for the benefits. If you're healthy, just be careful.

All the best!
-CJT2013
submitted by CJT2013 to Daytrading [link] [comments]

Sunset Spins Casino 100 free spins no deposit bonus code

Sunset Spins Casino 100 free spins no deposit bonus code

Sunset Spins Casino Free Spins & Welcome Bonus
Collect 100 no deposit free spins and 100% up to 100 GBP welcome bonus to Sunset Spins Casino! This exclusive offer is active for all new players from UK. Click on the promo link below and use special bonus code to qualify for all prizes.
>> Claim Free Spins Bonusese <

Sunset Spins Casino Review

Sunset Spins is the latest casino from Nektan and you can certainly see their fingerprints all over this beautifully designed site. The overall impression is one of a retro 80s California dream. The background features the silhouette of palm trees against a sunset sky with hues of purple, red and yellow. The logo mirrors this colour scheme, sitting proudly in the top left of the screen, while just below this a rolling banner shows the main promotions currently on offer.
If you’ve ever visited more than a few Nektan casinos the layout is one you should be familiar with. The website template is the same one they use for many of their other sites. Nektan obviously work by the old adage that if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. The bulk of the screen is filled with slots titles, with 32 smaller tiles and 2 large ones at the top. If this sounds overcrowded then don’t worry. Somehow they manage to squeeze a lot in on Sunset Spins and still give you room to breathe. It’s no mean feat but it’s a welcome one.

About Sunset Spins Casino

The Sunset Spins Casino is ran by Nektan Limited Casinos, a prolific group of casino operators and game developers who run Monster, Fortune Frenzy, Betreels and Reel Vegas. Perhaps the best known site they operate is The Sun Play, the casino site of the British tabloid newspaper. Nektan also have a deal with LeoVegas, providing their unique slots games for integration into the brand. Most recently the group signed a deal with Come Dine With Me to create a bingo site based on the popular UK TV show.
The group are ran out of Gibraltar under the regulation of the Gibraltar Gambling Commission and in the UK by UK Gambling Commission. A search for the company on the UK Gambling Commission’s website shows that Nektan have no recorded sanctions against them from the commission.

A Host of Developers

Sunset Spins is a site which not only offers a huge amount of slots and casino games to punters, but also offers games from a wide range of developers. Surprisingly for a company which develops its own games it doesn’t try especially hard to push its own content. At the time of writing the two featured games on Sunset Spins are Wild Wild West and Starburst, both of them from the excellent team at NetEnt. Other games featured include Moby Dick by MicroGaming and Pegasus by Inspired. Sunset Spins offer games from a total of 18 developers so there is plenty of variety to be enjoyed.
>> Claim Free Spins Bonusese <

Sunset Spins Casino Games

In the casino section of the site Sunset Spins finally pushes its own creations a little, with the top two titles of roulette and blackjack both being developed by Nektan. That’s not to say Nektan are your only options, the site also offers casino games from NetEnt, Realistic Games, Felt and Extreme Live Gaming. The live versions of casino games are provided by Extreme Live Gaming giving you the closest thing to a casino experience from the comfort of your home.

Sunset Spins Casino Bonuses

Sunset Spins has a 100% deposit match bonus for all new members up to the value of £10. If you qualify you also get 10 free spins worth a value of 10p per spin on Starburst. That means there is a total sign up bonus of £11 for all new members. This isn’t the best signup offer we’ve ever seen but it is still better than nothing at all. This bonus is also subject to a 30x wagering requirement so keep that in mind.
The site further has a win boost Wednesday offer. On Wednesday all winnings above your deposit figure are calculated and given a 10% boost. You must deposit a minimum of £10 on the day to qualify for the win boost but if you’re playing anyway this is not exactly a hardship. The win boost is capped at £50. The site has further offers and spin bonuses but most of these are capped at fairly low levels which gives the impression that Sunset Spins is aiming for a more cautious type of gambler, or one who only bets small amounts daily.
>> Claim Free Spins Bonusese <

Sunset Spins Casino Banking

Sunset Spins doesn’t have a dedicated banking page, but for most queries regarding finances the FAQ does a reasonable job of explaining what procedures the company follows. Sunset Spins accepts payment from a number of credit cards and vendors including: Visa, Mastercard, Neteller, Paysafe, Skrill, Trustly and Zimpler. The site further accepts payment from Boku, the payment services company which operates using your mobile phone number. This payment method allows you to pay for items by providing your mobile number and has the value of that payment added to your phone bill.
The maximum you can deposit into your casino account with Boku is £30 per day. Just remember that Boku payments are charged at 15% so only £25.50 of the payment is actually credited to your casino account. For all other deposit methods the casino has no charges. The company restricts punters to one withdrawal every 24 hours. The minimum withdrawal figure is £20 and the maximum is £2,000. Withdrawals may take 72 hours for the company to check before processing. As is often the case you need to provide photographic ID such as a driver’s licence as well as a utility bill to provide proof of address in order to complete some cash withdrawals.

Conclusion

Although Sunset Spins does not set itself apart from other casinos in Nektan’s catalogue, it is a very nicely produced and developed endeavour. The site looks gorgeous and while it cannot literally transport you to California’s sun-kissed coastline it does capture some of the feel of the OC. Although Nektan are an experienced operator of both casinos and games the site takes care not to push Nektan titles above all others. The range of titles on offer is excellent so there are plenty of options to keep your entertained.
A signup bonus at any site is always a welcome thing but at Sunset Spins the £10/£11 on offer does seem a little light. The inescapable conclusion is that Sunset Spins is a site that is aiming for low-rollers rather than high. Casino operators love small but consistent profits, much more than some punters realise. If you’re a little bit more cautious in your gambling and like to take the slow and steady approach then maybe a site like Sunset Spins could be ideal for you.
>> Claim Free Spins Bonusese <
submitted by freespinsmobile to u/freespinsmobile [link] [comments]

Kozmo Casino 10 free spins bonus no deposit required

Kozmo Casino 10 free spins bonus no deposit required

Kozmo Casino Free Spins and Welcome Bonus
Collect 10 free spins without deposit when you register as a new player at Kozmo Casino! Also, get a 100% welcome bonus after your first deposit to this casino. Play over 300 top-end games from Netent, Microgaming, Play n'Go, etc. This is one of the best UK slot websites!
>> Grab Free Bonus Offers Here <<

Kozmo Casino Review

Kozmo Casino is the newest online slot site in the galaxy and it is aiming to rocket right into your heart. Kozmo Casino is from the same people behind 888 Casinos, one of the largest and most recognised online casinos in the world. With that kind of backing you expect something pretty special and while Kozmo Casino may not be truly out of this world, it more than does the job.
Kozmo casino first launched into orbit on the 29th of September 2017 so it is a really fresh enterprise right now. The site has a notionally space theme which is mostly reinforced through Kozmic language and phrases rather than by any particular design elements. To be clear, the design of the site is functional and easy to navigate but it simply doesn't give credence to the idea that Kozmo casino is truly cosmic in nature. Instead its origins seem to have been a fairly standard website template from the planet known as Earth.

About Kozmo Casino

Kozmo Casino is operated by members of the 888 group and is headquartered in the fair island of Gibraltar. Specifically Kozmo is ran by Cassava Enterprises and Virtual Digital Services Limited which operate under a Gibraltar gaming license as well as 888 UK Limited which is regulated by the Great Britain Gambling Commission. The company is perhaps best known for their 888 casino and poker site which has been running since 1997. 888 has been the subject of a few large merger discussions including high street bookmakers William Hill and Ladbrokes but thus far nothing has come to fruition.
Kozmo Casino is crammed full of graphics and a rolling banner which showcases some of the main offers, promotions and benefits of the site. In that regard we might assume that some of the most pertinent and interesting information about Kozmo is featured there. Right now they boast that 300 slots are available at Kozmo, that you can play Kozmo from your mobile or tablet and that you can get up to 50 free spins a day. The more you play the more spins you get. The site further boasts that it only takes 2 minutes to sign-up so it isn’t overly taxing to get set-up and ready to play.
>> Grab Free Bonus Offers Here <<

Kozmo’s Banking

As always with online casinos and gambling sites it isn’t the signup process which is the most complicated aspect of the process, but rather the banking and withdrawal process. Kozmo casino makes it simple enough to see the payment forms it accepts with a list at the very bottom of the landing page. Visa, Mastercard, Neteller, Paypal and Entropay are amongst the types of payment accepted. When it comes to withdrawing sums of money Kozmo do a good job of explaining the process on their FAQ.
They are very upfront about exactly how long it takes for money to reach your bank account after a withdrawal. This depends exactly on how the money was deposited to Kozmo in the first place and varies from 3 days for Mastercard payments to 10 days for wire transfer. A good rule of thumb is is the payment will take 3-5 working days to reach you. Caution however, cheques issued by Northern Bank may take up to 21 days to clear for people outwith Europe. Best to avoid this deposit method if you need to collect any potential winnings in a hurry.

Kozmo Casino Bonuses

As with any online casino there are incentives for signing up and Kozmo offers a cash match bonus of £10 when you deposit £10. It further offers 10 free spins as part of the same offer. It is safe to say that this promotion may not excite more hardened gamblers, it seems designed to attract casual punters with a bit of something for nothing. For the casual crowd just beware a little, as you shouldn’t think about collecting that £10 bonus too quickly.
That £10 needs to be wagered a minimum of 35 times before it can be cashed out. If you have ever had a welcome bonus from one of the other sites in the 888 stable of casinos then you will not be eligible for a sign-up offer. The site further claims to have daily free spins with no wagering requirements but fails to go into any detail about how this process works.
>> Grab Free Bonus Offers Here <<

Plenty to Enjoy

Slots on offer at Kozmo casino include titles such as Irish Eyes, Jack and the Beanstalk, Jungle Spirit, Enchanted Prince, Starburst and Rainbow Riches - a slot UK punters will be familiar with from its ubiquity in high street betting shops. Some of the other titles appear a little more generic but in a total selection of over 300 slots that is to be expected. There is also an arcade looking 80s retro slot called Arcader and a slot tied to Casper the friendly ghost titled Casper’s Mystery Mirror.

Numbers and Forms

Kozmo casino makes a big play of being a supportive and helpful site. As well as accepting what they refer to as a constellation of payment methods they further enforce this by saying your details are thoroughly secure with them. In the UK they have a toll free help number between the hours of 9am and 1am, but for elsewhere in the world there is a form to complete in order to receive a response. Despite the fanfare regarding help and support this may take up to 72 hours to receive a response from. It is safe to say that the support side is not a 24/7 service for anyone who only deals with the firm through online methods.
>> Grab Free Bonus Offers Here <<

Kozmo Casino in Conclusion

As a fresh face in the online casino marketplace Kozmo does just about enough to distinguish itself from the rest. The space theme makes for a good working concept and this is followed through in the descriptions and wordplay on the landing page. Sadly, this level of effort has not gone into the graphical design of the logo or anything else here. The site is completely functional if nothing else.
With a £10 sign-up bonus and free spins the site doesn’t offer a huge amount of incentives for signing up so the main strengths seem to be a large array of video slots to choose from. The other plus point of the site is that the financial side of things seems safe and secure enough to give punters some confidence in what they are getting into. In a crowded marketplace of online casinos launching a new brand is quite an undertaking, especially if you want it to get really get noticed. With that being said the question remains whether Kozmo casino has enough escape velocity to break free of the atmosphere and launch into orbit or whether it will come crashing down to Earth with a bump.
submitted by freespinsbonus to u/freespinsbonus [link] [comments]

[PC][2000s] Game I played when I was a kid

I want to begin by saying I'm really sorry I remember so little. I posted this earlier this week but it didn't really go anywhere (probably because my description is AWFUL, the template in this sub helped somewhat with the clarity so this post I hope is better). I really want to find this game because I can't seem to get it out of my head.
I've asked my sister if she remembers what it was called (she also played it) but she only knew a few more details which I will mention below.
Platform: most likely some free to play games collection platform, similar to kongregate but probably not actually kongregate. My best guess is a swedish website with games for kids since I used to play on it as a kid. I played it on Mac. You did not need to download it. Genre: some kind of adventure game, singleplayer. It was 2D. Similar layout to old Mario games and similar platformers (although I'm not totally sure it was a platformer). I don't remember what the character you play as looks like. Estimated year of release: around early 2000s. I'm pretty sure it can't have been later than 2010. It didn't look like it was much older than 2000 but could probably also have been made sometime in the 1990s. Graphics/art style: I believe it was somewhat cartoony in style and pretty colorful. The thing I remember most clearly is a boss battle of sorts. You have to fight two very large (compared to the player character) humanoid figures, I think they are supposed to be humans but the art style is odd. They move as one character and they have one shared healthbar but they have two names. I want to say they were called siegfried and roy and it's possible that they were based on them. They had different looks and hair color, I believe one of them had darker hair and one was blonde. This boss scene most likely takes place in Vegas, my sister remembers casinos, I mostly remember neon lights/signs that remind me of Vegas. I believe the boss characters shoot lasers out of their eyes but that may have been a different boss. I also vaguely remember a boss fight against a sphinx, and I have a strong memory of the sphinx shooting laser out of it's eyes. I'm not sure if all bosses had this trait or if I'm getting things mixed up. Notable characters: I can't remember the player character but I'm pretty sure it was some sort of animal rather than a human. I might be completely wrong about this though. The only characters I remember clearly are the sphinx and the weird twins described in the previous category. I remember thinking they were a bit unsettling, they probably looked a bit creepy. Notable gameplay mechanics: this is probably what I remember least of. I basically only remember that you could move from side to side on the screen. I don't think the game had "depth", so you probably couldn't move "deeper into the screen" if that description makes sense. I believe the screen/background didn't move, so you moved between different static backgrounds. So like, run all the way to the right, poof you're in a new place. Other details: some of what I've written is guesswork so please suggest things even if some details are conflicting! My sister remembers snakes and that they were sitting. Like a cinnamon bun with a neck if that pose description makes any sense. I want to say you play as some sort of bigger feline, like a tiger or a leopard, because I have a really vague memory of it. This could also be completely incorrext :/ I'm sorry this post (and my English) is a mess. I'm really trying to remember what this game is and I've looked at the most likely websites if I could find it but so far no luck. This game is taking up all my brain power because I'm trying to remember it, please help me find it! Thanks in advance :)
submitted by Seiliko to tipofmyjoystick [link] [comments]

Getting your own deck printed by Shuffled Ink - a review

Getting your own deck printed by Shuffled Ink - a review

Playing Card Manufacturer: Shuffled Ink

The vast majority of custom decks of playing cards are produced by big printing companies like the United States Playing Card Company (USPCC), European-based Cartamundi, and Taiwan-based Expert/Legends Playing Cards. But there are some lesser known playing card manufacturers, and there are some good reasons why you should know about these smaller players in the playing card industry. Buyers will want to know what they can expect in terms of quality and handling of a deck printed by a lesser known publisher. But this will especially be of interest to creators of custom decks, because you will want to know what options you have for producing your decks besides the usual candidates. These smaller companies will especially be of interest to designers wanting to print a small run of prototype decks, or a number of decks of your own design for family or friends.
Companies like USPCC or EPCC/LPCC typically require a minimum order of 600-1000 decks, which quickly becomes out of reach if you're just printing a prototype or making a custom deck for relatives or workmates. As a result many designers typically turn to MakePlayingCards.com (MPC) for smaller scale projects like this. MPC is a printing and production company based in Hong Kong with a factory in China, and their strength is that they take small sized orders. Even if it's just half a dozen decks that you want printed, they'll do it for you. MPC's playing cards don't match the quality of a Bicycle deck in terms of handling, but they do offer playing cards with an embossed air cushion finish, and the quality is superior to budget printers like Artscow. As a result they are the printer of choice for many designers looking to print a dozen or so decks, since for many creators they are the option they know about.
So what about if I told you about another printer that offers a similar service? That playing card manufacturer is called Shuffled Ink, and it's even based in the United States. So let's find out more about them, and see if they are a viable alternative for those who might otherwise use MPC for printing their decks.

https://preview.redd.it/vab027z8ltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=56e7085af1732f76b005f614a00cc416f0072eed

The Shuffled Ink company

Shuffled Ink was previously known as QPC Games (Quality Playing Cards & Games) ahead of a rebranding that happened in 2016. Based in Orlando, Florida, the majority of their playing card products are printed at their United States printing and manufacturing facility. This makes them of immediate interest to North American consumers, because it means that there's real potential for reduced costs in shipping and delivery time. Some of the other things they produce (e.g. board games) are outsourced to China and shipped to the US for assembly, but aside from extremely high volume orders, nearly all their playing cards are printed directly in the United States. They also boast that they create products that are environmentally safe, since their materials are all safety-certifiable - something that can't always be said of the competition.
They have been in the business of professional printing and manufacturing for many years, with Charles Levin beginning the company on his dining room table in 1999. From there it grew into his three car garage the following year. After initially outsourcing all production, eventually in 2013 the move was made into the 8,000 square ft manufacturing facility that it is today, with over 20 employees. Growth continues, and there are plans to open a 17,000 square ft facility in the middle of next year. It's a family run business, with Charles taking care of marketing and sales, and his son Matthew running all domestic operations. Their clients include big names like Barclays, Verizon, T-Mobile, Disney, Google, Walmart, and World Poker Tour, so we're not talking here about a backyard operation run out of someone's garden shed, but about an established and respected printer. They describe their strengths as including the following: "An emphasis on our customer service, communications and responsiveness are huge added values when combined with our quality, best prices and turn around times."
Reports that I came across about the game components that Shuffled Ink produced under their QPC Games label were very positive. Printing custom board games is something they've been doing for around 20 years now, so they have a lot of experience in this area, and they've fulfilled many projects funded via Kickstarter. It's not just the game itself that they can handle, because their services also include taking care of producing any accessories that a board game might need, including tokens, dice, chips, spinners, timers, instruction books, mats, and boxes. This even covers custom pieces, so clearly they have access to a very broad production range. They're also moving more and more into providing fulfilment for customers as well.
But besides customized board games, Shuffled Ink also print cards, and that's especially my area of interest. I should mention that their printing of cards this isn't limited to traditional playing cards, because they also produce custom card games, custom flash cards, and custom tarot cards. In other words: anything card related, and they'll print it. Not surprisingly, they've manufactured millions of custom card games for customers and Kickstarter campaigns, along with whatever accessories and customization these needed. I didn't know there was a big market for flash cards, but apparently I'm wrong - it turns out that flash cards are very popular for many educational purposes, and are used for things like training employees, teaching new languages, educating children, or study purposes.
Tarot cards are a large but niche market that is somewhat separate from regular playing cards, but in the interests of completeness I'll mention that Shuffled Ink also produces fully custom tarot decks, using your own artwork or photography, with a minimum order size of ten. They are a member of the American Tarot Association, which gives them access to official tarot resources and materials, to ensure a thoroughly professional job. The printing on some sample Tarot decks that I looked at was clean, crisp, and impressive.

https://preview.redd.it/tv16rxy9ltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=a3cda9074123fd450cc449aa61857d0526daeb19

Shuffled Ink decks

Currently board games account for about 10% of Shuffle Ink's business, card games for 20%, tarot cards and flash cards for 20%, and a custom playing cards for a whopping 50%. These custom decks of playing cards that they print and produce is of special interest to me and most of my readers, so let's find out more about that.
Just about every option you can think of is available, and that's because Shuffled Ink caters to a wide range of customers with different needs. It turns out that it's not just collectors, card players, cardists, and magicians that like playing cards. Custom decks are extremely popular, and while they are sometimes produced as personalized items for the gaming industry, they are also printed for a range of other purposes including promotional giveaways, corporate and charity events, trade shows, wedding and anniversary gifts, and for all kinds of special occasions that a custom deck might commemorate and celebrate. Unlike other printers which have the requirement of an order size of 500 or more decks, Shuffled Ink lets you print as few as 5 decks.
Design
Given the diverse needs of their customers, it won't come as a surprise that Shuffled Ink offers lots of options for designing a deck. You can keep things very simple, by having standard faces, and using a single custom photo or graphic design of your own on the reverse of the cards. Or you can go fully custom, with individual personalized images on the front and back of each and every card. Using standard faces simplifies the process, because then it's just a matter of uploading your own design or photo for the card backs, which can be customized with additional text as needed.
If you want to do your own artwork from scratch, they provide a number of different templates for different sized cards, depending on whether you want to go with a poker-sized (2.5” x 3.5”) or bridge-sized (2.25” x 3.5”) deck. Templates are also provided for making the tuck box, which can also be a fully custom design of your own. If you need help, Shuffled Ink offers your first hour of graphic art support for free, and typically only charge for extensive work after that; for the most part their graphic support staff make themselves available to assist clients at no cost.
Stock
Several different options are available for the card stock, as well as two main options for the finish. As a magician, cardist, and collector, I'm mainly interested in paper cards, so I'll leave out the PVC and Plastic options that they offer, besides noting that these range from 28mm to 35mm in thickness, and have a 500 deck minimum. There's no such minimum for the two main paper stock options for playing cards, which are the 300gsm Premium Paper Stock (Smooth finish) or the 310gsm Casino Paper Stock (Linen finish). Most people with experience with playing cards will realize immediately that a smooth finish is the best for printing high resolution detailed artwork. A linen finish, on the other hand, is the one to opt for if you actually plan to use the cards for shuffling and games, because it has a textured and embossed surface that results in much better card handling, especially in spreads and fans.
You can get sample decks from Shuffled Ink to get an idea of what their playing cards look like, and the 310gsm stock is slightly denser and thicker. But both paper stocks have a black core to prevent you seeing through the cards when they are held up in the light. The 300gsm stock was more than adequate for a printed deck, but I'd definitely recommend going with the 310gsm stock if the deck is going to be shuffled and used extensively. The range of samples I had opportunity to check out included some cards with 330gsm stock. This is much thicker, and only suited to larger sized decks like Tarot cards and larger flash cards. Especially with the smooth finish, these certainly look great and feel snappy and durable, but for obvious reasons its not an option for a regular sized deck of playing cards.
Packaging
The range of different specialty packaging choices was much bigger than I ever expected. All decks come standard with the cards wrapped in cellophane inside the box - something that will be familiar to anyone who has opened a Cartamundi deck. If you want to go with something plain, you can opt for an ordinary white windowed tuck box or for a clear hard-plastic case (classic or jewel) which showcases the cards inside. The sample decks in plastic cases that I checked out were all packaged in a cardboard sleeve for added protection. Another option is a semi-clear soft-plastic gel case. Custom options include a completely custom printed tuck box, consisting of one piece, or two parts, as well custom painted tins.
Most of us will prefer a plain white tuck box if we're really looking to cut costs and just want to trial some cards. But for a more formal project, we'll likely opt for a custom tuck-box that incorporates our own design. Some of the sample boxes I looked at were very impressive, not just in terms of the custom printing, but I especially liked some of the solid two-piece cardboard boxes used for Tarot boxes.

https://preview.redd.it/tzyqq69dltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=58b9217c28a606e8fb4930b402d02d0f530b164b

My own experience in printing a deck with Shuffled Ink

The ordering process
So how about giving a complete first-hand account of an actual printing experience with Shuffled Ink? I did a collaboration with BottledMagic, who is a passionate cardist who makes impossible bottles, and had come up with a design for his own cardistry deck. Featuring a combination of orange and purple colours, and a low-poly art style, the deck was entitled Amberthyst Playing Cards. The name is an obvious play on amber and amethyst, the two main colours of the deck. He did all the design work, and my contribution was mostly going along for the ride, because we were both keen to see this deck in print, and see how it looked.
The process for getting a deck printed went fairly smoothly. First of all we had to create the files in the right format. A minimum resolution size of 300DPI was required for image files like JPEGs, but art created in Adobe Photoshop or Adobe Illustrator can be sent in its native format. Since our artwork was all created in Adobe Illustrator, we could just send the original files.
It's important to realize that printing uses the CMYK four-color process, which is typical for commercial printing. The RGB color mode you see on most computer screens is a three-color process that has to be converted to CMYK for printing. Where exact colours are essential, Shuffled Ink encourages you to send a physical sample of the colors required, so that they can attempt to color match as best as they can.
After finalizing the graphics files, we sent them off via email. Using a file-sharing service like Google Drive or Dropbox is another option that can be used to share the files. Within a couple of days I received an acknowledgement that the files had been been received, along with the promise that their art department would be in touch with proofs the following week.

https://preview.redd.it/wznjcgneltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=e613e76e20cf06888f32716b7386900cc1ecaf1c
Sure enough, a few days later, an email arrived with a final press proof for our order. We had to check this carefully and approve it, before our order would move into production. Attached were several PDFs, one with a mock-up of the tuck box, and two with mock ups of the cards. Why two? It turned out that our artwork had strayed slightly outside the recommended safe area, so there was a risk that the die cutting process would interfere with the art. The company thus provided two proofs, one showing the art exactly as provided, and a second proof with our art resized to fit within their specs. It was our choice to go with either, and we were grateful that we didn't need to re-do all the artwork because they'd done this for us already, so we went with the adjusted version they recommended.
Once we gave our approval, we became fully responsible for the accuracy of our proof in every way, which is completely understandable. Within a day we'd received email confirmation that they would proceed with the adjusted art as we had indicated. Now we just had to wait for the deck to be printed and shipped.
That's when a minor hang-up happened, because there must have been some internal miscommunication or oversight, and the decks didn't get sent out. After some time elapsed without receiving any kind of shipping notice, I inquired to see what the delay was, and their records didn't clearly indicate whether or not the decks had been shipped. Thankfully they promptly (re)printed them, put them in the mail with a rushed delivery, and our package arrived soon after.

https://preview.redd.it/4rbf4qgfltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=b3e392b3637e5c0b52846f5cb85136a394fb653e
The printed deck
So how did the deck turn out? Quite fine, thank you very much! We ended up with about one and a half dozen of our Amberthyst decks. The tuck box was a straight forward cardboard one, but having our own custom design on it made for a far more impressive presentation than a plain white box, and made the result look immediately more professional. We were even able to have printing on all the flaps, including the two side flaps which we used for a card reveall.

https://preview.redd.it/ocf17pkhltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=15683a5dc72d68d699ef6c3b0f9a0763a0c47441
There was even a thumb notch at the top of the box. There were also multiple fold lines enabling the main top flap to be folded backwards below the top of the box, making it much easier to get the cards out. This is standard for a high end playing card manufacturer, and playing card enthusiasts like me will be gratified to see this kind of attention to detail.
The cards themselves were fully wrapped in cellophane plastic inside the box - which is apparently standard practice for all decks produced by Shuffled Ink. Again, this makes for a more professional presentation, especially if you're giving a deck away as a gift.

https://preview.redd.it/amxb9ywhltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=c64ee9129ccad492f1df5fbae70d17f41766a538
The cards were very crisply printed, and the print registration was right on, with consistent and even borders all the way around, corresponding exactly to the original design. There are few things worse for a playing card enthusiast than opening a USPCC printed deck and finding misaligned borders, so it was pleasing to discover that there was no issue with that here. The colours were accurate, and the printing was very clean, with no signs of smudging or blurring.
The edges of the cards were cleanly cut, resulting in a smooth feel that matches what you'd expect from a deck printed by Taiwanese printers like LPCC/EPCC, and not the somewhat rough feel of a USPCC produced deck. Close examination showed that the edge of one of the cards was slightly more ragged, presumably from the cutting process, but this didn't really matter since it was the bottom card (a Joker), and it was only obvious when looking very carefully. This was only noticeable with some of the decks, and only seemed to affect the very bottom card in a minor way.

https://preview.redd.it/196rkdliltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=ebd0d80fb7bbb0f0fa7aba6c9a8d6a38c1ed5ff6
There are multiple printing options, and we had opted to print our deck using the 310gsm cardstock with Linen Finish. The main reason for this choice was because the 310gsm is the premium cardstock, and the 300gsm was a little too light for our personal requirements due to the cards being thinner, which is less than ideal for a deck used for card flourishing. I have seen some sample decks that used the 300gsm cardstock, but have to admit that I was pleasantly surprised, because the cards weren't as flimsy or thin as I was expecting. In fact those are probably fine for a novelty deck that you're mostly going to be looking at and not using intensively, but it's not ideal when you want decent handling and performance, especially for cardists.
We'd also had a few smooth finish decks printed as part of our order, so we could compare them. These smooth-finish playing cards are certainly fine for average use, but just won't spread or fan quite as nicely as the cards with the linen finish. But if looks are your most important criteria, and you're not too worried about fanning and spreading the cards, then the smooth finish produces the best visual results.
The cutting process must be different than what is used by the major playing card manufacturers, so don't expect to be able to do faro shuffles with a deck like this. But the cards have a pleasant thickness, and enough snap to be able to do a satisfying spring with no difficulty. The embossed linen finish was very pleasing, and is of a quality that matches that of MPC produced decks. Spreads and fans were fairly smooth, although I wouldn't be surprised to notice some clumping after extended use. Packet style card flourishes worked very smoothly, and riffle shuffles and overhand shuffles were more than comfortable. While this deck won't live up to the very highest and demanding standards required by an expert cardist, the performance and durability was more than acceptable for the needs of card games, and on par with a typical MPC printed deck.
The quality of our printed decks was certainly much higher than your typical souvenir deck. In fact the linen finish and 310gsm cardstock produced a quality that was above the components I've seen in many professionally produced board games and card games. It's certainly ideal for prototypes or for getting your own custom deck printed in cases where you're not in a position to mass produce a thousand or more decks with a big name playing card manufacturer.

https://preview.redd.it/g3hk9dyjltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8ef3ab09c98dbaf68841aa257de7666917ca51a0

Reports from others who have used Shuffled Ink

In terms of what others think, I've seen some mixed reports of experiences with Shuffled Ink, so I contacted a few other creators of custom playing cards to see what their experiences were like. Bear in mind that since many of these creators demand the very highest standards, which are often well above what the average person might consider acceptable.
Jackson Robinson of Kings Wild Project has printed with Shuffled Ink a couple of times. In the case of two projects, some reprinting proved necessary since the initial results weren't as expected, but there were positive reports about the final product. He personally favours the easy-to-use design interface of MPC and their speedy turn-around time.
Another large creator that I'm in correspondence with used Shuffled Ink to print prototypes for a large Kickstarter project. The decks weren't all sealed as requested and there was some damage to the tuck cases in transit. Some effort was needed on his part to get a good outcome, and this resulted in a somewhat lukewarm experience overall for him.
A different designer who used Shuffled Ink for producing three sets of prototypes indicated real satisfaction with the quality, turn-around time, customer service, and pricing. He reported that the cost of $3500 for 1000 decks with tuck cases was ideal for getting some momentum for projects with a smaller funding goal, and he was very pleased with the end product and the process.
The experience of yet another creator was also positive. He has printed several prototypes with Shuffled Ink, and reported being very happy with the response time of their communication, and the speed of delivery. In his view the quality of the prototype deck they printed compared very favourable to MPC printed decks. According to him, Shuffled Ink might well prove to be a better choice for US-based creators.
So there you have several other personal experiences to compare with my own first-hand report. If you have experiences with Shuffled Ink that you're willing to share, by all means comment below, to help ensure that other prospective customers are well-informed about what to expect. Overall in my estimation Shuffled Ink compares quite favourably with MPC, including their pricing, and the absence of many extra fees.

https://preview.redd.it/vg2itl2lltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=9e6278942cd4456bbb1abe1ba86f4d9bbeeda022

Printing your own deck with Shuffled Ink

So why might you want to consider printing a deck with Shuffled Ink? Firstly it should be mentioned that the quality of playing cards produced by Shuffled Ink won't match the high quality of decks produced in high volumes by industry leaders like the United States Playing Card Company, makers of the famous Bicycle brand. Magicians and cardists will notice that Shuffled Ink decks won't handle as smoothly, and you will notice this right away when shuffling, or attempting spreads and fans.
But the quality isn't terrible either, and it certainly is much better than what you'll get at your average printer. Unless you're planning to print 1000 or more decks, Shuffled Ink and MPC are your best bets for printing a decent quality product that won't look or feel cheap. Obviously it won't handle as smoothly as a top of the line cardistry deck printed in high volume by USPCC, and the cards won't slide quite as smoothly and cleanly. But it will handle much better than your typical souvenir deck, and last longer than your average grocery shop cheapie. What's more, you can expect the colours to look good, the print registration to be excellent, and the card stock to feel quite durable. It's a professional product in look and feel, and it's really only serious magicians and cardists who will demand the higher level of quality and handling possibly only with mass produced decks from the big playing card manufacturers.
Perhaps most important of all, with Shuffled Ink you can print a small number of decks, and for lower volume orders, these decks are about as good as you get anywhere. If you want to print a couple of dozen prototype decks, that quickly becomes an impossibility for most big publishers like USPCC and EPCC. At the very least getting them to trial a small number of copies will be an extremely costly business to the point that it's not worth bothering to do it. That's where printers like MPC and Shuffled Ink come to the rescue, because they'll let you print a few decks, while ensuring a reasonable turn-around.
Especially if you prefer to use a US based company, Shuffled Ink is ideal for the hobbyist creator. Perhaps you have a big project and want to scrutinize some prototypes before dropping large amounts of cash on a huge print run, or perhaps you just want to make a small number of decks for friends or family. Either way, Shuffled Ink is perfect for those situations. What they offer is a product that is of a quality that you won't find with your average printer, and yet that won't break the bank or only be possible with a minimum order of thousands of decks.

https://preview.redd.it/e7zcrfumltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=af6afc70017fae1c9ffc0cf19ae56caf1c5c3dd3

Final thoughts

Overall I'm impressed with the large range of options that Shuffled Ink has available, and despite a small glitch in the mailing process, my personal experience in printing a custom deck was positive, and the quality was good. It wouldn't be fair to expect the same level of quality and performance from a Shuffled Ink produced deck that I'm used to with a USPCC-produced deck. The main area where you can expect to notice the difference is in the handling. But if it's not a deck that's going to see intense use, this doesn't even really matter. Shuffled Ink would probably not be my printer of choice for decks geared for heavy usage or to meet the demanding needs of card flourishing or card magic. But they'd certainly be fine to use for card games, or for producing a novelty deck for collectors, or for a special event.
For those active in the playing card industry, the real strength of Shuffled Ink is their ability to produce small print runs and prototypes at a very low cost. That makes them a good alternative to MPC, which otherwise tends to be the printer of choice for people wanting to print their own playing cards in lower volume. The fact that they are based in the United States will also be a significant point of appeal for many people. With the help of printers like Shuffled Ink even you can become a playing card designer, and create your own decks to give away as gifts, or to add to your own collection as a one-of-a-kind piece!
NB: I do have a few extra copies of the Amberthyst deck available, so contact me privately if you are keen to have one for relatively cheap.
Where to learn more? Head to the Shuffled Ink website here, or check them out on social media (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Pinterest).

https://preview.redd.it/l2v2qz1oltp31.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=680bc8e81a797f2490700f28719d0e39d3c7c45b
submitted by EndersGame_Reviewer to playingcards [link] [comments]

PHP Script Casino Management System Online Casino Full Feature

[ Removed by reddit in response to a copyright notice. ]
submitted by Champion01 to u/Champion01 [link] [comments]

Advantages Of Choosing Casino Games From A Trusted Casino Portal

Many people tend to choose where to play casino games completely at random - perhaps by clicking a colorful and flashing banner at some website they have found while browsing, or by following a promotional link in an e-mail. Now, there is nothing wrong in signing up with a trusted online casino via their advertisements - not at all - however, the question is whether this behaviour is going to land the player with the best deal available for that particular casino? Also, are there perhaps any other considerations the player should keep in mind prior to diving in to just any casino game or website?
In this article we will discuss the advantages of choosing where to play casino games by visiting a trusted casino portal prior to playing. First, let us define what such a portal is. The term portal, when used in the context of the online web, is primarily a gateway providing useful links to many other websites. When used properly, a portal can provide essential information to the visitor about the topic of interest - and can also guide him or her to some recommended resources. This may save the visitor a lot of time and effort in evaluating the usefulness of the websites that they may come across. In this sense, the internet portal is very similar to the city tourist office where visitors come to find sightseeing attractions.
In the casino entertainment industry, portals are exclusively necessary and vital to the users as, quite frankly, there are simply so many casino games and gambling websites to choose from. By visiting an online casino portal, the player can quickly gather essential information on the games they would like to play and evaluate the reputation of a particular website in beforehand.
The true purpose of a good casino portal is to provide visitors and players with useful information - whether it has to do with the rules of the casino games (aka how to play), reviews of individual online casinos or poker rooms - or any other information on the subject that may appeal to the player.
One of the benefits of subscribing to the newsletter of a trusted casino portal, or by visiting it on a regular basis, is that players can stay updated with the latest offers provided by various online casinos. More often than not, casino portals have the ability to work out special deposit bonus deals with some of the casino operators which are exclusive to the portal subscribers. This way, the player may receive more in bonuses when signing up for a new online casino, rather than signing up via a random banner click elsewhere.
Of course, there are certainly many bad examples of casino portals available on the internet. These websites are often simple web templates stuffed with various casino banners and affiliate links, providing no valuable information to visitors whatsoever. Such websites should be avoided at all cost - a very common strategy for these websites is to plant tons of annoying pop-ups or redirections distracting the visitor. In worst case, they may even contain viruses or malware.
Luckily enough, most casino portals provide its users with an informative and enjoying gaming experience. By choosing to play casino games via a trusted casino portal, players can rest assure that they will get quality gameplay - probably also associated with the best deposit bonus deals available.
It isn't necessary to visit a casino physically you can visit a casino online here : 온카지노
submitted by Boomah422 to u/Boomah422 [link] [comments]

The James Bond Franchise Wrap Up

Greetings all! Many thanks to the countless people who contributed to 10 months of fantastic discussions about one of the most iconic (and one of my favorite) film franchises of all time. This is just a little recap/debrief/wrap up article where I'd love to get everyone's thoughts on the series as a whole. Additionally, I've done some more ranking and list making because it's fun and, let's be honest, there just aren't enough lists in the world! So let's open the discussion up and air out any final thoughts on the ongoing adventures of 007 & Co. Fair warning, I will use spoiler tags throughout my article for those of you who might not yet have seen Spectre, however be mindful of the comments.

Ranking the Movies

First thing's first. Here are all of my reviews and their assigned objective rankings.

Film Score
Casino Royale 94
GoldenEye 86
Skyfall 86
Goldfinger 85
On Her Majesty's Secret Service 82
The Spy Who Loved Me 80
The World is Not Enough 79
From Russia With Love 76
The Living Daylights 75
You Only Live Twice 73
Spectre (spoilers) 73
License to Kill 72
Dr. No 70
The Man with the Golden Gun 68
Quantum of Solace 68
Tomorrow Never Dies 68
Live and Let Die 66
Thunderball 61
A View to a Kill 59
Moonraker 59
For Your Eyes Only 55
Octopussy 48
Diamonds Are Forever 37
Die Another Day 30

For a fun little experiment, I wanted to see how I ranked them in comparison to other "Rank the Bond Film" lists. My sources included Rotten Tomatoes (based on their freshness rankings), IMDb (based on their user scores), Peter Travers (Rolling Stone), Forbes, Timeout New York, E! Online, Moviefone, AMC Filmsite, BuzzFeed, an /JamesBond thread, and MRQE. Here are the results.

First, I've organized them by release date and shown what their scores are on the various websites.

Second, I figured out the average score for each film with the highest and lowest score for each film thrown out to eliminate outliers (my scores are not included in this calculation) as well as determine the standard deviation for each film (i.e., how consistently each film was ranked).

Finally, here is a visualization of how each site ranked the films.

Some observations:

• No real surprises in the rankings. Casino Royale, Goldfinger, From Russia, and Skyfall all nabbed top spots. The World is Not Enough, Moonraker, and A View to a Kill took the dubious honor of bottom feeders.

• Skyfall was the most consistently ranked film (averaging spot #4 on most lists). License to Kill was the most inconsistently ranked film. No surprise either. Dalton's films split opinions upon release and have aged just well enough to be considered decent but still stand out in such a way as to turn some viewers off entirely. Without it's highest (3) and lowest (22) scores, LTK still ranked as high as 8 and as low as 22. So it was either a top-10 film or the second-worst.

• I still just don't get the hate for The World is Not Enough. Truth be told, this was the one film that actually inspired me to do all of this. I saw one or two lists that had it ranked so low. I had to see if there was anyone that agreed with me that it is actually a top 10 Bond film. Turns out there isn't. In fact, the closet I got was Moviefone who ranked it as #13.

• I don't know what Forbes is smoking. There is no way that For Your Eyes Only is the second greatest Bond film of all time. Lunacy. Similarly, I am shocked at Peter Travers' ranking for GoldenEye at 18 -- especially considering he then put Die Another Day at 10!!

• And speaking of DAD, I was legitimately surprised that it was generally considered to be a more middling film, rather than a universally hated one.

• This only confirms my belief that the Bond movies are some of the most divisive films of all time. This must surely be due to a variety of factors, not least of which is that a film series that spans 50+ years and that varies so greatly in tone from film to film will allow for people to have wildly diverse opinions of each era of film. It can all depend on which films they saw first or which ones they grew up with. I mean that sounds obvious, but just look at how much deviation there is from list to list. I mean no film came even close to receiving unanimous rankings across any of these platforms -- even Skyfall varied from 1 to 6.

Ranking the Songs

I also decided to take a look at one of the most fun aspects of the 007 franchise: the theme songs. I will be very up front about the fact that I am not a musician, I know nothing about musical theory, etc. I am just a layman, listening to these songs a few times over and making my general observations. Oh and it's worth noting that I did not include Dr. No on this list. The opening titles begin with the standard Bond Theme song, which since it was adopted into every other film I didn't feel like that really counted, and then transitions into a rendition of Three Blind Mice, which also doesn't count.

Ranking Song Artist Comments
23 For Your Eyes Only Sheena Easton Overly synth-y. Just another sappy love ballad. I just don't understand how this kind of songs was thought to be a spectacular start to a Bond film. Ugh.
22 All Time High Rita Coolidge Awful, schmaltzy saxophone intro. Same garbage as the previous three films (Spy Who Loved Me, Moonraker, For Your Eyes Only).
21 Nobody Does it Better Carly Simon Sounds like something you'd hear at 3am in a piano bar. Not sure what it's doing in a Bond film. Can't stand the vocals. At least this song has a decent band swell that picks it up a bit. The gentle cymbal tapping just reinforces the late night smooth jazz vibe.
20 Moonraker Shirley Bassey Starts small, stays small, never builds. Bassey's vocals are totally wasted here. She has the ability to be fierce and biting. Here, she's lackadaisical and boring.
19 Die Another Day Madonna Starts strong with tense strings and immediately dive bombs the second Madonna's disgustingly auto-tuned vocals kick in. Terrible lyrics ("Sigmund Freud" wtf?). A pandering piece of overproduced bubblegum crap.
18 Writing's on the Wall Sam Smith So disappointing. Following such a strong entry in Skyfall, the producers completely dropped the ball with Smith's "Writing." His vocals don't remotely fit with the tone of a proper Bond song. Cannot stand his breathy, whiny chorus. Ugh.
17 A View to a Kill Duran Duran If you can't tell, I'm not a huge fan of '80s music, so the heavy presence of synths in this song are tough for me to swallow, but at least this song has some life! Especially following the era of the lousy love ballads, AVTAK was a breath of fresh air. As a song by itself, not bad. As a Bond song, not the greatest.
16 The Living Daylights A-ha Another entry just dripping in '80s production. Still, it's got lots of energy. It's got some great builds and uses some awesome big band/brass elements that are reminiscent of the classic Bond songs.
15 License to Kill Gladys Knight Love Knight's vocals. She's got a great classic Bond feel. Love the intro. It feels sleuth-y, epic. Could definitely do without those breathy backup singers.
14 Live and Let Die Paul McCartney Great song. Terrible Bond song. McCartney is second to none, don't get me wrong. This song just isn't a great fit for the series. The reason it's not lower is that is has lots of promise until the 1:22 mark. And that damn fishing reel SFX is just so damn weird… Picks back up again, however it falters again at the 1:51 mark. The good aspects of this song are great. The bad are real bad.
13 You Only Live Twice Nancy Sinatra Exotic with great vocals. It's a bit sappy but it's got a nice use of strings to keep the song from getting too schmaltzy.
12 From Russia With Love Matt Monroe I'm rather conflicted about this one. It has a great exotic feel, it's got a good crooner, and the lyrics match the globetrotting feel. I just feel that there are stronger entries that offer a bit more energy.
11 You Know My Name Chris Cornell Hard to judge this one. Great piece of rock but again, I don't know if it really feels like a true "Bond song". At least it never devolves into a weird place like Live and Let Die. This one gets major props for incorporating the Bond theme heavily throughout and having a decent set of lyrics.
10 The Man with the Golden Gun Lulu I know I'm probably going to get some hate for this one, but hear me out. Great use of electric guitar and big brass band. The lyrics are rightfully criticized for being way too literal and silly (and the chorus is very weak) but Lulu's vocals are wonderfully dry, yet full of character. I especially love the swell at 1:38.
9 Another Way to Die Alicia Keys and Jack White Another entry that might get some criticism for being this high, but I truly feel that with one minor tweak, this song could have been considered one of the best. I love the piano and crunchy guitar intro. What I don't like is the duet. If this had been a Keys solo (with White handling the instrumentals), this could have been even stronger. I also really love the lyrics' discussion of paranoia and mistrust.
8 The World is Not Enough Garbage Another very strong entry. Shirley Manson's vocals are incredibly sultry. I positively love how striking the twanging guitar chords cut right through this hazy song.
7 Thunderball Tom Jones Take note Matt Monroe, this is how to croon during a Bond song. The song kicks in with a great use of the Bond theme at 0:35. The lyrics are total nonsense, however it all comes together and sounds so excellent. Jones' killer note at the end of the song is spectacular.
6 Tomorrow Never Dies Sheryl Crow This was a huge surprise for me. As I went through these songs, I never would have thought of putting TND this high, but listening to it, I can't get enough. Throws everything in from the thundering opening, to the big drums, the bell, the jangling guitar, and the piano. Crows vocals are positively electric. Her performance is every bit sultry, sexy, and scorned. Excellent!
5 Diamonds Are Forever Shirley Bassey Forget the movie, I could just listen to this song for 2 hours instead. The opening notes are mysterious, the big band is perfect (with plenty of classic Bond brass). The drop at the 1:21 mark is fantastic. And of course, Bassey's vocals are as iconic as they get.
4 On Her Majesty's Secret Service Theme John Barry (composer) Okay so this one isn't really a theme song in the sense that these other songs were but how could I pass on it? This is perhaps one of the single greatest musical compositions of the series outside of the Bond Theme. The buzzing guitar and deep, thumping bass are totally badass.
3 GoldenEye Tina Turner Almost perfect. Sexy, mysterious, lurking, with excellent vocals and brilliant lyrics. Little moments like the Bond theme slinking in at 1:40 are just perfect.
2 Skyfall Adele I absolutely, positively adore the chilling piano intro. Adele's vocals are exquisite. I love the slow, warbling guitar (1:00), the somber strings, the huge builds, and the use of the brassy Bond theme at 1:51. The whole thing gives me chills, especially as it starts and ends on that beautiful brass note.
1 Goldfinger Shirley Bassey Surprise, surprise. It just simply does not get better than Goldfinger. This is the quintessential Bond song, the standard to which all other songs are held. The big brass band, the strings, and the vocals are all just a bit silly, just a bit sexy, totally iconic, and catchy as all hell.

Ranking the Villains

I came up with a little system for ranking the Bond villains. I determined that a good villain should have a proper plan, should be generally villainous (cruel, mad, etc.), intimidating, competent, and charismatic (or at least have a decent, definable personality). Regarding one of the series’ few recurring villains, I elected to rank Blofeld several times, one for each appearance in a different film. With that in mind, here are the Bottom 5 and Top 5 Bond villains. The full list including the scores for each category can be found here (Spectre spoilers in slot #21).

Worst Bond Villains

Rank Villain Film Plot Comments
27 Gustav Graves / Col. Moon Die Another Day Destroy S. Korea via space laser Written as if a 12 year old came up with a Bond villain. Terrible plan, never truly intimidating, and the whole DNA replacement and "I modeled him after you" bit is completely stupid.
26 Aristotle Kristatos For Your Eyes Only Retrieve the ATAC device in order to control Soviet missiles, trick 007 into assassinating Colombo Bland, boring, forgettable.
25 Brad Whitaker The Living Daylights Sell opium as a means to finance his arms trading I applaud the realism of his plot, however the character is just so damned annoying. Baker plays the American General as a complete buffoon. And the whole wargame angle is weird.
24 General Orlov Octopussy Destroy NATO relations by detonating a bomb in a foreign Air Force base Another fairly forgettable character. Berkoff portrays the General as an almost Dr. Strangelove-esque wacko.
23 Ernst Stavro Blofeld Diamonds Are Forever Destroy nations' nuclear missiles with a space laser if they refuse to give in to his ransom demands The weakest of all of Blofeld’s various plots. Mostly, this iteration is ranked so low on account of Charles Grey’s portrayal. He’s insufferable, lacks any real intimidation, and the whole army of clones and voice changing devices are all just too campy for my taste.

Best Bond Villains

Rank Villain Film Plot Comments
5 Ernst Stavro Blofeld On Her Majesty’s Secret Service Brainwash women (Angels of Death) and use them as pawns in bacterialogical warfare Okay so the plan is a little bizarre and Savalas’ portrayal might not be as iconic as the one in YOLT, however this is Blofeld at his peak. He is menacing, sinister, and intimidating. The whole lineage angle is unique and gives a little bit of humanity to what has been an otherwise flat character.
4 Alex Trevelyan (Agent 006) GoldenEye Exact revenge on England by robbing the national bank just before destroying digital records (via electromagnetic pulse from satellite) Sean Bean performs beautifully as the MI6-agent-gone-rogue. His revenge mission plot is a wonderful balance of maniacal, villainous, and realistic.
3 Auric Goldfinger Goldfinger Devalue US gold stock by detonating a bomb inside Fort Knox gold reserve Bond himself remarks how brilliant Goldfinger’s plan is upon hearing it. I’m going to refrain from making any “gold standard” jokes, but Goldfinger is seriously one of the best. Cunning, proud, coy, greedy, and downright evil.
2 Le Chiffre Casino Royale Make money by shorting airline stocks through planned terrorist attacks Le Chiffre is one of the most fascinating villains in that he is a man driven by desperation and fear more than a god complex or a desire to destroy humanity.
1 Francisco Scaramanga The Man with the Golden Gun Steal solex agitator, assassinate 007 Christopher Lee’s Scaramanga is the perfect blend of flamboyant charisma, fierce intellect, and pure skill. The dinner scene between Scaramanga and Bond remains one of my all time favorites.

Honorable mentions go to Skyfall’s freakishly relentless Raoul Silva, Spy Who Loved Me’s megalomaniac Karl Stromberg, World is Not Enough’s coldly calculating Elektra King, Dr. No’s Dr. No for setting the template, and Moonraker’s surprisingly enjoyable Hugo Drax.

Ranking the Bond Girls

I came up with a similar method of ranking one of the other pillars of any good 007 film: the Bond Girls. For this category, I rated each Bond Girl by their intellect (general intelligence), competence (how skillful they were at their profession or tasks), initiative (do they just sit around and wait for Bond to tell them what to do or not), utility (do they have a direct impact on the story or are they just sort of there for show), and (yes I am aware of the hypocrisy here) beauty. This was a somewhat difficult list to assess, as the concept of a Bond Girl is rather loose. For example, in Skyfall, Bond seduces Severine, however she is in the film for such a brief period of time and her impact on the story is so minimal, that it didn’t even seem right to try and rank her based on these categories. Then of course there are any number of throwaway characters that Bond simply sleeps with or converses with briefly that are occasionally viewed as “Bond Girls”. Think of the iconic gilded Jill Masterson from Goldfinger. You might be aghast that she isn’t on the list, but she is such a small portion of that film (especially compared to her sister, Tilly), that it didn’t even seem worth it to place her on here, despite her image being plastered on every piece of promotional material for Goldfinger. So this is my best attempt at determining who is a Bond Girl and how they rank. The full list including category rankings can be found here.

Worst Bond Girls

Rank Girl Film Comments
33 Rosie Carver Live and Let Die Perhaps the most miserable character in the series. I couldn’t help but give her the only 0 of this entire exercise for Competence. She whines and cries to a man she just met because she isn't a good CIA agent. She’s not useful, not talented, and utterly annoying. And the one time she finally acts proactively, she is condescendingly mocked for misreading Quarrel Jr.’s allegiance.
32 Mary Goodnight The Man with the Golden Gun Vapid, irritating, pathetic, almost entirely useless. She’s easily captured and even chastised for her one contribution: killing a guard. And of course there’s the infamous scene in which any dignity she might’ve had evaporates as she’s shoved in a closet while Bond and Andrea Anders have sex.
31 Tiffany Case Diamonds Are Forever Another worthless character who adds little to the plot. She is given a rare instance of initiative at the end of the film and it turns out that in doing so, she completely screws up Bond’s plan. Oh also, her dialogue is completely insufferable.
30 “Dr.” Christmas Jones The World is Not Enough Another character written to be skilled and intelligent, but portrayed by a woman who cannot convincingly pull off either. Her role in the film becomes little more than a tagalong with weak excuses being provided for why she’s still around. She also turns into the second instance of Bond’s magical ability to turn lesbians straight.
29 Stacey Sutton A View to a Kill Same deal as Jones, the character is written to be intelligent, but the actress doesn't sell it one bit. She tends to fail at everything she attempts, and Bond completely disregards her and forces her to become a damsel in distress throughout their time together. She becomes a complete tagalong after a while.

Best Bond Girls

Rank Girl Film Comments
5 Elektra King The World is Not Enough Cunning, fierce, intelligent (though blinded by rage), she is absolutely integral to the plot, her actions are her own and she even acts as the puppetmaster for a wide range of people.
4 Camille Montes Quantum of Solace Not necessarily particularly intelligent per se, but highly skilled and motivated by her well formed backstory. QoS actually provides a rare instance of Bond screwing up her plans, though she bounds back quickly. Extra points for killing one of the film’s villains.
3 Pussy Galore Goldfinger The biggest downfall for Galore is her lack of integrity during the scene in which Bond apparently rapes her straight. Aside from that terrible scene, she is a fantastic character. She gets the drop on Bond multiple times, verbally spars with the best of them, and orchestrates a hugely important aspect of the film’s ending.
2 Teresa di Vicenzo On Her Majesty’s Secret Service It pains me not to be able to give her a perfect score, however she does have her downfalls. She really ultimately is just sort of going along with her father’s plans and when she’s captured, she reverts into a fairly standard damsel in distress. Aside from that though, her beauty and intelligence are almost without parallel.
1 Vesper Lynd Casino Royale The only character in this whole exercise to receive a perfect score. The single most well-rounded character of the entire series. Highly intelligent, witty, sharp, sly, plays her own game, acts of her own accord with her own motivations, integral to the plot — oh and stunningly gorgeous.

Honorable mentions go to Spy Who Loves Me’s crafty and skilled Anya Amasova, Die Another Day’s coldly independent Miranda Frost, You Only Twice’s Aki who saves Bond’s butt on more than one occasion, Tomorrow Never Die’s devil may care Wai Lin, and License to Kill’s rough and rowdy Pam Bouvier.

Ranking the Bonds

And of course there’s the ranking of the Bond actors. Everyone has an opinion that varies greatly from the last. Heck, I’ve already changes my mind three times as I’ve sat here writing this. Each actor is so wildly different and they all come from such unique times that it’s almost impossible to try and fairly compare them. And then of course there’s the struggle of trying to give each actor a fair shake when their films have varied so greatly in quality and number. But I will try to do my best.

Rank Actor Films Years Active Comments
6 Roger Moore 7 1973 - 1985 Easily the worst in my opinion. I never bought him as an assassin. I never bought him as a seductive gentleman. His humor was mostly lost on me. When they tried to get him to be rough and tumble in TMWTGG when he’s interrogating Anders, he just seems abusive. He also had the worst string of films to deal with and was kept on as Bond for far too long. Too few upsides.
5 George Lazenby 1 1969 This ranking is really misleading, as I actually LOVED Lazenby as Bond. I felt that he completely captured the crass attitude and unbridled swagger. I would frankly consider putting him as high as #3, however Lazenby’s biggest downfall is his lack of clout. He just wasn’t Bond long enough to get a decent gauge of how he really fit into Bond’s shoes.
4 Sean Connery 6 1962 - 1967, 1971 Blasphemy! Just because he was first doesn’t mean he was the best. He laid the groundwork and managed the suave nature and action better than some, however his characters never really felt like they had any depth to them. Mostly he is severely handicapped by his lackluster performances in YOLT and DAF.
3 Timothy Dalton 2 1987 - 1989 Ah Dalton, the Bond we needed but didn’t deserve. Dalton’s career was similarly too short. I considered giving him the #4 spot under Connery for this purpose alone, but I really feel like he did enough in his two films to establish what kind of Bond he was and would have continued to be. The dark, brooding exterior occasionally gave in to flashes of real charm and even caring. The humor could have used some work, but the action and especially the suave, high-class nature fit him perfectly.
2 Daniel Craig 4 2006 - present Craig’s performance in Casino alone would have been enough to push him into first place, however he’s had kind of a bizarre run of films since then. The stories have set him up to just be continually cantankerous and sullen. I have him in the #2 spot temporarily, depending on how the rest of his run as Bond goes. If he is able to do more films and is able to continue to regain his wit from Casino and to continue his arc from brutish thug to refined gentleman assassin, I feel the #2 or even #1 spot could be his.
1 Pierce Brosnan 4 1995 - 2002 It was equally difficult to call Brosnan the unequivocal best. His run is sadly marred by a series of mediocre and downright bad films. That said, his performance in GoldenEye is probably one of the best in the series. Brosnan is able to pull off every aspect of what makes Bond Bond with ease. He nails the humor, he looks like he belongs in a tux, and he appears entirely at ease when in the midst of a tense shootout or car chase. He even totally sells a few small moments throughout the series that required him to appear frightened, surprised, and vulnerable.

Naturally there is so much more I could discuss (favorite gadgets, favorite moments, favorite henchmen), but I suppose I should save something for the lead up to Bond 25, eh? A sincere thanks once more to everyone who joined me for the discussions over the past several months. Cheers!
submitted by sdsachs to TrueFilm [link] [comments]

Subreddit Stats: edmproduction top posts from 2015-08-29 to 2016-08-26 20:21 PDT

Period: 363.73 days
Submissions Comments
Total 1000 46215
Rate (per day) 2.75 126.78
Unique Redditors 716 8973
Combined Score 90094 157239

Top Submitters' Top Submissions

  1. 1975 points, 9 submissions: Composing_Gloves
    1. Music Theory From The Ground Up (918 points, 89 comments)
    2. Learn FM Synthesis! (372 points, 67 comments)
    3. Learn Harmor From The Ground Up Complete! (191 points, 42 comments)
    4. Kontakt From The Ground Up Complete! (178 points, 35 comments)
    5. Sound Design with Sytrus (129 points, 25 comments)
    6. Just Finished FM8 From the Ground up! (68 points, 26 comments)
    7. "Rip It" Free Sample Pack (56 points, 4 comments)
    8. Finished "Massive from the Ground Up" tutorial series! (34 points, 14 comments)
    9. Sound and Synth Basics (29 points, 2 comments)
  2. 1254 points, 9 submissions: FanuBreaks
    1. Advice for young producers (593 points, 74 comments)
    2. I did a little video on D&B breakbeat fundamentals. This is basic stuff, but maybe you can learn something. I will make more an dget deeper. This is all free, so feel free to share. Hit me up with questions if you want. (158 points, 17 comments)
    3. Creating a lush pad with Serum in 15 seconds (107 points, 27 comments)
    4. Post one FREE plug-in you use all the time (94 points, 127 comments)
    5. The plugins I like and use the most (lengthy blog post) (77 points, 23 comments)
    6. Drum Tip: tighten up the sound of your breaks by using a multiband gate (73 points, 32 comments)
    7. About compressing a song (70 points, 59 comments)
    8. Synth bas(s)ics: a quick video on how to do boom/808 bass with Serum (51 points, 13 comments)
    9. "How can I become a mastering engineer?" "What school/course I attend to become a mastering engineer?" (31 points, 12 comments)
  3. 1121 points, 16 submissions: SeamlessR
    1. SeamlessR 100k Collaboration (166 points, 180 comments)
    2. Carnage and Razer (146 points, 232 comments)
    3. Production Basics 15: Drop Arrangement (119 points, 16 comments)
    4. How To Bass 146: Heavy Distributed Harmonics (118 points, 11 comments)
    5. SeamlessR Viewer Track Reviews are back (97 points, 58 comments)
    6. How To Bass 152: Harmonic Phaser Growl (76 points, 19 comments)
    7. How To Synth 10: Bells (59 points, 17 comments)
    8. Preset Packs, Construction Kits, and "Cheating" (56 points, 45 comments)
    9. How To Bass 138: Twisty Growl (47 points, 11 comments)
    10. How To Bass 151: Lots and Lots of Modulation (40 points, 4 comments)
  4. 1098 points, 10 submissions: thebossXI
    1. Mixing Engineer for Major Lazer's "Too Original" explains how approached mixing/mastering the track (288 points, 23 comments)
    2. 9 Mixing Mistakes And How To Avoid Them (166 points, 47 comments)
    3. Hanz Zimmer has made a Kontakt library (153 points, 88 comments)
    4. NYTimes "Music Producers Explain How They Created a Hit" talk about The Chainsmokers, Flume, and Clams Casino on production (110 points, 16 comments)
    5. Greg Kurstin, producer of Adele's "Hello", talks about his process using Logic Pro X on Apple's website (94 points, 48 comments)
    6. edmproduction now has over 70,000 knob twisters! (88 points, 10 comments)
    7. FL Studio 12.3 | What's New? (74 points, 62 comments)
    8. Documentary with Waves Audio, explaining some of the philosophies they have when creating their amazing plugins (52 points, 12 comments)
    9. Noah '40' Shebib on producing Drake's music. Not EDM but pretty interesting in philosophy and workflow (45 points, 19 comments)
    10. Kshmr gives feedback to submissions to his contest. I found some of them really helpful with regards to mixing, how to keep a melody interesting etc. Worth a read! (28 points, 6 comments)
  5. 1083 points, 4 submissions: silentedge92
    1. How to Write Better Music - 3 Key Mindsets to Improve Your Music Production Skills Faster Than Most (387 points, 43 comments)
    2. Not 100% EDM related but: for those who want to learn a bit of Orchestration, I made a one hour long tutorial of a Hans Zimmer-ish / Epic Orchestral Trailer track I wrote in FL Studio (370 points, 51 comments)
    3. How to Make Your Strings Sound Realistic and Full (199 points, 34 comments)
    4. How to Overcome Writer's Block - Why We Get It, and Four Strategies to Use When It's Too Persistent (127 points, 18 comments)
  6. 1044 points, 13 submissions: DJVeaux
    1. A GREAT website for Music Theory (206 points, 30 comments)
    2. How To Make Better Music Faster (191 points, 76 comments)
    3. Theory & Arrangement | Zedd - Spectrum (169 points, 25 comments)
    4. A Few Quick Tips On Making Better Melodies (101 points, 76 comments)
    5. Great Production Tutorial From Laidback Luke (82 points, 51 comments)
    6. How I would've developed an ear for sound design if I had to start from the beginning (52 points, 21 comments)
    7. How To Create an Audien-style Track (51 points, 17 comments)
    8. Free eBook to help you guys tackle writers block, creating better quality music quickly, and much more (37 points, 23 comments)
    9. Anjuna Supersaws Tutorial - It's All About The Voiceleading (36 points, 32 comments)
    10. What Did You Learn This Month - October 2015 (34 points, 67 comments)
  7. 902 points, 3 submissions: gbgroshi
    1. Learn How to Play Chords on the Piano Like a SingeSongwriter in less than 8 Minutes (Powerful Youtube Video) (570 points, 72 comments)
    2. Learn How to Accompany Yourself on Piano with Two Fundamental Rhythm Patterns! (Less Than 7 Minute Youtube Video) (167 points, 21 comments)
    3. Learn Basic Chord Progression Formula to Write Songs from Scratch (Less than 7 Minute Youtube Video) (165 points, 21 comments)
  8. 859 points, 7 submissions: triplewub
    1. deadmau5 opens Faxing Berlin, Arguru, and Careless project files (282 points, 103 comments)
    2. Ableton hiring UI designers for the 'next generation of Ableton products'. (134 points, 56 comments)
    3. 'Fucking Loud Mastering' (Legitimately worth a watch) (121 points, 13 comments)
    4. 15 year old disabled artist using his feet to produce music (116 points, 36 comments)
    5. DNB producers - Samplephonics are giving away free high quality DNB drums. (113 points, 29 comments)
    6. Thoughts on Bitwig nowadays? (65 points, 127 comments)
    7. My HS8s are picking up radio signals and it's creeping me the fuck out (28 points, 35 comments)
  9. 846 points, 2 submissions: BuhDan
    1. I Brought a Live Drummer Into the Studio and made a 5gb Sample Pack with Beats for you Guys! (664 points, 101 comments)
    2. Here's Another 2gb of Drum Grooves! & A Subreddit! (182 points, 16 comments)
  10. 825 points, 4 submissions: CaptnWillie
    1. Everything you'd EVER need to know about REVERB (520 points, 38 comments)
    2. Back with EVERYTHING you need to know about GATING. (207 points, 71 comments)
    3. Huge tip for working with sampled audio / vocals (67 points, 27 comments)
    4. Free Hyped Massive Presets! Merry Christmas! (31 points, 1 comment)
  11. 798 points, 1 submission: swat24
    1. Lennar Digital laying down the law on Carnage using a cracked copy of Sylenth1 (798 points, 309 comments)
  12. 635 points, 7 submissions: SynthHacker
    1. How to Craft Your Ideal 808 Style Trap Kick using Massive (196 points, 38 comments)
    2. Great Flume Style Keys Template with Xfer Serum (111 points, 22 comments)
    3. How to Make a Louis The Child Wobble Synth with Xfer Serum (104 points, 26 comments)
    4. How to Make Unique Squelchy Trap Leads With Serum (71 points, 12 comments)
    5. Great Template for a Tycho / Boards of Canada Lead with Massive (51 points, 30 comments)
    6. Great Future House Lead Template with Xfer Serum (Tchami/Curbi/Oliver Heldens) (51 points, 19 comments)
    7. How to Make Shiba San's 'OKAY' Bass With Massive (51 points, 7 comments)
  13. 618 points, 1 submission: SevenLionsMusic
    1. I am Seven Lions, AMA (618 points, 373 comments)
  14. 593 points, 3 submissions: Marshmcgee
    1. (FREE download) Kick / Snare sample pack I've been working on for 4 years. (485 points, 79 comments)
    2. IDM Huge Bass Growl Drop Tutorial (by request yesterday)! (65 points, 27 comments)
    3. Marshall McGee here, back again with another sound design tutorial. This time we're tackling serum and growls. AMA! (43 points, 16 comments)
  15. 584 points, 3 submissions: paco_vermeulen
    1. Free chord progressions pack + how to compose interesting chord progressions yourself :) (325 points, 96 comments)
    2. HOW TO: use the 7 church modes to create different (non-western) sounding EDM melodies [video] (132 points, 35 comments)
    3. HOW TO: use the pentatonic scales to build an interesting progression with a melody on top [video] (127 points, 27 comments)
  16. 561 points, 8 submissions: VOLTDOGmusic
    1. Music Theory for complete beginners, first part of a video tutorial series on making melodic dubstep (185 points, 37 comments)
    2. Mixing Kick and Sub for dubstep/trap+bass heavy music (85 points, 17 comments)
    3. Creatively Shaping Reverb with Compression like Mark Sixma, MaRLo and W&W (64 points, 32 comments)
    4. Using music theory to build a chord progression, Part II of video series on making melodic dubstep (60 points, 18 comments)
    5. How to make Trap 808s from Scratch. And some free homemade 808 samples. (59 points, 10 comments)
    6. Building Big Lush Supersaw Stacks for Trance and Melodic Dubstep. Ableton Live 9 Set included (46 points, 28 comments)
    7. Using a Harmony to build a Melody and Bass line. Part III of a tutorial series on making melodic dubstep (36 points, 6 comments)
    8. Creating a Riser, Pad and Drone with Resampling a Reverb (26 points, 8 comments)

Top Commenters

  1. Ametrine08 (1218 points, 245 comments)
  2. 3agl (1134 points, 253 comments)
  3. SevenLionsMusic (789 points, 39 comments)
  4. mfEDM (741 points, 200 comments)
  5. DJVeaux (732 points, 74 comments)
  6. ofoot (730 points, 186 comments)
  7. stereo16 (678 points, 212 comments)
  8. miquelpedro (656 points, 144 comments)
  9. CaptnWillie (634 points, 60 comments)
  10. steve_duda (615 points, 37 comments)
  11. Holy_City (613 points, 118 comments)
  12. triplewub (580 points, 124 comments)
  13. yayger1 (568 points, 198 comments)
  14. bambaazon (527 points, 195 comments)
  15. boredjim8 (463 points, 160 comments)
  16. TheRealLunicuss (446 points, 60 comments)
  17. djsputty (444 points, 50 comments)
  18. SeamlessR (440 points, 76 comments)
  19. GunslingerJones (422 points, 78 comments)
  20. TranscodedMusic (412 points, 74 comments)
  21. dark_cat (412 points, 31 comments)
  22. droptopus (396 points, 61 comments)
  23. Lizard771 (395 points, 64 comments)
  24. Aerocity (378 points, 55 comments)
  25. asphyxiate (377 points, 107 comments)
  26. retroshark (376 points, 80 comments)
  27. c_o_r_b_a (366 points, 107 comments)
  28. Aurelleah (350 points, 119 comments)
  29. technicolorcoat (345 points, 101 comments)
  30. SavingPrincess1 (345 points, 17 comments)
  31. ioncehadsexinapool (340 points, 106 comments)
  32. T-Nan (338 points, 129 comments)

Top Submissions

  1. Music Theory From The Ground Up by Composing_Gloves (918 points, 89 comments)
  2. Lennar Digital laying down the law on Carnage using a cracked copy of Sylenth1 by swat24 (798 points, 309 comments)
  3. I Brought a Live Drummer Into the Studio and made a 5gb Sample Pack with Beats for you Guys! by BuhDan (664 points, 101 comments)
  4. I am Seven Lions, AMA by SevenLionsMusic (618 points, 373 comments)
  5. Advice for young producers by FanuBreaks (593 points, 74 comments)
  6. Learn How to Play Chords on the Piano Like a SingeSongwriter in less than 8 Minutes (Powerful Youtube Video) by gbgroshi (570 points, 72 comments)
  7. Everything you'd EVER need to know about REVERB by CaptnWillie (520 points, 38 comments)
  8. (FREE download) Kick / Snare sample pack I've been working on for 4 years. by Marshmcgee (485 points, 79 comments)
  9. In all my years of producing, I've never come across a video that explains compression as intuitively as this! by IHURLEN (450 points, 64 comments)
  10. Music Theory Checklist for Producers by Sneaky_Ben (425 points, 86 comments)

Top Comments

  1. 448 points: CaptnWillie's comment in Lennar Digital laying down the law on Carnage using a cracked copy of Sylenth1
  2. 315 points: DJVeaux's comment in What's the Wilhelm Scream of EDM?
  3. 227 points: SavingPrincess1's comment in How To Make Better Music Faster
  4. 210 points: lurchh's comment in I am developing a self-learning AI to write music - Please submit midi files!
  5. 188 points: rindyy's comment in Tinder for samples
  6. 178 points: chiko9090's comment in Lennar Digital laying down the law on Carnage using a cracked copy of Sylenth1
  7. 176 points: The_Dead_See's comment in Misinformation
  8. 165 points: deleted's comment in Why does Monstercat have such a substantial presence on reddit?
  9. 161 points: miquelpedro's comment in Misinformation
  10. 161 points: brendank1414's comment in Best tip you've ever received for producing?
Generated with BBoe's Subreddit Stats (Donate)
submitted by subreddit_stats to subreddit_stats [link] [comments]

[Table] IAmA: IAM Wil Schroter, Founder of 8 Web Companies. AMA

Verified? (This bot cannot verify AMAs just yet)
Date: 2012-09-05
Link to submission (Has self-text)
Link to my post
Questions Answers
Mr. Schroter thank you so much for doing this. I am a recent graduate of University and the CEO/founder of an internet startup launching in September. Although I have created/ran a successful company during college (a gourmet food truck) I am stepping out of my comfort arena and walking into the great unknown for me (web based platforms). Bc of this, I have brought on a 3 partners who all have different skill sets in tech (one is a programmer, another is a social media expert, and the third is in charge of all tech-related problems)- currently my biggest struggle is how to allocate equity in the company. What is fair? What is too much? what is too little? Maybe its my own greed, but bc i conceptualized/found funding/ and executed the idea- I dont want to have anything less than 70% equity in my own company- leaving 30% for me to allocate to the 3 remaining partners. They are not pleased. Advice? First, make everyone (including you if you want to be fair) have to vest their share in the company over time. 3 years is reasonable. This accounts for the inevitable falloff you'll get over the first 3 years where people quit. Second, make sure people's equity is commensurate with their market value. We use a pretty simple spreadsheet that takes market value (what you make today) and applies a multiplier to account for risk. We then use the market value of the company and say your contribution is a % of your value.
Thank you so much Mr. Schroter, emailing you right now! You're welcome. The invite is open to any other Founder. If I can help, I will.
Which industries do you feel are lacking in terms of new start-ups? It's easy to say feel good industries like energy and education. So let's take those off the table for a moment.
I think there is still a tremendous amount of innovation to be had in marketplaces. I mentioned this in another reply about stuff like AirBnb, Zaarly, and Exec.
I think there is so much dormant value that needs to be unlocked. Millions of folks will retire this year. What happens to all that resident knowledge? How can we get those seniors re-engaged to teach those younger? Or vice versa - 16 year olds know more about technology than most 50 year olds. How can they connect them to teach each other?
I'm fascinated with what I keep referring to as "dormant value". I love to see startups find skills, value items, time, etc that is going un-used and turn it into a marketable commodity. Sorry if I'm being a bit vague, but it's such a large market that I think some critical thinking would unlock a ton of value. I've got some marketplace concepts based on this that I'd love to see someone run with.
Where did the inspiration to become a business man come from at such a young age? When I was 17 leaving high school, the only thing I wanted to do was become an actor. I graduated at the bottom of my class in High School so I was definitely not destined for college or any kind of business career.
When I was 18 I was working with a company doing resales of mainframe computers (yes, I'm old). The company itself didn't have any software it was running on, so I told the CEO we need to get our stuff together and build a sales force management app. He told me it was too expensive - I suggested we could write it ourselves. He called me out and said "If you're so smart, why don't you write it?" My answer was "I would." 2 days later a 486 PC showed up at my dorm room with a note from the CEO "Have at it." 8 weeks later the first prototype of our sales software was written - in Access 1.0 which had just been released. It was the first time I had done something successfully in business and it felt amazing. A year later I started Blue Diesel.
Did you have any experience using access before that or did you self teach on the spot? I should have elaborated. I was at Ohio State at the time barely going to college. I sucked at it. I was living in South Campus but working full time during the day out of my dorm room.
You said that you 'were not destined for college', but then said the PC showed up in your dorm room. Why were you living in a dorm if you were not at college? I didn't have any experience with a PC, strangely. All of my experience was with Commodore products - 64, Amiga, etc. Now I'm really dating myself.
C=64 yeah! You are one of the good guys :) Most important tech innovation of my life - the c64.
Would you consider purchasing my new book www.fiftyshadesofbacon.com? I have had a career of getting my ass kicked. You only read about the successes because they make the headlines. The flops define you.
What did you learn from the flops? Focus is key. Can I do 5 things at a time? Yes. Can I do them well? No. I've tried like hell - it doesn't work.
Did you ever want to give up? It usually takes at least a year of hammering your assumptions before you know for sure you're on the wrong path. And that's if you're lucky. People who launch and in 3 months think they know the model won't work rarely appreciate how long it takes to get that answer.
What kept you going? Anyone can join a successful startup and grow with it. Joining a startup when it's nothing but pain and suffering and sticking it out is how you earn your stripes. I've learned far more about the character of co-workers in bad times than in good times.
What do you make in a year before taxes? In many years, zero. The tricky thing about being an entrepreneur is that you can make a lot, or you can make zero. You can actually make far less than zero by giving up real money as well as investing all of your savings into the company. It's a far worse downside than just having a low paying job.
"Never, under any circumstance share with people what you have (money). No one ever asks this for positive reasons. They either want something from you or they want to judge you by that metric. The moment people think you have more money than you need, they will begin thinking about how to separate you from it."
I cannot begin to tell you how true this has proven to be.
While I agree with this 9/10 times, I think there can be other reasons. I will never ask an entrepreneur how much they make, but I have always, and probably will always want to. For me, it's inspiration, I don't want your money, I want motivation. TI - it's honestly a tacky question to ask. Not giving you a hard time, just saying if you can avoid asking the question, you're probably better off.
My wife told me the other day that the number one suggested phrase in Google for my name was "Wil Schroter Net Worth". Apparently the way to ask is to Google. Now I need to figure out why my own wife is Googling me. ;)
If founders never had any idea they were on the right path, how do they know they are doing it correctly? This seems to hint at the idea of luck playing a huge part in the the success of startups. Luck is for people who go to casinos. Fortune is the reward entrepreneurs gain for taking risk.
What's the most important thing about pitching an idea or company to VCs to fund? How much of an idea/company do you realistically have to have built in order to shop around for VC funding? I get asked this all the time. It never helps to have less preparation or diligence put together, but that said, we got Unsubscribe.com funded without even knowing who worked there ($2.1m from Charles River Ventures, Draper Fisher, First Round, Ron Conway). On the other hand we spent literally years preparing Affordit.com's raise and got stomped from over 80 VC's. The funny thing is that both of those events occurred during the same year.
What little things help you get your day started? Especially on days where you might be particularly uncertain or not motivated? Morning work out? Your favorite latte? Going over your to-do list? I have extraordinary, off the charts ADD. Like I can't remember what I'm writing by the end of my sentence type of bad.
So in the morning the first thing I do is open up a fresh document (I use a tool called MyInfo which is awesome) and I start typing as fast as I can. I type every idea, thought, to do, that I can possibly think of. I have a lot of random stuff in my head so it's a mess.
The next thing I do, once I'm mentally exhausted, is I group everything that I just wrote. I group it by "stuff I need to do", "weird ass thoughts that have no value today", "people to follow up with", etc.
This isn't about motivation per se, it's about clearing my head. I find that when I do this, I wind up with one or two things that are critically important to focus on. And I get to working on just that.
Figure that 99% of my job is to invent and create. So filtering ideas down to what's actionable is a very big hurdle for me. I even have a little markup language that I use that imports my ideas into a spreadsheet because I'm not only ADD, I'm OCD.
Check out tiddlywiki I use it to store all my ideas in a structured and searchable format. R - thanks for the tip. I only use client/desktop software for note taking though since I'm often not online when I'm making notes.
Fundable.com got quite a bit of coverage on some very large techblogs, any pointers as to how to approach these parties, or did they find you? My typepad account is about as relevant as typepad so my apologies.
What's your take on the usage of non-.com TLD's? Re: fundable coverage, we worked really hard to get that coverage. We contacted hundreds of journalists to get dozens of pieces written. Crowdfunding is hot right now, but you need wins (which we are getting, thankfully). I think people assume press finds them, and I've rarely seen that happen.
Just checked out Link to wschroter.typepad.com which covers quite a bit of useful advice, however, it doesn't seem very recent. Why did you quit keeping it up to date (the A-list D-list thing is awesome btw!)? Re: non .com TLD's. I've bought a lot of domains over the years, and I've always been tempted to go non-.com and somehow always balked at the 11th hour. I think .co domains are awesome bargains though.
Could you speak to the mechanics and costs of realistically and successfully starting up? In the past 2 years I have worked on an aviation portal startup and a social media services/membership startup. Both were more than the teams assembled could handle, there was no funding, both are now closed. Can one start from the ground and $0 and make it? Or was that a waste of time, wrong business model? Thanks for doing this AMA! Most companies never take a penny of big funding. My numbers may be off, but if I recall barely 1,000+ companies got an initial round of VC funding last year. But according to Kauffman there were over 6 million companies started. That doesn't include angel, which is critically important, but gives you a sense for how many people are just bootstrapping it.
I'm not convinced that raising money is the key to success. I've done both, and while having more capital helps, there's something about staying super lean and growing from zero that I really like.
I think the #1 thing to focus on in your startup is your personal burn rate. The company can last in some form forever if you can keep your own rent paid. But the moment you have to hang up your spurs as the founder, you're screwed.
Thanks for this so much. I want to acknowledge how valuable your time and information are. Anytime. Happy to help.
When you were younger, you likely put more 24-hour-pizza-fueled nights when running your startups...I assume that's changed now, especially with a family? Wow that's a great question. It's 7:16 PM and I'm still at the office, but in the grand scheme of hours, that's not that late. I have a family to go home too though, so when it comes to my commitments it's late. My daughter goes to sleep in an hour. I want to be there for that.
If so, how do you make up for that lack of youth/stupid energy when you start businesses as you get older? The benefit of doing this for 20 years is that I don't have to spend 24 hours working on things to get them done. For example, when I was 22 I didn't know what the hell a pro-forma income statement was. I didn't know how to model assumptions or create a go-to-market strategy. So I made up for that lack of knowledge with raw hours. Now I know how to do that stuff. I can put together a useful pro-forma in a few hours. I can get far more done with less raw energy time required.
looking back, what were the kinds of habits/practices/routines that you now see as being totally useless and not worth repeating by any young entrepreneur? I don't know that I could have shortcutted any of that learning though. From the time I was 19 til about 22 I didn't take a single day off. Not holidays, Chirstmas, Sundays - nothing. And I loved it. That said, I was doing it because I was learning so much. I'm still learning, but the stuff I"m learning doesn't require those hours.
I've learned from starting websites/e-commerce that SEO is the most important thing to focus on when starting. Do you have any tips on SEO? What you found helpful? I think SEO is awesome although I'm not sure how helpful it is in the very early stages of startups since it takes a fair amount of time to get well indexed. In order to cut that cycle time I like to use CPC and Social to drive near term traffic to validate some of my assumptions early on before figuring out what I should be optimizing for in SEO. Some things I've learned about A/B testing -
Also on a side tangent. I know A/B testing for better conversions are a necessary evil. Any tips on doing testing for different layouts, buttons, designs on your websites? No one has any idea what's on the side of your big "continue" button, so don't assume they are clicking it because you've built an amazing product on the next step. They are going to click it to find out if there is something amazing there. But they are going to click it either way. So don't build a ton of product behind a button people may never click. I'm not sure how, but I just know the moment I hit a site whether it's legit or not. I design for that notion.
Who has been your inspiration? How do you think you best inspire others? I'm inspired daily by my wife.
What's your take on releasing a minimal viable product (or, more specifically, beta version) as soon as possible vs. taking the time to thoroughly test and evaluate your beta before you release it to the public for testing? The MVP is critical. Until you've got a real product in market, you haven't had the opportunity to validate any of your assumptions. Going into the market and assuming you know what your customers want is in and of itself a flawed assumption. The MVP is basically "this is the least we need to do in order to test whether we are even on the right path."
What is your end goal? How many more start ups do you have in you? What is the most ambitious project you have in mind? Starting companies is the end goal. Every company is another problem to solve, another puzzle to put together. I enjoy the challenge itself, not the outcome necessarily. It's my sport.
As a fledgling entrepreneur, I made about $5,000 profit in my Internet business by working on it on the side the past year and a half. It's not a lot considering how many hours I put into it. When do I know it's ready to go solo full-time? I have car and rent payments and a dog to feed. If you can maintain the company and continue to draw cash out of it and also have primary income, I think you're in good shape. At which point you don't need your job anymore, I think that will be obvious. But I wouldn't worry about changing up your situation if you can live comfortably and move the company forward. It's the best of both worlds.
Hey Wil, thanks for doing this. I really like Fundable and think it has a lot of potential. What makes Fundable different from other crowdfunding sites? Fundable was designed specifically for startups, not projects like kickstarter. You'll see us release the ability to raise from equity investors here soon which will change the face of what we do significantly.
The problem with the rewards-based model is that most startup companies aren't compatible with that model. It's awesome if you have a pre-sell opportunity, but if you need $250k just for operating expenses like most companies do, the reward model falls short. That's when people use equity as the reward which has far more scale and applicability to startups.
I think we've seen a very small glimmer of crowdfunding. Can't tell you how excited I am about being part of this revolution.
What's the best part of being an entrepreneur? Not having to answer to anyone. Seriously, this is the bane of my existence. In high school I was constantly in trouble because I hated being told what to do.
You can certainly argue that we all have to answer to someone - clients, spouses, etc. And that's true to a certain extent. But there's something different about being able to wake up in the morning and say "I'm going to work on whatever the hell I want to today." It's the ultimate luxury in my mind.
I respect chains of command and authority structures - I just don't fit well within them. I think this is a very common thread amongst entrepreneurs that I meet. We want the world to work differently, and we're willing to put ourselves out there to get that opportunity.
And if it goes well, it pays well ;)
You don't mind being in the chain of command as long as you're on the top? I don't need to be on top, I just need to be on my own. I'm not saying I care about giving other people orders, I'm saying I hate taking orders.
How do you consider yourself to be "on your own" if you have investors you need to answer to? That's well said. The investors typically had minority positions, but even then if you take $1 from someone else it's still a debt.
All that said, we're self-funded at Fundable so we truly don't have anyone to answer to.
I guess this means a lot when coming to making decisions. Do you have a team at all? At Fundable we have a team of 22 people. We go out of our way to hire people that don't need a lot of "management". People work very autonomously here and that's been our goal for all of the companies we've started.
While the focus has been on tech startups, do you have any advice on starting a marketing consulting agency? Well my first company, Blue Diesel became a full service marketing ad agency known as inVentiv. I don't know that there are a lot of secrets to starting a professional services company. The most frustrating thing I found was that there is no silver bullet. You get more work, you hire more people, you increase revenue along with liabilities. I kind of hated that. I moved onto creating products (web startups) because the consulting business was such a tough business to scale. We did scale to about $700 million in billings in 5 years but I have to tell you - it was just as hard at bigger numbers.
I have a multitude of different ideas, that I obviously can't focus on at the same time. How could I differentiate between what is viable and should gain my attention, vs something that should be put on the back burner, or taken off completely? D - I would focus on one for 6+ months and at least commit through that period. You really can't place multiple bets in pure startup mode and expect to succeed. All you're doing is sub-dividing your chances of success.
Where have you drawn inspiration for the ideas that led to the companies you've started? Were they reactions to problems you encountered in practice, idealistic endeavors, passion projects, etc? It's funny - they are really all problems that I heard someone complaining about (or had myself) and then started thinking "how can the Web solve that?".
Years ago a good friend of mine who is a talent agent in Hollywood mentioned that most casting was moving to "Reality TV" (circa 2006). he said that as an agent there really isn't a good way to find these folks, since they are not trained actors with agents. I simply suggested moving that process to the Web. At the time MySpace and YouTube were relatively new.
He setup meetings with every major network and production company in Hollywood and we pitched the idea of GotCast.com - a platform to move casting onto the Web. We signed every major network and now a great deal of casting for reality TV happens on the Web - and a fair amount from GotCast directly.
Every company has a story like that - I was just listening to someone complain about something and thought "Hm, what if?..."
Has there been a progression in the businesses you've started? Has one opportunity led to another in a meaningful way, and have you identified your opus? Fundable is my opus because it's literally a company that helps create companies. (we do crowdfunding for startups).
Just about every company I've started has been in a completely different industry. What I learned is that I really love starting companies. And I have a special place in my heart for helping other founders specifically.
I get to spend all day talking to other founders about great ideas. If you were a sports nut, you'd want to be at ESPN. If you're a startup nut like me, you now have Fundable ;)
When you first got into the biz, did your age impact limit your ability to be taken seriously / get funding? IM - trying to answer all of these -
Would you rather hire someone as an employee or give them equity in exchange for their contributions? I looked like I was 10 years old, so yeah, it hurt me. People thought it was "bring your kid to work day" when I showed up for meetings.
What are your thoughts on NDAs and protecting intellectual property -- especially given your experience with the internet industry? I prefer to have people who want to be a part of the growth of the business, not just there for a paycheck.
Do you have any any readings that stuck with you or changed your entire outlook on something? Robert Greene's 48 laws of power changed my life. I was a much nicer person before reading that I think. Ayn Rand didn't make me any more fun at parties either.
If someone was to go down a similar path building web companies and developing a marketing consultancy what advice would you have for them and what would you do differently? Re: building a consultancy - don't. It's great experience and a great way to earn income, but every single person I know that has gone into consulting would rather have a product to build and grow with. Myself included.
I see your point but wouldn't they just steal your idea or demand a huge percentage of the company? how do you brainwash them into thinking it's in their best interest to just do the hard work and not get all the credit and money, since their building the damn thing? If anyone that hears about your idea can simply steal it and build a better version than you can you're already screwed. I think the logic that someone is going to Mark Zuckerberg your idea is flawed. It assumes that the Winkelvoss twins could have built a better site themselves.
What percent of cost should be consumed by Marketing? In your personal opinion, what is the most effective form of marketing? (social media, print, radio) Can an innovative idea- that represents a lack in the market- survive and thrive without an effective marketing campaign? Depending on the business, I would pour everything I can into marketing. Social is the easiest to scale since the hard costs are so manage-able, but it's hard to get it to big scale. Cost per Click is my favorite because it allows you to tap into people you've never met before and find out if anyone actually cares about your product. If people don't click on your ads, it's often a good sign that something is missing on your offer, if not your product.
What books, tools, or resources (software, website, etc.) do you use most/ would you recommend for entrepreneurs just starting out? Last night I fell asleep listening to Robert Greene's "33 Strategies of War" (not recommended for good dreams). I am a die hard fan of Greene. All of his books, 48 laws of power, Art of Seduction, and even the 50th Law are incredibly insightful.
I think using Google Adwords to test landing pages and concepts is one of the most powerful early validation tools for startups that I know of, yet very few seem to employ it. I seem to recall Tim Ferris bringing this up in his 4 hour work week book and I thought it was so on point. I can be more specific if there is a certain category you're thinking about.
Are there certain breeds of companies that are getting funded these days and certain breeds that are getting "no" at the door. For example, are social media plays getting love and even good enterprise document record companies getting the door shut? The crazy thing about funding is that it's incredibly cyclical. If you were a groupon clone 18 months ago you were getting funded. If you were a hyperlocal check-in app before that you were getting funded.
I think the myth of VC funding is that they are looking for companies with obvious profits. It's not that they are against profitable companies - far from it - but what they really care about is growth. Their entire model is based on huge wins, so if a company can't get to insane scale (even at the expense of profit) it's still a more likely hit/exit than a $10m company doing $3m in ebitda.
What advice would you give to someone who wants to pursue making websites more? What has helped you with search engine rankings the most? Where did you learn to code? What are your favorite books on website building/html/css/etc? Do you own all business websites or do you own some informational/review/etc websites? How do you effectively start a business website? How do you attract customers with google / marketing? T - not sure if I can answer all of those so if there's something in particular I can focus on let me know.
I manage classical music singers and musicians as well as classically trained actors, how can I break into an online presence? Wait classically trained actors still exist? I thought we got rid of all of you guys when we brought reality TV to the mainstream?! (sarcasm).
I think your online presence is critical. At this point the Web has been around for nearly 20 years, so not having a viable web presence is a big miss. You don't have to go crazy. I find that 3 - 5 well designed pages go much further than some massive site that says very little and looks half-assed.
I'd go to templatemonster.com and pick a template that makes sense. You can get a fully designed template for less than 100 dollars. Figure out what you want modified, then go to Elance and have someone do the work to modify it. Your total out of pocket should be $500 - $1000 for everything. It will pay serious dividends.
I'm so glad you're doing this because I recently came up for an idea for a site I want to start but unfortunately I have no resources and I don't know where to start. I have no knowledge of programming I simply saw a problem in my line of work and thought of a way to solve it so that individuals and companies alike will gain from it. I need money so I need investors I also need to be able to hire someone to write the site, but I don't want to pitch the site to anyone because I have a fear they will just take my idea and do it on their own. I already have a brief 4 page plan written out with the problem, my solution, and the market size but I don't know where to go from here because I am currently limited on funds as well. Any advice? Investors rarely put money strictly into concepts unless the person with the concept has a really proven track record or somehow they have figured out how to turn lead into gold (kidding).
Not sure if this is a tech company, but by far the best option for pulling together resources is Startup Weekend. They run a couple times per year in every city and bring people with ideas together with teams who can build them. They build a prototype in 54 hours and present it to the group. It's awesome.
Which was your favorite company to start and why? I think Blue Diesel was the most exciting because I was 19 and it was the dawn of the Internet (circa 1994). It's weird to think about this now, but at the time no one had any idea what the Web or the Internet really was. I had been using my Commodore 64 with a 300 baud modem running Color 64 since 1985 so I had a pretty good early lead on online tech. Watching the whole industry come together and being a part of it was incredible.
That must have been incredible. Having the experience of seeing something so revolutionary arise, do you see any other industries that you perceive to be up and coming? i.e. Sleeping Giant Industries. I think the trend to watch right now is what you're seeing in AirBnb, Zaarly, Uber, and Exec. They are taking dormant assets (spare bedrooms, private town cars) and creating marketplaces to unlock those dormant assets to create value. I think there will be tons of these marketplaces springing up. I think AirBnb has created far more of a proof case for what can be done than anyone.
Whats your personal life like? do you have a personal life or is work you life? how religious are you? do you fancy the ladies or any other vice? Would you ever stop working if you earned a certain amount of money or not? BPS - I'm a super social guy so I'm out with friends whenever I can be. That said, I'm also a new dad so now the only ladies getting my attention are my wife and daughter.
I read that you have ADD. I suffer from the same thing. I struggle with putting time into my business ideas. I also struggle staying focused and managing my time - I get distracted far too easily. What advice can you give me to overcome these traits? EX - use them as a superpower, not a vice. Roll with it. Adapt your workflow so that as your mind races you get more done, not less. I have 3 screens running right now with 8 chats, email, 6 web browsers and a notepad I'm filling up. I've given up serialization of thought and output a long time ago and it's been awesome. Just try to contain the actual time spent to one project.
How did you make this websites when you were 19? How did you learn? When did you learn? Well it was easy. HTML was in the 1.0 spec so there were maybe 30 commands. I remember I had the entire set in a notepad doc for reference!
I would like your advice as how to start a web company, as the most crucial and vital skill is what I am missing: knowing how to program. Since I am lacking in this particular and key skill, would you suggest that I simply polish my business plan to the max and present to VC's for funding in which perhaps I can then hire help? RB - I never have any idea on how well companies will do in the public markets. I'm constantly perplexed.
Last updated: 2012-09-10 13:50 UTC
This post was generated by a robot! Send all complaints to epsy.
submitted by tabledresser to tabled [link] [comments]

best casino website template video

YouTube TOP 20 FREE 2D INTRO TEMPLATES (After Effects, Sony Vegas) Downloads + Tutorial The Best 10 Intro Templates Ever! Sony Vegas Pro Free ... TOP 20 BLENDER INTRO TEMPLATES! - YouTube Casino Royale Opening original - YouTube New Top 10 2D Intro Templates - Sony Vegas And After ... Top 50 FREE 2D & 3D Intro Templates 2019 Sony Vegas Pro ... How to Create a Free Website with a FREE DOAMIN name and ... Life As a VIP High Roller At the Casino: What It's Like ...

JackpotCity is a clean & elegant design casino website template which through you can display your games, tournaments, game winners etc. It comes with some useful templates like clean homepage, games showcasing, tournaments showcasing, contact page & much more. Preview More Info Get 27 casino website templates on ThemeForest. Buy casino website templates from $9. All created by our Global Community of independent Web Designers and Developers. A casino’s website has to look very happening yet classy to attract the viewers. To create such a perfect website, here’s a list of the best WordPress themes of 2019 specially made for Casinos. Choose your personal favourite! Nikki is the best gaming website template for gaming bloggers and influencers. This template has elements to boost your personal branding. The creator of this template has given you space to add all types of contents. You can entertain your audience with walkthrough videos, podcast audio, and direct blog post. GamblingClub – Best in Premium Gambling WordPress Themes. If you want to create a casino website for your club that helps you to convert the visitors into your potential customers then this GamblingClub WordPress theme is for you. It is a one-page template that has a full-width slider where you can place your latest event’s photographs. CS is a free Casino HTML Template for gambling website with full modern based on bootstrap responsive with multipurpose design specialized look that suits Casino business. It also can be used for other interactive entertainment games website template. It is fully SEO optimized and 100% customizable. We collect for you the best online casino themes, those are the top casino templates we can find. ... Dooplo – Gaming Website HTML Template If you are thinking about launching a website for your game plans we offer a wide range of games web templates with plenty of eye catching features in the design By using crypto games Dooplo. Get 11 casino HTML website templates on ThemeForest. Buy casino HTML website templates from $12. All created by our Global Community of independent Web Designers and Developers. Casino Website Templates. The online casino industry now brings in billions of dollars every year and players have more choice than ever before when it comes to the sites they use. To stay ahead of the curve you need to offer great games, reliable security, and flexible content that can draw new players in while keeping existing ones engaged. Online Casino Website Templates A website template is to draw attention with both appearance and content. As regards to Gambling related website – the greater importance of visual aspect is obvious. On-line casinoes are enormously popular nowadays, therefore WebSiteTemplates.org designers team constantly update the stock of website templates related to this particular category. Fascinate ...

best casino website template top

[index] [714] [3047] [6431] [3257] [2410] [6307] [8779] [9175] [184] [7370]

YouTube

- New Top 2D 10 Intro Templates- Download this Intros , you're free to use it as your channel intro ,Just provide the credits to the creators, Edit the name ... TOP 33 INTRO LOGO ★ FREE AFTER EFFECTS TEMPLATES 2018 with your logo animationSoftware: After EffectUse and edit to your liking and add to your video-----... In this video have shown How to make Free Website without buying any Domain and Hosting. We will Create a Free Wordpress Website and it also has Cpanel to co... About Press Copyright Contact us Creators Advertise Developers Terms Privacy Policy & Safety How YouTube works Test new features Press Copyright Contact us Creators ... For more, Visit: http://technicoz.com/2D Intro Playlist:https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLe0HBF_zvDMlHl95Yb1Pa1LaVaXhE8JgkLogo Intro Playlist: https://... In this video, I am going to detail for you what it's like being a high roller at the casino, what VIP status is like, how the casino determines whether or n... Top 20 Best Free Blender Intro Templates - Downloads + Tutorials Free online intro maker! http://editorsdepot.com/blog/intro-maker For more: http://editors... Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube. The Best 10 Intro Templates Ever! Sony Vegas Pro Free Download 3D+2D 2017 No plugins top 10 Sony Vegas Pro 13 14 15 free intro templates download 3D+2D. You ... Top 10 FREE 2D Flat Intro Templates of 2015-2016 After Effects, Blender, and Camtasia[January 2016] - Duration: 2:27. Project LAUNCH 255,520 views

best casino website template

Copyright © 2024 m.alltop100casinos.site