Showing posts with label limit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label limit. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

SQUARE DROPS WEEKLY LIMITS, HAS SIGNED UP 800,000 CLIENTS


Until now, when a merchant using Square racked up over $1,000 in payments in the course of a week, everything above that limit was held for a period of time, ranging from just a few hours up to a whole month. As of today, roughly a year and a half after the company's founding, that restriction has been lifted. Now all payments will be processed immediately and merchants will have access to the funds the next day. Square also announced that, in the year or so since it started offering its wares to the public, it has signed up 800,000 merchants who have processed over $2 billion in transactions. After ditching the $0.15 per-transaction charge and with the $1,000 per-week restriction limit lifted, we're sure those numbers will only increase in the year ahead.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

PRIVATE PROFILES WILL NOT BE ALLOWED IN GOOGLE + AFTER JULY 31ST


Don't want anyone searching for you on Google+? No problem! Just leave your profile marked as private and Google will punt your page from the cloud after July 31st. If you still want your profile around come August, you'll need to mark it as public before that deadline. You can still keep most of your personal details under lock and key, limiting access to specific elements to yourself, your circles, extended circles, or anyone on the web -- Google does require that your full name and gender be available to everyone, however.

Monday, May 2, 2011

AT&T DSL AND U-VERSE CAPS BEGIN TODAY...MAYBE


Today is the day that AT&T starts imposing data caps on DSL and U-Verse Internet, and begins tallying up overage fees. At least, that was the plan on March 18th -- when the company formally announced 150GB DSL and 250GB U-Verse caps -- but even if you're a paying customer who chows down several hundred gigabytes in a month, you may not have to worry about paying extra right away.

AT&T specified that users will have access to an online tool to self-police your usage before the company even begins to calculate the cost of your formerly all-you-can-eat bandwidth buffet, and as you can see in the picture above, the tool isn't quite ready for public consumption across the entire country.
gay-blog-member-of-the-best-gay-bloggers