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50000 free Backlink for your website


Backlinks are the heart of seo. No return the site will not be good in search results and it will not be indexed quickly how you already know that there are two ways you can get one backlinks it is a natural link and another it paid or automated. Natural link is worth you will take some time, but if you do not have long enough, running a professional business site you need to access the destination quickly, automated backlinking will be the last option. Pack or if you simply are not ready to buy the right links now let's start for free. Here is such a kind of free free paklink manufacturer, free link generator in the list. You definitely have a chance to create more than 50,000 free
Your url for your website. 

Index kings
Rapid website submitter index kings it will submit your website to various website statistic sites what will give you valued backlinks and your site will index and rank better on Google. So get free 15000 backlink with Indexkings additionally Deep Linking offers more +570 submission.

Y.M.E daily Backlink Builder
This backlink builder tool submits your URL to +11,500 different websites that automatically provide free backlinks for you. All of the websites in our list provide free website listings, site statistics, and site reports with dedicated URLs. 

BackLinkr
BackLinkr automatically builds (+2500) of high quality backlinks for your webpage. Generated backlinks on well established websites which are frequently crawled by search engines, quickly helping with SEO and improving your page rank on all search engines.

Im talk website submitter
Im talk website submitter will make 1800+ free backlink for your website. These entire website’s are mainly Whois, about us, website review typo website. These backlinks are no-follow some of are do-follow but these website’s are frequently crawl by Google bot and other search engines.

2000 backlink
This free backlink builder tool will create 2500 page about you website and get you 2500 backlink. Some of are no-follow and some of do-follow but those websites are crawl regularly by Google bots.

Get Free Backlinks
This tool provided you with a list of where you can get or create up to 5000 more free backlinks

Domain Pinger
Domain Pinger will ping your domain to 2450+ different websites,  included a large number of websites that accepts free listings, and they are mainly info, who is, about us, website statistic, value, business listings and directories. Ping your website and get thousands of FREE backlinks.

Seo unity
This free backlink builder tool will automatically submit your website url to 1853 different websites. Advantage of using this tool is every submission website has been collected and validated in a master list what are spam free and legally website. So get 1853 free backlink for your website

2500 backlink
It will give you 2500 backlinks instant

Kalsey
Free Backlinks Generator is a great tool for webmasters and service providers. All backlinks are from reputed web info sites and having various PR from 0 to 8. Mix of Dofollow and Nofollow. Creates 2500 backlinks

Autobacklinkbuilder 
This would creates 2,500+  pages about your website with backlinks pointing back to your website. No-follow and do-follow mix but well established websites regularly crawled by Google

Ser Backlink
Generates Backlinks in 1 Click and Pings Them Automatically. Get a full report of all URLS, backlinks and pings that you generate, in real time. Automatically Generate And Ping 2500 Backlinks

Zone Auto Backlink
Creates pages about your website/blog on everyone of these websites, resulting in about 2500+ different pages with backlinks pointing back to your website. Some of them are no-follow and some of them are do-follow.

Excite submit
This tool will Submit and Ping your URL to 1,506 Websites and Services with one click.

Useme
Useme will automatically ping your link to 2400+ different websites such as free listings, and they are mainly info, who is, about us, website statistic, value, business listings and directories.

247 backlink
You will get 1000 backlink for free all you need to do is register and put your website address.

Free backlink tool
Create up to 500 free backlink pointing to your website from high authority websites within a minute with pinging. Register requires

Backlink generator
Get 325 automated backlinks from backlink generator. They say this tool is the best in backlinking. This tool will create for you High valued instant permanent backlinks.

Auto backlink generator pages
This generator will give you more than 240 backlink form different websites and automatically ping your website url

Webmaster deck
This tool will submit your website to 176 Whois and website review sites.

Free web submission
Automatically add your website address to 101 sites like free website listing, website reports with dedicated url. This tool is Spam free and contains no illegal sites.

Real-backlinks 
100+ free real backlinks, 95% of the free backlinks are dofollow backlinks, receive more traffic with free backlinks

Free backlink builder
Free high pr do-follow backlink generator and ping service. It will get you 100 backlinks from highly ranked websites. This backlink builder is very useful tool for new websites to rank better.

Improve Seo rank
Submit your website to 100 highly ranked authority web properties and get fast indexing by search engines. These backlinks will be coming from Whois, dns and website review website.

Linksoar
Register and Get 45 high pr backlinks

Officialy
Fast backlink builder linking to your website still in beta mode, generates up to 100 backlinks.

Pingbomb
This tool automatically create 105 free backlinks to your site or page, then ping too.

Marketing blog online
An Auto backlink generator

Small Seo tools
Small Seo tool’s backlink maker will make 60+ high quality backlink for you



The New Apple Watch Wants You To Pay for Your Own Data All Over Again

It's great to have data on your wrist. But you're going to pay for it, even though it's the same data you use on your phone.

When Apple announced Series 3 of the Apple Watch last week, we saw the promise of the smartwatch reaching its true potential: a fully-realized, LTE-equipped device of its own that needn't be perpetually tethered to your phone. At the same time, we were waiting for the other shoe to drop. It was clear this was going to cost you, and I'm not talking about Apple's $399 price tag.

The smartphone revolution brought with it a bloated, never-ending monthly bill as the carriers convinced people to pay for both phone service and data. The new Apple Watch is one of the most visible moves to the world that comes next, one in which we not only buy data for our smartphones and tablets but also buy data for our watches and other connected devices. If you figured the carriers would take this opportunity to squeeze even more money out of us, I'm sorry to say you were correct.

Mashable dug into the economics of the LTE Apple Watch now that plans and details are starting to become available. What appears is a discouraging mess of extra monthly charges and bullshit fees. Specifically, you'd pay an activation fee to use data on your new $400 watch—a $30 fee, according to Mashable. Then add an extra $10 per month for a "device access charge"—what AT&T calls it when they want charge you again for using the data you've already paid for. Verizon will charge $10 per month after offering three months free to get people hooked on the service. There are no official plans yet from Sprint and T-Mobile but you can expect them to follow suit.

This is not new data, better data, or more data—just data that goes to your wrist instead of your pocket. Sure, it's not free for the carriers to add in these extra capabilities, but it certainly doesn't cost them ten bucks a month.

Despite the grossness, the Apple Watch crowd can surely handle the squeeze. Unlike smartphones, which have become a crucial appliance, smartwatches—and the Apple Watch specifically—remain a luxury product and status symbol for the AirPod-wearing well-to-do who can surely afford $10 a month for the luxury of streaming a running playlist to their wrist. Never mind the fact that after two years' worth of data at this rate, you'll have added a 60 percent premium on top of the upfront cost of the LTE Apple Watch in the first place.

The problem isn't about this watch. It's about how these fees could hamstring the future. We're staring down a world where all kinds of machines—drones, cars, you name it—are more capable and connected because they feature cellular service. But the bills keep skyrocketing, and not because we're drinking up more data. Just because a new gadget needs a straw.


There's no gun to our heads, and at any point we can simply say "I can't afford that" or "I refuse to play along." While a smartphone is a 2017 necessity, a drone is not. But if the ball-and-chain of the monthly bill grows heavier in lock-step with each new gadget that wants to dip into your data, it's easy to imagine the next game-changer device might not ever break through. These fake fees are nothing new, but each new one is doing its part to rob of us the better connected future we were promised. It's not a surprise, but it is a shame.



The 360-Degree Selfie



Inexpensive cameras that make spherical images are opening a new era in photography and changing the way people share stories.


  


Seasonal changes to vegetation fascinate Koen Hufkens. So last fall Hufkens, an ecological researcher at Harvard, devised a system to continuously broadcast images from a Massachusetts forest to a website called VirtualForest.io. And because he used a camera that creates 360° pictures, visitors can do more than just watch the feed; they can use their mouse cursor (on a computer) or finger (on a smartphone or tablet) to pan around the image in a circle or scroll up to view the forest canopy and down to see the ground. If they look at the image through a virtual-reality headset they can rotate the photo by moving their head, intensifying the illusion that they are in the woods.


We experience the world in 360 degrees, surrounded by sights and sounds. Until recently, there were two main options for shooting photos and video that captured that context: use a rig to position multiple cameras at different angles with overlapping fields of view or pay at least $10,000 for a special camera. The production process was just as cumbersome and generally took multiple days to complete. Once you shot your footage, you had to transfer the images to a computer; wrestle with complex, pricey software to fuse them into a seamless picture; and then convert the file into a format that other people could view easily.



Today, anyone can buy a decent 360° camera for less than $500, record a video within minutes, and upload it to Facebook or YouTube. Much of this amateur 360° content is blurry; some of it captures 360 degrees horizontally but not vertically; and most of it is mundane. (Watching footage of a stranger’s vacation is almost as boring in spherical view as it is in regular mode.) But the best user-generated 360° photos and videos—such as the Virtual Forest—deepen the viewer’s appreciation of a place or an event.


Journalists from the New York Times and Reuters are using $350 Samsung Gear 360 cameras to produce spherical photos and videos that document anything from hurricane damage in Haiti to a refugee camp in Gaza. One New York Times video that depicts people in Niger fleeing the militant group Boko Haram puts you in the center of a crowd receiving food from aid groups. You start by watching a man heaving sacks off a pickup truck and hearing them thud onto the ground. When you turn your head, you see the throngs that have gathered to claim the food and the makeshift carts they will use to transport it. The 360° format is so compelling that it could become a new standard for raw footage of news events—something that Twitter is trying to encourage by enabling live spherical videos in its Periscope app.


Or consider the spherical videos of medical procedures that the Los Angeles startup Giblib makes to teach students about surgery. The company films the operations by attaching a $500 360fly 4K camera, which is the size of a baseball, to surgical lights above the patient. The 360° view enables students to see not just the surgeon and surgical site, but also the way the operating room is organized and how the operating room staff interacts.


Meanwhile, inexpensive 360° cameras such as Kodak’s $450 Pixpro SP360 4K are popping up on basketball backboards, football fields, and hockey nets during practice for professional and collegiate teams. Coaches say the resulting videos help players visualize the action and prepare for games in ways that conventional sideline and end-zone videos can’t.
Component innovations


These applications are feasible because of the smartphone boom and innovations in several technologies that combine images from multiple lenses and sensors. For instance, 360° cameras require more horsepower than regular cameras and generate more heat, but that is handled by the energy-efficient chips that power smartphones. Both the 360fly and the $499 ALLie camera use Qualcomm Snapdragon processors similar to those that run Samsung’s high-end handsets.

Camera companies also benefited in recent years from smartphone vendors’ continuous quest to integrate higher-quality imaging into their gadgets. The competition forced component makers like Sony to shrink image sensors and ensure that they offered both high resolution and good performance in low light. As the huge smartphone market helped bring down component prices, 360°-camera makers found it possible to price their devices accessibly, often at less than $500. “There are sensors that now cost $1 instead of $1,000 because they’re used in smartphones, which have incredible economies of scale,” says Jeffrey Martin, the CEO of a 360°-camera startup called Sphericam. Advances in optics played a part as well. Unlike traditional cameras, which have fairly narrow fields of view, 360° cameras sport exaggerated fish-eye lenses that require special optics to align and focus images across multiple points.


Most 360° cameras lack displays and viewfinders. To compensate, camera makers developed apps that you can download to your phone to compose shots and review the resulting images. The cameras connect to the apps wirelessly, and many of them allow you to upload photos and video directly from your phone to Facebook and YouTube. In turn, those sites have made it possible over the past year for people not just to post recorded 360° content but to live-stream 360° videos as well.

Because creating 360° content requires stitching together multiple images, doing it on the fly for live streaming represents an impressive technical achievement. Computer-vision algorithms have simplified the process so that it can  be done on the camera itself, which in turn allows people to live-stream video with minimal delays. (It helps that most consumer-grade cameras have only two lenses and thus one stitch line. Professional versions can have six to 24 lenses.) The ALLie camera supports fast stitching and live-streaming, as do Ricoh’s upcoming Ricoh R development kit camera and Kodak’s Orbit360 4K, which will be available later this year for $500.


Spherical cameras represented 1 percent of worldwide consumer camera shipments in 2016 and are set to reach 4 percent in 2017, according to the research firm Futuresource Consulting. The popularity of these devices will benefit the virtual-reality industry as well as camera makers. You don’t need special VR gear to view spherical videos, but YouTube says many people look at them on smartphones slipped into VR headsets, such as Google’s Cardboard and Daydream devices. And more people experimenting with 360° cameras means more content for other people to watch in VR.

In fact, John Carmack, the chief technology officer of Facebook’s Oculus VR subsidiary, has predicted that people will spend less than 50 percent of their VR time playing games. Instead, they may don VR headsets to do things like virtually attend a wedding.


Once people discover spherical videos, research suggests, they shift their viewing behavior quickly. The company Humaneyes, which is developing an $800 camera that can produce 3-D spherical images, says people need to watch only about 10 hours of 360° content before they instinctively start trying to interact with all videos. When you see 360° imagery that truly transports you somewhere else, you want it more and more.