Monday, September 8, 2008

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PayCycle Wins PC Magazine Editors Choice Award for Small Business Online Payroll
PayCycle Cited for Potent Combination of Key Features and Called Best Bet
Palo Alto, CA (PRWEB) September 8, 2008 -- PayCycle, Inc., America s 1 online payroll service, announced today that it has received PC Magazine s highest editorial honor, the Editors Choice Award. It was given to PayCycle Plus after an exhaustive competitive analysis made up of an intense examination of product attributes and offerings via an independent and objective review process. The written assessment summed up the final impression of PayCycle by saying: PayCycle performed the best across the board in each category we analyzed. It s a potent combination, and it wins our Editors Choice this year. If you don t have a payroll service yet, or if you don t mind doing the work a switch will require, PayCycle is your best bet.
Our product development is passionately driven by our commitment to customer satisfaction, says Jim Heeger, president and CEO of PayCycle Inc


squire magazine unveils cover with electronic ink
By KRISTEN A. LEE 3 hours ago
NEW YORK (AP) Although readers keep shifting to the Internet, Esquire magazine's editor is sure print isn't dying, and he aims to prove it Monday by unveiling a 75th-anniversary issue with a cover that features electronic ink.
'For the last couple of years I've been in search of ways to do something that shows that print is a particularly vital product,' said Esquire magazine's editor-in-chief, David Granger. 'I really do think that print is the most exciting and rewarding medium there is.'
A 10-square-inch display on the cover of Esquire's October 2008 anniversary issue flashes the theme 'The 21st Century Begins Now' with a collage of illuminated images. On the inside cover, a two-page spread advertising the new Ford Flex Crossover features a second 10-square-inch display with shifting colors to illustrate the car in motion at night.
The displays, which Granger said have boosted advertising in the issue, were developed by E Ink Corp., a Cambridge, Mass., company that also supplied the electronic paper technology for the screen of Amazon's Kindle e-book reader




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