2014년 2월 22일 토요일

[해외에서 결제하기] 아이템 중개사이트 - 아이템매니아

아이템 중개 사이트 - 아이템매니아

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국내 온라인 게임의 인기에 편승하여 국내에서 개인간 아이템 거래량은 세계 최다 일것이며, 이런 현상은 개인간 아이템 거래의 급증은 오픈마켓같은 아이템중개 전문사이트가 있기 때문에 더 급증하고 있는 것 같습니다.

국내 최다 거래규모는 과거 아이템베이에서 아이템매니아가 물려받았으며, 그 이유는 쉴세없이 올라오는 물량과 체계적으로 관리되는 매매시세때문 일겁니다.

아이템매니아의 시세를 보고 있으면, 흡사 증권사의 HTS(Home Trading System)을 보고 있는 착각이 들 정도이니까요.

접속은 우회한다. 그래도 결제는 계속된다.

재미있는 사실은 아이템매니아는 해외IP 로 접근이 불가능한 경우가 많습니다만, 그렇다고 아이템매니아가 해외유저의 사용을 막는 것은 아닙니다.

아이템매니아 접속은? - VPN 등을 통하여 우회접속을 하시면 됩니다.

아이템매니아 본인인증은? - 고객센터로 전화를 거신 후 신분증 사본을 보내시면 인증이 가능합니다.(하지만 이용 전 반드시 고객센터에 문의해 주세요.)

아이템매니아 결제는? - SendHow를 이용하시면 Paypal 로 결제가 가능합니다.

할인, 이벤트 정보

아이템매니아 내에서는 현재 '청마(馬)와 달리는 설날기념 이벤트'를 다음과 같이 진행하고 있습니다.

  1. 말굽모아 만렙을 향하여 달려라! - 말굽스탬프를 모아 3번에 걸쳐 마일리지 제공
  2. 설맞이 대박 경품 행운! - 응모권을 모아 원하는 상품에 응모 및 추첨하여 경품 제공

이벤트기간은 2014년 1월 28일 부터 2014년 2월 26일까지 진행하니 다음주까지 진행 한다고 하니 아이템매니아를 이용하시는 분들께서는 참조해 주세요.

결제하시는 방법

일단 무통장결제가 열렸으니 SendHow 로 결제하는 법은 다음과 같습니다.

1. 주문 및 결제수단 선택

아이템매니아에 로그인 한 후 상단에 위치한 마이존에 들어갑니다.
여기서 마일리지 충전을 선택하고, 충전방법에서 무통장입금(전용계좌)를 선택해 주세요.▼

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2. 전용계좌 발급 및 계좌번호 메모

원하시는 아무은행의 전용계좌 발급버튼을 누르면 계좌가 발급되며, 이때 발급된 계좌번호 정보를 메모해 주세요.▼

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3. SendHow 에 결제정보 등록 및 Paypal 결제

SendHow 에 로그인 한 후, 결제대행 메뉴에서 결제금액, 계좌번호, 은행, 입금자명, 결제상세정보를 입력합니다. 아이템매니아는 입금된 결제금액을 마일리지로 반영하기 때문에 결제금액은 원하시는 금액을 입력하시면 됩니다.▼

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포스팅을 마치며...

국내에서 가장 많은 거래량을 자랑하는 아이템매니아인 만큼 사기사건도 상당히 빈번하게 발생하더군요. 하지만 대부분 이런 경우, 아이템매니아가 제시하는 안전거래 수칙을 따르지 않고 개인간 거래를 하거나, 타인의 아이템매니아 전용계좌(가상계좌)에 입금하셔서 발생하는 피해가 상당히 많다고 합니다.

하지만 아이템매니아의 거래수칙만 잘 따르시면 이런 피해를 사전에 방지하실 수 있으며, 발생하셔도 보상을 받으실 수 있기 때문에 반드시 안전거래수칙을 따라주세요.

그렇다면 해외에서 즐기시는 국내 온라인 게임을 SendHow를 통해 더 즐겁게(윤택하게?) 즐기실 수 있을 겁니다.

2014년 2월 15일 토요일

test blog

최근 한국내에서는 소셜커머스를 통한 쇼핑이 많이 늘었습니다. 현재 국내 소셜커머스 중 믿고 구입할 수 있는 곳은 티켓몬스터(이하 티몬) 쿠팡 위메이크프라이스(이하 위메프)가 있지요.

이전에는 무통장입금을 지원하지 않았던 쿠팡이 현재는 결제수단에 무통장입금을 지원하고 있습니다.

결제하시는 방법

  1. 쿠팡에 로그인 한 후 마음에 드는 물건을 신나게 장바구니에 넣는다.
  2. 장바구니에서 구입을 결정한 상품을 선택한 후 결제하기 버튼을 누른다.
  3. 결제수단에서 무통장입금과 은행을 선택한다.
    (일부 브라우저는 무통장 입금만 있음)
  4. 결제하기 버튼을 눌러 결제금액과 계좌번호가 나오면 메모한다.
  5. SendHow 에 로그인 한다.
  6. 결제대행 메뉴에서 결제금액, 계좌번호, 은행, 입금자명, 결제상세정보를 입력한다.
IMG 0142

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ddd

111


dnksdnklsd

1.

2.

3.

Plain Text Enhanced

By now you should have noticed “all these funny characters” before headlines and within the text. You should also have noticed “these colored bubbles”, and wondered how they found their way into this otherwise format-free introduction.

You may even have marveled at how nice everything looks, how beautiful the text is set, how headlines are outdented and lists indented, and how all this is possible without using fancy formatting palettes, rulers and font panels. And, ultimately, what it all means, what it’s good for, and why you should care.

We believe that writers should not be bothered with layout tasks. At the very least, layout tasks should never interfere with the writing process itself. Call it what you will — distraction-free, zen-like, purely semantic, mini minimal, neo retro —, fact is that content creation is best kept separate from presentation, or else the latter will get in the way. Eventually. By design (pun, sorry).

Ulysses uses so-called minimal markup to define, not format or style, text passages. The full list of available definitions is accessible via CMD-9, and it should have you covered left to right. From headlines to lists, to images and footnotes, you simply assign meaning to text passages by entering some easy to remember shortcuts.

Need a title? Create a title.

Need a quote?

Create a quote.

Need a footnote? Create one.1 No need to reach for your mouse, just type. Just. Type.

360 degree semantics

Now for the fun part: Ulysses can output your writing to a host of standard formats, such as Plain Text, RTF, Word, HTML ePub and even PDF. It does so by translating your plain text input based on the definition of the minimal markup. If your brain starts to hurt, here’s a simple example…

Let’s assume you want to emphasize a text passage. You select the word “emphasize” (do so), and press the keyboard shortcut CMD-I. Notice the extra characters that were entered around the word.

You have just told Ulysses, in its own “plain text language”, that this passage should be an emphasized passage. Now Ulysses knows and will never forget. So when you export your text to, say, RTF, Ulysses will translate this emphasized passage into what RTF understands — in this case, it will format your emphasized passage as italicized text. If you export to HTML, Ulysses will translate the passage to semantically correct <em>.

Headlines such as this will get a larger font in RTF and will be tagged with <h2> in HTML.

And so on.

The beauty of this should be obvious by now: Instead of worrying about how your output looks, you can concentrate on what your content is supposed to mean. This may be frightening at first, but trust us, it’s not.

It’s awesome.

Attachments, Notes & Comments

There’s a bar atop every sheet which is called the “attachment bar”. Attachments allow you to place arbitrary content next to your not-so arbitrary main content: images, text notes and keywords. Keywords are especially nice, since you can set up filters which will look for these keywords.

Images and text notes can be attached multiple times, and all attachments can be torn off and placed anywhere onscreen. You can even zoom into images, flip through PDFs and use most markup within text notes.

Another way to add notes is to create annotations or inline comments. Comments can also span entire paragraphs.

By Popover Demand

As you have seen, most of Ulysses’ advanced features are tucked away in small popovers. That way, they remain invisible unless you really need them. Most popovers can be torn-off and turned into always-on floating HUDs for quick reference and/or direct access. They make a good fit for a second monitor by the way.

And while some popovers are only available from within the editor, others can also be called in the sidebars. As an example, you can invoke Quick Export via the contextual menu on groups or filters. You can also check text statistics that way.

Pro tip: Quick Export, Favorites and Navigator feature full keyboard navigation. So if you feel like a power user, try this…

Hit CMD-8

Use up/down arrow to navigate

Try to select this headline

No, this one

THIS ONE!!!

iCloud vs On My Mac

In “Overview”, it states:

if you have iCloud set up and enabled, Ulysses will store everything on Apple’s super-modern mega-clusters

Well, we lied. It’s completely up to you where things get stored, and you can freely move your texts from the cloud to local storage only and vice versa. As long as both options are enabled in preferences, that is:

IMG 0068
Sidebar Settings set the Sidebar
IMG 0142

Obviously, everything stored in “On My Mac” will no longer be available on all the other Macs you own and use, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing, is it?

Integrating Daedalus Touch

If you own Daedalus Touch for iOS (and, frankly, you should), now is a good time to enable iCloud on your devices. We have natively integrated Daedalus into Ulysses’ sidebar, so there’s no setup necessary, no linking, nothing.

Daedalus’ stacks will show up as groups, and you can use most of Ulysses’ advanced features to continue the work you started on the road. Or the coffee shop. Or the beach. The bed. The couch. The Eiffel Tower. Mount Everest. ISS. Kepler 21b. So cool.

External Sources

Last but not least, you can even import and edit classic .txt and .markdown files, and have Ulysses keep them on your disk (i.e. outside Ulysses’ library). As an example, you can point Ulysses to a folder on your Dropbox, and have its contents behave just like native groups and sheets.

Some editor features will be limited (no images, no attachments), but that’s certainly negligible, compared to the alternatives. If we dare say so.

And… that’s… a wrap. You should now know enough to get around, and if you don’t, we have failed miserably.

So without further ado, you’re on your own.

Happy editing!

  1. Type (fn), put text into the popover, hit CMD-Return, continue.

image test

iCloud vs On My Mac

In “Overview”, it states:

if you have iCloud set up and enabled, Ulysses will store everything on Apple’s super-modern mega-clusters

Well, we lied. It’s completely up to you where things get stored, and you can freely move your texts from the cloud to local storage only and vice versa. As long as both options are enabled in preferences, that is:

Sidebar Settings set the Sidebar

Obviously, everything stored in “On My Mac” will no longer be available on all the other Macs you own and use, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing, is it?

Integrating Daedalus Touch

If you own Daedalus Touch for iOS (and, frankly, you should), now is a good time to enable iCloud on your devices. We have natively integrated Daedalus into Ulysses’ sidebar, so there’s no setup necessary, no linking, nothing.

Daedalus’ stacks will show up as groups, and you can use most of Ulysses’ advanced features to continue the work you started on the road. Or the coffee shop. Or the beach. The bed. The couch. The Eiffel Tower. Mount Everest. ISS. Kepler 21b. So cool.

External Sources

Last but not least, you can even import and edit classic .txt and .markdown files, and have Ulysses keep them on your disk (i.e. outside Ulysses’ library). As an example, you can point Ulysses to a folder on your Dropbox, and have its contents behave just like native groups and sheets.

Some editor features will be limited (no images, no attachments), but that’s certainly negligible, compared to the alternatives. If we dare say so.

And… that’s… a wrap. You should now know enough to get around, and if you don’t, we have failed miserably.

So without further ado, you’re on your own. Happy editing!

A Letter From The Soulmen

A Letter From The Soulmen


Hi there,

this is Marcus from the Soulmen. Please allow me to introduce you to Ulysses III.

This app is the culmination of 18 months of hard work, sweat and tears, built upon a 10 years’ experience creating writers’ software for the Mac and iOS.

It is based on the simple idea of a one-stop place for all your texts, be it small snippets, or large, life-spanning projects. It’s built to inspire, to encourage experimentation, and to grow steadily along with whatever you’ll throw at it.

If you’re new to this, then please enjoy what we believe is the greatest text editor the world has ever seen. A blank slate powered by a toolset of endless possibilities, limited only by your imagination as a writer.

If you’re coming from Ulysses 2, you’re in for some hardcore culture shock. Make no mistake: This is all-new, all-different, and there is no sense in trying to apply any of its rules to Ulysses III. So just treat this as you would any other new product, and don’t try to hunt down old features or recreate behaviors — chances are you won’t find them. You’ll have to start over. You’ll hate it. You’ll love it. Trust me.

Now… this is just the start. We will update and refine this baby on a steady basis, and as a matter of fact, we just did. Ulysses III 1.1 is a vast improvement over what we shipped in April, with lots of user-requested features molded in, polished and licked clean.

Please remember, though, that we are humans, and thus far from being perfect. There will be shortcomings, errors even, and you will have questions. We are anxiously awaiting your feedback — good, bad, mostly good hopefully —, so please don’t hesitate to reach out to us.

Lastly, understand that this is a product of pure dedication. We’re a small team, we love what we do, and we care deeply about it. We — that’s Max Seelemann, Marcus Fehn, Friedrich Gräter, Götz Fabian and Lucas Hauswald.

We are the Soulmen, and this is Ulysses III.

It’s yours now. Explore, play around. Have fun.

Marcus Fehn | The Soulmen September 2013

Overview

By now you’ve probably skipped this introduction and manically clicked on what few buttons are visible on screen. That’s alright, let it out.

As soon as you’re ready, we should cover some basics:

  1. Ulysses III is what we call an “enhanced plain text editor”. Everything you see — headlines, lists and emphasis — is just typed in. We will come back to this later.

  2. Ulysses III is a single-library app, and all your texts live in this single library. There is no “Open”, no “Save”, no Finder access — it all happens right inside this window.

  3. Ulysses III fully utilizes iCloud, i.e. if you have iCloud set up and enabled, Ulysses will store everything on Apple’s super-modern mega-clusters. You can then access your texts from all of your Macs, as long (or as soon) as you’re connected to the web.

Most importantly, Ulysses III is built to grow and adapt. You can use it as a sophisticated notepad, you can create your next American Novel. You can feed your blog, keep everything neatly organized, or mess around at will.

There is no “right” way to do things here, so make yourself comfortable, and make it your own.

Ok, but how do I…?

If you have used any kind of three-pane-app before, you should have no problem navigating and using Ulysses. And if you’re familiar with the likes of Markdown and Textile, you should even feel right at home in the editor. There may be a few special cases where we’re handling things a bit differently, but all in all this should be rather common ground.

Anyway, UI-Overview from left to right:

  • SIDEBAR
  • SHEET LIST
  • EDITOR

And that’s it. The sidebar is divided into sections and should be pretty self-explanatory. Depending on whether you’ve got iCloud enabled, or whether you’re a user of Daedalus Touch, you will see different sections, but these are no-brainers.

The sheet list is where all your texts reside.

And this here is the editor.

OH-KEY! But HOW DO I…?

You add groups and filters via the sidebar’s plus menu, and you add sheets via CMD-N. If you select a group in the sidebar, its contents will show up in the sheet list. Select a sheet, and it shows up in the editor.

Filters are a special kind of group. Once set up, they will look at the group they’re in and list all sheets that match the set criteria. For example, you can set up a filter that only lists sheets with a keyword of “fantastic”. If you place it deep within a nested group, say, six levels down, the filter will only show matching sheets within that very group.

You can even select multiple groups and filters (by holding down CMD), and get their combined contents listed in the sheet column.

It’s the sheets, baby!

All writing is done on Ulysses’ sheets. Sheets are somewhat equivalent to classic documents, though they don’t require a “title” or a “file name” or such.

Sheets can hold any amount of text, and you can freely move sheets around and sort them at will. You can also select multiple sheets and glue them together (CMD-J). They will then behave as a single sheet in the editor, which is especially cool if you rather have a lot of small chunks than a single, monolithic wall of text.

But again, there is no right or wrong way here, and different projects will require different approaches. Just experiment and see what works best for you.

Added bonus

Since sheets are likely to live in the vicinity of other sheets, we figured it would be nice if you could easily navigate between them — right from within the editor. There are keyboard shortcuts for this (CMD-ALT-up/down), but if you’re equipped with a Magic Mouse or trackpad, you can simply scroll to the top or bottom and “pull to switch”.

You should try this now to get the hang of it. Just come back here, as we’re about to look at the cool stuff.

아니랍니다

블로그 테스트

안녕하세요 SendHow Support Team 입니다. 간만에 포스팅입니다.

2008년 7월 1일 화요일