Seeking Alpha is a community for investors, bloggers and others to contribute articles related to the financial indistry. The site is free to read and to contribute to though there is an editorial staff that checks each article for accuracy and quality and they will need to approve your submission. It is a private company started by David Jackson in 2004 and is backed by Benchmark Capital.
Seeking Alpha was created in 2004.
There is no such movie called "Seeking Alpha". Seeking Alpha is a website that writes reviews for movies and rates them on a five star rating system.
Seeking Alpha is not a movie, rather it is a website that provide financial news and data for consumers and companies. The site provides earnings transcripts, news, and industry reports.
"hoopsandyoyostudios" is a video-making group that owns a fan-blog (not actually for them). The blog features fan-made stuff for TV shows or films.
The Mailstation United Kingdom website is a personal blog. A blog is usually made up of a collection of photographs a person likes and random thoughts, comments and articles that are person to the person who owns the blog.
Wolfram Alpha not only have an FAQ, but they also have Facebook and Twitter pages for people to follow. They also blog about any recent developments in their service.
The company that owns and operates Wolfram Alpha is Wolfram Research which is named for Stephen Wolfram, the founder and CEO of Wolfram Research. As for the Alpha, I do not know. Perhaps it is because it is the first letter of the greek alphabet, and they are "Number 1"?
According to Scholastic some of the best blogs for teachers are Mrs. Cassidy's Classroom Blog (for hands-on activities), Digital Anthology (Special Education blog), A Year of Reading (for reviews of books for kids), and Regurgitated Alpha Bits (a humor-based blog).
The pay from Seeking Alpha for the bloggers of course varies according to their contributions. One full-time blogger who made it into the Top Ten list said he would get less than $500 a month despite his efforts.
There is currently no Beta version, however, pre-alpha versions of Opera 10.50 are available at the Desktop Team's Blog.
I really don't think you can. However, if they have a public author profile, it my contain information or be linked to their Gravatar account. You can also post a comment on the blog, which will automatically send and email notification to the blog owner. If it is a unique domain, you may find out who is the owner through Whois.com, if it is a free blog ends with wordpress.com, you cannot.
Yes and no. Who owns the content that they want removed?