February 29th, 2008 by admin
Establishing a desired website is now as easy as 1-2-3. Have you ever determined how to build a website? You can have now a website builder services being offered by buildyoursite.com. In order to have a good and well-established website, there are a lot of things to consider. From the basic steps in securing domain names, buying them from trusted registrars, hosting them to reliable hosting packages and eventually putting up your desired information to make it a website, there is this one package at buildyoursite.com. You can create a website with them accomplishing all these things through them in a manner of smooth processing. At buildyoursite.com, it is amazingly easy to set up a desired website of everybody. It is just on the tip your hands and in the companion of mouse clicks.
This affordable package the site can give you includes everything you need in putting up a website. Its features such as; its powerful and easy to use website builder, designs based on your criteria, personalized e-mail services which there is no need to download and install. By choosing them as your partner, you are assured of having a 24/7 customer support, daily site backups, and a lot more.
Visit the site and establish your website with them. You can take their test drive for you to experience the services they are offering.
February 12th, 2008 by admin
In a bid to remain independent, Yahoo plans to reject Microsoft Corp.’s unsolicited takeover offer, according to reports on the Wall Street Journal’s web site.Quoting sources familiar with the situation, the Journal reports that Yahoo’s board feels the offer of $31 per share “massively undervalues” the company. A letter spelling out the position is expected to be sent Monday. Yahoo also expressed concern that Microsoft’s offer does not account for risks to Yahoo should the deal be overturned by regulators.
The Journal source said the company would be unwilling to consider an offer below $40 per share, which would represent a $12 billion increase over Microsoft’s original $44.6 billion bid. It is unclear if Microsoft would be willing to increase its bid by such a significant amount.
A Yahoo representative said the company would not comment on rumor or speculation and reiterated that the board is evaluating all its strategic options.
The two companies have been in discussions about an alliance or merger for more than a year. Yahoo has long hoped to remain independent, believing it can reverse its fortunes and lift its flagging stock price.
In the summer of 2007, investors believed it was possible as well. Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang replaced Terry Semel as CEO and announced he would unveil a new strategic plan for the company within 100 days.
“There will be no sacred cows and we need to move quickly,” he said. But, after the 100 days – and then some – passed, investor patience wore thin, driving the stock lower.
In late January, the slumping Internet pioneer reported a fifth-consecutive quarter of lower profits and warned of “headwinds” for 2008. Yahoo’s battered stock fell to a four-year low, below the $20 per share level, and Microsoft pounced.
Read the rest of this entry »
November 29th, 2007 by admin
SAN JOSE, Calif. - Increasingly worried over Internet providers’ behavior, a nonprofit has released software that helps determine whether online glitches are innocent hiccups or evidence of deliberate traffic tampering.
The San Francisco-based digital rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation hopes the program, released Wednesday, will help uncover “data discrimination” — efforts by Internet providers to disrupt some uses of their services — in addition to the cases reported separately by EFF, The Associated Press and other sources.
“People have all sorts of problems, and they don’t know whether to attribute that to some sort of misconfiguration, or deliberate behavior by the ISP,” said Seth Schoen, a staff technologist with EFF.
Read the rest of this entry »
November 29th, 2007 by admin
SAN JOSE, Calif. - Online pornography hunters’ Internet adventures are already fraught with danger from malicious code many porn sites use to commandeer visitors’ machines or steal personal data.
Now comes a scheme some researchers say amounts to extortion: One site’s threat to disable visitors’ computers with relentless pop-up ads if they don’t pay for a subscription they were automatically signed up for after a free trial.
The threats, reported this week by researchers at security vendor McAfee Inc.’s Avert Labs, affect people who visit the Web site and download software to access a free three-day trial membership.
Visitors do get free access for three days, but the download includes code that then generates a stream of pop-up windows, when the user is online and offline, demanding payment of roughly $80 for 90 days’ worth of additional access.
Read the rest of this entry »
November 29th, 2007 by admin
Because nobody makes snap judgments like a searcher.
During a recent trip to Google’s Kirkland, Washington office, Matt Cutts and colleagues spent an hour creating impromptu videos on various search-related topics. The first to be posted involves “the anatomy of a search snippet,” and how much control a webmaster has over what information is displayed in search results.
The answer to how much control is: quite a bit, actually. This article will explore Cutts’s explanation of the snippet, and ways to make the best of your search presence. Much of managing your appearance in the search results involves telling Google what to index and what not to index.
Homepage Title
The first thing you see in your search result is the title, and this is the first thing that Cutts also addresses. In honor of being in the Pacific Northwest, he used Starbucks’ search result as an example, which labels its homepage as “Starbucks Homepage.” This is your first impression.
Read the rest of this entry »
November 28th, 2007 by admin
Talk2Discuss.com was my friends first blog website. Yesterday I look at it and saw a blogpost which captures my attention. This was a video clip of a cheering squad that are performing for samsung, I think this is for commercial purposed. I’ve been amaze with their performance especially when they forming some shapes and images out of estimated 1000 persons performing.
Another was the image of a lady or should I say two ladies with one body… I wonder how they survived from their situation. And not to forget, the picture of an old lady wearing a two piece swim suit. I really enjoy reading and viewing his blogpost.
If you want to view it too just log on to http://www.talk2discuss.com
November 28th, 2007 by admin
One of the easiest ways in the internet to earn revenue with less effort is domain parking. I have learned after reading some related stuff against domain, domainer, domain parking, etc. How it works? Well, of course, you need to have a domain name. Register it, and all you have to do is park it. You don’t have to worry about your content if you intend not to use it for the mean time. That’s it. All you have to do is, little time in promoting the site and start receiving revenues.
November 14th, 2007 by admin
New forms of communication and personalized services-collectively referred to as Web 2.0 – are enabling browser-based applications to mimic the rich user experience of the client/server era. Referring to a second generation of the Web that entails hosted services and communities such as social-networking sites, wikis, and folksonomies, web 2.0 points to changes in the ways developers and consumers use the Web as a platform.
“Web 2.0 represents a series of new ideas about how to make applications more interactive,” sys John R. Rymer, vice president and senior analyst at Forrester Research. “It includes new metaphors for communicating and collaborating that have become popular on the Web at large. There’s absolutely no reason we shouldn’t’
T use these techniques in our business application.”
These new services are compelling, but they can’t stand in isolation from the rest of the enterprise. “For an enterprise IT department, the issue is not only how to use Web 2.0 capabilities but how to integrate new development environments and scripting languages with traditional languages and databases,” sys Kenneth Bailey, principal product manager for Oracle Fusion Middleware.
SOA lays a foundation for Web 2.0 because Web services protocols allow us to more flexibly create interactions and conduct transactions over the internet, Forrestr’s Rymer says. “Services can be plugged into social networks, wikis, rich internet applications and other metaphors and presentation formats,” he says. “Without SOA, Web 2.0 isn’t very interesting because the systems are too brittle, too static, and thus they can’t evolve to use these new capabilities.”
Oracle’s Bailey sees a naturay synergy between Web 2.0 and SOA-enabled applications. “Oracle WebCenter uses SOA principles to create productive work environments that include Web 2.0 services such as instant messaging, wikis, and discussion forums as well as application that create or use Web services,” he says.
SOA – service-oriented architecture of Oracle. Source: Oracle Magazine
November 13th, 2007 by admin
Web 2.0
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
On September 30, 2005, Tim O’Reilly wrote a piece summarizing his view of Web 2.0. The mind-map pictured above (constructed by Markus Angermeier on November 11, 2005) sums up some of the memes of Web 2.0, with example-sites and services attached.
Web 2.0 refers to a perceived second generation of web-based communities and hosted services — such as social-networking sites, wikis, and folksonomies — which aim to facilitate creativity[citation needed], collaboration, and sharing between users. The term gained currency following the first O’Reilly Media Web 2.0 conference in 2004. Although the term suggests a new version of the World Wide Web, it does not refer to an update to any technical specifications, but to changes in the ways software developers and end-users use webs. According to Tim O’Reilly, “Web 2.0 is the business revolution in the computer industry caused by the move to the internet as platform, and an attempt to understand the rules for success on that new platform.”
Some technology experts, notably Tim Berners-Lee, have questioned whether one can use the term in a meaningful way, since many of the technology components of “Web 2.0″ have existed since the early days of the Web.
Defining “Web 2.0″
In alluding to the version-numbers that commonly designate software upgrades, the phrase “Web 2.0″ hints at an improved form of the World Wide Web. Technologies such as weblogs (blogs), social bookmarking, wikis, podcasts, RSS feeds (and other forms of many-to-many publishing), social software, web application programming interfaces (APIs), and online web services such as eBay and Gmail provide enhancements over read-only websites. Stephen Fry (actor, author, and broadcaster) describes Web 2.0 as an idea in people’s heads rather than a reality. It’s actually an idea that the reciprocity between the user and the provider is what’s emphasized. In other words, genuine interactivity if you like, simply because people can upload as well as download”.
Read the rest of this entry »
November 11th, 2007 by admin
Inline with different range of BT services specializing on technology, BT Broadband and Internet is included. Under this service that specializes on different category such as: BT Broadband, BT Broadband Talk with Hi-dS, BT Broadband Networking, Online Services, BT Home IT Call and many others. BT’s total broadband services which tagged as the UK’s complete broadband bundles with up to 8Mb download speed, wireless BT Home Hub, BT Vision digital TV recorder and best ever security. Where else you can find these terrific services on other company but only here at BT.
There are so many options you can choose from in acquiring BT broadband services. Learn every option and find the one best fitted to you and your needs. Learn also what is broadband all about, planning to have a broadband and if you have already, discover how to enhance your BT total broadband uk.
You won’t regret choosing BT broadband, voted by readers as Trusted Brand of 2007 by Reader’s Digest, you assure a good and quality broadband services.