blloo’s blog – information is wealth

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Free domain name from co.cc

Web server software is quite important, most major web sites running on the internet are controlled by linux servers as they are very stable and reliable.Domains such as co.cc can be obtained without signing up for any sort of web hosting package.You can get everything that needed for your hosting. Click here to check for your domain name for free .Register A Domain Name Free for life.Now You can transfer ownership of you domain to another person. You can mapp the free domain to a blog or photo album.Using this service we can also integerate with google aps for your account for free.

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URL forwarding – Turn your long and boring URL

Click here to grab your free domain name

Filed under: Tools, business services, online advertising, online business, technology , , ,

Google’s aggressive advertising .. It is not only adwords

Google is seeking advertising agencies to warm up to it after years of not being their favorite entity. After all, think of all the marketing dollars spent on advertising search engine (SEO campaigns and elsewhere) that agencies fail because of certain searches for a giant.

Google shows off

Stephanie Clifford at the New York Times wrote about Google invading the offices of the advertising agency Leo Burnett in July, setting up a sort of mini-carnival of sorts to show their advertising technology. It seems that the company wants to recruit organizations to utilize its tools, but some of these organizations believe Google has ulterior motives.

“As Google begins to try to sell television, radio and print ads and created tools for buying and planning media campaigns, advertising and some academics say that the company works with institutions in order to possibly replace, “writes Clifford.

Advertising aggressive

It is not unreasonable to think that Google has its own interest in mind. Why would it not? The company appears to be his way of working further in the World advertise more aggressively than ever. For example, they speak not even waiting for federal approval before going to submit their ads deal with Yahoo.

It is being investigated as a possible antitrust issue. Imagine if Google has succeeded in phasing out advertising agencies. I do not expect that to happen anytime soon, however. Google is great, and it has a lot of pull, but it’s not all. It is a notion that even Google itself rejects.

“I do not see how we would actually be able to provide better customer experience to a client that a body can today,” said Google Vice President for North America ad sales, Penry Price. “There is no way we could, in fact, the queue behind a customer and provide services and information that the agency can today.”

A lot of ads in the future of Google

Do not mark the extinction of organisms yet, but there is no question that Google becomes a much greater in its advertising Britches these days. You will have YouTube ads will begin to emerge, Feedburner RSS ads, and do not forget that the acquisition of DoubleClick. If Yahoo! deal goes through unscathed, what will be a big piece of the advertising market will do even more.

Filed under: business services, online advertising, online business, technology ,

How to start a web site for free !!

I am often asked “How can I start my own web site without any web design knowledge and without any money whatsoever?”
I know it can be hard to get started sometimes and not everyone wants to put money down just to get a simple site to share photos, news etc. So I have set out to find as many resources as I could that help you get started.

Option 1) Free blogs

Probably the most well known of the lot is Google’s Blogger.com. Starting your own site (blog) there is very easy. No mucking around with designs (unless you want to that is) it’s just a matter of a few clicks of your mouse button and away you go.

Thoughts.com Forums – Click on “blogs” in the navbar to open a free blog account.
Vox.com – Free blog provider, photo sharing.
Xanga – Another blog and photo sharing site.
i.ph – This blog provider boasts of very refined privacy settings with many options.

Option 2) Social/business network sites
LiveJournal – Blog provider / social network.
MySpace – I’m guessing Myspace needs no introduction.
BraveJournal – Another blog place that is leaning towards being more social network then just blog provider.
Squidoo – Here you can make a one page site about any topic and you can even get paid for your content. You can make many one page content pages not just one.

Option 3) Free web hosting with site builders or content management systems
FreeWebs – Advertising will be placed on your site but if you just want a simple page this is a good place to start.
Yahoo/Geocities – Lots of ads will be placed on your site so only use for personal sites.
Google page creator – You need to have a Gmail account and be using either Internet Explorer 6.0 or Firefox 1.0, or higher, with JavaScript and cookies enabled. If you don’t have a Gmail account, you can sign up for one here free.

If you know of more good services please let us know in the comments.

Filed under: Tools, news, online business, technology , , ,

Hot News : MySpace to launch “High School Musical” contest

NEW YORK  – MySpace plans to launch a contest on Tuesday to market the latest in Walt Disney Co’s blockbuster franchise “High School Musical 3″ in what the News Corp Internet social network called its biggest film campaign to date. 

Disney is hoping to build interest in the third movie in its hit television films series, and the first to hit theaters, by tapping MySpace’s estimated 76 million unique users as of July, according to comScore.

 Some 40 percent of U.S. mothers are also members of MySpace, according to comScore, which a MySpace spokesman said was one reason why the family and kids entertainment-focused Disney selected MySpace to promote one of the studio’s biggest hits.

 Schools are pitted against each other as high school seniors compete by completing undisclosed online tasks involving uploading photos, filming and uploading videos, and decorating their profile pages to see which school has the most “school spirit,” said Angela Courtin, MySpace’s senior vice president of marketing.

 Unlike sweepstakes where users do little more than sign up, the contest entails weeks of participation on the Internet, offline and using cellphones to send text messages. The contest ends on November 3.

 Courtin called the so-called integrated marketing campaign a “continuation of a dialogue between the franchise, MySpace and the user.”

 Winners will receive a free trip for the entire class to a Disney theme park and a pep rally featuring U.K. pop star Natasha Bedingfield.

 ”High School Musical 3″ opens in theaters in the United States on October 24.

Filed under: Tools, news, online business, technology , ,

Online Tax Preparation Services

Retnz.comEasy Online Tax Preparation Services.

User friendly Online Tax Services for individual Income Tax Return Preparation..

Every day, the global financial industry reinvents itself in response to new technologies, new opportunities. Retnz was designed to help you make the most of your investments and property deductions, so you get the biggest tax refund possible. The software is tested for its compliance and validations by Practicing Chartered Accountants and Tax Consultants. In addition, thousands of customers and associates keep continuously providing suggestions and updates on its improvements.

The various heads of incomes that are available

·                     Income from Salary

·                     Income from House property

·                     Income from Capital Gains

·                     Income from other sources

Why Retnz is the easiest choice for you…

Retnz was designed to help you make the most of your investments and property deductions, so you get the biggest tax refund possible.

Filed under: Tools, online business , ,

Bill Bars Web Traffic Discrimination

A Democratic lawmaker on Wednesday proposed legislation to stop network providers from playing traffic cop on the Internet.

Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s subcommittee on telecommunications and the Internet, introduced the bill to promote the principle, known as “Net neutrality,” of treating all Internet traffic equally.

Markey, who introduced similar legislation in 2006, said the bill doesn’t regulate the Internet, only makes sure the rules of online engagement are fair. His spokeswoman said he wanted to defuse critics’ arguments that the bill amounts to regulation, which she called inaccurate.

“It does, however, suggest that the principles which have guided the Internet’s development and expansion are highly worthy of retention, and it seeks to enshrine such principles in the law as guide stars for U.S. broadband policy,” Markey said of The Internet Freedom Preservation Act

Phone and cable companies say they want the freedom to charge content providers for access to the Internet’s fast lane. Any legislation affirming Net neutrality, they argue, would harm investment and innovation in the Internet.

The Hands Off the Internet coalition, whose members include AT&T, Qwest Communications International Inc. and others, said Markey’s bill leaves regulatory fingerprints, regardless of what he calls it.

Supporters of the bill, including Google and public interest groups, contend it just protects consumers without hamstringing development or driving up costs.

The bill, co-sponsored by Rep. Chip Pickering, R-Miss., requires the Federal Communications Commission to assess whether broadband providers are “blocking, thwarting or unreasonably interfering” with consumers’ rights to access, send, receive or offer content, applications and services over networks.

The FCC would also be required to determine whether providers charge extra for certain services and if it’s lawful.

The bill also requires the agency to hold at least eight summits around the country to get input from various groups about Internet service competition and services.

An FCC spokesman declined to comment on pending legislation.

The bill was drafted in response to reports that some companies, including Comcast Corp., are unfairly stifling communications over the Internet.

Markey spokeswoman Jessica Schafer said the agency already has the authority to enforce such practices.

She cited the agency’s investigation of Philadelphia-based Comcast, the country’s second-largest Internet provider. On Tuesday, Comcast told the FCC in formal comments that hampering some file-sharing by its subscribers was a justifiable way to keep Web traffic flowing for everyone.

Consumer groups, lawmakers and other critics have complained that Comcast violated Net neutrality. The company declined to comment on Markey’s bill.

Schafer also said a North Carolina telephone company, Madison River Communications LLC, paid $15,000 to the FCC in 2005 to settle allegations it blocked phone lines that customers used to make calls over the Internet. Under the settlement, the company could not block Internet calls in the future, but did not admit to violating any rules.

Filed under: business services, online business, technology , , , ,

Who Wins And Loses When ISPs Become Bandwidth Cops?

The big U.S. Internet service providers — mostly cable and phone companies — are looking to change the way they sell and manage Internet access. Comcast already messes with its customers’ peer-to-peer transfers, Time Warner Cable is testing pay-per-use pricing, AT&T has proposed filtering out illegal downloads, and Verizon says again it might consider pushing some Internet bits faster than others.Leaving aside the morality and legality of such practices, if ISPs really do start to regulate traffic, this is good news for some companies and bad news for others.

Winners:

ISPs: Anything cable and phone companies can do to increase revenue (by charging based on the amount of bandwidth subscribers consume) and/or decrease capital spending (by reducing network capacity used for piracy) is good for their bottom lines. And because Americans don’t have much choice for Internet access, we don’t see many people ditching their ISP for another provider, no matter how angry they get. Many ISPs are also pay TV providers, meaning their video-on-demand offerings — which wouldn’t get the bandwidth surcharge — could get more eyeballs.

Cisco:
More complicated bandwidth maneuvering means more network gear and services to buy. Cisco (CSCO) has spent a ton of money on traffic management technology, including its $200 million acquisition of P-Cube in 2004.

Traffic management companies: These include Sandvine, Allot Communications (ALLT), and Arbor Networks. ISPs will use their technology to filter through their networks and weed out the offending bytes.

VPN providers: Companies offering “virtual private networks” are essentially selling an encrypted tunnel between a downloader and the file they’re downloading. ISPs won’t be able to screen this traffic. But this won’t help in situations where people have to pay for service based on how much bandwidth they use.

Netflix, Blockbuster: DVD rentals still make up the vast majority of their business, and these don’t require any Internet bandwidth to transmit.

Lawyers, lobbyists: We don’t expect the service providers to do anything radical enough to cause a mass subscriber exodus. After all, they need their businesses to grow, not shrink. But when ISPs are inspecting your Internet activity, that raises privacy concerns. And expect the companies on the “losers” list below to ramp up their lobbying for “net neutrality” laws that would bar ISPs from favoring some Internet files over others. It’s already started up again.

Losers:


Apple:
iTunes is the leading digital media store, but if consumers have to pay extra to download big files, Steve Jobs’ $3/$4 movie rentals don’t sound so great, especially in hi-def, where files are even bigger.

Amazon:
Likewise, the Unbox store/movie rental service becomes less attractive.

Hulu: The NBC U/News Corp. JV is putting together a great service, but if subscribers have to pay extra to stream video files over the Web, it’s less sexy.

The rest of Web video industry: Everyone from Yahoo to Google’s YouTube. Their video files are usually smaller, but still eat up a lot more bandwidth than emails.

CDNs: Akamai Technologies (AKAM), Limelight Networks (LLNW), and other content delivery networks are betting on a future where more video gets distributed over the Web. Cracking down on piracy is good for these guys, because some of their biggest clients are legit digital media sellers like Apple and Amazon. But if ISPs charge extra for big downloads, CDNs could end up pushing fewer movies over the Web.

P2P companies: Peer-to-peer transfers are already getting tampered with, thanks in part to their long-time connections to piracy. But legitimate companies like Pando and BitTorrent could have trouble using P2P to deliver files for their big-media clients if ISPs’ filters get in the way.

Filed under: business services, mobiles, online business, technology , , , ,

Microsoft Executive Shuffle Goes “Live”

The anticipated Microsoft reorganization is now happening. We wrote about it previously with respect to the ouster of Steve Berkowitz. Some are speculating that these changes anticipate a future integration of Yahoo into the company. But Mary Jo Foley says they were in motion well before the announced bid. (NOTE: See Official: Microsoft Management Reorg Announced; Dueling Ad Groups? for the latest news on changes).

CNET provides a good summary of who’s in and who’s out:

The move will see three top executives–including two prominent outside hires–leaving the company. Exiting Microsoft are: Senior Vice President Steven Berkowitz, the former Ask.com CEO who had been heading Microsoft’s online services unit, and Mike Sievert, the former AT&T Wireless executive brought in to run Windows marketing . . .Bill Veghte will add Windows Live marketing oversight to his responsibility running the Windows business unit. On the mobile side, longtime server and tools unit executive Andy Lees is headed over to the Mobile and Embedded devices unit.

The Wall Street Journal focuses its story on the moves with respect to mobile.

One can’t help but think that some of these shifts do in fact assume a Microsoft-Yahoo combination. Microsoft has been courting Yahoo for well over a year and one eye has to be on the impact of the proposed acquisition. If you were Microsoft and didn’t consider that then you’d either have to dump all the Yahoo executives or do yet another reorg after you’d just done one.

By the same token there’s still a chance at least that the Yahoo deal won’t happen (with recent talks between Yahoo and News Corp). So this reorganization must have a kind of “stand alone integrity” if the acquisition doesn’t wind up taking place.

Filed under: Tools, business services, online business, technology , , , ,

Using External CSS Style Sheets

External CSS style sheets offer numerous benefits to web site design. First, they centralize CSS rules, which means that making a change in one file affects the entire web site; therefore, site maintenance is much simpler. Second, an external style sheet reduces the amount of web page code, which makes it easier for spiders to dissect the code and get at the content. Third, most browsers cache this file, which speeds up the loading and rendering of a web page.

This tutorial assumes that you already know something about the use of cascading style sheets. Our focus is on helping you to implement it better with your web site.There are three methods for using CSS styles with your web pages.

An inline style is embedded in an HTML tag like the following. An inline style is typically used when the CSS rule being applied is unique to that HTML tag. An inline style is defined using the style attribute.

<img src="/images/logo.png" style="float:left;margin:0 10px 0 0;" />

An embedded style is a block of code that is added to the head section of the HTML script. An embedded style is used when the CSS rules are unique to that page. This block should always be contained in the head section of the script.

<style type="text/css"> .imageleft { float:left; margin:0 10px 0 0; } </style>

An external style sheet is a separate file filled with CSS rules that is referenced from each HTML script that uses it. Ideally, that should be every page in a web site. The external file can be located in the same directory as your HTML scripts, or can be placed in another directory. Because the file serves a specific purpose, external style sheets are commonly placed in their own directory, which may be named “styles” or “css” or something that clearly identifies the type of files found there.

An external style sheet is referenced within the head section of an HTML script. The file uses a .css file extension.

<link rel="stylesheet" href="http://www.domainname.com/css/style.css" type="text/css" />

You can fully specify an absolute path to the external style sheet file, as shown above, or you can use a relative path, as shown below. It is a good idea to make a relative path root-relative (starting with the root directory) so that you can reference it from scripts within different directories. If it looks like your defined styles are not working, check the path to the file

<link rel="stylesheet" href="/css/style.css" type="text/css" />

Other than the use of the .css file extension, there is nothing special about the format of an external file. You just need to define and list your CSS rules.

The Cascading Effect

The cascading part of CSS has to do with which CSS rule has priority. An inline style rule has priority over an embedded block style rule or an external style rule. An embedded block style has priority over an external style rule. Within an external style sheet, that last occurrence of a rule overrides previous occurrences. Generally speaking, the closer the rule definition gets to the specific HTML tag affected, the higher the priority.

Use of Multiple CSS Style Sheets

You can use as many style sheets as you wish, but it makes the most sense if you only call 1 or 2 from a web page. Style rules should be consolidated based upon how they are used. Normally, there would be a central external style sheet. If you have a number of pages that use a different set of CSS rules, you can either reference a different style sheet or an additional style sheet can be referenced. If you do this, remember to watch out for the cascading effects regarding which rules take priority.

Multiple Formats for Style Sheet Rules

Different developers use different methods for formatting CSS rules. Shown below are a couple of popular methods that are commonly used.

h1 { font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 18px; color: #000; }  .imageleft { float:left; margin:0 10px 0 0; }

Some purists prefer the format shown below because it saves a few bytes of code by eliminating some carriage returns and spaces.

h1 { font-family:Arial, sans-serif;font-size:18px;color:#000; } .imageleft { float:left;margin:0 10px 0 0; }

It doesn’t matter which format you prefer to use. All of them work the same.

The World Wide Web Consortium establishes and maintains the specifications for CSS. They do offer an online CSS validator. If you are having problems getting a rule to work properly or would just like to make sure that your code meets the specifications, check out this freebie tool.

Filed under: Tools, online business, technology, tricks , , , ,

Beware Social Networking Ad Buzz

The Facebooks and MySpaces may not be as appealing a destination for online advertising as they want businesses to believe.Much has been made of the potential for advertising on social networks. With their appeal to a younger audience that fulfills the demographic fantasies of many marketers, they have been promoted as the next big profitable ground for businesses to plow.

Google’s fourth quarter earnings took away some of the luster from social network advertising, as the company blamed lower than expected earnings from advertising on MySpace. Google paid $900 million for the privilege of delivering search and advertising to the site, but their Q4 2007 complaints sounded a little bit like buyer’s remorse.

We see opportunities to take advantage of social network advertising, like that offered by Facebook through its ad program in the right circumstances. As a business in a college town, where the likelihood of strong Facebook participation exists, it has to be considered for a marketing campaign for a business competing for the young 20-something consumer.

Without a heavy base of college-age consumers, or being a proprietor of items that appeal to a different audience, like homeowners or parents, contextual search ads still look like the place to be. Suggestions on making a site search engine friendly will help pick up visitors in regular search results. Consider efforts on doing so time well invested in growing the business. Source

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