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  • A Beginner's Quick Guide to How SEO Works

    SEO is among the best ways that you can have traffic directed and redirected to your website. The number of SEO tips and tricks out there are staggering and can take you a very long time if you as a novice begin to perform SEO based on what you read over manuals and blogs online.

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  • Top Five SEO Mistakes to Avoid

    No matter whether you are a blogger or a webmaster of a business website, as long as you are hoping for a higher exposure rate, then you will need to optimize your website for search engines. This is because doing SEO on your website is the best way to obtain a large amount of visitors to your site quickly.

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  • telecomuting in foreign country expiriences

    - by grabah
    Hi. Does anyone have any expiriance in telecomuting (working at home) for a company based in some foreign country? By this i don't mean working on some contracted job, but more or less permanent job. Is this even possible, what are options for payment, and can you expect to be payed by usual rates for that country or significantly less? Is there any workinghours control, or as long as you deliver on time it's all good.

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  • Google Mayday Update

    So Google did an update called Mayday. Although this was a small update, it had a profound impact on millions of websites around the globe. Some webmasters have claimed to have lost between 5-15% of long-tail traffic with some reporting more.

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  • Curating projects of deceased friends

    - by Ant
    A very good friend of mine, and an avid programmer, recently passed away. He left nearly 40 projects on BitBucket. Most of them are public, but a few of them are marked as private. I've decided to take on curation duties for the projects rather than leave his work to disappear. If you have been in the same situation, what did you do? Did you open-source everything? Continue development? Delete it all? I'm very interested to hear other people's experiences. There are a few reasons why some of the projects are marked as private (private projects on BitBucket are visible only to invited users and the original creator): One of them is an iOS web app that was free in the app store. I've had to remove the app from the store as I'm shutting down his web sites as a favour to his widow. However, I've already made the app public under the GPL v3 (he was a big GPL supporter). One of them contains proprietary code. It can't be open-sourced. Others are very much work-in-progress. I don't know if he intended to make them into hosted, paid services or if he wanted to give the code away under an open-source licence when they were finished. Here's a list of the private projects: Some kind of living cell simulator that uses SBML along with Runge-Kutta and Euler algorithms to do... something. There's a fair amount of code here but I don't know what it does or how far along it is. No docs. An accountacy application; it seems to have a solid DB design behind it but there's little code on top of that. A website whose purpose is to suggest good restaurants. Built on yii. Seems to have a lot of code but I'd need to set up a WAMP stack to see how far along it is. A website intended to host memorials to people who suffered from the same problem he was. Built on Joomla. I'm not sure how much of the code is just Joomla and how much is custom; again, I'd need to get Joomla running to find out. I'd just introduced him to Mercurial and BitBucket. All of the private projects are single commits of codebases he wasn't using version control with/was previously using SVN. I don't have the SVN repositories so I can't see the commit logs.

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  • Linux : Microsoft et SUSE renforcent leur partenariat autour de l'interopérabilité pour optimiser les environnements hétérogènes

    Linux : Microsoft et SUSE renforcent leur partenariat Pour l'optimisation des datacenters et l'interopérabilité A l'occasion de la 5ème édition de l'Open World Forum, Microsoft et SUSE ont annoncé le renforcement de leur partenariat avec le lancement d'une plateforme d'évaluation conjointe. « Depuis plus de 10 ans, Microsoft travaille à l'ouverture et l'interopérabilité de ses technologies. A travers cet engagement de long terme, notre objectif est d'offrir de véritables solutions d'optimisation des investissements et des compétences pour les environnements hétérogènes en Cloud privé comme en Cloud public », explique Frédéric Aatz, Directeur de la stratégie interopérabilité de Mic...

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  • How to Research Keywords - 1 Other Thing the Gurus Left Out

    It's actually funny when you're learning "how to research keywords" in the beginning they tell you to just find some long tail keywords that has low competition and good search volume. Then they tell you to write some articles around those keywords and submit them to the article directories. At this point you're free to sit back, watch the traffic flow in, and rake in the dough!

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  • Sample Code for the SSIS Book

    - by KnightReign
    Yes, I know I’ve been gone for a long time. I haven’t professionally blogged for years. But, the good folks here, Adam and Peter have out of the goodness of their hearts, left my blog around and well, I though I’d check in. Since then, I’ve changed jobs, gotten divorced, bought a few more laptops, bunches of guitars, a snowboard or two, iPads, iPhones, a few cars, travel to India, Europe, Middle East, backpacked Scotland (and still damp), Nepal and all over the US. I’m three roles away from the SSIS...(read more)

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  • Database Deployment Cribsheet

    As part of Simple-Talk's long-running Cribsheet series, they asked William Brewer to write a guide to deployment that described in general terms what is involved in the deployment of a database application, and the sort of issues you're likely to come up against. Top 5 hard-earned lessons of a DBAIn part one, read about ‘The Case of the Missing Index’ and learn from the experience of The DBA Team. Read now.

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  • How often should multiplayer games communicate with the server?

    - by Bane
    I once heard that Runescape "ticks" every 0.3s, and that seemed like a very long period of time, although Runescape is kind of a slow game. I'm building a more dynamic top-down shooter game, and I'm wandering, how often should I communicate with the server? ASAP, or every 0.1s? How do shooter games usually do it? Both the server and the client are written in Javascript, node.js and socket.io are being used.

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  • what is a squeeze page?

    - by Steve
    I've been reading a marketing book which suggests building a squeeze page to build an email list. Does this mean one of those long sales letter type pages with crumby styling? I'm assuming the styling does not have to be generic, or does it? Or, if the sales letter is not a squeeze page, what is a squeeze page? Is there an easy way to build one, and what considerations should be undertaken when building one?

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  • Working with SQL Agent Durations

    SQL Agent stores duration in HHMMSS format - not always useful. Discover how to use Powershell, some basic math, and T-SQL to tame these unruly values. Learn Agile Database Development Best PracticesAgile database development experts Sebastian Meine and Dennis Lloyd are running day-long classes designed to complement Red Gate’s SQL in the City US tour. Classes will be held in San Francisco, Chicago, Boston and Seattle. Register Now.

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  • What's the current wait time for reconsideration requests for Google's webmaster tools?

    - by chrism2671
    We recently received an unnatural links penalty to our site; a rogue SEO firm did us some serious damage, and we lost 40% of our traffic (hundreds of thousands of users) overnight. The effect on our business has been severe and we're really hoping we making things right. We submitted a reconsideration request but I'm wondering how long I should forecast for an outcome, as it will have a knock on effect for our business.

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  • How to mount ntfs partitions on startup?

    - by Levan
    I now this question has been asked a million times but this is a bit different, now I need to know on how to mount it on ubuntu 12.10 I been using PYSDM for a long time but on ubuntu 12.10 it does not work sadly, I installed arios-automount and it mounted partitions on start up but problem i have with it, on start up it launches all the partition window So can anyone tell me a good mount manager for ubuntu 12.10 with graphical user interface thank you for your time

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  • Three Main Differences Between SEO and PPC

    Today, many webmasters that want to boost traffic to their website mistakenly believe that SEO (search engine optimization) and PPC (pay per click) campaigns are the same thing. While both traffic driving methods have a common set of goals, they tend to have very different long term effects. This is just one of many reasons why you need to make use of both tools in order to expand your web presence as much as possible.

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  • Getting the Hang of SEO Writing

    Businesses need some sort of marketing. Whether it's the kind that puts up big billboards along major roads and highways, or the kind that puts up little banner ads on the tops of out of the way, obscure websites, or some kind of SEO campaign or any kind of marketing is good for any business. As long as you get to put your business' name out for people to see.

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  • What will come after Linux?

    <b>Technology & Life Integration:</b> "As much as I like Linux and wish that it live long and prosper. I am also one who likes to think about the future. So I started wondering. What is there that can follow in Linuxs footsteps?"

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  • Why Does On-Page Search Engine Optimization Work So Well?

    On-page search engine optimization has been around since an inordinately long time - probably it is the first kind of SEO that marketers began to use - but it is only lately that people have begun to understand its great efficacy in bolstering the prospects of any website. The term is used to describe all methods you use on the page of the website in order to enhance its prospects with the search engines.

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  • Report: The 7 Attractions of Gnome and KDE

    GNOME and KDE have long had features that Windows lacked. In the last few years, both major free desktops have added features that show not only an interest in usability, but, at times, an effort to anticipate what users might actually want.

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  • Apps Script Office Hours - October 25, 2012

    Apps Script Office Hours - October 25, 2012 - Arun announces an election sample app - soon! Look for the blog post on googleappsdeveloper.blogspot.com - LAX hackathon googleappsdeveloper.blogspot.com - Bill (Google Hangout) asks about ScriptDb. Ikai makes a long analogy about libraries and datastores and offers possible explanations for why certain issues occur, as well as some of the difficulties in working with distributed datastores. From: GoogleDevelopers Views: 48 6 ratings Time: 29:34 More in Science & Technology

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  • Use controller in view in MVC

    - by gavri
    I have a problem convincing my team mates why we shouldn't use (directly reference) the controller in the view when developing components in the spirit of MVC. I have invoked decoupling and natural intuition, but still those arguments didn't get through. They say, in their defense, that this is a normal compromise. What arguments are convincing? Or they are right? How can the practice of using the controller in the view could affect a project on the long run?

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  • Cloud Computing Business Benefits

    - by workflowman
    If you have been living under a rock for the past year, you wouldn't have heard about cloud computing. Cloud computing is a loose term that describes anything that is hosted in data centers and accessed via the internet. It is normally associated with developers who draw clouds in diagrams indicating where services or how systems communicate with each other. Cloud computing also incorporates such well-known trends as Web 2.0 and Software as a Service (SaaS) and more recently Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) and Platform as a Service (PaaS). Its aim is to change the way we compute, moving from traditional desktop and on-premises servers to services and resources that are hosted in the cloud.  Benefits of Cloud Computing  There are clearly benefits in building applications using cloud computing, some of which are listed here:  Zero up- front investment:  Delivering a large-scale system costs a fortune in both time and money. Often IT departments are split into hardware/network and software services. The hardware team provisions servers and so forth under the requirements of the software team. Often the hardware team has a different budget that requires approval. Although hardware and software management are two separate disciplines, sometimes what happens is developers are given the task to estimate CPU cycles, disk space, and so forth, which ends up in underutilized servers.  Usage-based costing:  You pay for what you use, no more, no less, because you never actually own the server. This is similar to car leasing, where in the long run you get a new car every three years and maintenance is never a worry.  Potential for shrinking the processing time:  If processes are split over multiple machines, parallel processing is performed, which decreases processing time.  More office space:  Walk into most offices, and guaranteed you will find a medium- sized room dedicated to servers.  Efficient resource utilization:  The resource utilization is handed by a centralized cloud administrator who is in charge of deciding exactly the right amount of resources for a system. This takes the task away from local administrators, who have to regularly monitor these servers.  Just-in-time infrastructure:  If your system is a success and needs to scale to meet demand, this can cause further time delays or a slow- performing service. Cloud computing solves this because you can add more resources at any time.  Lower environmental impact:  If servers are centralized, potentially an environment initiative is more likely to succeed. As an example, if servers are placed in sunny or windy parts of the world, then why not use these resources to power those servers?  Lower costs:  Unfortunately, this is one point that administrators will not like. If you have people administrating your e-mail server and network along with support staff doing other cloud-based tasks, this workforce can be reduced. This saves costs, though it also reduces jobs.

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