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  • 5 Steps to Impress First Time Site Visitors

    Have you ever given some thought to what you need to do to attract people to visit the website you just created for them? In case you haven't yet done so, let me take you through five basic steps which you should adhere to if you are looking for an increase in the daily hits to your website.

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  • Page Flip Flash Technology to Save the Environment

    With many more people becoming aware of the global climate change that is taking place around us, an increasing number of them are starting to understand their negative impact on the environment. Thankfully, a lot of them are taking steps to mitigate that negative impact.

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  • SEO & Digital Marketing - Social Media Intangibles

    'Social Media' is certainly one of the most often used, yet least understood terms in the marketing space. In terms of purely defining the term, Social Media can be defined as communications among people in the digital space. These communications typically involve the exchange of ideas, experiences, information and insight, along with various media such as images and videos.

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  • Proper Search Engine Indexing

    Google's search engine is nothing but a very simplistic search box, but behind the scenes, it's a complicated algorithm and getting increasingly difficult as time goes on. Search engines like Google, Yahoo, and Bing are getting more precise at sorting websites in order to help people find the information they are looking for.

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  • How to Build an Attractive Website?

    You might think it's difficult to master your domain and be successful online. However, if you want to generate traffic and make your website successful then you have to dismiss any notion that you can't be successful in your ability to make a website that people want to visit, that looks attractive and converts well.

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  • It's All About Your Website

    When you expect people to come flocking to your website to buy your product, service or eCourse you need to remember that it is all about your website appeal to attract visitors where they will stay long enough to read your sales pitch, watch your video or listen to your audio. Convincing them to take a moment to consider what you have to offer is all in the way you make that first impression, that 3 seconds to catch their eye, arousing their curiosity while assuring your visitor that it is all about them.

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  • How to Get on the Front Page of Google Even If You Do Not Have a Website Or Blog

    Local search is the term used to describe a person typing in their location to find a local business or service provider; for example "florist in Camden." If you are a local business there is a huge increase in the number of people using the internet to find their local service provider or product and your business needs to have a presence on the web to make sure they find you.

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  • SEO Tips - Never Use an Automated Service For Search Engine Site Submission

    It's hard to visit a marketing related website without some company offering to submit your site to the search engines. Of course what many people don't realize is that you're not going to get into the SE's using these 'site submission tools' the only way to get into the search engine is for them to index your site after finding a link for your blog or website from a site that is in Google's or any other search engines results already. The bottom line is you should never pay for or use an automated search engine submission service.

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  • Getting my younger brother started on programming

    - by SmartLemon
    My younger brother is 13 years old, I started programming when I started to develop Android applications when I was 15, last year my brother gained an interest in it and he would always pestering me about letting him make something himself, so I wrote him a few tutorials and he built himself a small application that had a few buttons that did something, I think you put in your dob and it would tell you what day you were born on, he took a couple of days building up to his final application, maybe even a week, learning everything he needed. Since then he hasn't really done much more because I have been engulfed in work and such where I have my own programming problems to sort out. I told him that when he was my age (I am 17) that he should be better then me, he was a bit sceptical about this however. I dont think he has as much logical reasoning as I would think he needs to solve more complex problems, but shouldnt that just develop over time as it did with me? He has been pestering me for the past week or something to write him more tutorials, but I didn't have time. All I had with me was a playlist I had downloaded from the new boston from youtube for C++, it's about 73 videos. He is currently about 20-30 videos in, he has come to ask me a few questions about it and thats it. Should I have really properly started him with C++? Should I stop him now and start him again on python or ruby? I know that C++ shouldn't really be a beginners language, especially for someone who is only 13, by the time this question is answered will probably be up to learning about inheritance or something. Some people may see this as not a real question, but it is, and should be used as a reference for others. I want to know, should I start him on a different language whch is more easy? What language then? And would it be better for me to teach him myself (I would make time) or just continue him with the new boston? There are a few more questions throughout this question but these are the main ones. Part of the question people seem to be neglecting is me asking whether I should change what language he is learning to another, or since he is already pretty far through the tutorials should I just leave him with C++ and he can learn the other languages freely by himself?

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  • Server Migration Checklist

    - by merrillaldrich
    During the past six months or so I have had to manage quite a lot of SQL Server migration/consolidation, and with each effort I’ve refined a checklist to try to make things go more smoothly. I just hate getting that call after a migration where something unexpected is broken :-). What follows is imperfect, but I thought I’d throw it up here anyway, if only as a starting point for other people. Some basic assumptions: I have been moving SQL Server 2005 Standard Edition and SQL Server 2000 data, so...(read more)

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  • SEO For Your Small Business

    Do you own a small business in Albuquerque? Do you have a website for that business? And is that website SEO, or search engine optimized to be found by people, in Albuquerque, searching for whatever service your business offers?

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  • Discover 25 Years of SPARC Innovation

    - by Cinzia Mascanzoni
    Over the last 25 years SPARC technology has led the field in enterprise IT innovation – providing world record performance to data centers across the globe. Discover how the history of SPARC has formed the IT landscape of today, and how upcoming improvements to this industry-leading technology will continue to shape the future. Register Now to hear the story of SPARC from the people who shaped the past, present, and future of this remarkable technology

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  • Database Mirroring Performance Monitoring

    Many people deploy performance monitoring solutions in a "one-size-fits-all" manner. That is, they tend to build a solution that can be easily deployed to multiple servers and capture basic information from each server. The trouble is that not every server is identical, not even within the same shop. For example, not every server may have database mirroring deployed, which means your performance monitoring solution may be missing some critical pieces of information with regards to monitoring database mirroring.

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  • Video Search Engine Optimization - Advanced Techniques For Best SEO Services

    Everyone is aware of the fact that a site whose configuration is best for the purpose of search engines is the one that attracts most of the internet traffic. People usually access such types of sites only. But not a single person on this planet has ever thought of optimizing the videos just like the optimization of the sites. As the video content is increasingly becoming more and more popular among the masses, so it is essential that the transmission of the data involves accurate optimization of the video search engine.

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  • Work For Hire SEO Services - What to Watch Out For!

    In a world where people continents apart work together for that same cause, and may not even know it, it can be confusing to hire someone when you cannot be familiar with them. Especially in the realm of online services like SEO services. A person who lives in a far away country may be willing to do the job you want them to for a fraction of the pay of hiring someone from your own country, but what redress do you have as a consumer if things do not go as expected? Not much really...

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  • Is it a good practice to code in English? [closed]

    - by Milox
    Possible Duplicate: Do people in non-English-speaking countries code in English? I have a development comming that is intended to be sold across Latin America (Spanish speakers), but I've heard from some partners that is a good practice to always code in English, I mean just code (methods, classes, pages names, etc), labels on GUI are going to be all in Spanish... Code will be edited in the future by developer of companies across Latin America and just maybe some from outside. What do you think?, any experience with this?

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  • FOSS: Free and Open Source Software

    <b>Datamation:</b> "FOSS is an abbreviation for Free and Open Source Software. In other words, FOSS is software whose source code is openly available. People can install and even modify FOSS as they please, so long as they follow a few basic requirements listed in the license."

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  • Cloud Computing Demystified

    There is a new term that is blazing in the world of IT; cloud computing. While the term is gaining more and more momentum many people are still unsure as to what the heck it is.

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  • Agile team with no dedicated Tester members. Insane or efficient?

    - by MetaFight
    I'm a software developer. I've been thinking a lot about the efficiency of the Software Testers I've worked with so far in my career. In fact, I've been thinking a lot about the Software Testers role in general and have reached a potentially contentious conclusion: Non-developer Software Testers staff are less efficient at software testing than developers. Now, before everyone gets upset, hear me out. This isn't mere opinion: Software Testing and Software Development both require a lot of skills in common: Problem solving Thinking about corner cases Analytical skills The ability to define clear and concise step-by-step scenarios What developers have in addition to this is the ability to automate their tests. Yes, I know non-dev testers can automate their tests too, but that often then becomes a test maintenance issue. Because automating UI tests is essentially programming, non-dev members encounter all the same difficulties software developers encounter: Copy-pasta, lack of code reusibility/maintainability, etc. So, I was wondering. Why not replace all non-dev roles with developer roles? Developers have the skills required to perform Software Testing tasks, and they have the skills to automate tests and keep them maintainable. Would the following work: Hire a bunch of developers and split them into 2 roles: Software developers Software developers doing testing (some manual, mostly automated by writing integration tests, unit tests, etc) Software developers doing application support. (I've removed this as it is probably a separate question altogether) And, in our case since we're doing Agile development, rotate the roles every sprint or two. Also, if at all possible, try to have people spend their Developer stints and Testing stints on different projects. Ideally you would want to reduce the turnover rate per rotation. So maybe you could have 2 groups and make sure the rotation cycles of the groups are elided. So, for example, if each rotation was two sprints long, the two groups would have their rotations 1 sprint apart. That way there's only a 50% turn-over rate per sprint. Am I crazy, or could this work? (Obviously a key component to this working is that all devs want to be in the 3 roles. Let's assume I'm starting a new company and I can hire these ideal people) Edit I've removed the phrase "QA", as apparently we are using it incorrectly where I work.

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