Finding A Good Managed Server

Foreword By The Editor

This piece by Kevin Abrahams addresses the problem of how to choose a web hosting service from among the huge number that are now available on the Internet. As someone who works in the industry, he is able to offer sound advice about what to consider and what to expect while evaluating the market. Remember to take a look at the About The Author paragraph and follow his link there for further information.
Mike Alexander
Author of ‘Internet Traps, Ripoffs And Pitfalls

Undeniable Fact

Multiple racks of servers, and how a data cent...

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It is an undeniable fact that due to the extremely large number of different providers in the globally competitive market of web hosting, research and review has become an important tool to aid in finding a good managed server provider. What are the factors that should be given emphasis?

Examine

Examine the managed services offered such as Secured Sockets Layer (SSL) certificates that ensure a secured online monetary transaction. Is the provider able to incorporate shopping carts and online forms? Will the provider be able to provide database maintenance? How about file transfer services? Consider bandwidth, data transfer levels and maximum uptime. All of these are crucial to ensure the productivity of your website. These are also essential to maintain good daily traffic to your website.

IT Infrastructure

Consider the applications, equipment and tools utilized by the provider to deliver their hosting services. Are they able to keep up with the latest trends in web hosting services?

Technical Support

Assistance and support should back up the services provided. At all costs, a provider must be reachable 24 hours a day/seven times a week. All sorts of communication such as telephones, mobile phones and online means should be extended to the clients. The lack of support system may cause loss of clients.

Consider the cost of their services and the payment methods they accept. Is the fee reasonable enough for the bunch of services they offer? Will they be willing to accommodate your preferred payment method such as installments, credit cards, checks or bank-to-bank transfers?

Cost

This is also a crucial factor to evaluate when looking for a server provider. Carefully evaluate the services a provider offer and examine if the services are substantial for the price they offer. It would be a good practice to compare not only the prices of different providers, but their services as well.

Summary

Considering the above factors, you are on a feasible track towards finding the right managed server deal for you. Don’t just rely on what everyone else says. If you don’t feel comfortable enough with a provider, you can always set off and move to another provider.

About The Author

Kevin Abrahams is a writer in the hosting industry and also a server administrator for DedicatedNOW, a leading managed server provider.

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Posted by Mike Alexander | Web Topics | Monday 25 July 2011 14:37

Web Development: An Important Strategy

Foreword By The Editor

The following article by Karri Owens covers the strategy of web development and its overall effect on other areas such as programming, S.E.O. etc. For further information, be sure to visit the links highlighted in the author’s bio (About The Author) in the final paragraph.
Mike Alexander
Author of ‘Internet Traps, Ripoffs And Pitfalls

So, do you know why web development so important in today’s market?

Programming

Web development timeline
Image via Wikipedia

Web development is typically used to described the programming required to construct the “back end” of a website. The back end is the area of the site that isn’t seen by visitors, but which does the work required in order to present the right information in the correct format to the visitors.

On The Move

Web development is on the move. Try Acing at CSS, semantic markup, Javascript or server side languages. Web development is broken down into two areas: front-end development and back-end development. Front-end developers are a mix of a designer and a back-end developer.

S.E.O.

Web development is another important strategy that falls under the important feature of the services provided by the various SEO companies. Web development is used to describe any database driven web designs using dynamic scripting languages like PHP, ASP, ASP.NET and Coldfusion. It also covers database design and development.

Mindset

Web development is also a mindset; its the passion for working on the web, allied with a thirst to learn new things, be it a new technique or a new technology. Quenching that thirst, is the challenge of a web developer.

Growth

Web development is high in demand and predicted to grow at a much faster rate as organizations continue integrating advanced technology. Web producers can earn up to $82,000, while web developers can make up to $76,000 on average.

Sales

Web development is what helps your company or product to sell and also it is what helps your identity to improve. It should make your life easier, and not cause more frustration. Web Development is a great resource that will help you increase your company’s revenue. Whether you need to web design, or marketing services you will always have to make sure that the end results provides results.

About The Author

Looking for a Los Angeles Web Design Company, then visit www.webmarksolutions.com to find the best advice on Website Design.

Posted by Mike Alexander | Web Topics | Tuesday 19 October 2010 20:23

Website Design Rules

Foreword By The Editor

Website design is not a difficult subject provided you take the trouble to follow some simple and time-tested rules for better overall website performance. Many people make the mistake of thinking that artistic excellence is what is called for and then get stuck in a morass of conflicting techniques which only end up making the result less efficient. This article by Russel Grant offers a number of easy-to-follow guidelines for keeping you on the right track.
Mike Alexander
For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

Peak Performance

Web Design: Website Mockup Retro Style
Image by 7scout7 via Flickr

You need to pay attention to every detail of your website design to ensure peak performance. Many common mistakes are made by both amateur and professional designers who believe that their visitors require an entertaining visual and audio experience when most often that isn’t the case at all.

Take heed of the website design rules that follow and you can be assured of an optimally designed website that will produce the results you are seeking.

Systematic Navigation

Always use an easy navigational system. It should be so simple that even a young child can understand how to move from place to place. Stay away from any form of Flash based menus or even multi-tiered menus as they only serve to add more complication to the layout. If you make things difficult for them, your visitors will leave your site as quick as they arrived. Also, have a sitemap added to the main menu to help them find what they are looking for.

Navigational Clarity

Let it be clear to the user where they are at any given time. When visitors are deeply engrossed in browsing your site, you want to make sure that they know which part of the site they are in. That way, they will be able to browse relevant information or navigate to any section of the site and find their way back just as easily. This is best achieved by ensuring each page has a clear title and a textual ‘breadcrumb trail’ that clearly shows the links they have taken to get where they are. Never confuse your visitors or you will lose them very quickly as they become frustrated.

Splash Pages

Leave ‘splash’ pages for movies and advertisements as they are very often the first impression people have of a website. Made up of pretty designs, they are usually lavish images and graphics with accompanying words such as “welcome to our site” or “click here to enter”. These are merely fancy additions without any real functional purpose at all. They serve only to entertain but if website conversion is your goal (i.e. you want buyers for your products), they can be a big barrier to you achieving your goals.

Banner Ads

Do not use excessive banner advertisements. These are usually placed at the top or bottom of webpages but they are mostly ignored by the majority of web surfers so it is a very ineffective form of advertising and a waste of good space. Instead, provide more valuable content and weave relevant affiliate links into your content. Let your visitors feel that they can buy at will rather than being coerced.

Audio

Use as little audio as possible if you want your visitors to stay a long time and study your content; do not irritate them with your choice of music. Some  sounds can certainly enhance their experience but when played over and over again they can become irritating. It may be ‘cool’ to include music but give your users some form of control such as a mute button or the ability to control the volume.

By using this information on website design you will find visitors to your site stay much longer and will return in the future.

About The Author

The author writes cool stuff. Get more of it at 3d Graphic Design Course.

Posted by Mike Alexander | Web Topics | Thursday 20 May 2010 14:00

6 Components Every Website Needs

Foreword By The Editor

The following article by Terry Stanfield is all about web design and is pretty self explanatory from just the headline so I’m not going to labor over the points it raises here but do urge you to read it. If you like the article, or you find it informative, you will find the authors ‘resource box’ as the final paragraph, together with links to his site.
Mike Alexander
For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

Informative Websites

Internet Marketing Strategy Using Search Engin...
Image by hongxing128 via Flickr

An informative website is one that will provide all visitors with the information they come to seek and will also keep them coming back for more. There are various Internet marketing strategies that are used in order to make websites not only appear more interesting, but also to draw attention to the site. Successful websites are not only informative, but they use Search Engine Optimization to get them noticed online. SEO websites are more successful online than those that are not optimized. A website should be more than just an attractive looking site, it should answer questions for any visitors who are drawn to the site. Good webmasters understand the secrets to making a website not only more informative, but easier to find online. There are several important aspects to having a website that is informative and will make visitors want to keep coming back.

1. Start A Blog

A blog is perhaps one of the easiest ways to keep a website updated with the latest information. A blog can be attached to any website and can be updated regularly with all of the latest information that your visitors will want to know and make them keep coming back.

2. Informative Articles

Informative articles should also be present on any informative website that hopes to garner attention from the public and answer questions. Articles should be search engine optimized so that they can lead people who are interested in learning more to your website.

3. Frequently Asked Questions

A Frequently Asked Questions page should be part of all SEO websites. These are the usual questions that people will normally ask about the site that can be answered right away in this type of forum.

4. Video Communications

People who have questions will want to see them addressed in video on some websites. A great deal of Internet marketing today employs the use of video to answer questions for visitors easily.

5. Contact Information

Contact information is also imperative to a good website. Those who have additional information and questions may want to email them to you and your response will keep them returning. Most importantly, your website will want to answer the big question which is what the website can do for the visitor. Visitors will want to know why they should use your site and how you can help them.

6. An Internet Marketing Strategy

Internet marketing is more than just about driving customers to SEO websites. It is also about making sure that the websites have something to say and answer all of the questions for the visitors. Informative websites that answer questions up front will garner more traffic as well as repeat visitation from the public.

About the Author

Before you start an Internet Marketing campaign, go to Terry Stanfield’s site for information on how to increase web traffic and more on search engine marketing services. Click here to get your own unique version of this article with free reprint rights.

Posted by Mike Alexander | Web Topics | Friday 18 December 2009 20:15

The Way The World Wide Web Works

Foreword By The Author

The World Wide Web (WWW), unbeknown to many, was actually a European innovation. It was invented by an Englishman, Tim Berners-Lee, and was created in 1990 while he was working as a scientist for CERN, the European Particle Physics Laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland. Some people, short on knowledge about how ‘cyberspace’ developed, think he invented the Internet itself, which of course, he definitely did not. The Internet was already in existence (and thriving) and had grown out of ARPAnet, a research network founded (and funded) by the U.S. military. But Internet protocols (the ‘rules’ governing how data is to be transmitted and received) were defined by obscure prefixes such as ‘gopher://’, ‘wais://’, ‘ftp://’, etc. These, and others, are still in use but, because of the WWW, no longer dominate as they once did. Usenet (‘news://’) is still popular though, as is SMTP, one of the original protocols for the most popular (and still fastest growing) of all information dissemination systems, the ever ubiquitous ‘email’.
Mike Alexander
For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

The Original Internet

LONDON - FEBRUARY 12:  Queen Elizabeth II meet...
Image by Getty Images via @daylife

Prior to the WWW, the Internet consisted mainly of thousands of sets of individual files and text-based messages transmitted by the various transport protocols mentioned above. Most were categorized and stored in databases on computers housed in universities across the USA and around the world. They were accessible only by those who understood the protocols and the intimidatory command systems necessary for their operation.

The Birth of the Web

What Tim Berners-Lee introduced to the Internet, and named the World Wide Web, was the ability to ‘link’ data together, whether that data was located in files on the same server or on servers half a world away. He did this by bringing together three main elements: HTTP—the WWW protocol; HTML—the ‘language’ of the web; and the URL system—for ‘addressing’ websites anywhere in the world (a website being simply an area of disk space on a computer). The use of these three elements would transform the Internet into what he called “a single, global information space”. It would allow, for the first time, transmission and retrieval of ‘pages’ that could each consist of many files. These might be graphics files, text files, sound files, or indeed any other type of file, since the only restriction would be in the application that could interpret the language and present the results as viewable pages (these applications came to be known as ‘browsers’). Thus rich, interactive, multimedia documents, each capable of being linked to any other file on the Internet, suddenly became accessible to everyone.

The Vision

His vision of the web was, in his own words, “about anything being potentially connected with anything. It is a vision that provides us with new freedom, and allows us to grow faster than we ever could when we were fettered by the hierarchical classification systems into which we (formerly) bound ourselves. It leaves the entirety of our previous ways of working as just one tool among many. It leaves our previous fears for the future as one set among many. And it brings the workings of society closer to the workings of our minds.” *

One of the analogies he used to explain what he meant was how a strong smell of coffee could trigger a response in his mind and instantly transport him back to a small room over a corner coffeehouse in Oxford, England, where he once studied. The brain, and therefore the human mind, works by using a web-like structure of connections, or links, he reasoned, and therefore the nearer his ‘global information space’ could come to using a similar structure, the more viable—and versatile—it would be. It would also, like the mind, be the ultimate expression of freedom, with no governing body or stultifying bureaucracy to restrict its development.

The Commercial Web

He foresaw the rise of commercialism on the Internet but welcomed it as inevitable anyway. The anti-commercial bias evident among some academics, particularly those who had used the Internet prior to the introduction of the World Wide Web, was not something he subscribed to.

He was nevertheless wary of the potential for predatory behavior by some parts of the business sector and his work as head of the WWW Consortium, the body set up to lead the web to its full potential, must inevitably have involved pressure being applied to his philosophy from time to time. But his vision was clear and incorruptible. He never considered using his ownership of such unique intellectual property for personal commercial gain. As it turned out though, even he was surprised by the speed and scope of entrepreneurial exploitation of the web. Its potential as a new marketing medium was taken up with almost evangelical fervor and it became firmly established almost overnight.

Newcomers immediately started to get exasperated by the seeming lack of structure they found as they tried to cope with this new non-hierarchical entity. “Who’s in charge of this thing?” marketers asked, and “Where’s the directory of participants?”. This led to the establishment of a whole new industry in its own right, as attempts were frantically made to categorize and map the web.

Search Engines and Portals

Search engines and directories (or portals, as they have come to be known) swiftly came into being and those that gained dominance soon started marketing their services as being indispensable to the ‘surfing’ public. (The irony is that the very term ‘surfing’ sprang from the fact that hopping from one site to another via their links was analogous to the way surfers hopped on a wave not knowing where it would take them but simply to enjoy the ride.) If they were even remotely as reliable as telephone directories, these claims to indispensability might have some justification. But they’re not, and never will be. Both large and small portals and search engines can sometimes be extremely useful tools, of course, but that’s basically all they are, helpful tools, among many other helpful tools. One reason is that the web is growing and evolving at such a phenomenal pace that it’s impossible to keep up with developments. The major search engines and search directories that most people use when trying to find things don’t even come close to categorizing and recording everything. Nor do they, as things are now, have a hope of ever doing so.

Which is one of the reasons why website developers who recognize these facts devote special pages of links to other sites. They understand the non-hierarchical structure of the web, where any data can be linked to any other. So they provide links to other information that their visitors might find useful, thereby enhancing the usefulness of their own site.

The Way Forward

The World Wide Web, precisely as its creator Tim Berners-Lee predicted, has become such a vast and rapidly growing network of sites that practically every topic and subject under the sun is represented on it somewhere.

The fact that there is no official map of what data is available and where it can be found, is sometimes a source of great frustration though, both for users of the Internet, and those who wish to present information for them to find. The surest way to improve the situation for everyone is for website authors and managers to recognize the validity of Tim Berners-Lee’s original vision and to respond to link exchange requests in as positive a way as possible. Even the big search engines and portals are at last beginning to recognize the wisdom of doing so. I predict that the number of incoming and outgoing links a site has will soon become a major factor that they will consider when ‘ranking’ it in their search results.

© Mike Alexander 2002

For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

* Weaving The Web by Tim Berners-Lee 1999. ISBN 0 75282 090 7

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Posted by Mike Alexander | Web Topics | Friday 2 October 2009 13:28

The Future Of Wireless Technology

Foreword By The Editor

Wireless technology, especially in relation to computer networking and cellphones, is a hot topic right now so it should be no surprise to hear that we welcome the following excellent article on the subject by Ken Snow. As he quite rightly says, wireless technology, due to a number of recent developments, will most likely make tremendous advances over the next few years.
Mike Alexander
For all your content needs go to ClipCopy Content Solutions

Practical Applications

Wireless technology is gaining ground because of its low cost and ease-of-use. We all are familiar with radio and phones that use wireless technology. There are many more possible practical applications for wireless and the breakthrough developments happening in this field are set to revolutionize the future.

Wireless Networking

A USB Bluetooth adapter.
Image via Wikipedia

Wireless networking means less maintenance and less cost. The advent of radio has put a stop to the use of telephones that use wires to transmit signals. The new age cell phones based on wireless technology have made it possible for us to reach anyone anytime. Wireless technology translates into a lower cost since it obviates the laying down of cables and wires and regular maintenance. The other area where a significant impact has been felt is in the networking of computers. The usual scenario of having a wired Internet connection is all set to change. Wireless connections are soon going to be cheaper than the wired alternative and will also be easier to use. This will result in a lot of people shifting to the wireless option, when available.

Microwave Access

Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access (WiMAX) will be the next generation of wireless, an improvement over the existing wireless networking that uses a standard called 802.11. The good news is that you will not need to change your equipment, as it will run on the existing hardware. Though scientists are still working on it, it is poised to take the world by storm. The first WiMAX equipment was launched at the end of 2005.

Its biggest advantage will be that it will cover a wide area, which could be as much as up to 50 kilometers! The term Local Area Network (LAN) will be replaced by Metropolitan Area Network (MAN), which would cover the whole city! It will also offer higher speeds of up to an astounding 10MB per second, coupled with improved security. All you would need to do is buy a subscription, plug into a network and you are ready to go!

The Latest Technology

Bluetooth technology is becoming a part of our lives now. Apart from replacing your USB port, it has the potential of replacing all the wires in your equipment, except for the power cord! Imagine the convenience of staying in a house that does not have wires, where Bluetooth connects all the equipment. It would mean fewer hassles in cleaning the house coupled with freedom from the fear of tripping over wires!

It wouldn’t be surprising if by the end of the next decade wireless technology would becomes commonplace. It sounds convenient and should also be lesser in cost. Given its potential, we all seem to have a much easier life, with a faster and safer access to the world!

Article Source

Author – kensnow
Location – http:/articledragon.com/?page_id=40&catid=19&subcatid=336&artid=975

About the author

Discover more breakthrough developments about by visiting science,technology,wireless.

Posted by Mike Alexander | Web Topics | Monday 21 September 2009 23:59