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Sunday, 2 September 2012

Pinterest Twitter friend notification email messages


quick-tips logo
A while ago, Pinterest removed the need to request an invitation to sign up:  you can now go to www.Pinterest.com and register immediately.

It now looks like there are three options for signing up:
  • Using your Facebook account
  • Using your Twitter account
  • Using an email address.

(However I can't confirm that the email address works or not - it didn't the last time I tried.)


Now, if you sign up via Twitter, there'a a question at the end of the registration process about whether you want your Twitter followers to be notified that you've joined Pinterest.  I'm pretty sure that this wasn't there the last time I signed up for a Pinterest account using a Twitter account.   But I ticked it - expecting that people might get some type of notification inside Pinterest.

However what actually happens is that an email message is sent to the email account of any Twitter followers who are already on Pinterest, telling them that you have just joined and inviting them to "make you welcome" - presumably by following you on Pinterest too.




The message reads
"Hi <<recipient's Twitter account name>>
Your Twitter friend <<your Twitter account name>> just joined Pinterest.   Help welcome <<your Pinterest account name>> to the community."

I'm fairly sure that the message is only sent to Twitter followers who are already registered in Pinterest themselves - not all your Twitter followers.

But I was a little surprised by this.

Sending an email is a little more invasive than I'd expected (and maybe shows that Pinterest is looking to do things with the linking data it collected when forcing us to sign up via our existing Twitter or Facebook accounts)####

Really I don't expect my Twitter followers to be following me on Pinterest.   I'm looking for a different target audience on Pinterest, not more of the same people who are following me already.  

And I'm a little worried that Twitter followers might think I've spammed them by telling them that I've joined Pinterest.


Saturday, 1 September 2012

web hosting mumbai

Web Hosting Companies in Mumbai 

 

Mumbai is a big city. All types of businesses flourish in Mumbai, ranging from self employed persons to entrepreneurs. Bollywood industry to IT companies are all in Mumbai.  There are more than a thousand web hosting companies in Mumbai and statics show that if we just count the no of domains registered in Mumbai only, it's much more than if we include the whole UP state. So indeed, lot's of clients and customers constantly look for web hosting services in Mumbai. The point here is that though there are many web hosts and IT companies in Mumbai but not all of them are good. So here in this post I wanna share with you people about the top 10 web hosting Mumbai companies which a client can choose to take services.
 

Top 5 web hosting companies in Mumbai  

  Start your web designing career by learning how to create a website for free


1. Bigrock:  The top most web hosting company in Mumbai is Bigrock. Bigrock has currently more than 1000 employees all from top IT graduate colleges of India. Bigrock has it's office located in Andheri, which is very pause zone of Mumbai. No doubt in companies reputation, more that 100000 people rely on their platform. There support service is awesome and their technical department is outstanding. I would first recommend everyone in Mumbai to look for Bigrock web hosting services. They are just awesome and great service indeed.

 2. Resellerclub: It's again the top most web hosting company in Mumbai, with more than 100000 of satisfied customers worldwide.Resellerclub is again the business of directi. Directi is the leading IT company in Mumbai as well as in India. Directi owns many business of which bigrock and resellerclub are a part.
Reseller club mains focuses it's web hosting business for large publishers and companies. They mostly provide reseller web hosting services.So if have a large business or need a more high tech server for hosting your websites in Mumbai, then reseller club should be your first priority.  Again there offices is in Andheri, Mumbai.


3. Mumbaihosting.com : Again they have a local hosting business in Mumbai. You can visit them at their local offices in  Lokhandwala Complex, Andheri West. Their entry plan starts with just $10 yearly and services includes 500 MB disk space, limit to 10 email account creation etc. 10% of service tax is not included here and you have to pay it additionally. One other thing to note here that both big rock and Mombai hosting are located in andheri of Mumbai, so it's all up to you, to choose one and reject other, but I would definitely say that Bigrock has really good service in comparison to all other.

4. Isha Web hosting Pvt Ltd:  is a domain registrar and web host since 1995. It has been serving in the internet industry from 1995 and  across 40 countries. Their values are Trust and success. They have successfully served web hosting services to all categories of business including Health, entertainment and finance. Their core values for business to help both small and large business owners succeed online.
Their official address in Mumbai is Kandivali(E).

5. Paceinfone: They have offices in Mumbai, Gujarat and USA. There web hosting plan varies according to there clients needs. i.e. You have many options to choose from when selecting a web hosting plan. They provided shared hosting, dedicated hosting, reseller hosting and SEO hosting. So if you have many domains which you wanna host for seo advantage, then they can provide you SEO hosting with multiple c-clas ip.You can visit their offices at Navi Mumbai, incase you live in Mumbai.





Copyright © 2013, All rights reserved!
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Learn CSS

CASCADING STYLE SHEET (CSS) TUTORIALS

Cascading: It means that multiple styles can overlap in order to specify a range of style from a whole website to a unique element.

Style: It deals especially with the presentation e.g. color, font.

Sheet: CSS is a file separate from the HTML file which is linked through its head tag.
  I recommend every one to learn for free >> How to create a website

Uses of CSS:

 

i.    It allows much richer document appearance than HTML.
ii.    Reduces work load by centralizing commands for visual appearances instead of scattered throughout the HTML document.
iii.    Use same style on multiple pages.
iv.    Reduces page download size.

 

Basic Syntax of CSS

Selector{property: value} e.g.

P{color:red}
  • The property is the attribute that is likely to be changed.
  • Value is the value set for the property.


Syntax For Multiple Property

Selector{property: value; property: value; property: value}

 e.g.

P{color:red; font-size:12px}

Note: If the value is multiple words then put codes around the value e.g.

P{font-family:"Sans Serif"}





Copyright © 2013, All rights reserved!
web hosting reviews    |  Learn how to download youtube video | YouTube downloader | YouTube to mp3

Tuesday, 28 August 2012

Mousetrap or gourmet cheeseboard - how are you treating your readers?

This article is pure self-indulgence and doesn't tell you how to do anything in Blogger or any other tool.

But maybe it's a good day to ask whether your blog is a murderous mouse-trap, a grotty greasy-spoon, or a luscious gourmet cheeseboard.



Confluent: very cool Blogger-users


Luxurious cheese platter, with brie, grapes, pickle and more - decorated with flowers and on a wooden cheeseboard.
I have a lot of time for David Kutcher, who has a very useful blog-about-blogger (Blog-Xpertise) and offers more general blogging and web-consultancy from his company, Confluent forms.

They do some very cool things with Blogger.

They understand that for people who aren't either super-techs or large scale publishers using Wordpress just isn't realistic.

And they've proved that while Blogger is a great tool for getting started, it can be configured to do just about anything that needs to be done.


But they think your readers are mice!

But today I think they got it wrong.
"You need to think of your website as a digital mousetrap ... you need to get the mice to your site, encourage them to take the bait, snare them in your trap".

Photo of a house-mouse, with bright eyes, ears sticking up and tail waving
Initially, this sounds cute.

But stop and think about it for a moment.

How do people react when they're trapped: they panic, develop very negative emotional reactions to the place they're in, hold on to their valuables, and fight to escape. If they do escape, they tell their family and friends to stay well away.

And what's the end-game for a mouse that get's caught in a trap?  Best case, it's released somewhere in between the park down the road and the depths of Connemara - a long way from friends, family and familiar surroundings. Most likely, it meets an untimely death from eating poisoned cheese, or a blow to the head.

Is that really what you want for your customers  / visitors / readers / subscribers ?


If you want the "mice" to stick around, offer great cheese


Personally, I think of my website as an elegant cheeseboard - designed strictly for human visitors.

It offers a range of flavours and textures - the ones my visitors want, and some that stretch their palette a little.  It includes some pieces especially for visitors who are just getting started.

It's restocked regularly, with style and giving individual "cheeses" enough space, so visitors can find what they're looking for, and also notice other interesting tidbits while they're there.

It's open and accessible:   mice - and web-crawling-spiders - can visit any time they like.  More importantly, they can leave. And when they do leave, there's a nice taste in their mouth, and healthy cheese in their bellies (don't mention the cholesterol!). So they can go elsewhere, and tell their friends about the great selection over at my place. They're likely to visit again, too, because I made sure that they felt good when they left - the cheese was tasty and the environment pleasant.

There are a range of tools available - and I cut some of the the cheese into very accessible slices for those visitors who are just getting started, and leave some more robust chunks out for the mouse-about-the-town who's looking for more.

I have a warehouse of interesting ideas (in my pre-publication blog) just waiting to be finished and added to the platter.

No one dies at the end of a visit.

And I'm confident that, one day, I will be able to offer my own gourmet cheese in an exclusive section, that the mice will pay to get in to based on the trust that we've developed in the free-cheese paradise.


What sort of blog are you building, a mouse-trap or a cheeseboard?



Saturday, 18 August 2012

Google Blogger / Apps access to country-specific domains

Today, Google Apps announced that we can now purchase a wider range of global and country-specific domains through them - previously they only offered a more limited set of the global domains. And now they're cheaper, too: domains registration is $8/year instead if $10.

To do this, they've partnered with a new-to-them domain registrar http://www.domaindiscount24.com - instead of eNom and GoDaddy, who they used before

If you buy a domain via Google Apps, and DomainDiscount24.com is the registrar, then

  • It comes pre-set up to work with Google's tools (mail, apps, sites, etc)
  • You need to use DomainDiscount24.com's administration tools if you want to make any changes to the domain set-up
  • You continue to use Google Apps domain management tools to manage the Google Services that are available to users in the domain (eg enabling/disabling Blogger)

Can we use one of these domains for Blogger?

I'd guess so: I'm pretty sure that Sites, like Blogger, requires that the domain-registrar provide DNS-hosting and the ability to edit CNAME and ANAME records.  You simply have to go through the same process that you need to use if you purchase a domain directly from any registrar.

(I'm going to test this very soon, there's a .co.nz domain that I've been thinking about for a while>


Will they work automatically with Blogger?

Not always: domain setup is a complex thing, and it's hard to predict if you will get the dreaded "Another blog is already hosted as this address" message:  I've purchased a domain via Google Apps before and and it work perfectly with Blogger - and I've had just the opposite experience, too.

If you get stuck, try either

  • Use the information in this recent article from Chuck at Nitecruzr (he's one of the best for resolving custom domain issues)
  • Going to the Blogger Product Forum: explain your problem and URL and ask the experts there to take a look.


Can we use this new registrar to buy country-specific domains inside Blogger?

Not at the moment, and - there's been no announcement from Blogger about it.

(Sideline:   I just tested it, and found that eNom is no longer offered as an option for domain-purchase under Blogger's switch-to-custom-domain track.   This means that GoDaddy, who not have a tool to make custom domain purchases easier, are now the only option inside Blogger - so I can see why Google might be looking to bring another registrar-partner on board.)


What domains are now available to purchase via Google Apps:


Global
.com    .info   .org    .net     .mobi     .biz     .name     .cc    .tv


Asia-Pacific
India: .in .co.in .org.in .net.in
New Zealand: .co.nz
Taiwan: .com.tw
Japan: .jp

Latin America
Colombia .co .com.co
Mexico:   .com.mx .mx

Europe
Belgium: .be
Switzerland: .ch
Czech Republic: .cz
Germany / Deutchland .de
Spain / Espana .es and .com.es
Republic of Montenegro: .me (though it has obvious wider appeal to English speakers!)
The Netherlands .nl
Poland .pl


Are domains for all countries available - why not?

There are still far more countries not on the list than on it.

I'm not surprised that there is no sign of Ireland (.ie) on the list -  these domains are hard to get.  I do manage one .ie site with Blogger:  the domain was obtained for a community group that doesn't have a company registration number, but which does have letterhead, a constitution and a well-connected chairman.   For it, I've found that LetsHost.ie provides the necessary domain management tools and their support people were helpful and didn't turn up their noses when I told them I was using it for a Blogger site.

Disappointing ommissions: Australia (.com.au) and England/Britain (.co.uk) - I'm not sure what the story is with these, or which registrars provide the tools needed to let you use a domain purchased from them with blogger.

Wednesday, 15 August 2012

Tools for applying copyright protection to your blog

This article is about the steps you can take to apply copyright protection to your blog.


Overview

Based on a work By Binnette (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0-2.5-2.0-1.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Previously, I've described how copyright applies to blogs in very general terms.

This is a more detailed look at the things to consider if you want to protect your "stuff" (ie words, pictures, tunes, blog-design, code, etc) from being used by other people without permission.  It covers:
  • Deciding what restrictions you want to apply
  • Telling readers what the policies are
  • Physically stopping people from making copies of your work
  • Making it obvious when your work is copied

Decide on your copyright policy

The first step in applying copyright to your blog is deciding whether people are allowed to make copies of your work, and under what conditions.

Many people initially say "it's mine, no one else can make any copies".

But some people want to share their materials and aren't looking for anything in return - hence the open copyright and Creative Commons approaches.  

Other people are willing to share provided they get some of the credit for doing the work and/or some money.  Both the Wall Street Journal (Curse of the Greedy Copyright Holders and Their Fee-Seeking Lawyers) and YouTube's Head of User Experience (Margaret Gould Stewart: How YouTube thinks about copyright - as presented at TED) have some pretty good arguments about how sharing can make more revenue in the long run.  And thinking about what you might, realistically, do when someone breaks the law and makes a copy of your material may make a policy that allows copies-provided-credit-is-given more appealing.

Ultimately the decision about what policies to apply is yours - but you need to decide what policies you're going to follow before you can do anything about them.


Telling people what they can (or cannot) do

Once you've decided what copyright rules apply to your blog, it's good to tell your blog-readers what permissions you are willing to give for use of your material:
  • If you don't want to give any general permissions, you might put text with the phrase "© YOUR-BLOG-NAME" in a prominent position.
    If you have a designer template, then the Attributes gadget already has a field where you can put copyright, provided you haven't removed it.    Or you may just want to add a text-gadget the same way you would add any other type of gadget - if you put it above or below your Blog Post gadget, then it will show up with every single post including ones that you've already published.
  • If you are willing to give permission, but only on a case-by-case basis - say so.  And tell people how they can get in touch to discuss using your work.
  • If you are happy to give some general permissions (eg people can copy your material so long as they attribute it to you), you might investigate the Creative Commons options, and put a statement from them on your site.  Their site has a automated tool for adding a gadget, or you may like to add the HTML to your blog yourself.
  • To protect photographs or artworks, you could put a copyright statement right inside the image, either very obviously or as a faded-yet-visible watermark.  That way, anyone who sees a copy that someone has made will know that they photos are really yours.

Stopping people from copying your work

Physically stopping people from being about to make copies of  work is another approach.
    There are scripts that you can add to your blog that disable the right-click option for anyone who is viewing the page: this makes it harder to copy-and-paste text or to save pictures.  However I don't recommend this approach: it's easy for tech-savvy people to disable the scripts or to work around them (eg to look at your page source code and copy the picture location from it), and because it stops your viewers from doing other things (eg opening links in a new window) that they should be able to do.

    Another option is to stop people from copying text from your blog. As with disabling right-click, I don't much like this approach, and don't use it: as with disabling right-clicks, it doesn't apply to RSS-feed or email subscribers, and a determined copycat can either disable Javascript, or take a screen shot and OCR it, or even just re-type the content.  But it might be suitable for some blogs.   To do it, add this CSS rule to your template:
    .post-body {
    -webkit-touch-callout: none;
    -khtml-user-select: none;
    -moz-user-select: -moz-none;
    -ms-user-select: none;
    user-select: none;
    }

    One way to protect photographs is to save them as a fairly low resolution before you upload them:  this means they look ok web-pages (yours and anyone else's), but have very low quality if people try to print them or use them in places like a newspaper.   If you don't want to reduce the resolution, you can remove the ability to click on them, so that they don't open in a new window:  this won't stop people who can read the source HTML behind your page, but it will deter your average photo-copier.

    If you want to protect music you have composed or videos you've made, you might investigate registering your content with YouTube's Audio ID and Video ID system.   This won't stop other people from making copies of your work in other places, but it will stop them from uploading copies (or derived works, eg their own video with some of your music) back to YouTube - or at least give you some options for saying what should happen if someone tries to do so.


    Make copies obvious

    Rather than trying to stop people from making copies, an other approach is to simply make the original source obvious to anyone who looks at the copy.

    Watermarks:

    Adding a some partially-transparent text to photos or videos deters people who might copy your work (because it will be obvious that they've copied it), and makes the original source clear to anyone who sees a copy.  Most photo-manipulation tools now have tools for adding text to photos.  Make sure you keep a safe high-quality, un-watermarked copy of any  photos that you care about, as well as showing the altered one on your blog.

    Cross-linking:

    Long-term Blogger-HAT readers will have noticed that I'm putting more and more links to related articles into each post. I started doing this to be helpful (eg did you know you can add a Facebook "like" or "send button" button to individual posts as well as to your whole blog?)), and to stop repeating myself. But it's also a good tools for discouraging determined copy-cats:  they don't really want to link to me, so if they use my material they'll have to edit lots of links). And the casual or automated ones (who don't bother editing the links) just end up sending traffic to me.


    Use features that are built into other file types:

    If you use your blog to distribute other items (eg templates, eBooks, diagrams), you might like to consider more subtle ways of either is telling people about the copyright provisions, or just giving yourself the credit for work you've done.

    Example:  one of my sites gives away planning templates that are made with MS Word and PowerPoint.  I'm happy for them to be copied and changed, provided the copyright attribution is left intact.  Microsoft's File / Properties feature has a link to my website in each template, and often in Windows Explorer these values are shown when someone hovers their mouse of the files.  Over time I expect it to be a good tool for building the recognition of my blog.


    "Signing" your RSS feed

    If you put  a statement, crediting your blog as the source into your RSS feed, then every single item that is posted has your blog-name attached: copycats either need to edit it out manually, or leave it in and show the world where they got their content from.

    For example the line I have added to the feed of the blog you are reading right now is:
    This article is © Copyright – All rights reserved - Blogger-Hints-and-Tips.
    You may publish translated versions of this article on non-English language blogs provided you acknowledge Blogger-Hints-and-Tips as the original source.


    Blogger has a feature for setting this up:
    1. Go to Settings > Other > Site Feed 
    2. Add the words you want to use to the Post feed footer box, 
    3. Click Save Settings.


    Registering your work with a copyright-service

    There are a number of services around that let you "register" the copyright for an item.  This might give you peace-of-mind, or evidence to use in certain legal situations.

    But it won't make any difference to whether people make unauthorised copies of your blog-contents, so I'm not going into details about it here.

    The next article in this series, Dealing with people who have copied your work, has more detail about how these services work and what they're actually useful for - and suggestions about some other, possibly more useful, steps you can take.



    Related Articles:

    Copyright, Blogs and Bloggers, an Introduction

    Taking action when someone has made an unauthorised copy of material from your blog

    How to add a gadget, using Blogger

    Putting 3rd party HTML (eg a Creative Commons licence) into your Blog

    Stopping the pictures in your blog from being "clickable"

    Finding a Picture's location (URL) in Picasa-web-albums

    Removing the Attribution Gadget from your Blog

    Types of blogger template.

    Tuesday, 14 August 2012

    Blogger and valid HTML code

    This article explains the issues faced by Blogger users who try to see if the HTML in their blog is valid - and why this doesn't matter in most cases.



    What is "valid" HTML

    If you read SEO advice or webmaster guidelines or web-best-practises, you should be told to make sure that the HTML in your website is valid.

    Valid HTML is simply website code that totally meets the rules defined by W3C, the non-profit organisation that ultimately makes the rules about HTML and the other scripting languages that are used on the internet.

    You can tell if the code on a site is valid by using a validator tool, like http://validator.w3.org/   - this is the best one, since it's from W3C:  if anyone knows whether something follows the rules, then they do.

    But really, what is valid HTML/XHTML, and why does it matter?   Basically, it's code that meets all the rules and standards that have been decided for the current version of HTML, as at today.   It matters because web-browsers are written so that they correctly show information on screen if the code that is used to describe it follows the HTML rules.

    However, as personal devices/computers and the web gets more sophisticated, the rules are enhanced so that browsers can do  more interesting things.   This means that code that was valid several years ago may not be valid today, because the rules have changed.


    How to make the code in your blog valid

    The short answer is that there is no way to force Blogger to generate valid code.

    The slightly longer answer is that Blogger software makes your blog's posts and pages into web-site pages by combining:

    You can control whether the code on your posts is "valid" - but only as far as Blogger's Post-editor lets you (eg it takes out <p> </p> tags and uses <br /> instead - this isn't regarded "good practise").

    And you can edit your template to remove certain things that are not valid.

    But no matter what you do, you can not remove all the "invalid" code that's generated by Blogger when your posts or pages are published, and you don't have the freedom to "clean" their code either:  Blogger provides us with free hosting and unlimited bandwidth - the price of this is that they impost some limits on what we can do with them.

    So your overall site will not be valid accordingto the W3C rules.  There is nothing that you can do about this - and personally I don't think this will change any-time soon.


    Is invalid HTML code really a problem:

    At first glance, this may seem like a disaster - if Blogger won't make "valid" code, then we cannot use it to make blogs/sites that display properly, or that meet Google's own webmaster guidelines.

    That's not quite right, though:  an important feature of the way browser-software and the internet work  is that browsers try to to work out what to do with HTML code that they don't understand (eg code that isn't valid any more, or code that's got new features that the brower doesn't support yet).  Instead of crashing, they make a best-guess about what to show on the screen, even though this might take them (a little) longer than showing valid code.

    What that means for us Blogger-users is that our sites will be just fine most brower-software..

    What's more, Google have promised that the  HTML which Blogger produces will work on the  most recent and last-most-recent version of the currently popular web-browsers - even though it's not "valid".

    The only consequence is that our blogs may take a little longer to load, while the browser decided what to do with the "invalid" code - but in most cases, this extra time will be small compared to the time needed to load our pictures and gadgets, not to mention other cool things like Twitter messages or Facebook like buttons.

    Of course, if you're a purist and hate "breaking the rules", then having an "invalid" blog may be more of a problem than you can bear.  But if you're realistic, you will notice that there are many, many fine sites made with Blogger, and this lack of valid HTML doesn't appear to be doing them much damage.


    SEO and code-validity

    In the early days of search-engine-optimization, people thought that having valid code would make it easier for Google and other search engines to look at and index your website - and this would make it do better in search results.

    Initially, they may have been right.  But Google et al are pretty motivated to index everything - especially the blogs that their tools create.   And today, web-search "spiders" have become pretty clever about understanding web pages, no matter whether they're valid or not (or were valid before, or will be valid in future, etc)

    In short, if you've been reading up about SEO and found a recommendation to "make sure your website code is valid", then I'd suggest skipping that advice, and spending your time worrying about more important things, eg that:

    (*)  technically, the phrase is "key words" - and there are zillions of guidelines telling you how to choose "good" key words for your niche.   But  the simplest approach is to use version is "interesting" words, that people who are looking for your blog post are likely to use.



    Related Articles:



    Does search-engine-optimization matter for your blog.

    Copyright, blogs and bloggers

    Showing a picture on your blog

    Understanding Blogger's Add-a-Gadget tool

    Showing a working Twitter message in Blogger

    Adding Facebook like, Send and Share buttons.