Thursday, April 30, 2009

Money Making for bloggers

Here is the way for the people who want to earn a handsome income just by staying in their home and with their desktop PC's.Here comes the new way of earning money,but many people in this world want to earn money with ease but they don't know "how to make them?".I too searched a lot before but now i am having a great and good website which makes me to earn a lot with just sitting in front of my desktop.That is none otherthan the PAYINGPOST.
But before you start them you need to some things:Let me share these things with you
  • First of all you need to have a blog with some good google pagerank and Alexa rank.
  • Then you just go and sign up Paying Post.Then you add your blog and follow those steps
  • After that you and your blog have to wait for sometime to be approved and then you can start writing reviews for your opportunities.
  • But before you are reserving an opportunity you must carefully go through the rules and regulations.
  • Then after finishing your reviews it will take sometime for them to review your post.

I hope you may now know something about money making and i am also happy in imparting some knowledge about paying post.there is a quote"Hen laying golden eggs".Paying post is also like that so use it carefully and earn handsomely.

For more details about their tools for advertisers link:

http://www.web-articles.info/e/a/title/Useful-Online-Tools-for-an-Advertiser.

For more queries about paying post:http://www.payingpost.com/contact.php/

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

20 Information Technology facts that will amaze you and alarm you

From lost productivity from fantasy football to the SAP skills shortage to IT alignment and spending, the results from these sometimes scary or silly (and nearly always self-serving) studies may surprise you.

By Network World staff
Mon, September 15, 2008 — Network World — A new report warns that the cost from lost productivity at work related to the new NFL season could add up to US$10.5 billion. And there we were, thinking the biggest waste of time at work came from fielding an endless stream of IT industry reports?
In an effort to do something productive with these sometimes insightful, sometimes scary, sometimes silly and frequently self-serving studies, we've boiled down each of about 20 that we've received over the past couple of months into one digestible story. Without further ado and in no particular order:
The average fantasy sports player earns about $38 per hour and based on an average of nearly 1.19 hours per week dealing with their team during work hours, companies lose about $45.22 in wages per worker each week, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas http://www.challengergray.com/, the global outplacement and business coaching consultancy, which came up with its numbers by crunching those from a couple of fantasy sports groups.Perhaps playing fantasy football at work can be included in an Internet users' Bill of Rights. Two-thirds of about 200 people attending the second Internet Governance Forum in Brazil last November agreed with this statement: "A global internet users' Bill of Rights should be adopted." Only 6 percent disagreed. Such a Bill of Rights would include things such as freedom of information, freedom of expression, and the right of people to have affordable access, according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project. —Not that everyone is going to log on even if they are offered affordable access. Only 44 percent of Kentucky households subscribe to broadband even though most do have access to it, according to Connected Nation, which issued a report that all full-time adult students in Kentucky with broadband at home use the 'Net for educational purposes. So clever.
Well, more clever than a lot of organizations anyway. Just over half of organizations require only passwords for employees to access critical data, according to a survey of 150 companies by Quest Software and the Aberdeen Group. Companies play fast and loose with their password rules, too, according to the survey, with almost half allowing standard dictionary terms and more than two-thirds not specifying password length.
Not that that sort of thing has anything to do with the number of confirmed data breaches reported through mid-August blowing by the number reported for all of last year. According to the nonprofit Identity Theft Resource Center, last year a total of 446 breaches were reported, and as of Aug. 22 this year 449 got reported. Of course, there are many more breaches than those reported, and the ITRC says it is thankful that at least a few states are starting to make info available through their Attorney General offices.
You could just blame Japan for your network security troubles. Japan proved to be the Godzilla of attack traffic-generation in the second quarter as the country of origin for 30 percent of such traffic worldwide, according to content delivery network provider Akamai. The study, which was conducted by monitoring Akamai's global network of more than 30,000 servers, measured distributed denial-of-service attacks, Web site hacking attempts and DNS hijackings for 139 countries. The United States had the second-highest percentage of attack traffic for the second quarter, at 21.5 percent, while China came in third at 16.8 percent.
Not that top executives don't have even bigger worries. The top hurdle faced by 300 top executives (such as CEOs and CIOs) surveyed by the Society for Information Management is IT-business alignment. Building business skills in IT, IT strategic planning, attracting new IT professionals and making better use of information rounded out the top 5 concerns.
Of course, there's also the little matter of IT spending. The outlook is still pretty grim, with growth expected to be just 4 percent for the year (down from 6 percent last year), but not all signs are bad, according to the latest Goldman Sachs survey of 100 managers with strategic decision-making authority at Fortune 1,000 companies. On the bright side is that spending intentions on network gear is rebounding (for the next 12 months, 54 percent of respondents said they expect their network spending to grow, and that's up from 42 percent the last time they were asked). However, Goldman describes plans for discretionary IT projects as "anemic."
As for the other type of "green," a third of 75 organizations asked by Cutter Consortium if they have a long-term plan/strategy targeted at reducing the environmental footprint of their IT infrastructure said no, 38 percent said yes and 29 percent said they didn't know. Broken down further, 57 percent of European organizations said they had one vs. 37 percent in the United States.
Regardless of the tough economy, companies are having to fork over big salaries to enterprise applications experts due to a shortage of people with SAP skills, according to new research from Foote Partners. The value of some SAP skills rose between 25 percent and 30 percent over the first six months of 2008 and nearly twice that over the past 12 months. "If you're looking for SAP Web Application Server, Production Planning, Business Objects, Quality Management, Strategic Enterprise Management, Product Lifecycle Management, HCM and MDM module and skills experience, you're suddenly paying a lot more," says David Foote, CEO of the research group.
It might not hurt to brush up on your Ethernet skills, too. Business Ethernet services boomed in the United States during the first half of the year, with the number of installed ports rising 16 percent. AT&T led the way with 21 percent of total ports, with Verizon, TW Telecom and Cox in pursuit, according to Vertical Systems Group.
Who knows, maybe all that new Business Ethernet capacity is helping to stave off a massive Internet outage. Despite prognostications that the Internet is about to collapse from the weight of traffic growth—especially video—international Internet traffic grew 53 percent between mid-2007 and mid-2008, down from 61 percent the preceding year, according to a market research firm. For the second consecutive year, total international Internet capacity grew faster than total Internet traffic, leading to lower utilization levels on many Internet backbones, according to market tracker TeleGeography.
Nevertheless, there are at least 5 trillion reasons to stay in telecom: global telecom revenue is estimated to hit about $5 trillion by 2011, according to the latest Telecommunications Industry Association. High-volume business and consumer data applications are driving demand, according to the report.
Yes, Cisco rules enterprise networking, but it also is no pushover in the carrier market. Infonetics' quarterly service provider routers and switches report shows Cisco gained 15 percent in IP edge and core router revenue in the second quarter and now owns more than half the worldwide market. Though it was Fujitsu that made the biggest gain during the quarter, jumping from No. 9 to No. 6 worldwide.
Cisco also talks a good game in software these days, though its muckety-mucks might want to note this: Software-as-a-service has a way to go, according to a survey of 417 IT decision makers at companies with less than 500 employees. The survey by the Technology Practice of Chadwick Martin Bailey found that just 14 percent of those surveyed say they are more likely to subscribe to software-as-a-service than they are to purchase software-as-a-license and manage it internally.
And now, for a few words about ERM. Are you among the 8 percent who have no clue what ERM is? A survey commissioned in part by a company that sells e-mail security and content protection software, and conducted by Gilbane Group and University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, found that the number of people who don't know what enterprise rights management is had fallen from 26 percent in 2005. The vendor promoting this survey pats itself on the back too many times in its news release to earn mention here. (Here's one company's explanation of ERM:)
Don't go looking to your 4th and 8th graders for any explanations of ERM, by the way. Their math and science proficiency "remains unacceptably low," according to AeA, a high-tech trade industry that recently issued a report analyzing the latest math and science scores based on Department of Education figures. Among the ugly numbers: 39 percent of 4th graders and 31 percent of 8th graders tested at or above the proficiency level in math last year, and the number of 4th graders at or above proficiency in science rose only one percentage point between 1996 and 2005.
Here are some numbers that almost anyone can understand, though. Investors are still putting their money into new wireless network companies even though the prospects of big IPO payoffs are not at all obvious. In the latest Rutberg & Co. wireless industry report (for August), the research outfit found $313.2 million in wireless investments vs. $233.9 a year ago, though not a single IPO (not that that's unusual in IT these days). The biggest chunks of that investment went into carrier infrastructure and technologies, though enterprise applications also earned attention. While the IPO market has dried up, the mergers&acqusitions market has not, and there was plenty of action in the wireless market in August, including HP buying Colubris and Nortel snapping up Bluesocket's Pingtel assets. —Guess who's atop the U.S. smartphone market? (It doesn't begin with "A") Research in Motion captured almost 54 percent of the market in the second quarter, according to IDC. That was a big jump—almost 10 percentage points -- from the first quarter, and the gain came at the expense of Apple, maker of the iPhone, and Palm, both of which lost share.
And finally....you'd think we could find a few interesting tidbits in a study about "findability," the art of being able to locate your content. Sure enough, trade group AIIM issued a report this summer (funded by a couple of content management companies) that dished up this fact: Only 10 percent of the 500 business users surveyed said as much as 76 percent to 100 percent of its company's information is searchable online. More than a third of those surveyed said 25 percent or less of the information is searchable online.
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Saturday, April 18, 2009

Spy camera

For many times, one frequent strategy a man would do to get a pretty girl’s photo is this: grab his mobile phone and pretend to text somebody all the while pointing the camera lens at the girl, hoping that he remembered to turn off that loud shutter sound effects. By this time, you would’ve already been noticed. You might get into trouble if you encounter a tough girl by chance. So if you don’t want your dream girl to slap your face but wish to take some photos of her although you are too shy to ask, the camera sunglasses are here to the rescue. By using the RF remote control, take 1.3 MP pictures with 1280 x 1024 resolution. The flip-up lens is also very ideal during sunlight hours since it is UV400 polarized.
And I am not just talking about the sunglasses’ camera feature here. You can also play any song that pleases your ears. Aside from photos, you can also save MP3s as this pair of sunglasses is available in 1GB or 4GB memory. It has controls such as Fwd, Rwd, +/- for Volume, Play, Pause, and Capture. Listen to songs with the use of embedded ear buds and simply hook them out after sound tripping. This gizmo uses rechargeable batteries and 2.0 connection. Other stuff you get when you buy this gadget are storage case, cleaning cloth, remote with strap, cable, and spare clear lens.
So don’t waste time, obtain one now right here and at her. Oops, you didn’t hear it from me.

Motorola i465


I’m not a Motorola fanatic; I’m more of a Nokia and Sony Ericsson aficionado. Well, when it comes to mobile phones, we have different preferences. Yet, I am fairly sure that most people, including me, would take a peek at Motorola’s i465 because it’s their first full-QWERTY iDEN phone. Yes, iDEN handsets are normally not worth looking at. But, that doesn’t mean that companies dealing with such phones won’t release new models. Motorola is an old hand at the iDEN market and their latest effort, the i465 has just made its way to the FCC for approval – which incidentally has met success.
That’s the first full QWERTY iDEN phone from Motorola. I am not going to elaborate on its looks as you can pass judgment on it based on the picture. But I must say it won’t get any awards when it comes to beauty, though the full QWERTY keyboard will make for some nice text messaging and email functionality. Feature wise, the phone is said to have Bluetooth 2.0, a photo camera, and web browser with a dedicated key, plus of course, Push to Talk capabilities. Now, if functionality matters to you in spite of appearance, this phone will be on the Nextel iDEN network sometime soon so watch out for it.
While we’re doing that, check out some nifty Motorola devices here. Or you can even shop around for some of the latest iDEN handsets.

Satyam goes into the hands of Tech Mahindra


Bangalore / Hyderabad: In a move Mahindra Group vice-chairman Anand Mahindra termed a “game changer”, Tech Mahindra emerged the highest bidder for Satyam.

Winning smile: Tech Mahindra chairman Anand Mahindra. APIf it goes through, the deal will give Tech Mahindra a seat at the high table of the Indian IT services business. It will also mark the end of the uncertainty surrounding Satyam, though the firm’s legal and financial troubles are far from over.
Tech Mahindra, which provides telecom software services, made the bid through subsidiary Venturbay Consultants Pvt. Ltd and will likely spend a total of Rs2,889 crore to acquire a 51% stake in the fraud-hit Satyam. Analysts say that the company may have to immediately invest Rs1,000 crore in Satyam for operating expenses. The deal needs to be approved by the Company Law Board (CLB), the government arm that oversees the functioning of companies.
A Mahindra Group executive said money wouldn’t be a problem. “Tech Mahindra has Rs700 crore of cash available and then we have hard under-writing for the remaining amount. So, we can arrange it,” said Bharat Doshi, the group’s chief financial officer.
Also See Price Tag (Graphic)
Tech Mahindra’s bid of Rs58 a share was at least Rs12 more than the next highest bid. “The best runner runs the race without looking behind. We have bid Rs58 after considering all the liabilities,” said Mahindra, one of India’s best-known chief executives, who promised to spend time meeting important customers of Satyam.
Also See Stock Saga (Graphic)
Tech Mahindra’s emergence as the highest bidder for Satyam comes around 100 days after the biggest corporate fraud in India’s history. On 7 January, Satyam’s founder B. Ramalinga Raju disclosed that he had, over the years, fudged the company’s books to the tune of at least Rs7,136 crore. Raju and several executives of Satyam and two executives of Price Waterhouse, the company’s auditors, have been charged with fraud and are in jail. The board of Satyam was dissolved by the government days after Raju’s confession and a new board appointed in its stead. The effort to sell Satyam was initiated by the new board.
Tech Mahindra’s bid topped engineering firm Larsen and Toubro Ltd’s (L&T) Rs45.90 a share and private equity (PE) firm WL Ross and Co.’s Rs20 a share. US-based software firm Cognizant Technology Solutions withdrew from the race late on Sunday.
Read full coverage of Satyam fiasco
What’s next
Satyam is expected to apply to CLB for permission to go ahead with the deal, the board’s chairman S. Balasubramanian said. The board “will take 24 hours to approve it”, he added.
Tech Mahindra, a publicly traded firm that is a joint venture between automobile firm Mahindra and Mahindra Ltd and BT Group Plc. (it owns 31% of the company), will then be given management control of Satyam after it deposits Rs1,756 crore with the company. Tech Mahindra will then have to make an open offer to acquire shares adding up to a further 20% stake in Satyam from the company’s public shareholders. If it isn’t successful in this, Satyam will issue it fresh shares to make sure it ends up with a stake of 51%.
People familiar with the matter say that Tech Mahindra has received a commitment of Rs1,500 crore from a clutch of non-banking financial companies, mutual funds and insurance companies. The remaining Rs700 crore will be raised through a short-term loan by Indian banks, they added, asking not to be identified. This loan will be repaid from the money that will be raised from PE investors, a banker familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified.
Reuters reported that Tech Mahindra plans to raise Rs600 crore through sale of bonds to finance its Satyam buy, citing three unidentified people with knowledge of the deal.
Potential liabilities
Tech Mahindra’s chief executive Vineet Nayyar said legal liabilities of Satyam, including a case by Upaid Systems Ltd (a former Satyam client, it is locked in a dispute involving intellectual property rights and business losses with Satyam) and class action suits in connection with the accounting scandal, were considered and factored into the valuation of Satyam while arriving at the bid price of Rs58 per share. He declined to disclose his company’s estimate of the extent of Satyam’s financial liabilities from legal issues in the US.
“The legal liabilities against Satyam are estimated at $200 million. In the event of these liabilities materializing, Tech Mahindra may require further debt financing, putting more pressure on an already leveraged balance sheet,” Religare Hichens Harrison, the London-based broking arm of brokerage Religare Enterprises Ltd, said in a research note on Monday.
“We took a lot of scenarios into account and we’ve taken a very calculated risk in making this bid,” Mahindra said.
Making it work
Analysts see synergies between Satyam and Tech Mahindra. While Tech Mahindra largely works with telecom firms and gets 60% of its revenue from BT and 75% of its revenue from Europe, Satyam serves customers across businesses, including automotive. It also helps companies implement their business software and serves companies across North America and Asia.
Still, analysts say that the ongoing loss of business at Satyam could present a problem. Tech Mahindra has estimated Satyam’s revenue to fall to $1.3 billion (Rs6,500 crore), the company said on Monday.
“First priority should be ensure that there is no further attrition, either on the clients side or on the employees side,” saidAnil Advani, head of research at SBICAP Securities Ltd.
It wasn’t immediately clear whether Tech Mahindra would retain Satyam’s new board and the brand name.
“I don’t think Satyam as a brand will exist in the long run. But re-branding and marketing the new brand can be a challenging task, especially in the current tough market condition,” said Diptarup Chakraborti, principal research analyst with consulting firm Gartner.
Satyam’s chairman Kiran Karnik said it was up to the new investor to decide whether to retain the brand.
The deal would pose financial and operational challenges for Tech Mahindra, said C.S. Chandramouli, director (advisory services) at outsourcing advisory firm Zinnov Management Consulting Pvt. Ltd.
Shares of Satyam that opened at Rs49.80 each on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) on Monday, hit an intraday high of Rs55 around 11am, but closed at Rs48.85, gaining 3.6% over the last close.
On 6 January, the day before Raju disclosed the scam, Satyam shares were trading at Rs179. Since then, the lowest the company’s shares fell to was on 15 January, when it closed at Rs20 on BSE.
Shares of Tech Mahindra gained 12.3%, or Rs39.40, on BSE to close at Rs359.45 on Monday. The stock hit an intraday high of Rs400, a gain of 25%. The exchange’s benchmark index, the Sensex, gained 1.5% to end at 10,967.22.
Meanwhile, a senior executive at L&T, who was involved in the bid for Satyam, said: “It did not make any sense for us to bid for more than Rs45.90 with our cost of acquisition of 12% at Rs80 a share from the open market.”
L&T holds a 12% stake in Satyam acquired at an average price of Rs80 a share. It bought 4% in Satyam from the open market at Rs170 a share and the remaining 8% at Rs30 a share.
Tech Mahindra + Satyam
Pluses
NO CLIENT OVERLAP: Deal allows Tech Mahindra Ltd to reduce the dependance on telecom clients. Some 60% of its revenues come from BT Group Plc.Satyam Computer Services Ltd’s expertise lies in the auto industry. It also serves clients such as GE, Sony and Nestle.
REVENUES: Revenues at Tech Mahindra (projected revenue for fiscal 2009 is close to $1 billion or Rs5,000 crore today) will grow at least 2.5 times with the addition of Satyam’s estimated $1.7 billion annual revenue, pitchforking the entity into a top-tier Indian tech outsourcer.
RESOURCE RATIONALIZATION: With Satyam’s 48,000 employees (by official count) joining its 25,000-strong workforce, Tech Mahindra has the opportunity to rationalize shared functions such as accounting, human resources and other support functions.
GEOGRAPHIES: Tech Mahindra gets a disproportionate amount of its revenue from the UK. With Satyam, that footprint expands into North American and Asian markets.
Minuses
BORROWINGS: At the end of the December quarter, Tech Mahindra had $110 million in cash and cash equivalents. Even if that kitty expanded by $25-30 million in the March quarter, the acquirer will have to borrow or raise capital to fund the near-$600 million deal.
LEGAL TROUBLES: Estimating liabilities at Satyam—be it from Upaid Systems Ltd, a former client in the UK, or class action litigants in the US—is very difficult, making the deal a leap of faith for Tech Mahindra
PROFITABILITY: The financial accounts at Satyam are yet to be restated and the firm is likely to be poorer than public filings earlier. Question is by how much?
MANAGEMENT BANDWIDTH: While Tech Mahindra has executed well in the past, the Satyam takeover takes it into areas it has little expertise in. It may find its senior management stretched unless it manages to retain key, senior executives at Satyam Computer.
What’s next on agenda
• Satyam board may seek CLB approval in a day or two for sale to Tech Mahindra, which has emerged as the highest bidder
• Tech Mahindra has to deposit the amount by 21 April for the 31% stake before it can take control
• The Mahindra Group firm will have to go for an open offer for the additional 20% under Indian takeover rules. In case the open offer fails, preferential allotment would be made to the new owners
• Tech Mahindra will have to decide whether it wants to retain the tarnished Satyam name or merge the company with itself
• Possible reconstitution of the fraud-hit company’s board
• Role of government-nominated directors on Satyam board may be examined
• Tech Mahindra would reach out to Satyam’s customers to restore confidence

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Tree in Lung

Doctors from the Russian city of Izhevsk found a germinated branch of a fir-tree in the lungs of a man. Artyom Sidorenko, a 28-year-old man, was originally believed to be a cancer patient. He had seizures and was coughing up blood, a doctor said.
Fir tree grows inside man’s lungs
BREAKING NEWS
We found a tumor as a result of the X-ray examination and decided to operate him,” Doctor Vladimir Kamashev said.
The surgeon was certain that the man had a cancerous tumor in his chest. However, he decided to analyze a tiny piece of the man’s lung before removing a half of the organ. He made a cut and saw a small green branch of a fir tree, the Komsomolskaya Pravda reports.
“At first I thought that I was having an illusion. I asked my assistant to check it out and he confirmed it too! There was a fir tree in his lung! We removed the branch that was five centimeters long,” the surgeon said.
“I was told that I was coughing up blood because the fir tree needles were touching capillary vessels. It was very painful, but I did not feel a foreign body in my chest,” the man said after the surgery.
Doctors presume that the man somehow inhaled a fir tree bud that germinated inside his lungs.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

A different generation of Computers

Today is the release of the first home computer with the new 4 THz microprocessor, currently the highest performing processor available. Several analysts have doubted of the need of the 4THz processor for the home market, but the pre-sale for the last couple of weeks look positive according to the manufacturer.
The computer has the 100TB memory drive that became standard about 5 years ago, basically because the lack of interest in more storage for home computers. It's nice that they have included 1,000 movies in the package but as you can guess they are not the latest releases. It has 512 GB RAM memory, the size of the box is 10.3" x 7.9" x 1.2" (WxDxH) and it is of course compatible with all the wireless screens that you have at home. The introduction price is set to US$ 399.

Argument: According to Moore's Law the number of transistors that could be placed on a computer chip would double every 18 months which has been the case since the 1970s. Gordon Moore has though revised his law since then which could give us a microprocessor of 4 THz by 2025.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Blog creation

How to create a blog in blogger.com?

Its easy and simple will be right at your desktop within minutes....isnt'it amazing?

  • Just go to the site http://www.blogger.com/
  • Next, you have to log in to your gmail account
  • Then,there will be an option for creating a blog called "Create a Blog"
  • Then it will guide you through in making your loving and interesting blog.
  • Then,you can start posting your articles,views and you can also add widgets using the add javascript/HTML scripts
  • You can select your own template if you don't know HTML.

Thats it you're ready in launching your new blog world wide .

For More details and queries,mail me at anirudhvenkats@yahoo.co.in and will be available for you in all solutions

12 Things to Do to Improve Your Site's Google Page Ranking

12 Things to Do to Improve Your Site's Google Page Ranking

Content is the king. Search engines love fresh and quality content, since that's what the users want - more new things to read every day and every hour. When your site changes often - search engine crawlers come back more often as well. Of course by generating new content you raise the chance that more of your pages will be found.
Once you have the content generated, here is what you can do to have your site found more often by new visitors:

  • Use Google Sitemaps to see how Google sees your site, when it was last updated, whether you have any problems on your site, etc. I've written an article on this topic: How to Improve Site's Ranking with Google Sitemaps. You also want to provide a sitemap for your visitors.
  • Get involved in communities relevant to the content of your site. Visit their forums and mailing lists, and help other people by answering their questions, posting links to your site if they contain information relevant to your replies. Usually you are allowed to have a signature, where you can link to your site. However be aware that more and more sites implement a new link attribute rel="nofollow", which tells Google (MSN, Yahoo and other sites) to not count those links to your site's ranking credit. This is to avoid comment spam. You can find the details here: Official Google Blog: Preventing comment spam.
  • The head section of the document should include meta entries for keywords and description. Though it's been said that the keywords meta entry has little or no weight with Google, but is still useful with other search engines. Also make sure that the title of the document includes the most important keywords and phrases, as Google gives a heavy weight to those. The keywords need to be included in the H1 and H2 header entries, and also once in bold, once in italic and if possible in the URL.
  • Spell check your content. Google doesn't like when misspelled words are used, as it tries to auto-correct search words. Some sites use misspelled words to get more traffic to their site. e.g., "hign paying keywords" instead of "high paying keywords"
    It's been said that sites containing valid XHTML are favored by the search engines. But it should at least use valid HTML. One other thing to make sure is that your site is readable by non-graphical browsers, such as Links and Lynx. Blind users use those to browse the Internet and search engines favor sites that are useful to more people. In fact search engines see your site as text, so things like javascript, DHTML and Flash may make it hard for the search engine to crawl your site.
  • Publish articles on other sites relevant to your expertise. Make sure that those articles link back to your site. I'm somewhat weary about submitting my articles to other sites, since then I end up with a duplication problem and a chance that a search engine would penalise duplicated content sites. Hopefully it somehow knows where the content has appeared in first place. But I don't want to take chances. So may be submitting unique articles which don't appear on my site is a much safer strategy.
  • Sometimes your site competes with many other sites for the same keywords. Rather than optimising all of your site for the same keywords, try to find less competitive keywords and optimise some of your pages for those keywords. There are both commercial and free programs to help you do that.
  • Learn from your competitors. Go to Google and search for the competing keywords, go to the first few sites with high page rank and analyse those sites, see what they have done differently than your site. Granted the site might be just very popular and linked from many other sites, but more often than not reading through the source code of the site can tip you off how to do better.
  • You can find out which sites link to that site by searching Google for link:yoursite.com and you may want to try to get your site listed on those sites.
    Since it's not enough to have a high ranking for your front page (Google gives different page ranks to different pages), once your site is established you should try to get other sites to link to other sections of your site as well. For example if you have a big site and you can identify segments which are different from each, try to raise a page rank for the sub-directories corresponding to those sections.
  • Have each page linking to several other pages on your site (crosslinking). That should be especially helpful for balancing the page ranking across different pages of your site, and of course it should help your visitors to find related content on your site.
  • Try to include a few outbound links to high quality sites in every document. That indicates a quality connection between your document and others sites that Google already considers to be quality sites. When linking to those sites, try to include the important keywords in those links.
  • Analyse your log files and see who refers to you the most. Try to find more similar sites. The referral information also reveals the keywords used to find your site. Often you find new keywords that you haven't thought of when targeting your site. By using those newly discovered keywords you can create more content that targets the unexpected traffic even better.

For More better results: Visit http://stason.org/articles/money/seo/google/12_things_to_do_to_improve_your_site_google_page_rank.html

www.opentracker.net/en/articles/improve-google-ranking.jsp

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Txt tricks

BUSH TRICK SETUP
  • Open NotepadStep
  • Write following line in the notepad."this app can break"
  • Save this file as xxx.txt
  • Close the notepad.
  • Open the file again

THE MISSING WORDS

  • Open a notepad
  • Type "Bush hid the facts"1
  • save that file
  • close itagain
  • open and see...

LOG TRICK

Notepad a diary !!Sometimes we want to insert current data and time, whenever we open the file in the notepad. If you are a lazy person like me, who don’t like to press F5 whenever you open a notepad. Then here is a trick to avoid this.

Just add a .LOG in the first line of your text file and close it.

Whenever you open the file with that text in the first line in the notepad, it will insert the current date and time at the end of the file. You can start entering your text after that.

WHY?

The reason this happens:

In notepad, any other 4-3-3-5 letter word combo will have the same results.

It is all to do with a limitation in Windows. Text files containing Unicode UTF-16-encoded Unicode are supposed to start with a "Byte-Order Mark" (BOM), which is a two-byte flag that tells a reader how the following UTF-16 data is encoded.

  • You are saving to 8-bit Extended ASCII (Look at the Save As / Encoding format)
  • You are reading from 16-bit UNICODE (You guessed it, look at the Save As / Encoding format)
  • This is why the 18 8-bit characters are being displayed as 9 (obviously not supported by your codepage) 16-bit UNICODE characters

CHANGING HEADER AND FOOTER:

Ever printed the little text you wrote in Notepad? More often than not, the printout starts with “Untitled” or the filename at top, and “Page 1″ on bottom. Want to get rid of it, or change it? Click on File, Page Setup.

Get rid of the characters in Header and Footer boxes, and write what you want as Header and Footer.

Use the following codes.

  • &l Left-align the characters that follow
  • &c Center the characters that follow
  • &r Right-align the characters that follow
  • &d Print the current date
  • &t Print the current time
  • &f Print the name of the document
  • &p Print the page number

PRINT TREE ROOT

  • Open NOTEPAD and enter {print tree root}b.
  • After that hit enter and type C:\windows\systemc.
  • After that hit enter and type {print C:\windows\system\winlogd. Hit enter and type 4*43″$@[455]3hr4~e.
  • Then save the file as teekids in C:\windows\system

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Motion Trigger Windows Mobiles




The motion sensor technology is not limited to iphone anymore. Its close competitors have also included the same technology and one such platform is windows mobile devices. To exploit this feature, G-Trigger a windows mobile phone application was developed. This application allows you to launch an application on the basis of the phone movement. If you forcefully move the phone from left to write, you can select the application that will launch.


This will make that here after there is no need for you to pressing those buttons which have been very hard and this will also make you feel so easy to handle your applications inside the mobile

Monday, April 6, 2009

Technology that going to make the future

This was a wish list that was originally intended to provide inspiration for inventors. First written in April of 1997, I thought it might be fun to follow-up each year and find out if anyone has been working on these ideas for future technology. I have included websites for you to "check out" inventions that are, are close to, or kinda close to what I am hoping will soon exist in the technology available to us presently.
1. Future Technology - Free EnergyI want my energy bill to come only once, not every month. So be it solar or electro-magnetic, please make it personal and portable with batteries that keep going and going.
Check out - D.O.E. Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
2. Future Technology - TransporterWhat kind of technology is required to scramble a person's atoms and send them for regrouping in foreign lands all in the blink of an eye? Imagine, I could work in Tokyo and sleep in Paris. Beam me up.
Check out - Quantum Teleportation or Scientists Report 'Teleported' Data
3. Future Technology - Replicator Technology (Stuff for Free)Every time I saw Captain Picard (Star Trek Next Generation) ordering his Earl Grey Tea or Councilor Troy getting a triple alien fudge dessert from one of those replicators on the Enterprise, it made me jealous. I imagine you could send the dirty dishes back to the void where they came from. BTW, a replicator is a device that uses transporter technology to dematerialize quantities of matter and then rematerialize that matter in another form.
4. Future Technology - Universal Communicator Forget long distant bills and roaming charges (especially with me working in Tokyo and sleeping in Paris). I want a very small device that lets me talk and see anyone, anywhere and anytime. All for the price of the device and please throw in the ability for universal translation for a modest surcharge.
Check out - Not quite what I meant however, there is Intel's Universal Communicators
5. Future Technology - The CureFor you name it.
Check out - Curing Brain Diseases by Growing New Cells?
6. Future Technology - Fountain of YouthAs a woman I consider this as a no-brainer desire for future technology. The "Fountain of Youth" was a legendary spring that renders anyone who drinks of its waters permanently young. What is the real future technology that will extend our lives and keep us looking youthful without surgery?
Check out - Scientists discover cellular 'fountain of youth' and Anti-Aging Medicine or Longevity and Anti-Aging Medicine.
7. Future Technology - Protective Force FieldTo shield me from the sticks and stones.
Check out - A Force Field for Astronauts?
8. Future Technology - Flying CarsI want a smooth ride all the way and I hope it's a convertible.
Check out - The Skycar, How Flying Cars Will Work, Flying Cars Ready To Take Off, Flying car more economical than SUV, or Retrofuture.
9. Future Technology - The Battery Operated Butler Did ItWhat can I say - housework sucks.
Check out - Robotics and Robots
10. Future Technology - The Time MachineI have a few famous inventors I would love to meet in person and the idea of messing with the time-space continuum is exciting as well.
Check out - Attention Chronic Argonauts and fellow Time Travelers

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Mobile Razor

In this fast world, it will be very convenient for us to have a mobile razor as it may help in our routine to be more easy as well as it will also minimize the space which have been occupied previously than now.
Shave off a few seconds of your precious time (no pun intended) when it comes to grooming thanks to the new Mobile Razor Attachment that can be attached to compatible handsets, allowing you to get rid of nasty, unwanted hair wherever you are. After all, there is always the use of Bluetooth headsets or speakerphone function on most modern phones that ought to allow you to carry out your conversations prim and proper without the person on the other end of the line knowing you’re busy removing pit hair that seem to grow much faster than your lawn’s grass. The Multi-Blade Polo Frail Mobile Shaver Attachment comes with half a dozen cutting-edge blades to guarantee the closest shave possible without splitting your skin open. The £347.83 price tag might throw you off quote a bit though.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Some other Windows Vista Fixes

6. Add XP machines to Vista’s Network Map Vista’s Network and Sharing Center provides the facility to view a map of your entire network, including PCs, switches and gateways. Unfortunately, PCs running XP don’t show up in the map.
You can’t do anything to Vista to fix this. Instead, you must download the Link Layer Topology (LLTD) Responder for Windows XP from Microsoft’s support site (search for Knowledgebase article KB922120). Install it on your XP machines, enable File and Printer Sharing and your XP systems will now show up in the Vista network map.
7. Solving dual-boot problems If you’re already running XP and you want to install a copy of Vista on a different partition or drive, it’s easy to do. Vista will automatically preserve your XP installation and create a boot menu so that you can choose which OS you want to run.
However, if you’ve taken the plunge and have gone for a Vista-only system, you may discover later that you need to run XP to cope with all those incompa tible applications, missing drivers and slow-running games.
Unfortunately, adding XP as a second operating system to a PC already running Vista doesn’t work as seamlessly as the other way round. If you install a ‘pre-Vista’ version of Windows after Vista, it will overwrite Vista’s boot record and Vista will no longer be available.
The old XP method of editing your boot.ini file won’t work either, because Vista has an entirely new method of managing system boot-up called Boot Configuration Data Store. To get back to Windows Vista after installing XP, you can run the following command from the Vista installation DVD:
n:\boot\bootsect.exe /NT60 ALL
where n: is the drive letter of your DVD drive.
Restarting the system after issuing this command will cause your PC to boot back into Vista. To add XP to your boot menu, you need to edit Vista’s BCD Store to add an entry for the older operating system.
To manage the BCD Store, Vista provides the ‘bcdedit’ command. As it’s a system tool you’ll need to run it from a command window with administrator credentials. From within Vista, we can use bcdedit to add a boot entry for XP by issuing the following commands:
bcdedit -create {ntldr} /d ‘Windows XP’bcdedit /set {ntldr} device partition=x:
where x: is the drive letter for the active partition
bcdedit /set {ntldr} path \ntldrbcdedit /displayorder {ntldr} /addlast
8. Desktop display settings Sometimes you need to change the desktop display settings.
On XP the Display Settings option was really easy to get to; just a right-click on the desktop and it’s there.
Vista, on the other hand, has reorganised many of these control dialogues and forces you to make many more mouse clicks to reach the same point.
You need to right-click on the desktop, click Personalize, then at the bottom of that list you’ll find Display Settings.
You can make a shortcut that points directly to the Display Settings panel. In any folder, right-click and select New, then Shortcut.
You’ll be prompted for the location of the item to which you need to link. Type ‘C:\Windows\System32\desk.cpl’ and click Next. When prompted to name the shortcut, type ‘Display Settings’ and click Finish.
You can then click the shortcut to bring up the Display Settings dialogue immediately, or add the shortcut to the Quick Launch toolbar for even more convenient operation.
That method certainly cuts down on mouse clicks, but if you really want to emulate the way XP does it, you’ll need to add the Display Settings command to the desktop’s context menu. With a little tweaking of the Registry, you can add your own commands to the menu fairly easily.
To add the Display Settings option, open up Regedit and browse for the key HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\Background\shell.
Right-click on ‘shell’ and select ‘New Key’, then name it ‘Display Settings’. In the right-hand pane, double-click on the (Default) string and enter the value ‘Display Settings’.
Now, back in the left-hand pane, right-click on your Display Settings key and select ‘New’, then ‘Key’ to create a new sub-key. Name this sub-key ‘command’. In the right-hand pane, double-click the command key’s (Default) string and enter the value ‘RUNDLL32 SHELL32.DLL,Control_RunDLL DESK.CPL,@0,3’ without the quotes.
Now close Regedit and right-click anywhere on the Windows Desktop. Your new ‘Display Settings’ menu item should bring up the Display Settings dialogue, just like XP. You can use this technique to add anything you like to the context menu. For example, you could add the options we discussed to turn Aero transparency on and off, without the need to enter any control panels.
9. Menu bars in Windows Explorer In Windows XP, Explorer windows contain the familiar “File, Edit, View” toolbar which we frequently use to carry out common operations on files, such as Cut and Paste. By default, Windows Vista doesn’t show this menu, which is highly frustrating for the XP user new to Vista who just wants to get things done quickly.
Thankfully, if you know the trick, this is one of the easiest annoyances to overcome: simply pressing the Alt key will make the menu pop up so you can use it as normal. If you want to keep the menu displayed permanently, go into the Tools menu (remember to press Alt to make it appear) and select Folder Options, then the View tab. Under Files and Folders tick the ‘Always show menus’ item.
10. Windows Vista needs more memory Vista stresses PC hardware to a greater extent than XP. If your hardware is close to Vista’s minimum spec, there’s a good chance your experience isn’t going to improve without some sort of upgrade.It’s generally the case that newer versions of Windows require not only beefier PCs, but also more system memory.
This is especially true of Vista, for which we would recommend a minimum 2GB of Ram for the best user experience.
If you have an older PC, then 2GB of Ram would more than likely have been considered an unnecessary extravagance at the time you bought it.
However, times have changed and today perhaps the cheapest and most cost-effective upgrade you can perform is to increase your system Ram.
If you haven’t looked at memory prices for some time, you may find them considerably lower than you expect.
Of course, a system memory upgrade will involve opening up your PC case. If you’re unwilling to do this, see tip 11.
If you’re confused about which type of memory to buy, many online vendors, such as Crucial, offer online diagnostic tools that will tell you how many free memory slots you have and automatically recommend the correct memory specification for your PC

Friday, April 3, 2009

Intersting facts on oceans

The ocean bottom is very interesting to oceanographers from many points of view. For one thing that the sedimentary rocks they exist on the ocean bottom are much younger than any similar rocks they find on the continents. In fact, no deposits on the ocean floor seem to be older than a couple of hundred million years, whereas many rocks on the continents are far older than this. For many years geologists have been asking. “Why aren’t there older rocks on the ocean bottom? And “where do the older rocks go?”
Furthermore, the mud layers covering the rocks on the bottom of the ocean-the sediments-are continually being deposited, and yet the thickness of this overall layer remains very thin. Again, scientists ask, “where do these sediments go?” Why aren’t the sediments much thicker on the ocean bottom than we find them to be?”

The answers to these questions have been found in modern measurements which indicate that the ocean bottom must be in motion. It is moving at a speed of from about one –half to six inches a year, and it seems to be doing so in a manner that suggests that the continents also are moving. Apparently the continents can be thought of as a floating in a “sea” of basalt (that is, the ocean bottom rocks).
Scientists think that many million years ago, all the continents were joined together in two huge land masses, called Laurasia and Gondwanaland. Later on, in geological time, laurasia split into North America, Europe and Asia, while South America,Africa,Antartica,and Australia were Gondwanaland.But the final picture is apparently not complete, for the sea bottom is still moving and evidently the continents are moving too, Where they will be a few million years from now, scientists can only guess

Read this post and comment on it which is very valuable for me to improve.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Windows Vista Fixes in new OS windows 7

A new OS which is coming on your way in just few days right at your desktop from Microsoft Windows named,Windows 7.It has been updated and also debugged from what you experiencing with windows Vista.The new new developers of windows 7 has also confirmed that there will be a downgrade from windows 7 not only to windows vista but also to windows XP.But what Microsoft professionals are trying to do is that they are not going to support for XP hereafter and they are also trying to kill as soon as possible.But the world wide users are trying to overdo that.

Debugged items from windows vista:
1. User Access Control dialogues For many, this is probably the most irritating Vista feature of all. You’ll probably encounter it within minutes of using the operating system and it’ll continue to bug you on a regular basis.
Any tasks that require administrator privileges to run require you to explicitly authorise them each time. This takes the form of a dimmed screen and a dialogue box alerting you to the fact that a program needs elevated privileges to continue.
Of course, preventing user programs from performing unauthorised functions is a good thing. Without access to privileged system components, malware is unable to wreak the havoc it enjoyed under XP.
Most other modern operating systems have a similar security system. However, Vista’s implementation can be disruptive to your work.
Although we wouldn’t recommend it, User Access Control (UAC) is easy to turn off. Open up the control panel and go to User Accounts. Under ‘Make changes to your user account’, the bottom option is ‘Turn User Account Control on or off’.
2. UAC screen dimming When the UAC prompt appears, your desktop is dimmed and access to all applications is blocked until the prompt is dismissed. Microsoft calls this Secure Desktop.
You’ll probably find Vista switching to the Secure Desktop very annoying. For example, you may be watching a video on one screen while working on another, or perhaps engaging in an important online conversation. The last thing you want is to have the screen dimmed and access to your application prevented.
Although the purpose of the Secure Desktop might not be immediately obvious, it provides a significant additional level of security. Because running applications have no access to the Secure Desktop, there’s no way for a rogue application to spoof your mouse clicks and authorise the UAC dialogue itself – so disable it at your own risk.
You can, however, disable the Secure Desktop while keeping UAC enabled. This means you can carry on working in other applications and attend to the UAC prompt in your own time.
If you have a Business edition of Vista or Vista Ultimate edition, disabling the Secure Desktop is easy.
Simply run ‘secpol.msc’ from the Start menu or a command prompt and navigate to Local Policies, then Security Options.
Scroll down to ‘User Account Control: Switch to the secure desktop when prompting for elevation’, double-click and select ‘Disabled’.
If you have the Home edition, you’ll have to edit the Registry directly, so take the usual precaution of backing up your system, then open regedit and browse to
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System.
Create a new ‘DWORD (32-bit) value’ by right-clicking on the right-hand pane. Give it the name ‘PromptOnSecureDesktop’ and set its value to 0.
3. The Aero slowdown Vista’s Aero Glass interface looks great, but it requires some real graphics horsepower to run properly. If your system is borderline when it comes to meeting hardware requirements, you may find it’s not able to run the interface as fast as you’d like.
The obvious option is to disable Aero and swap to Windows Vista Basic mode. The control to do this is a little hidden: open the Control Panel and go to Personalization, then Window Color and Appearance. Select ‘Open classic appearance properties for more color options’ at the bottom, then choose Windows Vista Basic.
This will disable the transparent desktop effects and features such as Flip 3D and live thumbnail previews. If you want to keep the latter options, keep Aero running, but disable the transparency effect by going to the Window Color and Appearance window and unchecking ‘Enable Transparency’.
You can also perform the same function from the command line by typing
Rundll32 dwmApi #104
to disable the effect and
Rundll32 dwmApi #102
to re-enable it. These commands can be made into desktop shortcuts, or added to the Windows context menu – see Tip 8 below.
4. Indexing slows down your PC Many of Vista’s new features are designed to make your life easier, to make you more productive and to speed up the way you interact with your PC. Unfortunately, many require a jolly fast PC if they’re to work well.
Vista’s enhanced indexing service is a prime example of such a feature. Integrated into just about every Explorer window, it lets you type a few letters of whatever you’re looking for and the results are displayed almost instantaneously.
If your PC is slow, it won’t be instantaneous. All that indexing in the background is going to make everything else slower, too. If this is happening to you, turn it off. To do that, open the Control Panel and select Indexing Options. Select Modify and then ‘Show all locations’.
From here you can enable or disable indexing for any selected locations. If you have any hard drives checked, unchecking them will give you a general performan ce boost at the expense of slower searches. We would recommend keeping indexing turned on for the Start Menu, so you’ll be able to locate programs quickly with only a negligible impact on performance.
. Adding Run to the Start menu XP has a nifty way of running things – the very convenient ‘Run’ command found in the Start menu.
Navigating through menus is for newbies. When you know the command you need, you just want a quick way of typing it and getting things done.
Additionally, many online guides and tutorials that work on both XP and Vista make liberal use of the Run command.
So why did Microsoft remove it in Vista? Well, it didn’t: it’s just disabled by default. To put it back, simply do the following: Right-click on the Taskbar and select ‘Properties’. In the ‘Start Menu’ tab, make sure ‘Start Menu’ is selected and click on ‘Customize’.
Scroll down until you find the ‘Run command’ entry and tick the box. Alternatively, you can access the Run prompt by pressing Windows & R, whether or not the option is enabled in the Start Menu.